Explore & Discover Rocky Dobey's Street Art Works

Explore & Discover Rocky Dobey's Street Art Works

Led by the power artist, Rocky Dobey, registered participants embark on a guided exploration, uncovering Dobey's public artworks uncovering

By Onsite Gallery, OCAD University

Date and time

Saturday, May 4 · 11am - 2pm EDT

Location

Onsite Gallery, OCAD University

199 Richmond St. West Toronto, ON M5V 0H4 Canada

About this event

  • 3 hours

Explore & Discover Rocky Dobey's Public Works

Saturday, May 04 from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m.


Led by exhibition power artist, Rocky Dobey, participants embark on a guided walk to discover and learn about many of Dobey's public artworks on the streets of Toronto. His works bring crucial focus to societal and civic concerns, including justice reform, globalization, neighborhood gentrification, Indigenous sovereignty, drug rehabilitation, and homelessness.

Participants will meet at Onsite Gallery, learn about his artworks in the power exhibition and walk up McCaul St., through Chinatown and into Kensington Market. Please arrive on time or you will miss this incredible opportunity.

Please connect with Onsite Gallery team at onsite@ocadu.ca for accommodation needs.


Onsite Gallery is generously supported by The Delaney Family


About Rocky Dobey


Rocky Dobey (he/him) has been installing street art in Toronto and other Canadian cities for five decades, beginning with xeroxed posters in the mid-1970s and numerous anonymous agitprop billboards, concrete sculptures, lacquered books, and political plaques in the ’80s and ’90s. He has been bolting etched copper memorial plaques to telephone poles throughout this time and making posters for Anti-Globalization, Reclaim the Streets, Prison Justice, Harm Reduction, and many more progressive political causes.

Over the past twenty years, Dobey has developed a more formal public practice of intaglio prints, copper sculptures, and more recently large etched works in copper, enhanced with porcelain paint, tar, and other materials. The new works address many of the same concerns as the early street art, but applied to a much larger scale, and use techniques derived from printmaking and sculptural traditions.