Picking up pieces of Ukraine: An exclusive Q&A with street artist Mahyar Amiri

By experimenting with various mediums, this Toronto-based artist is raising awareness for Ukraine

By: Teresa Valenton

Amiri finishes up the final details on his latest mural MAKE LOVE NOT WAR by adding the remaining petals beside a young girl. (Dylan Kavalsky/VOCAB Communications) 

In embracing a creative rebellion against tradition, mixed-media artist Mahyar Amiri explores the boundaries of street art. As one of the only silkscreen artists — a form of art that utilizes negative spaces through stencils — in Ontario, Amiri challenges new mediums to evolve as an artist, which is evident in his most recent mural, MAKE LOVE NOT WAR

Amidst the war between Russia and Ukraine, Amiri draws attention to the innocence of children during these times. Images of the mural have been shared by notable Ukrainian celebrities including Alan Badoev and Irina Soponaru.  Located on the wall of Civello Salon and Spa at 269 Queen St. West, Amiri creates a space for reflection. 

Inspired by artists such as Warhol and Banksy, Amiri pushes himself to focus on his personal values through public displays of art. Emphasizing inner strength as an artist, Amiri draws inspiration from their willingness to create thought-evoking pieces. 

Creating a variety of pieces around Toronto, Amiri calls out political issues through various mediums. In a 2021 mural titled REVOLUTION, he features two young boys as his subjects to represent the tensions between Afghanistan and its citizens. 

Amiri also created for Blunt and Cherry, highlighting the COVID-19 pandemic in relation to controversies surrounding vaccine and mask mandates among global citizens. Replacing a flag with a mask, Amiri highlights how international governments have provided aid to the virus. 

In an interview with CanCulture, Amiri speaks on the artistic subject matter of his latest mural, taking on the city and establishing himself as a street artist.

Do you have specific locations in mind when creating murals?

Two fundamentals come into mind when painting a mural. One is the location and what it means to me; so that’s one thing, which is the sentimental aspect of the mural location. The second part is obviously the exposure it gets. I wouldn’t want to paint on the side of a dumpster or something that no one sees. It’s great for any artist to paint on a wall that gets a lot of exploration and establishes your name in the city.

In relation to your piece about the war between Russia and Ukraine titled MAKE LOVE NOT WAR, why did you select the wall of Civello Salon and Spa?

At first, they didn’t want to give me that wall because they originally had it black and a lot of artists had tried to occupy it. Long story short, I just went up to them and I said I’m going to do it for free and if you don’t like this mural, I’m going to paint it black the next day and come back down with no problem. They liked me as a person and not just an artist, I was very thankful for that.

Can you walk me through the creative process of this mural? 

So that mural was painted with monochromatic colours such as dark grey and white to paint to subjects. I used yellow and blue for the flag and the flowers the girl was picking up from the floor and brown for the cardboard. I did not want to go too busy, but I just wanted to paint kids as a subject as something simple and, yet, meaningful as well. 

How did you select the subject matter in depicting the war between Russia and Ukraine?

Personally, I still don’t know what my official subjects for my murals are, but lately, they have been children because I do like the innocence they carry within society. So whenever there is a war or disagreements between a party’s adults, I always like to highlight and raise awareness of these events, such as what’s going on in Afghanistan and the war in Ukraine with these children. In my eyes, they have no intentions of causing trouble or bloodshed and I wanted to use them to convey this message — to create love not war with the Ukraine mural; just simple subjects with nothing too out of the ordinary. 

Is there a reason behind the juxtaposition of the monochromatic aspect and the children in the piece?

The yellow is very evident with the flowers to kind of represent the light and happiness the city brings. But as you can see, there are not many yellow flowers left in the mural. Most of them are gray, like on the sides of that girl. So she’s kind of picking up the remaining pieces of her country to gather and hold them in her hands. It represents all the happiness and joy that were wiped off the environment. The yellow is to showcase and display the beauty that Ukraine once had before this war began.

In what ways do you want viewers to view your art?

My business is called Not Art, so I don’t really know. They can view it however they want, it’s open to perspective at the end of the day. I’m just painting because I have fun with it. I’m not painting to shove opinions down people’s throats. As long as it makes people feel something, I think I’m doing my job right. If I’m making the change, I think I’m doing my job right. I just hope that at the end of the day I have fun and people like my work.

Do you feel moved as an artist creating a mural with this subject matter as well?

