The vibrant streets of Toronto are set to come alive on October 4 as Nuit Blanche, the city’s renowned all-night celebration of contemporary art, returns to captivate art enthusiasts and the general public alike.

Nuit Blanche 2024, Aga Khan Museum. Photo credit: Akber Dewji
The free event runs from Saturday, October 4 at 7 p.m. until Sunday, October 5 at 7 a.m. across multiple locations in the city.
This year’s theme, Translating the City, curated by Artistic Director Laura Nanni, explores Toronto’s multilingual character, where more than 200 languages are spoken. The program includes over 85 works by local, national and international artists, spread across three major exhibitions in North York, Etobicoke and downtown.
New This Year:
Nuit Blanche 2025 extends across Toronto with three major exhibitions. In North York, Collective Composition, curated by Laura Nanni, emphasizes shared creativity and responsibility. Etobicoke hosts From here, there, everywhere, curated by Renata Azevedo Moreira, reflecting on migration and belonging. Downtown, Charlene K. Lau’s Poetic Justice explores Indigenous homelands, treaties, and Toronto’s layered histories of arrival and departure.
Notable Artworks:
- WISHING WELL: ALPHABET SOUP ( 12 Alexander Street): The installation transforms Buddies in Bad Times into an immersive installation and dance party, featuring DJs, performances, interactive word play, and alphabet soup, celebrating community, language, and queer connection.
- Undersight by Cassils ( 2 Colonel Samuel Smith): Undersight by Cassils projects words censored by US federal agencies into the night sky using Morse code and high-powered light. Visible for miles, the work confronts erasure of issues like climate change, equity, and vaccination.
- The Eye of Wisdom by Ellen Pau (100 Queen St W): A large-scale projection at Toronto City Hall, reimagines Ellen Pau’s The Shape of Light (2022). Using the Heart Sūtra, it explores light’s healing qualities, linking Toronto and Hong Kong through themes of guidance and belonging.
- A Place I Call Home (28 Bathurst Street ): Home, Sweet Home is an interactive installation addressing Toronto’s housing crisis. A glowing dreamhouse shifts as visitors approach—its light fading, projections breaking—symbolizing the fragility of stability and the growing inaccessibility of safe housing.
- Dissolving Boundaries (9 Eireann Quay): A 350-by-200-foot projection at Toronto’s Canada Malting Silos by OOOPStudio blends dance, sound, and imagery to explore the transformative power of water. Presented by the EU in Canada and OCAD University, it reflects climate, culture, and reciprocity.
- 100% [City] (5100 Yonge St.): Adapted from performances in over 40 cities, the installation blends theatre, data, and participation, turning statistics into lived stories while inviting Toronto audiences to reflect and respond.
- Circle of Sound: An Immersive Musical Journey ( 77 Wynford Drive): Commissioned by the Aga Khan Museum, reimagines the Qasida Al-Burda through a 360° dome, surround sound, and live performance. Featuring Fareed Ayaz, Abu Muhammad, and Toronto musicians, it fuses sacred, classical, and contemporary traditions.
How to Plan Your Trip:
When: Saturday, October 4 | 7:00 PM – Sunday, October 5, 2025 | 07:00 AM
Where:
Nuit Blanche at Major Locations
- 401 Richmond – Built For Art: Built For Art at 401 Richmond animates its façade, interior floors, and parking lot with 12 hours of exhibitions, installations, and performances by local and visiting artists
- Aga Khan Museum – Circle of Sound: An Immersive Musical Journey, Voices of the City
- Assembly Hall – Echoes of Identity
- The Bentway – A Lake Story, Declaration of the Understory, La Sombra que te cobija / the shadow that shelters you, Seeing Celsius
- CNE – Withrow Common Gallery – Systems of Expression: From Pixels to Bottle Caps
- Daniels Spectrum – A Place We Call Home
- Institut français du Canada – “Parade d’ouverture” (Opening parade) – Mind the map(ping)
- It’s Ok Community Arts – It’s Ok*, In Transit
- Japanese Canadian Cultural Centre – The Shape of Loss
- Koffler Arts – Intergalactic Planetary: Berlin-based American artist Tracey Snelling presents a multimedia installation of miniature buildings combining photos, video, and light.
- Mabelle Arts, 38 Mabelle Avenue – Signal
- Meridian Arts Centre – Nuit Blanche at the MAC! – Immerse yourself in an invigorating night at Meridian Arts Centre with live performances (7:00 pm – 1:00 am), a silent disco (7:00 pm – 1:00 am), a night arts market and Maryam Zaraimajin’s interactive installation, “The Loom of Lost Words”.
- Museum of Toronto – The 52: Stories of Women Who Transformed Toronto
- North York Arts – Northbound: Songs of Sovereignty
- Nuit Blanche East Danforth Hub – IN View: Danforth Translated Storefront Series, O’notsta’kéha (Shake the Bush), Opening of the Mouth
- Theatre Passe Muraille – Nuit Blanche Rest Stop
- Youngplace – Nuit Blanche at Youngplace
- Wildseed Centre for Art & Activism – The Meeting Point
- Wychwood Barns – Echoes and BAM! Nuit Blanche Arts Market: An immersive sound and video installation explores labor, legacy, and industrial identity. As part of the program, the BAM! Nuit Blanche Night Market runs 7–11 p.m., featuring over 30 participating artists.
Event Centres with washrooms, food vendors and drinking water and printed map:
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- Etobicoke – 11 Colonel Samuel Smith Park Dr.
- Downtown – 360 Dundas St. W.
- North York – 5100 Yonge St.
Event-goers can collect a printed map at event centers and
Getting Around:
In addition to the regular blue all-night network service, the TTC will operate an all-night subway service on all three lines during Nuit Blanche.
- Etobicoke: Extra service will be added from 1 to 8 a.m. on October 5 on 944 Kipling South Express buses.
- Downtown: The 505/305 Dundas Streetcar will be diverted both ways between Bathurst St and Church St from 5 a.m. on October 4 to 1 p.m. on October 5.
- North York: The 97 Yonge/320 Yonge Night Bus will be diverted both ways between Empress Avenue and Elmwood Avenue from 11:45 a.m. on October 4 to 9 a.m. on October 5.
TTC routes – 505/305 Dundas streetcars will divert both ways on Spadina Avenue, Queen Street West and McCaul Street from October 3, 7:15 p.m. to October 5, 01:00 p.m.
Road Closures:
Multiple road closures will be in effect during the event:
- In Etobicoke, Colonel Samuel Smith Park Dr. and roads surrounding Humber Polytechnic’s Lakeshore Campus
- In downtown Toronto, Dundas Street West from Spadina Avenue to Simcoe Street
- In North York, Yonge Street from Empress Avenue to Elmwood Avenue







