Nick Sweetman is one of Toronto's most prominent graffiti artists.
Last February I was walking down Lansdowne Avenue in Toronto with my friend Michael Bungay Stanier, who was our guest back in Chapter 48, and as we strolled under a giant bridge I saw a giant ... well, it looked like a photo! But it wasn't a photo. It was a massive spray-painted image of a Hooded Merganser, and at the very bottom corner was a signature that said "Nick Sweetman."
Looks like a photo, right? Look at that eye! That bill! But I discovered there's this Toronto mural artist named Nick Sweetman and turns out I've seen the guy's stuff all over the place. He paints pollinators, birds, insects, and animals of all kinds...
He painted a whale shark I've ridden by on my bike for years without knowing it was him! Squint and you'll see the 'Sweetman' underneath its cavernous mouth:
So I decided to reach out to Nick Sweetman and ask him about doing a unique partnership with me and 3 Books. He was game! We found a 750 square foot brutalist bare concrete wall behind a subway station in Toronto begging to be beautified. And now 11 months later I am very proud to present...
After I spent six months getting approvals from the Toronto Transit Commission (shoutout to Cameron Penman, David Nagler, Kerry-Ann Campbell, and Councillor Dianne Saxxe!), Nick started painting the wall behind Dupont Station on September 17th, 2024 (my birthday!) and finished it up on November 1st.
What resulted is honestly the most beautiful piece of public art I have ever seen. I know I'm birdy biased but Nick's beauty, his eye, his senses—they just know no bounds. He doesn't use stencils! He's not tracing anything! The guy is literally just looking at a dirty, bare, curved 750-square-foot wall and, NO BIGGIE painting 16 HYPERREALISTIC LOCAL BIRDS ON IT!
Over the six weeks of painting I pulled out my recorder many times, Nick's friend and fellow graffiti artist Blaze Wiradharma (@blazeworks) pulled up with his video gear, and then genius editor Scott Baker (@adjacentp) rolled in to edit our first-ever 3 Books audio-video documentary experience.
Listen! Watch! Be amazed by the wonder of Nick Sweetman! We explore questions like: Why did Nick leave the wine drinking art gallery world for dirty street corners? What do people who have owe to people who don't? How do we see the crustaceans in our parking lot? And ... do we still have a shared reality?
We talk about mural painting, graffiti, street art, what it means to live in a world where humans overtake everything and, of course, Nick's 3 most formative books. We even get a live splice of Leslie teasing out his third book in real-time which is pretty special!
I highly recommend you WATCH this chapter if you can as we put so much heart and soul into making Nick's masterpiece come to breathtaking visual life.
But, of course, as we flip the page to Chapter 144, you can always just listen in on Apple or Spotify, too.
We will always remain platform-agnostic and there are buttons for all are below!
Chapter 144: Nick Sweetman on breaking boundaries with brilliant birds
View full transcript here
CONNECT with Nick Sweetman
Nick’s 3 Books
First book (34:14)
Second book (52:44)
Third book (1:07:09)
WORDCLOUD OF THE CHAPTER
Quotes
"Art is a bridge to what's possible." — Nick Sweetman | 3 Books Podcast
"The whole gallery world felt a bit disconnected from regular people." — Nick Sweetman | 3 Books Podcast
"I think capitalism is a huge problem." — Nick Sweetman | 3 Books Podcast
"Just because we're in a city doesn't mean we're not in the environment." — Nick Sweetman | 3 Books Podcast
"The people who have have a duty to the people who do not have." — Nick Sweetman | 3 Books Podcast
"People should vote for people doing the least shitty thing." — Nick Sweetman | 3 Books Podcast
"Our current system of government doesn’t seem to produce good leaders. Good people don’t seem to succeed in the same way as the corrupt." — Nick Sweetman | 3 Books Podcast
"I want to hope that the damage we’re doing is not permanent." — Nick Sweetman | 3 Books Podcast
"In 200 years every city on earth would be gone without a trace. That is exciting to me." — Nick Sweetman | 3 Books Podcast
"Humans have never lived within our limits." — Nick Sweetman | 3 Books Podcast
"Did you know there’s a crustacean walking around your parking lot?" — Nick Sweetman | 3 Books Podcast
Show Notes
‘A Short History of Progress’ by Ronald Wright