Yes, I do feel moved. It’s one thing about selling an art piece for some amount of money and there’s one about making a mural for free. So I definitely do enjoy all the comments and messages that I get from it. It was my goal for people to love it and I hope it directs people towards making love and not a war for the future. 

Through Amiri’s visual interpretations of international issues, the streets of Toronto have become a canvas of opportunities. You can find more of Amiri’s artwork here

Photo Essay: The meanings behind Canadian street art

What stories lie just behind the spray-painted brick or airbrushed stucco?

By: Olivia Wiens

Photos by: Haley Sengsavanh, Kinza Zafar, Olivia Wiens

While many people turn to galleries and museums to enjoy stunning art pieces, fantastic artwork can be found on many streets in Canada.

From small graffiti scratches in the back alleys of prairie towns to the towering murals overlooking the Toronto skyline, street art is a valuable part of Canadian culture. It reminds us that beauty and art can be created out of anything. And while the free viewing is a perk to public street art, it also showcases pieces of our history that might otherwise be forgotten. 

Let’s travel across Canada and see the street art each place has to offer.

“The Matriarch”, created by Skwxwú7mesh Úxwumixw (Squamish Nation) artist Siobhan Joseph and her team, is located in Vancouver on the side of Slim’s BBQ. (Haley Sengsavanh/CanCulture)

“The Matriarch” was created for the Vancouver Mural Festival in 2019 and was inspired by artist Siobhan Joseph’s late mother, who was the matriarch of the family. Her mother is dressed in red to honour Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Girls and is standing amid a lush natural landscape with the sea and mountains.

Displaying such a prominent issue on the side of a building creates an active reminder of the social injustice that Indigenous women face every day. It helps to form a deeper impact in the daily lives of those simply driving by the colourful mural.

Painted on the side of The Slice, a bar in Lethbridge, Alta., in 2007, this mural was created to help attract customers to the restaurant’s growing business. (Olivia Wiens/CanCulture)

Artists Ryan Smitham and Daniel Audet tag-teamed this mural to help broaden the live music scene in their small city. The woman depicted is Shaela Miller, a local singer who has played at The Slice many times since the painting was created. Street art like this mural helps depict pride and appreciation for locals who shape the city they are from.

Located on the side of the Ukrainian Co-op in Regina, Jez Brenwold’s aerosol piece is meant to symbolize Ukrainian culture within Saskatchewan. (Olivia Wiens/CanCulture)

Jez Brenwold’s floral work wraps around the entire building, but the bordered wheat field is the focal point of the piece and highlights the beauty of the Saskatchewan prairies. 

Street art like this allows the artist to share their pride and passion for their culture with an entire city. As this mural lines a main road in Regina, countless people driving by get to appreciate Ukrainian culture in their own province.

This airbrush mural, created by Troy Brooks and Christiano De Araujo in 2014, is a tribute to the queer bathhouse raids that occurred in Toronto in 1981. (Kinza Zafar/CanCulture)

“The Bathhouse Raids” was the largest of 11 murals created for the Church Street Mural Project, a project coordinated with WorldPride, which Toronto hosted in 2014.

The piece acts as a reminder of the struggles that queer people faced in the 1980s, as well as the struggles that they still face today. However, “The Bathhouse Raids” also symbolizes a significant turning point for Toronto’s 2SLGBTQIA+ community, as the raids that occurred in 1981 sparked many human rights and police brutality protests.

Elicser Elliott has been spreading his art in Toronto’s Queen West neighbourhood since the 1990s. This recent piece of soft figures and organic shapes is for those who construct warmth and connection within their communities. (Kinza Zafar/CanCulture)

Elicser Elliott is one of Toronto’s most notable graffiti artists. Some of his most recent works have showcased his appreciation for COVID-19 frontline workers and his passion for the Black Lives Matter movement. 

Oliver Cuoto, owner of The Bee Shop on Bloor St. West in Toronto, provided this conceptual design to artist Slavka Kolesar, who spent the month of July 2020 making their collective dream come to life on the side of Cuoto’s store. (Kinza Zafar/CanCulture)

This original mural depicting the world of honeybees is a collaboration between a shopkeeper, Oliver Cuoto, and an artist, Slavka Kolesar. While illustrating motifs of Mother Earth and the life cycles of honeybees, Kolesar also reflects the ever-existing human-nature relationship. The large-scale street art acts as a constant reminder to passersby that the nature around them desires respect from humankind.

