Toronto

Toronto's new Winter Stations have been announced. Here's a sneak peek

Toronto's Winter Stations art exhibits have been revealed and will pop up in the city starting Family Day weekend.

'Bright and joyful' art installations to open Family Day weekend in Toronto

An art exhibit rendering of a cloud and rain.
Nimbus was created by artist David Stein and is a play on 2016 installation Floating Ropes. (David Stein)

Toronto's Winter Stations art exhibits have been revealed and will pop up in the city starting Family Day weekend.

Nine public art installations are planned in total this season, with six stations along east end beaches alongside installations along Queen Street East at Woodbine Park, Kew Gardens and Ivan Forest Gardens.

In a news release, organizers say four winning designs were selected from hundreds of worldwide submissions and will be showcased alongside three student designs from Toronto Metropolitan University, the Waterloo Department of Architecture and Guelph University, as well as two designs from the event's archive.

"Over the past 10 years of Winter Stations, we've created incredible works of art that have moved people in incredibly meaningful ways during a season that can feel gloomy otherwise," said RAW Design Architect Dakota Wares-Tani in a statement.

"We hope that the impact of bringing bright and joyful stations to Toronto's east end continues to resonate."

An art exhibit of a raccoon on a beach.
Conrad was created by Novak Djogo and Daniel Joshua Vanderhorst. (Jonathan Sabeniano)

This year's winning installations are set to run until the end of March, with plans for more exhibits later in the year.

Organizers say the theme for this year's show is "resonance," with designers challenged to "breathe new life into the echoes of the past" by reinventing installations from Winter Stations history.

A rendering of two people walking towards a spaceship.
Organizers say the exhibit We Caught a UFO! references the 'rumours and whispers of the many UFO sightings across Lake Ontario.' (Xavier Madden and Katja Banovic)