filter_list Showing 6 results for "Toronto" close Clear
dashboard All 47 museum exhibitions 19trending_up market 9article local 6article news 4person people 3article policy 2article culture 2candle obituary 2
date_range Range Today This Week This Month All
Subscribe

How a midlife crisis led artist Julia Dault to embrace the hyper-local

Acclaimed Canadian abstract artist Julia Dault is shifting her focus from the international blue-chip art circuit toward community-based engagement. Following a period of personal reflection, Dault established Hot Pizza, a community art studio in Toronto dedicated to the motto "art for everyone," while simultaneously debuting her latest solo exhibition, "Primary Information," at Bradley Ertaskiran in Montreal.

DC Getaway: Exploring Toronto’s art scene, from galleries to murals

Toronto's visual arts landscape is highlighted as a premier destination for travelers, featuring a mix of massive institutional collections and specialized local galleries. Key attractions include the Royal Ontario Museum (ROM), known for its vast natural history and ancient civilization galleries, and the Art Gallery of Ontario (AGO), which houses over 120,000 works ranging from Renaissance masterpieces to contemporary installations like Yayoi Kusama’s Infinity Mirrored Room.

These Toronto laundromats are putting a new spin on the art gallery scene

Emerging artists in Toronto are turning to unconventional venues like Dirty Laundry and She Said Gallery to bypass the city's high-barrier commercial art scene. These functioning laundromats operate as professional gallery spaces with exhibition schedules and opening receptions, allowing artists to host solo shows for minimal fees and zero commission on sales.

Laundromats putting new spin on art gallery scene

Two laundromats in Toronto, Dirty Laundry and She Said Gallery, have been operating as dual-purpose art galleries for the past six years. They offer emerging artists affordable, accessible exhibition space with minimal fees and no sales commission, featuring monthly and weekly shows that are booked years in advance.

Laundromats putting new spin on art gallery scene

Two laundromats in Toronto, Dirty Laundry and She Said Gallery, have been operating as dual-purpose art galleries for the past six years. They offer affordable, accessible exhibition opportunities for emerging artists, with low fees and no commission on sales, in stark contrast to the city's more exclusive and expensive traditional gallery scene.

Local artists can showcase their work in Toronto show

A juried art exhibition titled 'The Hub of The Great Lakes' will take place in May 2026 at Toronto's Twist Gallery, presented by the ART HUB At Spring. The month-long show will feature approximately 75 wall-hung artworks by artists from Sault Ste. Marie and the Algoma region of Northern Ontario, with all pieces available for purchase. A formal Call for Artists will be released in two weeks, inviting original works that reflect the spirit and creativity of the region.