Joel Aleister Richardson (born October 15, 1969), (a.k.a. Jimmy Swann), is a Canadian artist, filmmaker and award-winning athlete.
Richardson became widely known for his controversial clash with Toronto's Mayor, Rob Ford. [1] [2] His work is extensive, ranging from oil on canvas, portraits and landscapes... to his unique style of flash mob performance street art, which closed streets in the heart of the Canadian financial district. [3] He was an invited participant to the Occupy Wall Street main art show in New York City, which took place at the J. P. Morgan Building on Wall Street. [4] He is a member of the Directors Guild of Canada(DGC) and has over 20 IMDb credits. [5]
Joel's childhood was spent growing up in Owen Sound, Ontario. He made a name for himself as an up-and-coming long distance runner, and in 1988 met future Olympic gold medalist, Matthew Birir and his brother Jonah Birir [6] at the World Junior Championships in Sudbury, Ontario. At the age of seventeen Richardson traveled to Kenya where he lived in a mud hut with the Birir's in a tiny village named Metipso, in the central highlands of Kenya.
In 1992, after returning to Canada from spending four months on the Gaza/Israeli border, Richardson was hospitalized for undisclosed reasons. After spending a month in the hospital he rented a studio in the infamous 888 Dupont, a former factory filled with artists, musicians and hustlers. The atmosphere was a perfect storm of creativity, subversion and a shared sense of community that fueled one of the most prolific periods of his career. Two years later Joel returned to Metipso, where he would paint the people and landscapes that had so inspired him as a young athlete. [7] These paintings would later be displayed at his first major exhibition at the Tom Thomson Memorial Gallery. [8]
While at 888 Dupont, Richardson met with former members of Maurice Bishop's militia and made arrangements to travel to Grenada to paint. This eventually led him to live four months in Grenada with a fundamentalist Rastafarian family, where he painted over seventy-five paintings. [9]
In Guatemala, Richardson met stock broker, Johnny English(alias). Three days later, Joel narrowly escaped an attack by banditos that left one man shot dead. These were life-changing experiences that dramatically affected his work. Finance became a major theme, and his relationship with English would inspire the yet-to-be released documentary highlighting English's eventual flight from the markets, by motorcycle, into the Sahara Desert.
Over the years that followed, Richardson and stock broker Johnny English would stay in contact, and through several trips to Europe, particularly to English's Options Trading Firm in Paris France, Richardson got a glimpse into the wacky world of Derivative (finance). Taking what he learned from English, Joel created his own large equations based on the Black–Scholes model, and replacing certain numbers with a figure of a man in a suit.
Edward Bawden, was an English painter, illustrator and graphic artist, known for his prints, book covers, posters, and garden metalwork furniture. Bawden taught at the Royal College of Art, where he had been a student, worked as a commercial artist and served as a war artist in World War II. He was a fine watercolour painter but worked in many different media. He illustrated several books and painted murals in both the 1930s and 1960s. He was admired by Edward Gorey, David Gentleman and other graphic artists, and his work and career is often associated with that of his contemporary Eric Ravilious.
Alfred Joseph Casson (1898–1992) was a member of the Canadian group of artists known as the Group of Seven. He joined the group in 1926 at the invitation of Franklin Carmichael. Casson is best known for his depictions in his signature limited palette of southern Ontario, and for being the youngest member of the Group of Seven.
Stanley Warren was an English painter. He was a bombardier of the 15th Regiment of the Royal Regiment of Artillery who became known for the Changi Murals he painted at a chapel during his internment in Changi prison in Singapore during World War II.
Charles Fraser Comfort, was a Scottish-born Canadian painter, sculptor, teacher, writer and administrator.
Street art is visual art created in public locations for public visibility. It has been associated with the terms "independent art", "post-graffiti", "neo-graffiti" and guerrilla art.
OSGEMEOS are identical twin street artists Otavio Pandolfo and Gustavo Pandolfo. They started painting graffiti in 1987 and their work appears on streets and in galleries across the world.
