
Home galleries are hiding in plain sight across Canada
It was the summer of 2021, and Toronto was still in pandemic mode, weathering a lockdown that would become the longest of its kind. Erin Storus was living in the Annex that year, renting an apartment in a shared house on Markham Street. She was unemployed and unsure about the future, and yet, Storus felt lucky. She had something most downtown residents pined for: her own private patch of green space. "We had this big beautiful backyard that was a total mess," says Storus, and amid the weeds and ankle-high grass, she saw potential.
For a single day that July, Storus transformed her urban oasis into an outdoor exhibition called Garden Variety. She had zero past experience as a curator. She didn't even know the artists. But when she pitched her idea, everyone said yes.
When exhibition day came, Storus strung gelatin lampshades by Shannon Garden-Smith in the trees, witchy lanterns which glowed amber as the afternoon sun faded to dusk. (Last year, Garden-Smith's monumental floor installation for Nuit Blanche was among the standout works of the night.) On the weather-beaten fence, she hung prints by Alison Postma, an award-winning artist and furniture designer whose work had previously shown as part of the Contact Photography Festival. And SK Maston, a local artist who would later exhibit at the Bonavista Biennale, literally dug her contributions into the lawn, creating small ponds around the yard. These glistening portals revealed ghostly paintings of enormous moths.
"The idea was kind of a community barbecue, but instead of, you know, hot dogs and hamburgers and corn, it's art," says Storus. By her estimate, around 200 people saw the show that day — turning up because they got a tip from a pal, or maybe saw the scene from their window next door. "It ended up being the best thing I've ever done," says Storus of the show, and by the end of that summer, she'd hosted two more.
Since Garden Variety's inaugural year, Storus has both finished a masters degree and launched a career as a professional curator, doing exhibitions for the Museum of Contemporary Art Toronto and the Plumb among other venues, and this July, she'll revive her project in a new location near Dundas and Gladstone. (She's since moved out of the place on Markham Street.) Like past editions, each Garden Variety show will be a one-day event, funded by Storus and reliant on volunteers to bring it to life. The first exhibition of the season is scheduled for July 5, and will feature site-specific work by the artists Leeay Aikawa, Danan Lake, Joy Wong, Derek Liddington, Emma Welch and Jaime McCuaig.
The experience of discovering contemporary art in somebody's backyard can conjure a feeling of magic and novelty, but there's a long tradition of upstart artists and curators transforming their homes into ad-hoc exhibition space. Projects of this scrappy nature are often fleeting, evolving into something bigger or more formal. Others eventually run their course when the passion and/or savings run down. Still, these venues are everywhere in Canada, and some believe their number will only increase as the cost of living continues to climb.
When your apartment doubles as an art gallery
Saving on rent isn't the only reason the model persists, though according to artist and curator Marie Ségolène Brault, founder of Espace Maurice, it's definitely a major factor. "Montreal is no longer as affordable as it was even, like, 10 years ago. So if young people want to show their work, they're going to have to get creative," she says.
That's exactly what Brault did in 2021, when she opened Espace Maurice, a gallery she runs out of her loft apartment in the city's Gay Village. "I knew right away when I moved in that I wanted to do this here," says Brault. The layout of the space is in an L-shape, she explains, with room for exhibitions near the entrance. "If you turn the corner, then it's my home." Since launching, Brault estimates she's organized more than 20 exhibitions for her gallery, paying most of the operating costs herself. (She affords it by working in the film industry as a props buyer.)
Four years into the endeavour, Brault has become increasingly interested in curating for venues that are not her living room, but she hasn't tired of hosting an open house every weekend. There's a big dining table in the centre of her apartment, she says, and sometimes she'll find herself sitting there with a stranger, sharing a quiet moment. "It's very, I don't know — very poetic," she says. Experiences like that have been a bonus, it seems. At the beginning, Brault was motivated by more practical concerns. Like Storus at Garden Variety, she was at the beginning of her career as a curator. And with job opportunities looking scarce, she created her own, inspired by the apartment galleries she'd visited while studying in Chicago.
