Toronto Star

ART THE ON EDGE

If you think Scarboroug­h is new to Toronto’s art scene, you haven’t been paying attention

- Murray Whyte

A few years ago, a young artist contacted me about coming to see a collective gallery/studio space he and some friends, all recent University of Toronto graduates, had set up in an old lightindus­trial bay. I do these kinds of things all the time, so I was happy to accept. Then he gave me the address: 1345 Morningsid­e Ave. in Scarboroug­h.

The cognitive dissonance alone was enough to lure me outside my usual downtown parameters. Artists were urban creatures, thriving in dense, dilapidate­d spaces, weren’t they? Could a suburban strip mall really do?

When I arrived at Y+ Contempora­ry, then all of a few weeks old, my perspectiv­e changed. Daniel Griffin Hunt, who had invited me out, was, like his partners, dead serious — not only about their work but about fostering a creative community in the great beyond of big-box stores and cookie-cutter houses.

It’s important to understand, though, they were hardly starting from scratch.

On Saturday, for the first time, Nuit Blanche will include a Scarboroug­h component as part of its all-night art frenzy. But that is less a legitimizi­ng turn for the former borough than it is an attempt for Nuit Blanche to claim some of Scarboroug­h’s burgeoning cultural currency for its own. The myopic downtown view of the suburbs has never been kind — and to Scarboroug­h in particular, both the country’s oldest and most-maligned burb, with whispers of “Scarberia” still lingering in the air.

But only wilful blindness could allow one to miss not only what Scarboroug­h is in the midst of becoming, but what it has always been.

For years, driven, like so much here, by the rising property market, immigrant population­s traditiona­lly drawn to the city’s core have been building lives and communitie­s in the suburbs. Drive along Lawrence Ave. east of Victoria Park and you’ll find deeply ensconced Afghan, Pakistani and Indian communitie­s tucked into the low-slung 1950s strip malls that line the broad boulevard for kilometres.

It’s hectic, a bundle of difference set against the city centre’s increasing sameness. It’s also the exact kind of fertile territory artists need to mine to make work that’s meaningful. The Art Gallery of York University, which has had a close-up view of that great beyond — its catchphras­e is “Out There” — made a show of bubbling suburban creativity last year with Migrating the Margins, a knockout exhibition of artists loosely from the city’s fringes (with a few exceptions; Tau Lewis, a rising star, grew up in Chinatown).

Less important than the specifics of borough was the intention of the gesture: That the city was changing, driven both by property value and a generation­al shift. Young artists, the children of immigrants ensconced in the suburbs, saw a different Toronto than the old-school downtown scene, and their work, like their concerns, would reflect it.

It’s a lot to suggest that anyone particular­ly makes “Scarboroug­h art” — among other offences, that’s a tiny box for a dizzying breadth of difference and experience, which is the area’s strength. More to the point, a new generation of artists, driven by the difference all around them, doesn’t need downtown, and maybe finds it a bit past its sell-date.

“I know, Scarboroug­h’s hot right now,” laughed Nep Sidhu, an artist based there whose family immigrated from India.

Sidhu, who’s featured in the Museum of Contempora­ry Art’s inaugural show Believe, has never really felt like a part of the downtown circuit, so he has nothing to miss. From his vantage point, a sprawling studio inside his family’s Scarboroug­h metal shop business, the borough as a platform for his global audience sits just fine.

Let’s not mistake this all for a new phenomenon. Toronto culture, historical­ly, has been what grows up between the cracks while the sanctioned efforts dominate. Through the ’70s, ’80s and ’90s, that found expression with a rigorously independen­t downtown art scene battling institutio­nal indifferen­ce and the bigfooting legacy of painters like the Group of Seven.

In Scarboroug­h, new communitie­s over that same span have needed a generation to find its feet. One generation on, its coming-out party — for the rest of us — is now.

Nuit Blanche, curated by Scarboroug­h native Alyssa Fearon, confirms for the downtown set what Scarberian­s have always known.

“There’s a lot of resilience, a lot of creativity,” she told me last year, when the city announced her appointmen­t. “That’s what I want to illuminate — the great things that are there already.”

 ?? STEVE RUSSELL PHOTOS TORONTO STAR ??
STEVE RUSSELL PHOTOS TORONTO STAR
 ??  ?? Alyssa Fearon, top, a Scarboroug­h native, is curating Nuit Blanche this year. Above, Diana Reyes also known as Fly Lady Di, will perform as part ofFilibust­er inside the Scarboroug­h Civic Centre along with David Delisca, a spoken word artist, left.
Alyssa Fearon, top, a Scarboroug­h native, is curating Nuit Blanche this year. Above, Diana Reyes also known as Fly Lady Di, will perform as part ofFilibust­er inside the Scarboroug­h Civic Centre along with David Delisca, a spoken word artist, left.
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 ?? STEVE RUSSELL PHOTOS TORONTO STAR ?? Jessica Karuhanga will perform in the Scarboroug­h woodlot.
STEVE RUSSELL PHOTOS TORONTO STAR Jessica Karuhanga will perform in the Scarboroug­h woodlot.
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 ??  ?? Andrew Finlay Stewart, above, will present a video installati­on called Wards in the council chamber. Left, Julia Gibran will host Sunrise Yoga at the library.
Andrew Finlay Stewart, above, will present a video installati­on called Wards in the council chamber. Left, Julia Gibran will host Sunrise Yoga at the library.

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