With so much to see and do, here is a short list of School of the Arts, Media, Performance & Design (AMPD) projects that will be sure to capture the imagination.
Dance student Sophie Dow is one of many voices in Will Kwan鈥檚 , a performance that plays with the force and fragility of the human voice and the capacity for words to establish bonds between people across time and space at the Art Gallery of Ontario (AGO) at 317 Dundas Street West in Toronto.

Will Kwan鈥檚 concept drawing for The Forest
Inspired by the low-tech ingenuity of the 鈥渉uman microphone,鈥 which is a technique used to amplify speech in public gatherings that has been popularized by activists to circumvent restrictions on the use of amplified public address devices, performers carry the messages of a speaker, voice to voice, through the gathered audience. Occupying and emanating from the centre of the AGO, the words and stories that flow through the 鈥渕icrophone鈥 will reflect on expanded conceptions of time and human evolution, while embodying a slowness that resists contemporary temporal frameworks.
Computational Arts Professor Joel Ong鈥檚 Aeolian Traces is an immersive installation that utilizes a hybridization of data harvesting, physical installation, algorithmic composition and spatial sound. He is one of six artists in The Gladstone Hotel鈥檚 聽in the hotel鈥檚 second floor studios public space at 1214 Queen Street West in Toronto.

Digital rendering for Joel Ong鈥檚 Aeolian Traces
The piece explores the notions of home and transience especially within today鈥檚 context of globalism, migration and cultural nomadism. Presented through a combination of a multi-channel sound diffusion system and an eight-channel DC motor fan setup, the piece creates wind currents in a gallery space triggered/controlled by human migration data. Visitors are invited to interact with the system by including personal travel histories through an interface that dynamically aggregates and alters the installation鈥檚 audio-visual contents. An ephemeral installation of sound and wind, the piece proposes human movement as an ambient and critically 鈥榥atural鈥 medium.
Two of Nuit Blanche鈥檚 four curators for the city-produced exhibitions are AMPD alumni from the Department of Visual Arts & Art History.

Barbara Fischer
Barbara Fischer (MA 鈥99), executive director/chief curator of the聽Justina M. Barnicke Gallery聽and the聽University of Toronto Art Centre聽as well as a professor in curatorial studies at the University of Toronto, curates located Queen鈥檚 Park and University of Toronto.
In her curatorial statement, Fisher writes: 聽鈥淓ven in the normal course of everyday life, streets are complex sites. When social justice movements succeed, the street becomes the primordial site to celebrate and remember鈥搒uch as in annual festivals like May Day and Pride. When there is no justice the street becomes the place where we rally and throw our voice together in a show of force. Festival and protest meet in the street. And art is associated with both, remembering by way of images, words, whispered histories, or monuments, the points where anger and power clash.鈥

Maria Hupfield. Photo by Jason Lujan
Maria Hupfield (MFA 鈥04), a member of Wasauksing First Nation in Ontario who is currently based in Brooklyn, New 91亚色, is an artist and co-owner of Native Art Department International, curates 聽on Bay Street between Albert Street and King Street, over to Queen Street and University Avenue
Hupfield states in her curatorial statement: 鈥淭he moon provides the gift of a cosmic perspective by connecting all of our relations both human and non, through the seasons, land and water, beyond the body without discrimination. In an act of solidarity building, five artists from across Canada indigenize the Toronto downtown financial district to make space for new possibilities and future imaginings. Informed by lived experience, diverse cultural knowledge and creative vision, the projects signal resilience while this sphere in the sky watches over us, luminous, glowing, timeless; everlasting life. An Anishinaabe interpretation and tribute to the late David Bowie鈥檚 song聽Life on Mars聽鈥 a critique of entertainment, 鈥榥eebahgeezis鈥 is one word in the Anishinaabe language for 鈥榤oon鈥.鈥
For more on Nuit Blanche, visit .
Courtesy of YFile.