A gallery where the next-door neighbours are regulars
Danica Pinteric, a Toronto-based writer and curator, had a similarly formative experience. While studying in Montreal, visits to Vie d'ange, a project space in an old autobody shop, ignited her imagination. (The space, which was founded by curators Eli Kerr and Daphné Boxer, closed in 2019.) "Just kind of going for it and not waiting for permission really inspired me," says Pinteric, who ran her own garage gallery in Montreal (Calaboose) before moving home to Toronto.
She launched Joys gallery there in 2022. The venue is a renovated garage (the former home of Tap Art Space), and during the warm-weather months, Joys hosts exhibitions, readings and other events — partly supported by grants and funds raised through an annual artist calendar. "If we don't get the grant, we'll still do [the show]. It's just a matter of scale," she says. And though Pinteric doesn't live on the property — she just rents the garage — Joys has cultivated a homey feel that has a lot to do with its location. Because the gallery opens onto the alley, many of Joys's regulars are the families next door. "I'm watching kids grow up, and they come every year to the shows and they're a year older," she says. "It's kind of special to have an organic, kind of neighbourly relationship with some of the visitors."
A live/work space like no other
Toronto artists Lisa Neighbour and Carlo Cesta are cultivating their own block-party vibe at Beauty Supply, a 170-square-foot space on the second floor of the couple's Geary Avenue house. Neighbour and Cesta are established artists who've both exhibited widely, and they describe themselves as "pioneers on Geary." It's been roughly 30 years since they moved into their home, which long pre-dates the bars and restaurants that have popularized the strip.
"Carlo and I both have been involved in kind of ad hoc galleries since we were in art school," says Neighbour, but it wasn't until 2018 when they rechristened Cesto's studio upstairs as Beauty Supply, opening to the public with a show by their friend Lee Goreas. Programming is sporadic, with new exhibitions held once or twice a year; a Kathleen Hearn exhibition is on the books for later this spring, they say, and visitor info will be available through the gallery's Instagram.
According to Neighbour, the original vision was an excuse to get the community together — to share some snacks and have a party — while creating more exhibition opportunities for locals. "For us, it doesn't really cost that much extra money to have turned [the upstairs] into a gallery space," says Neighbour. The only downside, they say half-jokingly, is the pressure to clean up before visitors appear. "Plus, it's a little bit selfish, but we get to actually experience the artworks in the gallery every single day of the exhibition," says Neighbour. "It's wonderful."
Creating the art world they want in condos, barns and backyards
As someone who shares the same rare privilege, Bonny Poon knows the feeling. Poon is an art dealer and the founder of Conditions, a commercial gallery she runs from a ground-floor condo near OCAD University in downtown Toronto. The unit currently boasts two rooms for exhibiting art: a high-ceilinged kitchen plus a bathroom/project space that's been cheekily rebranded as the "Potty." The gallery's entrance, which is a sliding patio door, immediately reveals the site's residential secret identity. Poon lives in the condo with her family in addition to running a second business out of the space, a fitness studio called Flow — though the room's white-cube austerity may suggest otherwise.
Before opening her Toronto gallery, which held its first on-site exhibition in the spring of 2024, Poon operated Conditions from a different domicile: a one-room apartment in Paris, which Artsy dubbed one of the " most important young galleries in the world" in 2019. Out in France, the work-from-home arrangement suited Poon just fine, she says, so she replicated the model upon returning to Canada. Living at the gallery spares Poon from an arduous commute and saves on rent to boot. Freedom, it seems, is the arrangement's greatest reward — and she especially enjoys having the ability to offer genuine hospitality. "I can easily make guests dinner or a cup of tea in the kitchen," says Poon. "There's definitely a sense of having more agency or feeling like this is on my terms. My conditions."
The same "make it happen" philosophy applies at DIY spaces like Orchid Contemporary in Hamilton, a garage gallery founded in 2022 by artist and curator Adrien Crossman. "If you can run a space, then it's one of the ways to create the art world you want without asking permission," says Crossman, whose programming at Orchid prioritizes underrepresented practices and work by artists from marginalized communities, including queer, trans and racialized folks.
