Toronto's waterfront is getting a free month-long winter art exhibit (PHOTOS)

Dec 5 2018, 2:16 am

Now in its third year, temporary winter art exhibit Ice Breakers is returning to Toronto’s waterfront.

Organized by Winter Stations and The Waterfront Business Improvement Area (WBIA), Ice Breakers will provide the city with five temporary wintertime art installations from January 19 to February 24.

This year, visitors will discover five new wintertime art installations located on Queens Quay from Harbourfront Centre to the Toronto Music Garden.

Four winning installations, which emerged from an international design competition, will be featured this year. Teams from Hamburg Germany, and Athens Greece, will be joined by two local groups, as well as a student installation contributed by Ryerson University, according to organizers.

Each of the designs responds to this year’s exhibition theme “Signal Transmission.”

“The theme is open to interpretation, and we were hoping to see work that’s both challenging and accessible,” said Roland Rom Colthoff, co-founder of Winter Stations. “Ice Breakers and its sister competition Winter Stations are reminders that public art can and should be fun, engaging and open to everyone.”

Justin Ridgeway, another Winter Stations co-founder said that Signal Transmission “may be approached as an exploration of data, digital and analog communication, including the various modes and codes involved.”

“Simply, Signal Transmission is about how humans and other species speak – to each other and to our self, internally,” he said.

The exhibition will run over five weeks, overlapping with the debut of the fifth anniversary of the Winter Stations competition in The Beaches on Family Day.

Here’s what you’ll be able to see this year:

‘Chroma Key Protest’

‘Chroma Key Protest’ by Andrew Edmundson of Solve Architects Inc. (Toronto, Canada)

‘Tweeta-Gate’

‘Tweeta-Gate’ Eleni Papadimitriou and Stefanos Ziras of Space Oddity Studios SOS (Athens, Greece)

‘Connector’

‘Connector’ by Alexandra Griess and Jorel Heid (Hamburg, Germany)

‘Strellar Spectra’

“Stellar Spectra” by Rob Shostak and Dionisios Vriniotis (Toronto, Canada)

‘Tripix’

winter

‘Tripix’ by Ryerson University (Toronto, Canada)

This winter, if you’re looking for an excuse to get out of your condo, let this be it. Free outdoor art in the city.

DH Toronto StaffDH Toronto Staff

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