A day in Montreal

On a Toronto visit in late September, I drove to Montreal. My brother was invited to a friend’s gathering outside of Montreal, but couldn’t drive, having recently had surgery. So I offered to drive, along views of Lake Ontario, then through hills and forest. We stayed with friends on the west side of Mont Royal Park. That evening, we walked the neighborhood and up the hill to L’Oratoire Saint-Joseph du Mont-Royal.

Where we stayed
Flower shop window
L’Oratoire Saint-Joseph du Mont-Royal

I had the next day to myself to explore the city. The subway was an easy catch to the centre; I chose the closest stop to Notre-Dame Basilica. Along the way, I passed through the colorful streets of Chinatown.

Chinatown

Notre-Dame and the Centre plaza

Notre-Dame Basilica
Paul de Chomedey, founder of Montréal

The downtown streets were clogged with construction, so I didn’t stay long.

The St Lawrence River waterfront was a great place to stroll among the piers and quays.

An acrobat ride

My afternoon destination was the art museum. I took a different route, down interesting looking urban streets, to Sherbrooke Street.

Chapel art show
Station
Choir concert
Street art

A neighborhood street festival!

Other travelers may look for history or archeological museums, and depending on where I’m traveling, that may be appropriate. But I am often drawn to art museums that represent their area or heritage. The Montreal Museum of Fine Arts, Le Musée des beaux-arts de Montréal, inhabits several buildings, old and new, connected under the street by underground levels with their own galleries.

Le Musée des beaux-arts de Montréal

In a large museum, I zero in on just a few areas of interests. It was a wonderful place to spend a few hours. The museum has an excellent collection of indigenous art. After exploring those exhibits, looking for the early twentieth century paintings, I descended to lower levels – a confusing warren, as I wandered the same hallways several times.

The Group of Seven was a collaboration of Canadian landscape painters from 1920 to 1933, plus Tom Thomson and Emily Carr. Their paintings show the influence of the Impressionists and celebrate Canadian natural landscapes. I had seen many of their paintings in earlier trips to Toronto at the McMichael Museum, and was excited to find more of their work.

A later and lesser-known group of Montreal artists, the Beaver Hall Group, including several women, were heavily influenced by the Group of Seven. This group’s work centered mostly upon urban landscape and portraiture. They were well represented in this Montreal museum; it was a joy to discover a new group of artists in a genre that I love. (Look for these groups online; I prefer not to photograph in museums.)

Just south of the museum is Crescent Street, packed with restaurants. Leonard Cohen, the famous Canadian singer/songwriter and poet, floats above it. I chose a restaurant for dinner, then walked around Mont Royal Park back to our lodging.

A related post to come: A wintry day in Montreal

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Published by rkrontheroad

Writer, photographer, traveler

35 thoughts on “A day in Montreal

  1. Wow, you sure packed a lot into one day! I’ve not spent a lot of time in Canada. Exploring it is on my bucket list. It looks amazing through the filter of your lens, Ruth.

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  2. Hello, Montreal! Seeing them again through your lens brings back good memories. This is the first city I went to as a solo traveler and I enjoyed the art scene here that I had to return with my husband a year later so he could also enjoy it.

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  3. It’s been years since I last visited Montréal (honestly, since I was a kid). Although I returned to Canada a few months ago, I didn’t make it to the east side of the country. The city looks fantastic, and it sounds like you had a fun day in town! Thanks for sharing, Ruth 🙂

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  4. Thank you for taking us along with you to explore Montreal 🙂 It looks like my kind of city, very lively yet liveable! I love the Leonard Cohen mural, the costumes at the street festival, the cathedral and waterfront.

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  5. It looks like you had a good time wandering the city and at the art museum. The city is familiar to me as my sister and her family live there so we go most years for Christmas. Some time I’d love to see it without snow on the ground! — Alison

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  6. I was in Montreal many years ago on business, and only had one evening’s time to drive around the city. I sensed it would have as much life and character as you show here. I love the photo of the artist getting off his scooter onto the sidewalk, especially his outfit and the mask on the bike.

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  7. I really enjoyed exploring Montreal, a city I know little about, through your lens Ruth. I was expecting street art and you handsomely delivered, though it is your closing shot of the Leonard Cohen tower block that I love the most. Glad you managed to swiftly dodge the construction, our ever-present enemy on city trips (and even in smaller towns and villages grr). I have just been checking out the artists you mentioned and am particularly taken with Emily Carr. Thanks for putting her on my radar.

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