Katie Lyle and Stefan Harhay, co-founders of Project Underwing in Toronto, have been throwing art exhibitions in their backyard since 2017. Inspired by the can-do spirit of artist-run spaces, they give participants free range to create what they wish. And at 13 Cedars, a brand new project space in Rowley, N.B., artist Jay Isaac has refurbished a small barn on his home property in a bid to grow the local contemporary-art scene. "Coming from Toronto, one of the few things I miss is accessibility to contemporary art, so I decided the best thing to do is start a space," he tells CBC Arts over email.
A gallery where you'll find more chickens than people
Meanwhile, in rural northeastern Ontario, Alexander Rondeau is also creating the change he wants to see. In 2021, while studying remotely, Rondeau began mounting exhibitions from a plywood shed on his mom and dad's farm in Kerns Township, Ont. The structure itself was built for pheasants and chickens, and it remains a working coop. "I don't want to be corny, but I didn't want to, like, gentrify it," jokes Rondeau, and to his surprise, most artists have been comfortable — excited, even — to share space with livestock at Rondeau's Between Pheasants Contemporary. There's only been one bird-related snafu over the course of 20 exhibitions. A series of unframed prints proved too tempting for the pheasants, Rondeau explains. "They made little nests."
Between Pheasants Contemporary champions under-programmed artists, and many of the shows give priority to 2SLGBTQ+ perspectives. It's brought more contemporary art and dialogue to the region, says Rondeau, and he runs Between Pheasants in tandem with another project, Covey Bouquet, which offers support to curators interested in producing their own exhibitions in whatever "sites of possibility" they can find. Covey Bouquet's first exhibition, which was curated by Rondeau, was held in a horse barn and featured "rural gothic" works by Ontario artists Colin W Davis (North Bay) and Dunstan Topp (Sudbury).
There are, however, some obvious drawbacks to mounting an exhibition in the countryside. Foot traffic, for one thing, is non-existent. If 20 folks come out to a show, that's a "huge success," says Rondeau. But on top of the in-person relationships he's built with engaged local art-lovers, he's found an even larger audience online.
For gallerists and patrons alike, there's no place like home
It's the same for La Shed, a gallery in Gabarus, N.S., a Cape Breton fishing village with fewer than 100 residents. In late 2019, Montreal gallerists André Laroche and Louis Joncas bought a seaside home in the community — auspicious timing, to be sure. When the pandemic struck, they fled Montreal. "We just thought, 'Let's go for a couple weeks to Cape Breton,'" says Laroche. "That two weeks ended up being six months." And as for La Shed — which is, in form, a spruced up tool shed with an ocean view — it's hosted exhibitions every year since then. This summer, it will have a group show devoted to emerging artists from Halifax, curated by Bijan Ramezani.
In 2023, Laroche and Joncas's eponymous gallery moved out of the Belgo Building and into their Montreal residence. That venture (The Apartment) has since closed, and Laroche, 65, plans to turn more of his attention to La Shed in Gabarus. Laroche, a self-described "people person," loved the experience of running exhibitions from his home in the city. "Sometimes people would stay maybe half an hour, sometimes an hour. Just the environment creates a different dynamic." He greets significantly fewer guests at La Shed, given its remote location. Still, the attraction manages to draw the occasional "adventurous visitor," he says.
It might feel odd to poke around a stranger's tool shed — or condo or chicken coop. But seeking contemporary art in unusual locations has its rewards. "It might seem really kind of coveted or secret or, you know, insider-only," says Pinteric. "But it's actually the opposite, in my experience."
Storus feels the same. "Institutions, they are very intimidating," she says. "I think there's very few people I know who are outside of the arts that feel comfortable entering and accessing those spaces, and so I wanted to completely eliminate that barrier, you know, which is why I kind of prefaced [Garden Variety] as a community barbecue, but art." And she has high hopes for Garden Variety's comeback season. "My hope is that as many people as possible, from as many communities as possible, hear about this and come out."
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Globe and Mail
01-05-2025
- Globe and Mail
‘Proud Canadian photographer' Clara Gutsche reflects on life behind the lens
The award-winning photographer, whose work appears at the Contact Photography Festival, spoke to the Globe about her work Clara Gutsche's photography of Quebec nuns, here Les Sœurs Clarisses in Valleyfield playing tennis in 1991, began as a project to record convent architecture. Clara Gutsche/Supplied to view this content.


