
‘Sheltering’ by Timothy Schmalz
Dear Readers, like many cities has a range of public art, ranging from the beautiful to the bizarre and everything inbetween. The statue above, by Canadian sculptor Timothy Schmalz, is very new, and I found it very moving: its location, in the garden of the United Metropolitan Church, is a gathering place for homeless people, close to several hostels and also to the local hospital.
And then of course there are the Canada geese of the Eaton Centre, looking very spick and span at the moment. And where the hell did the phrase ‘spick and span’ come from? Apparently it’s a ship building term, where a ‘spick’ was a metal nail, and a ‘span’ was a wood chip – ‘spick and span new’ was the original term, meaning a brand new ship with everything in order.
Anyway, after that digression, here are some geese….we saw two actual wild Canadian geese flying over Queen Street earlier this morning, so I can vouch for the accuracy of the depiction.

I’ve written a piece about the history of the Eaton Centre Geese before here
Turning round, there’s a rather fine bridge connecting the Eaton Centre to the now-defunct Hudson’s Bay building…

And then there’s a brisk walk through the old building, with some remnants of its past as a department store…

…but mostly you’re channelled through corridors lined with murals by Chairman Ting, a Vancouver-based design consultancy. Apparently they cover 27,000 square feet. Chairman Ting also designed the FIFA World Cup poster for 2026, so they’re clearly having a good year.

The latest news is that some of the old Hudson’s Bay building might be converted to self-storage. Well, better than tearing it down I suppose.
Now, I’d passed something on my way into Toronto on Saturday that I really wanted to check out, and here it is…

Yes, it’s a giant child’s head. The sculpture is called ‘Dreaming’ and it’s by Jaume Plensa, a Catalan sculptor. Apparently the 8.5 metre tall, 2.5 tonne sculpture has been here since 2020, so how I’ve missed it previously I have no idea. It’s one of those sculptures that looks fine from the front, but starts to look very strange as you walk around it….

Hmmm. It’s supposed to be meditative, but it feels a little creepy to me. What do you think?
Practically next door to ‘Dreaming’ is this amazing building, which deserves a blog post all to itself. So, more on the Concourse Building tomorrow….























































