Attention, Toronto artists. Local landmarks are looking to exhibit your work - Action News
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Toronto

Attention, Toronto artists. Local landmarks are looking to exhibit your work

The Bentway and Ontario Place are both calling for submissions from artists this month to showcase their work over the coming year.

The Bentway and Ontario Place are both looking for artists to showcase over the coming year

Stylized flames and glowing lights along columns are shown alongside the skating trail which is located underneath the Gardiner Expressway.
Toronto-based multidisciplinary artist Shellie Zhang's Beacons was chosen to exhibit at the Bentway skating trail for the 2022-23 season. The Bentway is seeking artists' submissions for next year's exhibit. (Shellie Zhang)

Local artists have at least two opportunities to showcase their work at high-profile tourist venues this year.

The Bentway and Ontario Place are both looking for proposals this month for upcoming exhibitions.

Anna Gallagher-Ross, senior manager of programming at the Bentway, told CBC Toronto the skating attraction is looking for local artwork thatembraces the winter season.

"We're looking for artists who have a unique take on winter and who are ready, really ready, to collaborateand to think through what it means to produce an artwork in the cold," she said.

The Bentway is seeking submissions as part of its Transform the Trail program. In its second year, the program offers artists from all over Canadathe opportunity to showcase their work alongside the unique skating trail located under a stretch of the Gardiner Expressway. The artworkwill be displayedfrom December 2023 to February 2024. The submission deadline is Jan. 31.

A light sculpture is show featuring a series of colourful hands with long fingernails and an eyeball motif.
Ontario Place's Lumire (previously known at the Winter Light Exhibition) is set to return in March. Artists should submit proposals for this year's exhibition by Jan. 16. (Ontario Place)

Ontario Place is solicitingproposals from Ontario artists for Lumire: The Art of Light (formerly known as the Winter Light Exhibition) for this year. The annual event is set to transform Trillium Park every night between March 10 and May 7. This year's theme is "renewal" and seeks to celebrate the change of seasons from winter to spring.

The chosen artist may receive up to $12,500 for their work and the submission deadline is Jan.16.

Offering a space to showcase local art is one of the added benefits of running a popular attraction like the Bentway, said Gallagher-Ross.

"Each year at our skate trail, we welcome over 30,000 people from across the GTA," she said. "We like to think that we convert those skaters to art lovers because they're so able to encounter really unique and fantastic, original commissions from artists."

For its current season, the Bentway is showcasing multidisciplinary artist Shellie Zhang's Beacons, a set of glowing gradient beams scattered throughout the skating trail.

Stylized purple flames and lights are shown at the bottom of a column that supports the Gardiner Expressway, next to the Bentway skating trail.
Zhang's Beacons features a set of glowing gradient beams scattered throughout the Bentway skating trail, located beneath a stretch of the Gardiner Expressway. (Samuel Engelking/The Bentway)

The exhibit was created to meet the theme of "first winters" with new immigrants to Canada in mind. Zhangwas born in Beijingbut now calls Toronto home.

Beacons is meant to celebrate the Bentway as a free space where people can gather, shesaid.

"Free public spaces like the Bentwaywere a huge moment for me growing up when I first came to Canada," Zhang said. "Spaces like libraries, community spaces, religious spaces, these were places where not only you got to meet people in your community but meet people and establish relationships outside of what is sort of familiar."

She believes artists canenhance these spaces.

"We kind of have the unique position where we get to make rules a little obsolete and where we get to make a little more magic happen in places where experiences can be quite isolating among the urban concrete we all live in," Zhang said.

The Bentway's programming has also been developed to complement this year's exhibit with activities like free skating lessons for newcomers to Canada.

For next year's exhibit, The Bentway is encouraging artists to think about how they can enhance the unique space and the experience of skaters. A public information session will be held Jan. 19 at 5:30 p.m.

Ontario Place bills Lumire as a "free light exhibition [that] allows visitors to explore the park and experience art developed by Ontario artists."

Artists are asked to submit a proposal that exhibits a strong connection to the "renewal" theme. It must alsohavean interactive component and a creative use of light. Proposals shouldinclude mockups and a detailed budget.

More details about how to submit can be found on Ontario Place's website.