CBC
20-04-2025
- CBC
Home galleries are hiding in plain sight across Canada
It was the summer of 2021, and Toronto was still in pandemic mode, weathering a lockdown that would become the longest of its kind. Erin Storus was living in the Annex that year, renting an apartment in a shared house on Markham Street. She was unemployed and unsure about the future, and yet, Storus felt lucky. She had something most downtown residents pined for: her own private patch of green space. "We had this big beautiful backyard that was a total mess," says Storus, and amid the weeds and ankle-high grass, she saw potential. For a single day that July, Storus transformed her urban oasis into an outdoor exhibition called Garden Variety. She had zero past experience as a curator. She didn't even know the artists. But when she pitched her idea, everyone said yes. When exhibition day came, Storus strung gelatin lampshades by Shannon Garden-Smith in the trees, witchy lanterns which glowed amber as the afternoon sun faded to dusk. (Last year, Garden-Smith's monumental floor installation for Nuit Blanche was among the standout works of the night.) On the weather-beaten fence, she hung prints by Alison Postma, an award-winning artist and furniture designer whose work had previously shown as part of the Contact Photography Festival. And SK Maston, a local artist who would later exhibit at the Bonavista Biennale, literally dug her contributions into the lawn, creating small ponds around the yard. These glistening portals revealed ghostly paintings of enormous moths. "The idea was kind of a community barbecue, but instead of, you know, hot dogs and hamburgers and corn, it's art," says Storus. By her estimate, around 200 people saw the show that day — turning up because they got a tip from a pal, or maybe saw the scene from their window next door. "It ended up being the best thing I've ever done," says Storus of the show, and by the end of that summer, she'd hosted two more. Since Garden Variety's inaugural year, Storus has both finished a masters degree and launched a career as a professional curator, doing exhibitions for the Museum of Contemporary Art Toronto and the Plumb among other venues, and this July, she'll revive her project in a new location near Dundas and Gladstone. (She's since moved out of the place on Markham Street.) Like past editions, each Garden Variety show will be a one-day event, funded by Storus and reliant on volunteers to bring it to life. The first exhibition of the season is scheduled for July 5, and will feature site-specific work by the artists Leeay Aikawa, Danan Lake, Joy Wong, Derek Liddington, Emma Welch and Jaime McCuaig. The experience of discovering contemporary art in somebody's backyard can conjure a feeling of magic and novelty, but there's a long tradition of upstart artists and curators transforming their homes into ad-hoc exhibition space. Projects of this scrappy nature are often fleeting, evolving into something bigger or more formal. Others eventually run their course when the passion and/or savings run down. Still, these venues are everywhere in Canada, and some believe their number will only increase as the cost of living continues to climb. When your apartment doubles as an art gallery Saving on rent isn't the only reason the model persists, though according to artist and curator Marie Ségolène Brault, founder of Espace Maurice, it's definitely a major factor. "Montreal is no longer as affordable as it was even, like, 10 years ago. So if young people want to show their work, they're going to have to get creative," she says. That's exactly what Brault did in 2021, when she opened Espace Maurice, a gallery she runs out of her loft apartment in the city's Gay Village. "I knew right away when I moved in that I wanted to do this here," says Brault. The layout of the space is in an L-shape, she explains, with room for exhibitions near the entrance. "If you turn the corner, then it's my home." Since launching, Brault estimates she's organized more than 20 exhibitions for her gallery, paying most of the operating costs herself. (She affords it by working in the film industry as a props buyer.) Four years into the endeavour, Brault has become increasingly interested in curating for venues that are not her living room, but she hasn't tired of hosting an open house every weekend. There's a big dining table in the centre of her apartment, she says, and sometimes she'll find herself sitting there with a stranger, sharing a quiet moment. "It's very, I don't know — very poetic," she says. Experiences like that have been a bonus, it seems. At the beginning, Brault was motivated by more practical concerns. Like Storus at Garden Variety, she was at the beginning of her career as a curator. And