Public art can include sculptures, mosaics, banners, earthworks or street furniture.

We celebrate cultural history and creativity through our Public Art Program, Corporate Art Collection, and exhibitions at town facilities as outlined in the Visual Arts Policy. Roles and responsibilities for requesting and/or approving works are defined in the Public Art Procedure

We maintain a Corporate Art Collection with works on display in many public meeting rooms and facilities.

Our exhibition program showcases creative work of local artists, including work by individuals, art organizations, instructors, and students. Queen Elizabeth Park Community and Cultural Centre (QEPCCC) and Trafalgar Park Community Centre offer free corridor exhibition space.

The Exhibitions Committee reviews proposals for exhibitions twice a year. Application due dates are February 1 and September 1.

Exhibition submissions and applications

We welcome exhibition proposals from professional, local, emerging artists, instructors, students, and culture groups in the areas of fine art, craft, and digital arts for temporary public exhibitions.

Applications must include:

  • Exhibition Application Form (pdf)
  • Written proposal with details regarding the issues or ideas explored, as well as the type of medium and format of the works to be exhibited, in three paragraphs or less.
  • Five to ten images of your work on USB drive, CD and/or DVD. Images must be PC compatible in JPEG format, and a maximum of 1 MB file size (maximum resolution of 1024x768 pixels at 72dpi). PowerPoint presentations, PDFs or large TIFF files will not be accepted. Do not send original artwork.
  • A corresponding image list. Label all materials and list the works numerically, indicating each title, year of production, materials used and overall dimensions.
  • Provide a current resume listing your training/education, exhibitions, grants/awards and other professional art experience. Please keep qualifications to a three pages maximum.

Email your application to qepexhibitions@oakville.ca. You may also mail or deliver applications to:

Gallery Submissions

Culture Coordinator

Queen Elizabeth Park Community and Cultural Centre

Town of Oakville

2302 Bridge Road

Oakville, ON L6L 2G6

Corridor galleries

Exhibiting in the Corridor Galleries at QEPCCC and Trafalgar Park Community Centre is free. The preferred duration of group and solo shows in our open corridors is three to four months.

For an overview of the facility, open the QEPCCC Corridor Galleries map (pdf).

For details on each corridor, including measurements and wall texture, open the QEPCCC Corridor Galleries guide (pdf).

QEPCCC main gallery

The Main Gallery at QEPCCC presents professional artwork by local artists for a fee. Content ranges from historical to contemporary themes. Exhibitions may also include works by national and international artists and exhibitions proposed by curators or collectives.

Rental rates range from $275 to $375 weekly for a minimum of three weeks.

Open the Main Gallery floor plan (pdf).

For more information

Contact the Queen Elizabeth Community and Cultural Centre at 905-815-5979.

Are you a young artist between the ages of 11 and 19 looking for space to exhibit your work? The Youth Corridor Galleries at QEPCCC provides a platform for emerging youth artists and students in the community at large.

We are interested in showcasing original artwork and giving youth the opportunity to gain valuable experience in the exhibition process, to install and display their works, and even opportunities to sell their artwork.

Application forms and submission requirements

A complete application for an exhibition in the Youth Corridor will consist of:

  • Pages 3 and 4 of the Youth Exhibition Application Form (pdf) filled in.
  • A short description of your artwork. Discuss the content of the work, both conceptually (issues or ideas explored) and physically (type of medium and format). Please also outline why you would like to exhibit your work at QEPCCC.
  • One image of each work you are proposing to display. Images must be PC compatible in JPEG format, a maximum of 1 MB file size, a maximum resolution of 1024 x 768 pixels at 72dpi. Please do not submit PowerPoint presentations, PDFs, or large Tiff files. Do not send original artwork.
  • A corresponding image list. Label all materials and numerically list the work, with the title.

Email your application to qepexhibitions@oakville.ca. You may also mail or deliver applications to:

Gallery Submissions

Culture Coordinator

Queen Elizabeth Park Community and Cultural Centre

Town of Oakville

2302 Bridge Road

Oakville, ON L6L 2G6


After receiving notification of acceptance by email, applicants must return a signed Exhibitor’s Agreement and Guidelines. A general information meeting is scheduled with town staff thereafter.

Email qepexhibitions@oakville.ca for more information.

There are no calls for proposal at this time. Please check back later.

The Exhibitions Review Committee reviews proposals twice a year. The committee helps staff to adjudicate exhibition applications for corridor/gallery displays and exhibitions. The purpose of the committee is to:

  • Review all applications for exhibitions.
  • Offer constructive comment concerning the exhibition applications and to recommend applications to town staff for exhibition.

