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St. Michael's College, University of Toronto: 1996: Joe Rosenthal Sculpture: Bronze: University of St. Michael's College [17] More images: Couch Monster: Art Gallery of Ontario: June 20, 2022: Brian Jungen: Sculpture: Bronze: 4m tall and 5.5m long Art Gallery of Ontario [18] [19] More images: Courante: Toronto Music Garden: Various Sculpture ...
Statue of John A. Macdonald (Toronto) Statue of John A. Macdonald (Wade) Statue of John Graves Simcoe; Statue of John Sandfield Macdonald; Statue of Norman Bethune; Statue of Northrop Frye; Statue of Oliver Mowat; Statue of Queen Victoria (Toronto) Statue of Robert Raikes (Toronto) Statue of Sun Yat-sen (Chinatown, Toronto) Statue of Winston ...
Statue of James Whitney; Statue of John A. Macdonald (Toronto) Statue of John Graves Simcoe; Statue of John Sandfield Macdonald; Statue of Norman Bethune; Statue of Northrop Frye; Statue of Oliver Mowat; Statue of Queen Victoria (Toronto) Statue of Robert Raikes (Toronto) Statue of Sun Yat-sen (Chinatown, Toronto) Statue of Winston Churchill ...
A number of monuments and memorials in Canada were removed or destroyed as a result of protests and riots between 2020 and 2022. These included six sculptures of Sir John A. Macdonald, the first prime minister of Canada, three of other figures connected to the Canadian Indian residential school system (Alexander Wood, Egerton Ryerson and Joseph Hugonard), two of Canadian monarchs (Queen ...
A life-size equestrian statue of Tecumseh along with a dismounted figure of British Major General Sir Isaac Brock, both created by Canadian sculptor Mark Williams, was unveiled in Sandwich Towne, a neighborhood in Windsor, Ontario, on September 7, 2018. David Morris, who frequently portrayed Tecumseh during War of 1812 bicentennial events, was ...
Also known as the "First Toronto Post Office" (it was the fourth post office in York, but the first one to serve the settlement when it became Toronto in 1834), it is one of the earliest surviving examples in Canada of a building purpose-built as a post office; typical of small, early 19th-century public buildings, combining public offices and ...
E.B. Cox (1914–2003) was an internationally known sculptor from Toronto, Canada. [1] He was part of a generation of sculptors such as Charles Daudelin who preferred to carve rather than model their work. [2]
The Toronto statue stood for years inside the Main Store at Yonge and Queen streets. When the Main Store was demolished in the late 1970s to make way for the Toronto Eaton Centre, the statue was moved to the Dundas Street entrance of the chain's new flagship store. The Winnipeg statue stood for eight decades in the downtown store on Portage Avenue.