When people are exposed to significant, and often large, pieces of art in their daily lives, the meaning behind those pieces becomes more and more evident. Street art sparks conversations about the issues surrounding each work, whether that be current social justice issues or moments in history that have shaped the country. Ultimately, visible, accessible and meaningful art forms like these not only allow bystanders to appreciate them, but also reminds them that art is a means of fighting for what you believe in. 

Street art can be found in every corner of Toronto, and ArtWorxTO has collected over 1,500 pieces of street art as part of “Toronto’s Year of Public Art 2021-22”. To start exploring the beautiful creations made by Canadian artists, check out their Artworks Map, which lays out murals, architecture, sculptures and so much more for the public to enjoy.

The Walls That Tell Stories

By Madison Wong

De Araujo’s Queen Street West Mural Project tells the history behind Queen Street West. His mural consists of real musicians, magicians, artists and more who have performed and roamed the street. (Photo courtesy of christiano_artist via Instagram)

De Araujo’s Queen Street West Mural Project tells the history behind Queen Street West. His mural consists of real musicians, magicians, artists and more who have performed and roamed the street. (Photo courtesy of christiano_artist via Instagram)

Mural art illuminates buildings, alleys, and public spaces in Toronto. They are unique in their ability to engage communities by storytelling, portraying messages and honouring remarkable people through vibrant paintings.

Mural artist Christiano De Araujo and his company have completed several eye-catching murals around the city. His most recent one tells the history and culture of Queen Street West. It consists of real artists, musicians, buskers, and others who have performed on the street.

“I love being able to express myself and who I am,” De Araujo said. “I go about my day in a constant high because I’m doing what I love.”

De Araujo said the great part about mural artists having their work displayed in public is the attention they receive from bystanders. Those who take and post pictures, ask questions and compliment their work also promote it.

Adrian Hayles’ Reggae Lane Mural at Eglinton and Oakwood.. (via Adrian Hayles)

Adrian Hayles’ Reggae Lane Mural at Eglinton and Oakwood.. (via Adrian Hayles)

Adrian Hayles, mural artist and painter, said he enjoys the community engagement process where he gets to have open discussions with clients about what they want him to paint.

He says that it gives him insight for coming up with sketches, colour concepts and feedback from the community. “Those discussions force me out of my box and allow for extraordinary creative possibilities,” Hayles said.

Standing twenty feet tall and one-hundred feet wide, Reggae Lane is a mural at Eglinton and Oakwood avenues that Hayles takes immense pride in. It features Canadian Reggae legends from that community.

Hayles emphasizes his love for the production process and how close it was to the heart of the community. “The fact that we get to help shape communities by telling their stories and creating pieces that hopefully outlast us is very special,” said Hayles.

Nick Sweetman.jpg

Like Hayles and De Araujo, artist Nick Sweetman has also completed projects that engage the community. He has partnered with StreetART Toronto, youth groups and other painters to create vibrant paintings and community engaging mural projects.

For one particular work, he created a monumental-sized mural with STEPS Initiative, titled “In Our Hands.” Working with a group of emerging high-school artists, they were able to complete a series of four pieces on the outside of Valley Park Middle School in Don Mills.

“It was a really rewarding experience working with girls who had never done a ton of art, let alone paint a huge mural … we really bonded,” Sweetman said.

Sweetman is also proud of a wall that was dedicated to a friend who passed away in September 2017. The project was originally started by himself and another artist, but it soon evolved into a bigger community project, bringing more people involved.

“We took up an entrance of graffiti alley (in downtown Toronto) and made the mural super tall so he’s looking down,” said Sweetman.

“Mike Kennedy: Remembered in Paint” at Portland and Queen streets. Completed by Sweetman in collaboration with Wales, Tensoe2, Braes, Sight, Getso, Poser, CTR. (Photo by: Patrick Cummins)

“Mike Kennedy: Remembered in Paint” at Portland and Queen streets. Completed by Sweetman in collaboration with Wales, Tensoe2, Braes, Sight, Getso, Poser, CTR. (Photo by: Patrick Cummins)

In the early stages of his career, Sweetman was proactive in chasing jobs. Now, after gaining recognition and partnerships from past clients, he has the jobs coming to him.

Sweetman says he has always kept three main principles in his mind; First to be a nice person, second, to deliver on his word and third to work extremely hard on every project.

“Potentially everything you make is the first and possibly only thing that someone will see, so you might as well make it kickass,” Sweetman said.

This piece was edited by Jacklyn Gilmor