The purpose of the exhibition program for the Main Gallery at QEPCCC and Corridor Galleries is to:

  • Continually showcase creative work to the public that is important to the community.
  • Priority for exhibitions will be to exhibit professional artwork by local artists in the areas of fine art, craft, performance art and digital arts, which range in content from historical to contemporary themes. Exhibitions may also include works by national and international artists and exhibitions proposed by curators.
  • Provide a combination of gallery rentals and exhibitions organized by town staff including partnerships with internal organizations.

Nominations for positions on the committee shall be sought from the community at large with a preference for demonstrated knowledge of arts and culture in Oakville, reflective of our programs and members.

Contact the Cultural Supervisor at tonia.dirisio@oakville.ca for the Terms of Reference for the Exhibitions Review Committee and to submit nominations.

Explore local art and artists in Oakville

Explore community Connextions throughout Oakville

Our temporary public art project, Connextions, returns for 2022! New works of art are featured on prominent windows at recreation facilities in each ward to build community spirit and reflect on the idea of reconnecting.

Iroquois Ridge Older Adults Centre

Youth Gallery

Lucas Mindzak

Oakville Trafalgar Community Centre

Galleria art display

Ravenous Appetite and Boundless Energy, Barb Choit, 2020

(75 linear feet of 18mm hand drawn coloured lead free glass tubing filled with 75% argon and 25% neon)

An anamorphic neon sculpture depicting a chimney swift. The piece draws inspiration from a resident colony of swifts in the old Oakville Trafalgar High School located next to the community centre.

Watch a video conversation with Oakville Galleries Curator Frances Loeffler and Vancouver-based artist Barb Choit about the new public artwork commissioned by the Town of Oakville for display in the galleria of Oakville Trafalgar Community Centre.

Fitness Track

100 + 20/4 = 30, John Willard, 1987 (quilts)

A series of four quilts that have come to be known as the “John Willard ribbon quilts” was commissioned by Oakville Galleries to mark their twentieth anniversary. It incorporates traditional quilting elements inspired by pioneer quilt makers. At OTCC it is installed as the artist envisioned, on one full wall.

Renowned Canadian designer/quilt maker and Oakville Library staff for 21 years, John Willard began quilting in 1975, with a background in set and costume design, photography, display, and collecting. Inspired by traditional patterns and historic events, he is especially noted for deconstructing patterns and designing quilts with daring combinations of varying and disparate fabric prints. Willard taught the art of quilt making, specializing in contemporary design.

Queen Elizabeth Park Community and Cultural Centre

Something for Everyone, Emily May Rose, 2018 (vinyl wrap)

Artist Emily May Rose’s fun and bright design was the winning proposal for a mural wrap to cover the generator located at the Queen Elizabeth Community and Cultural Centre. Made with careful consideration of colour and composition to create works that are both beautiful and meaningful, the mural reflects the community centre by combining aspects of the local arts and culture, recreation, nature, and history of Oakville.

Emily May Rose is a Toronto-based artist and illustrator. She explores urban themes and her own personal experiences living in the city, generally placing animals like raccoons into the scenarios in a humorous way to make light of their situation.

For more information about the artist visit www.emilymayrose.com

River Oaks Community Centre

Canada 150 Mural Mosaic

The Canada 150 Mural Mosaic Project brings together 150 communities and thousands of participants by creating community murals that visually reflect the history and culture of Canada. Oakville’s unique mural is composed of 750 tiles, which were painted by residents during registered workshops in February 2016.

Led by artist Lewis Lavoie and his Mural Mosaic Team based out of Alberta, you can visit www.canada150mosaic.com to follow the mural’s progress across Canada.

Sixteen Mile Sports Complex

Louis Riel And The Church at Batoche, 1885

Since 2005, artist Liz Pead has been using recycled hockey gear to create large scale installation paintings which speak to the Canadian histories of textile, legend, sport and landscape painting through the Group of Seven. This work involved cutting up and affixing the bits of recycled hockey gear to create an outdoor scene.

Town Hall

North Atrium

Nothing at this time.

Trafalgar Park Community Centre

Octagon for Trafalgar Park, Laura Marotta, 2018 (stainless steel)

With its polished stainless steel surfaces and geometric lines, the large-scale structure is designed to be a social hub that invites exploration and reflection by visitors as they move around the piece and view it from its many angles.

An independent selection committee made up of visual arts professionals and community representatives selected Marotta’s sculpture through a Public Art Call process as outlined as part of the town’s Art Policy.

Laura Marotta is a Master of Fine Arts (MFA) graduate from the University of Guelph. Her artwork has been featured in curated exhibitions, festivals and public art commissions. For more information about the artist visit laura-marotta.com

Main Corridor

Peter Semple – Paintings

Multi-Purpose Room 2

Art at Trafalgar Park – Watercolours by our 50+ Artists

November 2022 to July 2023

Indoor Track Corridor

Oakville Camera Club


Questions?

