
We’re transforming!
The Gardiner Museum is embarking on its largest capital project in 20 years—a $15.5 million campaign to create a visitor experience unique in the cultural sector.
The full-scale reimagining of our ground floor will include the construction of a new fully equipped makerspace, a Community Learning Centre, and an Indigenous gallery space.
Transformational Gift
The Radlett Foundation, in honour of William B.G. Humphries
Leadership Gifts
Government Support


Chair, Indigenous Advisory Circle, Gardiner Museum
Kent Monkman
Photo: Chris Chapman

Chief Curator & Deputy Director, Gardiner Museum
Sequoia Miller
Access
The ground floor transformation prioritizes two distinct interpretations of access: the reduction of barriers to audiences’ ability to enjoy and participate in the Gardiner’s spaces and programs, and features that allow guests of varying physical abilities to benefit from everything the Museum has to offer.
Connectivity
Design plans for the renovation are guided by the goal of encouraging and establishing connectivity between people enjoying the Museum, between cultures through shared ceramic traditions, and between spaces and their functionality.
Indigeneity
The ground floor transformation furthers the Museum’s vital work of decolonization through a centering of Indigeneity in the renewed permanent collection galleries.
News & Updates

From the Ground Up
Read the Brochure

Announcing a New Commission by Artist Nadia Myre
Announcement

Introducing our new Gallery of Indigenous Ceramics
Announcement
The Makerspace
An expanded and prominently positioned Makerspace will foreground hands-on making as central to our mission and set us apart from traditional museum settings. The Makerspace will highlight the accessibility of clay and activate the Museum as a site for creativity.
Community Learning Centre
The new Community Learning Centre (CLC) will host nearly 200 school groups annually as well as public programs. A comfortable place for visitors to connect with one another and engage with educational resources, the CLC will also feature new display opportunities for the Gardiner’s renowned collections.
Indigenous Gallery
A vital gesture toward reconciliation, the transformation will include the establishment of a central Indigenous gallery space showcasing ceramic traditions of the Woodland and Great Lakes Region. The gallery will be designed by Chris Cornelius of studio:indigenous.
Indigenous Advisory Circle
Established in 2020, the Gardiner’s Indigenous Advisory Circle consults on numerous projects, including the design and development of the new Indigenous Gallery. The Gardiner Museum would like to acknowledge their invaluable contributions in guiding this project: Mary Anne Barkhouse, Kent Monkman, Andre Morriseau, Duke Redbird, and Tekaronhiáhkhwa / Santee Smith.
Meet the Team

Architects
Montgomery Sisam

Chief Curator & Deputy Director
Sequoia Miller

Curator of Indigenous Ceramics
Franchesca Hebert-Spence

Designer
Chris Cornelius
Ways to Support
Transforming the Gardiner’s Ground Floor is a once-in-a-generation opportunity that requires the support of a wide community. Every contribution brings us closer to realizing our mission of building community with clay.
MAKE A GIFT$5,000 – $9,999
Peter, Alexander, Nicholas and Natasha Czegledy & Valerie Sorbie
The Donald Family Foundation
Yvonne & David Fleck
Hon. William* & Catherine Graham
Keilhauer
Thomas O. Miller
Wendy Rebanks
Victoria Stuart
Bonnie Zelman & Philip Plotnick
Anonymous (1)
$1,000 – $4,999
Daniel Bain
Shary Boyle
Ryan Chang
Bingbin Cheng
Leila Fiouzi
Greenrock Charitable Trust
James A. Bilkstys-Richardson
Dennis Weiss
The Weisz Family
Brian Wilks*
Land Acknowledgment
The Gardiner Museum is situated on the ancestral and traditional territories of many nations, including the Anishnabeg, the Chippewa, the Haudenosaunee, and the Wendat peoples, and is covered by Treaty 13 with the Mississaugas of the Credit First Nation. It is now home to many diverse First Nations, Inuit, and Métis peoples. As a museum that celebrates the material of the earth, the Gardiner Museum is committed to honouring Indigenous peoples’ cultural and spiritual connections to the land. Reconciliation is central to our work as a museum, and we strive to celebrate Indigenous knowledge and creativity through our collections, exhibitions, and programming.