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The Amazing Adventures of Michael Snow: an uncensored history of Toronto’s most notorious art star

Fifty years ago, Snow’s iconic Walking Woman sculptures made him an international art star. That was just the start of a rich life full of famous friends, bohemian bacchanals and city-wide scandals. His latest work, a dancing light beam on the Trump tower, is his most flamboyant feat yet

The Amazing Adventures of Michael Snow

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One afternoon last summer, Michael Snow stood on an upper floor of the Sheraton hotel examining his latest creation from a distance. It was a test run of Lightline, a 65-storey light sculpture he designed for the new Trump hotel. A glowing white spire, made up of thousands of LED lights, snaked up the seam of the tower like a stripe on a marching band uniform. Then it began to move. A blast of light shot up about 20 storeys and flickered in staccato bursts. “It waltzes,” Snow tells me. “The light jumps up and down in a rhythm—buh-bum, buh-bum.” Sometimes the computer-operated animation will flash like a strobe light, or mimic the stop-and-go of traffic, or a rainfall or snow. “The snow is really quite beautiful,” says Snow.

But the sculpture had mechanical problems, and, shortly after the test, it was shut off. It was still out of order as of this February. “Guess they have other things to worry about first,” Snow grumbles, a coy reference to the panes of glass that have been falling off the building.

Of all the works Snow has produced over the years, Lightline is the only one that wasn’t his idea. Eb Zeidler, the architect responsible for the tower—and the Eaton Centre and Ontario Place—called Snow up in 2009 and asked him to devise a light beam on the side of the building. Snow happily accepted and transformed it into a kind of cinema, controlling the movement of the lights with a computer program. That the hotel was named for the tackiest man in North America didn’t faze him. Donald Trump and Snow actually have a lot in common: unshakable ego, wilful disregard for public opinion and a knack for stoking controversy.

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Faulty towers: who’s to blame for condoland’s falling glass, leaky walls and multi-million-dollar lawsuits

Faulty Towers

Jan Gandhi and Omar Jabri share a love of big-city life: the people, the architecture, the fashion, the logarithmic bustle of human energy that comes from high-density, high-rise living. They first met as articling students with different Bay Street law firms, introduced by mutual friends. Together they moved to New York, where Gandhi worked as in-house counsel for MTV and Jabri as an intellectual property lawyer, and they lived in an apartment in Chelsea. Gandhi became addicted to flash-sale websites, filling her wardrobe with deeply discounted designer fashions. Flash sales are enormously popular in New York. She saw an underserved market in Toronto, so she hatched a plan to return and launch her own site.

THE FESTIVAL TOWER
OPTIMA
MURANO

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Reason to Love Toronto: because Regent Park’s The Citadel dance theatre is now a reality

Reason to Love Toronto: because we like to bet on long shots

(Image: Dave Gillespie)

At Dundas and Parliament is a gleaming 60-seat dance theatre called The Citadel. It’s the best thing to happen to Regent Park since the colossal $1-billion neighbourhood revitalization began in 2006, and it almost didn’t happen at all. In 2007, when Bill Coleman and Laurence Lemieux, the husband-and-wife founders of the dance troupe Coleman Lemieux and Compagnie, bought a former Salvation Army soup kitchen, their enthusiasm blinded them to the fact that they couldn’t afford it. The building cost $750,000 and needed at least $300,000 in renos; they were earning $30,000 a year combined. They begged and borrowed enough for a down payment, and maxed out 11 credit cards to cover their living expenses. AmEx was hassling them daily by the time Mitch Cohen, the head of Regent Park redeveloper Daniels Corporation, heard their tale. He’s a sucker for a feel-good story, but also a businessman who realized that the presence of a renowned dance company could persuade prospective buyers that the area would gentrify. He connected them to his tradespeople, and $300,000 in aid started rolling in: windows from Toro Aluminum, engineering design from SNC Lavalin and more; Diamond Schmitt supplied architectural designs pro bono, and an investment banker named David Banks and media-shy arts patrons Gretchen and Donald Ross chipped in much-needed cash. Now, The Citadel is open, and professional dancers and area kids (who get free classes on Saturdays) have a beautiful, high-quality performance space in which to hone their craft. And while finances are still shaky, the venue is booked into the summer, a sign that Coleman and Lemieux’s flying leap might just work out, after all.

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