Please contact Tonia Di Risio, Program Supervisor – Culture, at 905-845-6601, ext. 4614 or public.art@oakville.ca.

Main Gallery

Oakville Arts Council – Christmas Sale and Exhibitions

November 26 to December 16

Lobby

Red Dress Project – In Honour of Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women, Girls and 2S+

October 4 to November 25

Display Area

Oakville’s Flower: HMCS Oakville

Presented by Oakville Museum in partnership with Lieutenant (N) Sean E. Livingston CD.

November 5, 2022 to September 17, 2023

Corridor Galleries

  • ArtWorks Oakville – Member Show
  • Black History Display – Oakville's Black History
  • Brenda Reid – On Courthouse Steps
  • Oakville Camera Club – Capture Oakville 2022
  • Oakville Fibre Artists – A Walk in the Woods
  • Oakville’s Sports Hall of Fame Display
  • Southern Ontario Visual Artists – The Best of SOVA

Oakville Museum

Satellite Space

Read Me a Story: Fables and Fairy Tales

Through to 2023

Elders have taught children important life lessons through storytelling since time began. Through museum artifacts, we take a whimsical look at reoccurring themes found in fables and fairy tales from a long, long time ago.

Town Hall, 1225 Trafalgar Road

North Atrium

  • Alvin Tan – Blooming, 1974
  • Azhar Shemdin – Reflections in Blue, 1991
  • John Alford - The Sinking of U-94, 1983
  • Karl Woetz – Avancez
  • Michel Foucault – Le Bucheron, 1988
  • Neville Palmer – Standing Form (After Noguchi), 1974
  • Neville Palmer – Vertical, 1974

Selections from the Corporate Gifts collection from our Sister Cities: Huai’an, China; Neyagawa, Japan; and Dorval, Quebec.

Upper North Atrium

  • Fred Schopf – Portrait of Allan M. Masson, Mayor, 1966
  • Ian Lazarus – Maquette for “Falling Up”, 1983 (On loan from Oakville Galleries)
  • John McKinnon – Maquette for “The Perfect Fit”, 1988 (On loan from Oakville Galleries)
  • John McEwen – Maquette for “Still Life and Blind” (On loan from Oakville Galleries)
  • Josef Petriska – Untitled, 1982
  • Manfred – A Moment of Trust, 1988
  • Mark Lewis – The Smell of Books, 1993-1994 (On loan from Oakville Galleries)

South Atrium

Josef Petriska – New Life

Upper South Atrium

Tim Rainey – Mystical Presence (East Side)

Meeting Room A

Norman Choo – Warm Shower Ends a Day, 2003

Bronte Room

Sydna Bell-Windeyer – Old Bronte Harbour, 1988

Thomas Mathews – Fishing Scene, 1974

Oakville Room

David Newman – Untitled, 1962

Thomas Mathews – MacDougald’s Warehouse

Thomas Mathews – Sixteen Mile Creek, 1967

Sixteen Mile Sports Complex, 3070 Neyagawa Boulevard

Liz Pead – Louis Riel and the Church at Batouche, 1885, 2014-2015

Queen Elizabeth Park Community and Cultural Centre, 2302 Bridge Road

Thomas Chatfield - Maple Red

Oakville Public Library

Central Branch, 120 Navy Street

  • Almuth Lütkenhaus – Tibetan Girl, 1967 (3rd Floor)
  • John Willard – Toucans, Tigers and Zebras Oh My! (2nd Floor)
  • Ronald Arnott Baird – Gates (Various locations)
  • Thomas Chatfield – Montreal River (3rd Floor)
  • George McElroy – Easter in Early Oakville
  • George McElroy – Trotting Races on the Sixteen
  • George McElroy – Shipbuilding on the Sixteen
  • George McElroy – The “Radial” Crossing on the Sixteen

Woodside Branch, 1274 Rebecca Street

Gwyneth Young – Untitled, 1962

Oakville Galleries is a not-for-profit contemporary art museum with exhibit spaces in two locations:

  • Centennial Square at 120 Navy Street, and
  • Gairloch Gallery at 1305 Lakeshore Road East

The following works are located in the Gairloch Gardens sculpture park:

Wind Bower, 1990 by Catherine Widgery

Steel, laminated walnut and mahogany

Active as a sculptor for 30 years, American artist Catherine Widgery has developed numerous public artworks that integrate technology and the natural environment. Situated just steps away from the main entrance of Oakville Galleries at Gairloch Gardens, Widgery’s Wind Bower is an interactive, immersive work that captures the shifting sights and sounds of the garden. Consisting of an open structure of metal rods with a seating area and a canopy of softly tinkling wind chimes, the work is at once a product of industry and intellect, and a pleasant, shady nook for passers-by to sit in and become attuned to the shifting sensations of nature.


