Public Art
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Pickering Public Library – Central Branch: Reopening Saturday, December 6th at 9:30 am
Pickering City Hall: Reopening Monday, December 8th at 8:30 am
The City of Pickering is launching a new public art project to be installed in Ernie L. Stroud Park, part of the Steeple Hill Community, in late spring 2025.
On exhibit in the Chestnut Hill Developments Recreation Complex is "Look Up!", a temporary art installation by artist Casey Watson, courtesy of the Experience Ontario Grant.
The City is pleased to share that the artist exhibiting their work during Winter Nights, City Lights this year is Nate Nettleton and his work Epiphany. The work will be exhibited from now until January 31, 2024 in Esplanade Park, Pickering.
The City of Pickering is celebrating frontline workers and first responders through two new murals currently installed at Chestnut Hill Developments Recreation Complex (CHDRC). Artists connected with first-responders and sought out feedback from the community for their artworks.
The public art piece named “You Can Never Close Nature” by Artist FATSPATROL (Fathima Mohiuddin) in partnership with Mural Routes, and is located at the exterior wall of West Shore Community Centre, 1011-1015 Bayly Street, Pickering and on a couple of the concrete walls at the West Shore Skate Spot. FATSPATROL’s final design was created with the help of the West Shore community and is reflective of the neighborhood and the recreational activities that take place in this location. The mural includes themes and images of the diverse natural environment that coexist in the West Shore community.
The City of Pickering is celebrating the iconic Canadian Author Lucy Maud Montgomery and her many connections to the Durham Region. Two original murals have been created by artist Meegan Lim thanks to a Government of Canada investment through the Federal Economic Development Agency for Southern Ontario (FedDev Ontario) as part of the Tourism Relief Fund.
The mural represents the 1929 collapse of the Whitevale Bridge in the centre, and on each side are the flora and fauna associated with the valley of West Duffins. The central image is taken from a photograph of the collapsed bridge in 1929. Salmons are shown spawning in West Duffins. Either side has images of the wildlife around Whitevale and west Duffins: red-wing blackbird, great blue heron, mallard, blue jay and cardinal, a monarch butterfly on a milk weed plant and a snapping turtle.
Kijimba Kind are spirits that hail from a variety of cultures. This is a collection of carvings installed in Alex Robertson in 2001 that portray these spirits, as a show of the diversity and similarities among the people in Pickering.
Previously titled “Census Five,” the Batten Disease Memorial Sculpture is meant, as the name makes clear, to be a memorial to all the children who have lost or will lose their lives to Batten Disease.
The City of Pickering is celebrating frontline workers and first responders through two new murals currently installed at Chestnut Hill Developments Recreation Complex (CHDRC). Artists connected with first-responders and sought out feedback from the community for their artworks.
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