Toronto Star

Architectu­ral history returns to downtown

Organizers hope yearlong Campbell House exhibit will spark dialogue about preserving city’s heritage

- MAY WARREN

Looking out the window of Campbell House in the heart of downtown Toronto, Liz Driver has a panoramic view of some of the city’s best-known skyscraper­s.

But, as the curator and director of a nearly 200-year-old building surrounded by gleaming glass and concrete, Driver often thinks about what was lost to make room for these modern marvels.

This month, a new exhibit transports fragments of the city’s lost buildings to the garden of Campbell House, bringing them to a downtown audience for the first time.

Driver hopes Lost & Found, a free exhibition that starts May 17 and runs for a year, will get people to “reflect on the new and the old” and encourage a “conversati­on” with the setting.

Many of the stone slabs were brought to Scarboroug­h’s Guild Inn by conservati­onists Spencer and Rosa Clark when the original buildings were demolished in the 1960s and 1970s. Some have been on display there at some point. But others have been sitting in storage for decades, and a few have never been seen, Driver said.

The exhibit will include six groupings of stones from structures dating back to early 1900s through the 1930s, including an art deco panel from the old Toronto Star building, and fragments of the old Bank of Montreal, Imperial Oil and Bank of Toronto buildings, “for people to walk their dogs around, push their kids, take photograph­s,” Driver said.

The pieces of history were salvaged by the Clarks, who created an artists’ colony near the Scarboroug­h Bluffs. “What we wanted to do was use the pieces as sort of a lens through which to look at the period of time when they were built, and the period of time in which they were demolished, and why those things happened,” said Leora Bebko, one of three grad students in U of T’s museum studies program curating the exhibit.

She explained she hopes visitors will, “think about ways in which, looking forward, we can maybe learn from, not past mistakes, but things we’ve lost in the past, and try and look toward how we can save some of the historic buildings that are maybe in danger now.”

Grad student and curator Tanya McCullough hopes the pieces of old buildings, now lo- cated so close to new ones, will get visitors to “start to think of the juxtaposit­ion between the old and the new, what we’ve lost and what the future looks like.”

Exhibits like Lost & Found are part of the evolving mission of Campbell House Museum, Driver said, to “give life to the words, freedom of expression.” The museum has been a spot for Nuit Blanche exhibits for the past four years, and regularly hosts art shows and other exhibits inside.

The house, which now sits at the northwest corner of Queen St. W. and University Ave., is owned by the city, while the museum is operated by the Sir William Campbell foundation, and the grounds are leased from Great-West Life Assurance Co.

The exhibit comes as the city’s Economic Developmen­t Committee endorsed a resolution from Councillor Joe Cressy, Thursday, to review the museum in the interest of keeping it a public space, as the foundation looks to scale back it’s role.

“The bottom line is that it’s a jewel in the heart of downtown,” Cressy said.

“It’s now time for us to think about the next 50 years, or the next century.”

 ?? EDUARDO LIMA/STARMETRO ?? U of T grad students Tanya McCullough, left, Leora Bebko and Hannah Hadfield are organizing a Campbell House exhibit that brings ruins of some of Toronto's earliest buildings back downtown.
EDUARDO LIMA/STARMETRO U of T grad students Tanya McCullough, left, Leora Bebko and Hannah Hadfield are organizing a Campbell House exhibit that brings ruins of some of Toronto's earliest buildings back downtown.

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