Giant Beaver Charm, 1999-2000 by Fastwürms

Chrome-plated steel, surgical stainless steel and bronze

The immersive art/life performative works and installations of the Canadian collective Fastwürms bring together conceptual art, popular aesthetics, do-it-yourself amateurism, and humour with various ‘sub-cultural’ sensibilities - queer, working-class, wiccan, occult, and gothic. The duo also has a long-standing affinity with and reverence for the natural world and animals, particularly cats (their own cats often feature in their work).

Wrapped around a distinctive willow tree standing at the edge of the Gairloch Gardens pond, Giant Beaver Charm is – as the title suggests – an oversized charm bracelet with a giant suspended beaver tooth, among other ornaments. Commissioned as part of the exhibition ‘Beaver Tales’ in 2000, it reworks and subverts Canada’s entrenched national icon, suggesting alternative symbolisms and systems of belief.


Falling Up, 1983 by Ian Lazarus

Buffed stainless steel

Since the early 1970s, Ian Lazarus has created sculptures for exhibitions and public environments in Malaysia, Ireland, Mexico, and across Canada. Glimpsed momentarily by motorists who drive past Gairloch Gardens along Lakeshore Road, Falling Up creates the paradoxical illusion of four solid, stainless steel pillars seemingly knocked upwards, as though rewinding backwards in time. This subtly surreal backwards motion catches viewers off guard, creating a temporary rupture in our understanding of gravity and the “natural” order of things. Falling Up is one of the first works that was commissioned for the Gairloch Gardens Sculpture Park.


Channel, 2004 by Liz Magor

Bronze

Over the past five decades, Liz Magor has developed a world-renowned practice that contemplates everyday items such as clothing, packaging, labels, furniture, twigs, branches, and tree stumps. Throughout our lives we are surrounded with ‘stuff’ both natural and fabricated, often forming complex relationships with them. Magor’s work considers what these relationships say about our personal desires and insecurities, as well as the wider pressures of societal, economic, and other outside forces that inform our attachments to things. Often her objects become subtly altered through processes of casting, remodelling, or resituating, so that the boundary between the real and the simulated is no longer clear.

Placed in a wooded area of Gairloch Gardens, Channel is a tree stump cast in bronze that seems at first glance to be entirely harmonious with its natural surroundings. A closer look, however, reveals two eye-like openings. This anthropomorphic twist catches us off guard, and reveals our profoundly unstable relationship to the things we think we know.


A Large Slow River, 1999 by Janet Cardiff

Audio Walk (18 Minutes)

Janet Cardiff is a Canadian artist who has been celebrated internationally for her work with sound; particularly her audio walks, which she has often made in collaboration with her husband and fellow artist George Bures Miller. A Large Slow River is an audio walk commissioned specifically to respond to Gairloch Gardens, made while the artists were in residence at the gallery. It was recorded on-site using omni-directional microphones that captured a soundscape of the gardens one might experience on any given day. The recording was then crafted into a uniquely moving and unsettling narrative audio work, which takes listeners on a walk around the gardens, drawing attention to the themes of water, time, memory, and displacement.


Still Life & Blind, 1988 by John McEwen

Aluminium and Steel

John McEwen is well known within Canada for his large-scale sculptures of animals, namely dogs, deer and wolves, which are often flame-cut from slabs of steel. The artist is interested in how these specific animals often spark a sense of mystery and magic in the human imagination, and can reveal the interconnections between what we often perceive separately as ‘nature’ or ‘culture’. In Still Life & Blind, the sparse outline of a deer is barely visible from a distance, seeming to stand at the lake’s edge. In its original installation, the piece also included a “blind” - a camouflaged place for humans to watch animals without being seen. Here, it acts as a prompt to consider the relationship between viewer and viewed.


1929-1984 Landscape, 1973 by Walter Redinger

Fibreglass

Based in Ontario for most of his life, Walter Redinger was well known for his elemental, pod-like fibreglass sculptures. Created in 1973 (a year after Redinger represented Canada in the Venice Biennale), 1929-1984 Landscape is the first work that was commissioned for the Gairloch Gardens Sculpture Park. The title of the work alludes to the 1929 stock market crash and George Orwell’s well-known dystopian work of fiction, 1984. In framing the decades between these years, Redinger marks out an era of instability in which visions of a dystopian future were coming to pass. Vaguely anthropomorphic, the four figures in this sculptural group suggest a community, albeit one in which individual identities have been eroded by the mechanical and societal developments of a fast-changing world.