Month-Long Airport Photography Exhibitions

Clean the Sky - Positive Eco Trends & Breakthroughs

Billy Bishop Toronto City Airport Debuts Dogs in Flight

— April 28, 2026 — Art & Design
Billy Bishop Toronto City Airport is hosting the adorable Dogs in Flight photography exhibition. This month-long activation is running from April 20 to May 20 in the airport's first-floor atrium.

Dogs in Flight features ten striking images of rescue dogs captured mid-leap by Toronto-based photographer Jack Jackson. The exhibition is presented in partnership with NutriCanine and Toronto Animal Services. Eve Wiggins, Chief Operating Officer at Nieuport Aviation, shared: “Through Dogs in Flight, we’re proud to partner with organizations that share our values and our belief in giving back. Dogs have given so much to our passengers, whether through therapy programs or critical working roles, and this exhibit is one small way we can help shine a light on dogs in need of care, advocacy and adoption.”

Ultimately, Dogs in Flight transforms Billy Bishop's transit corridor into a community gallery space that celebrates rescue dog adoption while highlighting the airport's existing canine community, including St. John Ambulance therapy dogs that comfort passengers and security dogs that perform essential screening work.

Image Credit: Jack Jackson

Trend Themes

  1. Cultural Programming in Transit Hubs — Embedding exhibitions and community art in airport concourses reframes transport nodes as experiential public spaces with alternative revenue and audience-development potentials.
  2. Pet-centric Community Engagement — Showcasing therapy and rescue animals in public activations highlights growing demand for empathetic, animal-led experiences that strengthen brand affinity and community partnerships.
  3. Short-term Pop-up Exhibitions — Month-long photographic activations demonstrate a shift toward ephemeral, high-turnover displays that can maximize footfall exposure and sponsor-aligned storytelling.

Industry Implications

  1. Airports and Aviation — Turning transit corridors into curated gallery spaces suggests new service layers that enhance passenger well-being and diversify non-aeronautical income streams.
  2. Pet Care and Animal Welfare — Partnerships between shelters, service-dog organizations, and public venues point to expanded visibility channels and fundraising models for rescue and therapy animal programs.
  3. Commercial Photography and Art Services — Demand for site-specific, short-run exhibitions indicates opportunities for photographers and curators to monetize licensing, installation, and branded-content collaborations.
9.7
Score
Popularity
Activity
Freshness