with job opportunities looking scarce, she created her own, inspired by the apartment galleries she'd visited while studying in Chicago. A gallery where the next-door neighbours are regulars Danica Pinteric, a Toronto-based writer and curator, had a similarly formative experience. While studying in Montreal, visits to Vie d'ange, a project space in an old autobody shop, ignited her imagination. (The space, which was founded by curators Eli Kerr and Daphné Boxer, closed in 2019.) "Just kind of going for it and not waiting for permission really inspired me," says Pinteric, who ran her own garage gallery in Montreal (Calaboose) before moving home to Toronto. She launched Joys gallery there in 2022. The venue is a renovated garage (the former home of Tap Art Space), and during the warm-weather months, Joys hosts exhibitions, readings and other events — partly supported by grants and funds raised through an annual artist calendar. "If we don't get the grant, we'll still do [the show]. It's just a matter of scale," she says. And though Pinteric doesn't live on the property — she just rents the garage — Joys has cultivated a homey feel that has a lot to do with its location. Because the gallery opens onto the alley, many of Joys's regulars are the families next door. "I'm watching kids grow up, and they come every year to the shows and they're a year older," she says. "It's kind of special to have an organic, kind of neighbourly relationship with some of the visitors." A live/work space like no other Toronto artists Lisa Neighbour and Carlo Cesta are cultivating their own block-party vibe at Beauty Supply, a 170-square-foot space on the second floor of the couple's Geary Avenue house. Neighbour and Cesta are established artists who've both exhibited widely, and they describe themselves as "pioneers on Geary." It's been roughly 30 years since they moved into their home, which long pre-dates the bars and restaurants that have popularized the strip. "Carlo and I both have been involved in kind of ad hoc galleries since we were in art school," says Neighbour, but it wasn't until 2018 when they rechristened Cesto's studio upstairs as Beauty Supply, opening to the public with a show by their friend Lee Goreas. Programming is sporadic, with new exhibitions held once or twice a year; a Kathleen Hearn exhibition is on the books for later this spring, they say, and visitor info will be available through the gallery's Instagram. According to Neighbour, the original vision was an excuse to get the community together — to share some snacks and have a party — while creating more exhibition opportunities for locals. "For us, it doesn't really cost that much extra money to have turned [the upstairs] into a gallery space," says Neighbour. The only downside, they say half-jokingly, is the pressure to clean up before visitors appear. "Plus, it's a little bit selfish, but we get to actually experience the artworks in the gallery every single day of the exhibition," says Neighbour. "It's wonderful." Creating the art world they want in condos, barns and backyards As someone who shares the same rare privilege, Bonny Poon knows the feeling. Poon is an art dealer and the founder of Conditions, a commercial gallery she runs from a ground-floor condo near OCAD University in downtown Toronto. The unit currently boasts two rooms for exhibiting art: a high-ceilinged kitchen plus a bathroom/project space that's been cheekily rebranded as the "Potty." The gallery's entrance, which is a sliding patio door, immediately reveals the site's residential secret identity. Poon lives in the condo with her family in addition to running a second business out of the space, a fitness studio called Flow — though the room's white-cube austerity may suggest otherwise. Before opening her Toronto gallery, which held its first on-site exhibition in the spring of 2024, Poon operated Conditions from a different domicile: a one-room apartment in Paris, which Artsy dubbed one of the " most important young galleries in the world" in 2019. Out in France, the work-from-home arrangement suited Poon just fine, she says, so she replicated the model upon returning to Canada. Living at the gallery spares Poon from an arduous commute and saves on rent to boot. Freedom, it seems, is the arrangement's greatest reward — and she especially enjoys having the ability to offer genuine hospitality. "I can easily make guests dinner or a cup of tea in the kitchen," says Poon. "There's definitely a sense of having more agency or feeling like this is on my terms. My conditions." The same "make it happen" philosophy applies at DIY spaces like Orchid Contemporary in Hamilton, a garage gallery founded in 2022 by artist and curator Adrien Crossman. "If you can run a space, then it's