With so many facilities-related projects happening throughout the province, ArtsBuild is pleased to highlight the accomplishments of arts organizations in Ontario. Making Spaces for Art is a series of case studies, each telling a story of a facility in Ontario; whether the story features a new build, a future project or an innovative renovation, this series is a look into the sustainable future of many arts organizations.
Meant to entertain and inform, Making Spaces for Art takes you inside the world of sustainable facilities in Ontario. If you know about a facility that would fit into our Case Studies, email Erin!
- Carousel Players (St. Catharines, ON)
“When life gives you lemons, make lemonade”
- The Judith & Norman Alix Art Gallery (Sarnia, ON)
“The saying goes, ‘It takes a village to raise a child,’ but it took a community to build the Judith & Norman Alix Art Gallery…”
- Button Factory Arts (Waterloo, ON)
“Construction is a bit like printmaking. You plan the plate, you get it all ready, you ink it, you go to put it in the press, and its always a happy accident on how it turns out, because its never the way you’ve planned.” – Heather Franklin, Executive Director
- North York Arts (Toronto, ON)
“Blue skies smiling at me, nothin’ but blue skies do I see” – Irving Berlin
- Toronto Centre for the Arts (Toronto, ON)
“Bigger doesn’t necessarily mean better. For the Toronto Centre for the Arts, ‘big’ was their 1,800 seat Main Stage theatre…”
- Coleman, Lemieux & Compagnie (Toronto, ON)
“Sometimes, it is best to just dive in. A cool lake on a hot summer day or a delicious plate of pasta, both deserve the dive in treatment. Renovations… not so much.”
- Mackenzie Hall Cultural Centre (Windsor, ON)
“Even with a wealth of information just finger flicks and nanoseconds away, there is so much more to be said about Mackenzie Hall.”
- The Grand Theatre (Kingston, ON)
“Some things are timeless, ageless, and truly grand. And while theatre as an art form is a perfect example of this, theatres themselves, tend to have an expiration date–especially ones that were built well over a century ago. Such was the case of The Grand Theatre in Kingston.”
- Thunder Bay Art Gallery (Thunder Bay, ON)
“After a few decades in school, the Thunder Bay Art Gallery is finally graduating. The gallery has been located in a hidden away corner on the campus of Confederation College for the past thirty-seven years. Those years are in the process of coming to an end.”
- Waterloo Region Museum (Kitchener, ON)
“It is the ambition of the Society to acquire at an early date, a substantial fireproof county building in which to preserve permanently all such records and general objects of historic interest.” – W.H. Breithaupt, November, 1912
- McMichael Canadian Art Collection (Kleinburg, ON)
“If we can achieve this with a log and field stone building, on a ridge, in the middle of one hundred acres, anyone can.” – Victoria Dickenson, CEO
- Dufferin County Museum & Archives (Mulmur, ON)
“We are well placed in the middle of nowhere.” – Darrell Keenie, General Manager
- Arraymusic (Toronto, ON)
“Artists need centrally located, affordable space.” – Rick Sacks, Artistic Director
- ROCS / Place des arts (Sudbury, ON)
“Talent without discipline is like an octopus on roller skates. There’s plenty of movement, but you never know if it’s going to forward, backwards, or sideways.” – H Jackson Brown Jr
- The Registry Theatre (Kitchener, ON)
“Let me not to the marriage of true minds / Admit impediments.” – Shakespeare
- Dundas Valley School of Art (Dundas, ON)
“In this world there are only two tragedies. One is not getting what you want and the other is getting it.” – Oscar Wilde
- Art Gallery of Mississauga (Mississauga, ON)
“I call it the best kept secret of Mississauga.” – Stuart Keeler, Director-Curator
- Theatre Passe Muraille (Mississauga, ON)
“As a green muppet once said, ‘it is not easy being green.’ In this day and age however, being green has taken on a whole new meaning and a whole new importance.”