William Perehudoff was a Canadian artist most closely associated with colour field painting. He was married to the landscape painter Dorothy Knowles.
Posterchild is the nom de plume of a street artist based in Toronto, Canada who may be best known for his Mario Blocks project, the purpose of which is to install homemade Mario blocks in public spaces. After being featured on Boing Boing the project has expanded as others have made and hung their own blocks.
Since the 1980s, the area surrounding the Sydney inner west suburb of Newtown, New South Wales (NSW), Australia—including the suburbs of Newtown, Enmore, Erskineville, Camperdown and St Peters—has been known for its wide range of prominent graffiti and street art on walls. The public visual art in the Newtown area consists of a variety of styles and methods of execution, including large-scale painted murals, hand-painted political slogans, hand-painted figurative designs, spray painted semi-abstract designs "tags"), and other stylistic developments such as stencil art and street poster art, "Yarn bombing", and sculptural items cast from plaster and other materials.
George Agnew Reid, also known as G. A. Reid, was a Canadian artist, painter, influential educator and administrator. He is best known as a genre painter, but his work encompassed the mural, and genre, figure, historical, portrait and landscape subjects.
Charles Pachter, is a Canadian contemporary artist. He is a painter, printmaker, sculptor, designer, historian, and lecturer. He studied French literature at the Sorbonne, art history at the University of Toronto, and painting and graphics at the Cranbrook Academy of Art in Bloomfield Hills, Michigan.
The Ottawa School of Art is a non-profit art school in downtown Ottawa, Ontario, Canada. The school offers a one-year certificate program, a three-year diploma program, art camps, and general interest courses, as well as providing exhibition space and a boutique for the display and sale of artwork by local artists and students. The school facilities include a ceramics studio, sculpture studio, wood shop, printmaking studio, a dark room for photography, painting studios, and multipurpose studio spaces where life drawing classes take place.
Joel Bergner is a muralist/ street artist and educator who creates large-scale works of art with the participation of young people and communities around the world. Bergner is the co-founder and co-director of the non-profit organization Artolution, which organizes community-based public art initiatives with those who have experienced armed conflict, trauma and social marginalization. He has led such projects with incarcerated teenagers, Syrian refugees, youth from slum areas, the mentally and physically disabled, young people with substance abuse issues, orphans and street children.
Graffiti in Toronto, Ontario, Canada, is a cause of much disagreement among its residents. Graffiti is seen by some as an art form adding to the Toronto culture; however, others see graffiti as form of vandalism, viewing it as ugly, or as a form of property damage.
Davenport Road is an east–west arterial road in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. It is believed to follow an old native trail along the foot of the scarp of the old shoreline of glacial Lake Iroquois. It currently runs from Yonge Street in the east to Old Weston Road in the west.
Gustav Hahn was a German Canadian painter, muralist and interior decorator who pioneered the Art Nouveau style in Canada. Hahn was also an amateur astronomer, and his father, Otto Hahn, owned a collection of meteorites.
Shifting Landscapes is a 250-by-35-foot mural painted on Henderson Bridge in Thornhill, Ontario, by Canadian artist James Ruddle in 2015. The painting begins with boldly colored trees, rocks, and sky that develop into an urban environment with a mix of natural elements. The mural was commissioned by the city of Markham as a community-based art project and was painted with the help of eight local students. The painting incorporates a "Group of Seven" style along with modern graffiti art and features words such as "reflection", "technology", "revitalization", "nature", "J. E. H. MacDonald", and "Markham". The mural embodies the artists' depiction of the continual changes in the competitive landscape of business, such as globalization, technological innovation, regulatory restructuring, demographic shifts, and environmental pressures.
Tristan Eaton (1978) is an American artist. Primarily known for his toy designs and street art murals, Eaton is also a graphic designer and illustrator.
Rae Johnson (1953-2020) was a Canadian painter who lived in Toronto, Canada.
Jabari "Elicser" Elliott is a visual-artist based in Toronto, Ontario.