Explore Montréal’s stunning collection of public art

Arts Culture, arts and heritage
  • L'Histoire de la musique à Montréal by Frédéric Back
  • L’art magnétique (hommage à Jean Paul Riopelle) - mural by Marc Séguin, MU, 2022
Isa Tousignant

Isa Tousignant

Montréal is an urban playground, an open-air dance floor and a gourmet destination, but it’s also — perhaps less famously — a living, breathing art gallery.  The city is peppered with stunning works of public art of every imaginable type and medium, all of which you can explore at your own pace, for free.

Self-guide your own art hop

Your key to the best, most complete, clear and informative adventure through Montréal’s rich public art scene is the Art Public Montréal website.

Created by Tourisme Montréal in collaboration with Ville de MontréalArt Public Montréal was founded to put Montréal on the international public art map. By pooling resources and expertise in research, collecting and promoting art, the website shares information and fuels excitement about the city’s extensive public art collection. 

Uniting nearly 1,000 artworks by close to 500 Québec and international artists, the website offers an informative page on each art piece, including details about the artist and a street map of where you can find it on the island of Montréal. By perusing the map — as well as listening to their podcasts and checking out their YouTube channel — it’s easy as pie to design your own route based on your interests or artists you’re particularly drawn to, but Art Public Montréal also offers a bunch of suggested self-guided tour routes to navigate the city’s cultural riches like a pro.

Choose the perfect pre-designed tour

You’ll find many suggested self-guided tours to choose from, some that are over an hour, others that are mini-tours of around 30 minutes that make for a great way to explore Montréal’s diverse neighbourhoods. There’s a fabulous tour of Mount Royal, aka “the mountain,” as well as thematic tours like a night-time tour of Quartier des spectacles. Here are some of our other favourites:

The On the Walls of the Plateau, from Laurier to Mont-Royal30-minute mini-tour is the perfect entry into the city’s famed mural art scene, visible on walls throughout this cool neighbourhood at any time of the year. Here are some cafés and restaurants to check out while you’re there.

You’ll get to admire many more murals, plus architecture-integrated works and public art that perfectly illustrates the vibrant atmosphere of the rapidly transforming neighbourhood in the Griffintown tour, estimated at just over an hour and a half long on foot.

Berlin Wall

During colder months (or sweltering hot summer days), the 1-hour Underground City tour will help you appreciate the artistic side of this 32-km long underground pedestrian network beneath Montréal’s downtown core, a shopping mecca you can enjoy for many hours.

Mural "La pomme du savoir", Mateo (Mathieu Bories), 2017

The 30-minute Little Italy mini-tour will teach you about the history of a neighbourhood where the first Italian immigrants settled in the 19th century, centred around the stunning Jean-Talon Market (an absolute must pit-stop for foodies).  

Discover downtown through the lens of the Where the Business World and Art Come Together 1¼-hour tour, a foray into the downtown business district that includes the famous fountain sculpture by Jean-Paul Riopelle, a piece of the Berlin wall, and an 18th century sculpture of the Greek goddess Amphitrite.

The 45-minute MIL Montréal Project and Its Surroundings tour will help you learn about a relatively newly minted neighbourhood that spans from Outremont to Parc Ex, a dynamic and innovative area punctuated with public spaces where student life, research and the arts come together.

For a different perspective on the city, head to the Lachine neighbourhood, where 350+ years of history mingle with the gorgeous Canal and some fantastic art on Art Public Montréal’s 50-minute self-guided tour. The tour includes enigmatic inscriptions in stone, a beaver hide design etched in steel, and faces of explorers on the sails of a ship.

You’ll find many more (and so much inspiration) at Art Public Montréal. Happy touring!

Isa Tousignant

Isa Tousignant

Isa Tousignant is an editor and storyteller with a curiosity that runs deeper than most. She has chatted life philosophies with celebrity chefs, gemologists, arena rockers and furries. (All were transformative.) Her favourite things include discovering new flavours and celebrating the creativity that defines her hometown, Montréal.

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