Contact

1356 Dundas Street West
TORONTO ON
M6J 1Y2
CANADA

TEL: 416.504.0575

info@bulgergallery.com

 

**The gallery is NOT currently accepting portfolio submissions**


Tuesday - Saturday  11AM - 6PM

 

As well as by appointment or by chance

 

  • Transportation & Parking

    Parking - Paid parking is available along Dundas Street West until 3:30pm Mon-Fri, and 9pm on Saturday. There is also free one hour parking along many of the side streets in the area. We are on the north side of Dundas, between Dovercourt and Gladstone.

     

    There is additional Green P parking just North of Dovercourt and Dundas, at 118-150 Harrison Street. Or further East along Dundas, just past Ossington on the South side at 1117 Dundas Street West.

     

    Transit - We are just west of the Rusholme Road stop on the Dundas streetcar.

    If you're taking the subway, take Line 2 (Bloor-Danfoth) to Dufferin Station and take the South - 29A Dufferin bus towards Exhibition (Dufferin Gate). Get off at Dundas Street and walk 4 minutes east to 1356 Dundas Street West.

     

     

    LAND ACKNOWLEDGEMENT

    Stephen Bulger Gallery is located on the traditional territories of the  Wendat, Anishinabek Nation, the Haudenosaunee Confederacy, and the Mississaugas of the Credit. This area is included in the One Dish, One Spoon Wampum belt, a peace treaty dating back to before the 18th century which is a mutual agreement between the Iroquois Confederacy and Confederacy of the Ojibwe and allied nations to share and care for the land and the resources around the Great Lakes. We all eat out of the Dish—all of us who share this territory—with only one spoon, and this means we share the responsibility of ensuring the dish is never empty; this includes taking care of the land and the creatures we share it with. We are grateful to have the opportunity to live and work in this territory and across Turtle Island. This land acknowledgement is a process of deliberately naming that we work on—and promote culture from diverse makers produced on—Indigenous land, and that Indigenous peoples maintain their rights to this land. It provides us with an opportunity to reflect on all our relationships, and the continuous process of improving these relationships.