A procession of over one hundred canoes moves in unison across Toronto’s eastern Waterfront, each carrying colour field paintings made with pigments sourced from the lake/shoreline and activated by the wind. A Lake Story writes Lake Ontario’s colour story across the sky and water, amplifying the lake’s own voices of vibrancy, ecosystem, and community.
A Lake Story by Melissa McGill presented by The Bentway
September 27 & 28, 2025
Procession at 11am & 4pm, Toronto Waterfront
A Lake Story, a new commission by artist Melissa McGill, takes the form of a large-scale canoe procession that writes Lake Ontario’s story through color, across the sky and water. A Lake Story features 400+ local canoers and paddlers together in a coordinated, slow-moving procession. An epic celebration of Lake Ontario and the re-naturalization of the Don River, the project maps Toronto’s harbor and waterfront biosphere with the lake’s own vocabulary expressed through its natural color palette. By giving visual voice to the interconnected relationships above and below the waters, the project invites us to shift our perspective to participate in and learn from nature’s wisdom and creativity.
McGill has developed this site-specific natural color story in collaboration with Jason Logan of the Toronto Ink Company. Together, McGill and Logan gathered and worked with natural and found material from the waters and shoreline to collaborate with the creative expression of the lake itself. Featuring materials such as goldenrod, clay, algae, red brick, and wild grape sourced from Leslie Street Spit, Gibraltar Point, and the re-naturalized Don River among others, these colours have been used to create vibrant wind-activated colour field paintings that dance above the canoe procession to communicate Lake Ontario’s vibrant resilience both above and below its waters. Together water, colour, wind, and paddlers find and speak the lake’s language and tell its vital story. McGill collaborated with Elder Duke Redbird, whose insights, stories, perspectives and wisdom have guided A Lake Story since its earliest stages .
This short film above captures both the intimacy and epic scale of A Lake Story, with intimate insights into its creative process, highlighting my collaborations with dear friends Jason Logan of the Toronto Ink Company, Elder Duke Redbird, our wonderful collaborating paddlers and color bearers, and the whole Lake Story team. Following the on-water performance of A Lake Story, we presented this film at Harbourfront Centre’s Concert Stage during Nuit Blanche.
COLOUR SOURCES
Gathered water and colour story ingredients such as acorn, algae, red brick, yellow brick, copper pipe, wild grape, wild rose, tansy, goldenrod, iron bed spring, mulberry, dogwood bark, wyellow willow, red pine, russian olive, burdock, lake clay, biogenic ochre were collected from Gibraltar Point, Leslie Street Spit, Sunfish Cut, Budapest Park, the re-naturalized Don River, Keating Channel, and including along the hidden and buried rivers of Toronto.

PROJECT COLLABORATORS:
JASON LOGAN
Jason Logan is an internationally recognized designer, creative director, author, and artist. His illustrations have appeared in The New York Times, and his fine art has been exhibited in New York City, Los Angeles, Toronto, and the Yukon. His work has been recognized by the American Institute of Graphic Arts, The Society of Publication Designers, the Centre for Social Innovation, and the Canada Council for the Arts. His most recent book, How to Be a Color Wizard was published last year with MIT Kids. He is also the author of Make Ink: A Forager’s Guide to Natural Inkmaking, included in The Guardian’s list of best books of 2018. Logan’s work and colour network is featured in The Colour of Ink a documentary which premiered at the Toronto International Film Festival.
The Toronto Ink Company
Founded in 2014, The Toronto Ink Company is a collaborative, citizen-science experiment in harvesting colour from built, wild and hybrid landscapes. The Toronto Ink Company works on all scales, from bottled pigments and ink tests to collaborative projects and workshops with scientists, Indigenous communities, poets, artists, designers, filmmakers, architects, and city builders. The inks have been tested by artists, illustrators and experimenters around the world, from Berlin, New York, Paris, Los Angeles and Japan to a National Geographic icebreaker in the Arctic. Custom inks have been commissioned by Harley Davidson, Row 7 Seeds, the University of Michigan Press, WeTransfer and DC Comics, among others.
DR. DUKE REDBIRD
Dr. Duke Redbird is an Elder from the Saugeen Ojibway Nation, on the shores of Lake Huron. A celebrated Indigenous Visionary as well as an established public intellectual, poet, broadcaster, and filmmaker, Dr. Redbird is also a highly sought after keynote speaker. He is an Elder and Advisor to various public and private organizations, and his online presence brings his breadth of cultural knowledge and artistic practice to the benefit of a global audience. Dr. Redbird is instrumental in the implementation of innovative multimedia, technologies and beyond, bringing an Indigenous approach to art education that was rooted in his pioneering work at OCAD University. A multidisciplinary artist, he brings an Indigenous lens to modern art and design, and has aided in the emergence of a vibrant Indigenous presence on the contemporary cultural scene. Dr. Redbird’s outstanding contribution to culture, literature, human rights, legacy stretches far beyond his work in Canada.
Commissioned and Presented by The Bentway
BENTWAY PROJECT TEAM:
Curators: Ilana Altman and Alex Rand
Associate Curators: Renee Castonguay, Megan Kammerer
Producers: Veronica Barton, Stephanie Dudek, Jeremy Forsyth, Sue Holland
A Lake Story celebrates the ongoing environmental commitment of Toronto’s Waterfront and the re–naturalization of the Don River, and is possible thanks to the collaboration of many partners involved, including Waterfront Toronto, Waterfront BIA, Ports Toronto, Billy Bishop Toronto City Airport, Redpath Sugar, Toronto Foundation, and community support from the Toronto and Region Conservation Authority.
Lead Watercraft Sponsor:
Nova Craft Canoe
Special Thanks To: Canoe Heads for Kids, Eric Davies, Don’t Mess With the Don, Lorella Di Cintio, Firemen Movers, Harbourfront Centre Canoe and Kayak Centre, Sally Han, Island Yacht Club, Dave Lovas, Helen Mills, Colleen McCarten, Karen McDonald, Bonnie McElhinny, Yvonne Monestier, Oceah Oceah, Ontario Recreational Canoe and Kayak Association, Rick Portiss, Steve Procunier, Ellis Michael Quinn, Chris Rath, Jenifer Redsky/Oceah Oceah, Heidi Sopinka, and Nancy Wolfe
Artworks/Color Studies: Melissa McGill
Video credit: Andrew Williamson
Photos: Melissa McGill, Andrew Williamson and Trida Simone Easey