one of the ways to create the art world you want without asking permission," says Crossman, whose programming at Orchid prioritizes underrepresented practices and work by artists from marginalized communities, including queer, trans and racialized folks. Katie Lyle and Stefan Harhay, co-founders of Project Underwing in Toronto, have been throwing art exhibitions in their backyard since 2017. Inspired by the can-do spirit of artist-run spaces, they give participants free range to create what they wish. And at 13 Cedars, a brand new project space in Rowley, N.B., artist Jay Isaac has refurbished a small barn on his home property in a bid to grow the local contemporary-art scene. "Coming from Toronto, one of the few things I miss is accessibility to contemporary art, so I decided the best thing to do is start a space," he tells CBC Arts over email. A gallery where you'll find more chickens than people Meanwhile, in rural northeastern Ontario, Alexander Rondeau is also creating the change he wants to see. In 2021, while studying remotely, Rondeau began mounting exhibitions from a plywood shed on his mom and dad's farm in Kerns Township, Ont. The structure itself was built for pheasants and chickens, and it remains a working coop. "I don't want to be corny, but I didn't want to, like, gentrify it," jokes Rondeau, and to his surprise, most artists have been comfortable — excited, even — to share space with livestock at Rondeau's Between Pheasants Contemporary. There's only been one bird-related snafu over the course of 20 exhibitions. A series of unframed prints proved too tempting for the pheasants, Rondeau explains. "They made little nests." Between Pheasants Contemporary champions under-programmed artists, and many of the shows give priority to 2SLGBTQ+ perspectives. It's brought more contemporary art and dialogue to the region, says Rondeau, and he runs Between Pheasants in tandem with another project, Covey Bouquet, which offers support to curators interested in producing their own exhibitions in whatever "sites of possibility" they can find. Covey Bouquet's first exhibition, which was curated by Rondeau, was held in a horse barn and featured "rural gothic" works by Ontario artists Colin W Davis (North Bay) and Dunstan Topp (Sudbury). There are, however, some obvious drawbacks to mounting an exhibition in the countryside. Foot traffic, for one thing, is non-existent. If 20 folks come out to a show, that's a "huge success," says Rondeau. But on top of the in-person relationships he's built with engaged local art-lovers, he's found an even larger audience online. For gallerists and patrons alike, there's no place like home It's the same for La Shed, a gallery in Gabarus, N.S., a Cape Breton fishing village with fewer than 100 residents. In late 2019, Montreal gallerists André Laroche and Louis Joncas bought a seaside home in the community — auspicious timing, to be sure. When the pandemic struck, they fled Montreal. "We just thought, 'Let's go for a couple weeks to Cape Breton,'" says Laroche. "That two weeks ended up being six months." And as for La Shed — which is, in form, a spruced up tool shed with an ocean view — it's hosted exhibitions every year since then. This summer, it will have a group show devoted to emerging artists from Halifax, curated by Bijan Ramezani. In 2023, Laroche and Joncas's eponymous gallery moved out of the Belgo Building and into their Montreal residence. That venture (The Apartment) has since closed, and Laroche, 65, plans to turn more of his attention to La Shed in Gabarus. Laroche, a self-described "people person," loved the experience of running exhibitions from his home in the city. "Sometimes people would stay maybe half an hour, sometimes an hour. Just the environment creates a different dynamic." He greets significantly fewer guests at La Shed, given its remote location. Still, the attraction manages to draw the occasional "adventurous visitor," he says. It might feel odd to poke around a stranger's tool shed — or condo or chicken coop. But seeking contemporary art in unusual locations has its rewards. "It might seem really kind of coveted or secret or, you know, insider-only," says Pinteric. "But it's actually the opposite, in my experience." Storus feels the same. "Institutions, they are very intimidating," she says. "I think there's very few people I know who are outside of the arts that feel comfortable entering and accessing those spaces, and so I wanted to completely eliminate that barrier, you know, which is why I kind of prefaced [Garden Variety] as a community barbecue, but art." And she has high hopes for Garden Variety's comeback season. "My hope is that as many people as possible, from as many communities as possible, hear about this and come out."


