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Address:
317
Dundas Street West
Toronto
Phone:
(416) 979-6648
Hours:
Mon:
Closed
Tue: 11
am-6 pm
Wed: 11 am-8:30pm
Thur: 11
am-6 pm
Fri: 11
am-6 pm
Sat: 10 am-5:30pm
Sun: 10 am-5:30 pm
Admission:
$6 CAN
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Overview Virtual
Tour
Official
Site
Next year, it will be 100
years since businessman Sir Edmund Walker and artist
George Reid decided that Toronto needed a museum of art.
Torontonians are grateful they did. Although the Art Gallery
of Ontario—called the AGO by locals—is not one of the
best-known landmarks in the world, it is one of the best
known, and loved, in Canada. It’s also the eighth largest
art museum in North America.
The AGO’s collection has
more than 24,000 works representing 1,000 years of European,
Canadian, Inuit, modern and contemporary art, both inside
the building and out. Outside, at the northeast corner of
the gallery, there’s a giant Henry Moore sculpture that is
often crawling with children playing hide-and-seek. Inside,
you will find more of Moore’s creations, 20th
century Canadian works by the Group of Seven, and
world-renowned travelling shows, su ch as the recent
Michelangelo to Picasso collection from the Albertina in
Vienna. You can purchase reproductions of most of these
works, and others, in the gallery’s massive, meandering
store.
The gallery opens at 10 am
weekends and 11 on weekdays, but stays closed on Mondays.
The easiest way to get to
there is to take city transit. Catch the southbound Dundas
streetcar from in front of the Eaton Centre and tell the
driver to let you off at the gallery. It’s smack in the
middle of Toronto’s vibrant China Town, so save time to
have a wander around. The address is 317 Dundas Street West.
The cost is "pay what you can," but they suggest
$6 per person, and you’ll have to shell out more for
special exhibitions.
If you have a passion for
Canadian art, then you’ll find it’s worth the 30 km
drive north to see the McMichael Canadian Art Collection. It
has a large display of works by the Group of Seven, as well
as First Nations and Inuit artists. Admission is $7, which
also gives you access to the gallery’s forested land (100
acres) where you can discover for yourself what inspired the
Canadian artist’s in the first place.
If you’re driving, take
Hwy. 401, then Hwy. 400 north to Major Mackenzie Drive. Turn
left (west) on Major Mackenzie to Islington Avenue. Turn
right (north) on Islington to the village of Kleinburg. The
address is 10365 Islington Avenue.
If you don’t have a car: at
Islington subway station transfer to TTC #37 bus northbound
on Islington to Steeles Avenue. At Steeles & Islington
transfer to the Vaughan #3 bus, continuing north on
Islington. Vaughan #3 does not stop at the gallery entrance.
Get off at Nashville Road and Islington Avenue and walk
south on Islington for 15 minutes. The gallery is on the
east side of the road. To return to Toronto, take the #3 bus
south on Islington to Steeles Avenue and double back.
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