Toronto subway public art

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Toronto subway public art

This article catalogues public art on the Toronto subway. It lists public art installed at Toronto subway stations by subway line and station. More information may be found in the individual station articles.

More information Station, Line ...
Station Line Title Artist Description Photo
College Hockey Knights in Canada Charles Pachter Two-part installation depicting the Montreal Canadiens and Toronto Maple Leafs squaring off from opposite sides of the subway tracks, with the Canadiens on the northbound side and the Leafs on the southbound side. The station served the Maple Leaf Gardens when it was the main hockey arena in Toronto. Thumb
Downsview Park Spin Panya Clark Espinal Abstract circle-like figure viewable from a certain angle Thumb
Dundas Cross Section William McElcheran Terracotta tile murals, located by the northwest entrance and along the under-platform crosswalk, depicting a vibrant urban scene of pets, shoppers, businessmen and other commuters Thumb
Dupont Spadina Summer Under All Seasons James Sutherland Two flower mosaics using thousands of pieces of glass built directly into the station's tiling reaching upward into a mezzanine Thumb
Eglinton West Summertime Streetcar Gerald Zeldin Two enamel murals depicting PCC streetcars facing each other Thumb
Finch Crossroads Kseniya Tsoy Mural painted outside the east side entrance between Finch and Bishop avenues Photo not available
Rhythm of Exotic Plants Krystyna Sadowska Sculpture displayed on the lower concourse level, outside the fare-paid area Thumb
Finch West (untitled) Bruce McLean Sculptured concrete supporting columns Thumb
Glencairn Joy Rita Letendre Station-length skylight consisting of panes of art colours inserted between two glass panels Thumb
Highway 407 Sky Ellipse David Pearl Multi-coloured glass panels for the subway platform skylights and bus terminal façade Thumb
Lawrence West Spacing... Aerial Highways Claude Breeze Enamel tile mosaic depicting abstract wavy lines Thumb
Museum Decorative columns resembling the Egyptian god Osiris, First Nations house posts, Doric columns found in the Parthenon, China's Forbidden City columns, and Toltec warriors Thumb
North York Centre Top of the North Hill—1850s Nicholas and Susana Graven Mural made of over 5000 pieces of glazed ceramic tile, on the northbound platform Thumb
Traffic at Yonge and Sheppard—1860s Nicholas and Susana Graven Mural made of over 5000 pieces of glazed ceramic tile, on the southbound platform Thumb
Pioneer Village LightSpell Tim Edler and Jan Edler 40 ceiling-suspended chandeliers to display 8 interactively-entered characters; artwork installed but not yet activated due to the TTC's concerns about offensive language, which is prohibited according to the TTC's 2009 revision of its By-law #1. Thumb
Queen Our Nell John Boyle Painted murals at the platform level depicting Nellie McClung (a women's rights activist), William Lyon Mackenzie (first mayor of Toronto), and the former Simpson's and Eaton's department stores Thumb
Queen's Park Ana Vilel A ceramic tile mural, displayed in the mezzanine, donated by the Government of Portugal and inspired by Portuguese exploration of the New World Thumb
St. Clair West Tempo Gordon Rayner Enamel mural depicting abstract stripes Thumb
The Commuters Rhonda Weppler and Trevor Mahovsky Many large bronze snails clinging to the walls of a staircase leading down from the streetcar/bus platform; inspired by a children's book by Pierre Berton. The shells of the snails consist of various items lost by commuters. Thumb
Sheppard West Boney Bus John McKinnon Abstract bus shape made from giant aluminum beams and basalt "wheels"; located in front of the station. Thumb
Sliding Pi Arlene Stamp Large-scale mosaic along the curved wall of the stairway between the bus platform and the mezzanine Thumb
Spadina Barren Ground Caribou Joyce Wieland Large quilt featuring caribou in a tundra landscape, located at the concourse level below the 85 Spadina Road entrance[1] Thumb
K'san Village House Posts Fedelia O'Brien, Murphy Green, Chuck Heit Large cedar wood carvings depicting an owl, a wolf and a hawk displayed on the ground level of the 6 Spadina Road entrance Thumb
Morning Glory Louis de Niverville Surreal enamel mural at the 85 Spadina Road entrance[2] Thumb
Union Zones of Immersion Stuart Reid 166 large glass panels along the length of the platform depicting sketches of commuters Thumb
Vaughan Metropolitan Centre Atmospheric Lens Paul Raff Studio Coloured mirrored panels and windows located on the domed ceiling Thumb
Wilson Canyons Ted Bieler Wall sculpture located at the mezzanine level Thumb
Wilson Outside the Lines Christine Leu and Alan Webb Seven painted steel sculptures, inspired by air shows hosted at Downsview Airport Thumb
York Mills Breaking Ground Laurie Swim Tapestry commemorating the 50th anniversary of a 1960 accident that killed five young Italian immigrant workers constructing a tunnel for a water main in Hoggs Hollow Thumb
York University Piston Effect Jason Bruges Studio Glass panels that provide a black and white lighting display when a train passes Thumb
Coxwell Forwards and Backwards Jennifer Davis and Jon Sasaki Three-dimensional sculpted curtain, cast in polished reflective aluminum Thumb
Dufferin Something Happens Here Eduardo Aquino and Karen Shanski Colourful mosaics with metallic tiles featuring local logos, icons and historical references Thumb
Kennedy A Sense of Place Frank Perna Mural painted on the service road entrance; half of the mural was destroyed when the entrance was demolished in 2018 Thumb
Ossington Ossington Particles Scott Eunson 800 stick-on coloured acrylic tiles arranged in clusters near stairways on the platform and mezzanine levels; evocative of Garrison Creek. Thumb
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Derivations
Allan Harding MacKay Rectangular decorative panels on the platform and concourse levels depicting features of the station and of the neighbourhood Thumb
Runnymede Anonymous Somebody Elicser Elliott Depictions of people in Bloor West Village Thumb
Sherbourne The Whole is Greater than the Sum of its Parts Rebecca Bayer Wall panels consisting of colourful mosaic ceramic tiles Thumb
Woodbine Directions Intersections Connections Marmin Borins Brightly coloured coated metal panels arranged in geometric patterns Thumb
Bayview From Here Right Now Panya Clark Espinal Shadows of common objects such as apples and ladders silk screened to the linoleum and walls framed by patches of coloured tile giving it a surreal look called trompe-l'œil[3][4] Thumb
Bessarion Passing Sylvie Bélanger Frieze of hands, feet, and backs of heads representing the users of the station with the images of heads at the platform level, feet at the concourse level, and hands along the stairs between the Sheppard Avenue north side entrance and the concourse Thumb
Don Mills Before / after: 1997 / 2002 Stephen Cruise Tilework on the concourse walls representing geologic strata with depictions of local flora and fauna Thumb
Bronze inlays in the terrazzo floor of the concourse and platform levels depicting fossils of fish, turtles, and leaves found on the site Thumb
Leslie Ampersand Micah Lexier 17,000 ceramic tiles each with the hand-written words "Sheppard" and "Leslie" separated by a printed ampersand Thumb
Sheppard–Yonge Immersion Land Stacey Spiegel Mosaic composed of 1.5 million one-inch tiles developed from a digitized and pixelated blend of 150 photographs depicting lush landscapes, country homes, and rural scenes stretching along Yonge Street Thumb
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