CBC
02-10-2024
- CBC
Nuit Blanche 2024 to focus on overcoming distance from one another
Social Sharing In its 18th year running, this year's Nuit Blanche will focus on the theme Bridging Distance, with more than 80 installations in public spaces across the city, showcasing the way we experience and overcome our distance from one another. The all-night celebration will take place Oct. 5 to 6, starting at 7 p.m. all the way until sunrise at 7 a.m. Nathan Phillips Square, often the place that attracts large crowds at the festival, will have no exhibits this year. Instead, the majority of the installations will be placed along the waterfront and south Etobicoke. It's a change that Jeanne Holmes, the manager of Toronto's cultural events programming, says will hopefully encourage spectators to see that part of the city in an entirely new fashion. "Because it happens at night, because it happens in the public realm and it kind of transforms public space, it feels almost like it's a dream. Like, did it really happen? Was this thing so magically transformed yesterday and then today it's just a sidewalk?" Holmes says the best time to be at the festival is 4 a.m., when things slow down. But in case you miss out on some of this year's exhibits, a dozen of them will stay up until Oct. 13. CBC is a media partner of this year's festival. Here are some of the installations you can expect to illuminate Toronto's streets this weekend: LUMI A thread of soft inflated balls lit with different colours will loop along the Simcoe Wavedeck on Queens Quay. Unlike typical artwork labelled "do not touch," people are encouraged to sit on the brightly lit yoga balls and move them around to form new shapes. 65 SQM, the women-led collective behind the installation, describes it as an "urban intervention" meant to spur gathering and inspire spectators to interact with people they've never met before. "If you move one piece, it ultimately affects the other piece. So even if you're strangers and one person is sitting and someone wants to move [the balls around], you have to interact with the stranger next to you," said Ye Sul E. Cho, one of the artists in the collective. Curated by Syrus Marcus Ware, LUMI will be part of the Waterfront Central Exhibition named And the Spaces Between Us Smiled, inspired by the poem Stay on the Battlefield by Sonia Sanchez. "I hope that when people are walking away from [the exhibition], they're propelled to want to connect with people in their life. They're propelled to want to talk to the person going home with them on the TTC about what's happening in their community," said Ware. The Bright Web Those making their way to Yonge-Dundas Square will be greeted by a nine-metre spider web, with textile sculptures and shadows that make up the shape of a large spider. In a lively metaphor, the spider dances to sounds of ringtones and chat notification as it presents the world wide web as a simultaneous source of connection and distraction. Roxanne Ignatius, the textile artist behind the project, says it's meant to tease our animal instincts. "I want to make people look at their phones in a different way and playfully reinterpret that sense of being so tied to the sound of a notification," she says. Black in Time At Regent Park, you'll see the product of Donna Marie Paris and David Ofori Zapparoli's trip across the country, during which the collaborators gathered stories and portraits of Black Canadians, including an Alberta farmer and a former Olympian. The stories will stretch over a large map placed at Daniels Spectrum centre, where spectators will be able hear each person's story through headphones or read them through a transcript. The two say that throughout the process, they got to learn about Black communities with Canadian roots they've never known of. "It's just mind boggling to me the amount of history that this country has that we don't know anything about," said Paris, a 7th-generation African Canadian. "History is much more nuanced than what you read about in the history books," added Zapparoli. Those coming to the installation will also get a chance to record the stories of how they ended up in Canada. Dim Sum without Distance As part of a cross-border collaboration, renowned artist Hung Keung selected Toronto performer Lauren Runions to fly to Hong Kong, where she learned how to make dim sum, a dish that means "touch the heart" in Chinese. Runions later came up with an interpretive dance inspired by the process. Five large-scale LED monitors will be spread throughout the heart-shaped Love Park by the waterfront, showing videos of her choreography. "I hope people feel connected to how they consume food, who they eat it and share it with," said Runions. Plan your trip For those driving, the following road closures will be in place Saturday: Queens Quay W. (eastbound lanes) from Bathurst Street to Lower Spadina Avenue. Queens Quay E. (eastbound lanes) from Yonge Street to Lower Sherbourne Street. Dockside Drive from west of Knapp Lane west to Queens Quay E.(Richardson Street). Colonel Samuel Smith Park Drive loop, between Colonel Sam Smith Park Road and Colonel Samuel Smith Park Drive. All roadways are expected to be open by 12 p.m. Sunday. The TTC will also be diverting several routes in the area.