In October, 2024, we installed 43 artworks at the Dorothy Ley Hospice in Etobicoke. The installation combined a range of paintings, and included a photographic work by Canadian photographer Sherman Hines rendered on metal. (Learn more here about the special process for those images.)
(Left to right) Tim Faught of Posterjack, Sarah Hillyer of the Dorothy Ley Hospice and Caroline Murphy of ArtWorks for Cancer (AWFC) admire a vibrant image of Banff, Alberta by photographer Sherman Hines, installed in the reception area of the hospice.
Alan Loch and Bert Amato of ArtWorks for Cancer think this luminous and calming untitled painting by Ethel Harris is perfect for the Dorothy Ley Hospice's reflection room.
Caroline Murphy and Bert Amato of AWFC take in multiple stylized floral images brightening a hallway at the Dorothy Ley Hospice.
Caroline Murphy and Dr Michael Weinberg of AWFC absorb the painting Italian River Bank by Susan Wilde, perfectly situated in a hallway at the Dorothy Ley Hospice.
The painting Italian River View by Susan Wilde awaits admirers as they will be walking the hallways of the Dorothy Ley Hospice.
Dr Michael Weinberg and Bert Amato of AWFC remark how the painting Spring Blossoms by Eric Tobin makes the end of a hallway at the Dorothy Ley Hospice positively glow.
Artworks beautifully set the tone in a quiet room at the Dorothy Ley Hospice.
Sunlight in the Snow 1993 by Ingrid Wogrinetz (left) and two untitled pieces by George Chen (right) warm a corner of the Dorothy Ley Hospice's reflection room.
Dr Michael Weinberg and Alan Loch of AWFC present Autumn Canoe and Lakeside Hike, paintings by Bev Rodin, at the end of a hallway at Dorothy Ley Hospice.
Three untitled works by George Chen (left) join two other artworks adorning a nurses' station at Dorothy Ley Hospice.
Artworks Neon Pink Flowers (left) and Dancing Flamingos (right) by Denise Morrison, along with Mauve Flowers by Christopher Estridge (center) create a colourful flow down a corridor at Dorothy Ley Hospice.
Where hallways and a nurses' station converge, artworks too converge brilliantly, including the paintings Autumn Canoe and Lakeside Hike by Bev Rodin.
Autumn inspires much of the gorgeous imagery and colour palettes in the works selected for the Dorothy Ley Hospice.
Part of the artistry in the installations also involves balancing and aligning works well, with each other and within the settings in which they are placed.
Alan Loch of AWFC, with installation tools at hand, proudly presents a painting well aligned on a corridor wall at Dorothy Ley Hospice.
Another member of the AWFC team cheerfully inspects installation tools, to ensure all artworks are well and securely placed.
Here is a walkthrough of part of the ArtWorks for Cancer installation at the Dorothy Ley Hospice.