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Canary Wharf reveals 16 spectacular new installations for the milestone edition of its celebrated light art festival
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This year’s light art display embodies the theme DREAMSCAPE, exploring surreal, ethereal and uniquely human experience
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Winter Lights will run from Tuesday 20th to Saturday 31st January 2026
Canary Wharf’s award-winning Winter Lights festival returns this month for its landmark tenth edition, running daily from 5-10pm from Tuesday 20th to Saturday 31st January.
To mark a decade of dazzling displays, this year’s Winter Lights will transform the neighbourhood with its most ambitious lineup yet. The trail features 16 installations, including six new commissions.
With brand-new theme DREAMSCAPE, visitors will be transported into ethereal, surreal and otherworldly realms. In addition to the new temporary installations, the trail will also highlight nine of Canary Wharf’s iconic permanent light artworks, many collected from previous editions of the festival.
The free-to-attend event will take visitors on a journey of immersion and discovery, featuring large-scale artworks created by returning Winter Lights artists as well as new contributors from the UK and around the world.
Instrumental in putting light art on London’s cultural map, Winter Lights has grown into one of London’s most celebrated cultural events, drawing visitors from across the UK and beyond.
To celebrate the tenth edition of the festival, Canary Wharf has commissioned artist Anna Lomax to design a limited-edition print, available to purchase in-store at the charitable organisation Circle Collective. Lomax has also been commissioned to create a triptych of installations titled For Ever and Ever and Ever, which will be exhibited throughout the retail malls.
The trail invites visitors to explore surreal illusions, kinetic sculptures, celestial landscapes and interactive pieces that blur the boundary between reality and imagination.
Whether it’s mind-bending optical illusions, digital blooms or captivating kinetic artwork, Winter Lights is bringing a striking combination of installations to Canary Wharf.
Highlights include a monumental hand formed from floating light voxels by Patrice LaCroix, an astronomical installation that brings the solar system into the treetops by Artistic and Janis Petersons, and a vast water-screen projection that turns mist into shimmering holograms by Limbic Cinema.
Visitors can experience the festival for free each evening, with the district’s cafés, restaurants and bars open throughout. For a full day out, Winter Lights can be combined with a trip to the popular ice rink in Canada Square Park and immersive festive bar, The Winter Club, in Wood Wharf.
Alongside Canary Wharf’s bars, cafés and restaurants, Winter Lights Bites food stands will pop up across Montgomery Square, Jubilee Park and Union Square, serving global street food from wood-fired pizzas and jerk chicken to Moroccan dishes, plus sweet treats including crêpes and crumble.
Visitors can take advantage of Off Peak Offers from Monday to Wednesday, including 20% off food from Winter Lights Bites traders, free entry to the Ice Bar when purchasing a drink at The Winter Club, as well as three hours of free parking when you spend £10 at Waitrose.
Pippa Dale, Associate-Director Arts & Events at Canary Wharf Group comments:
“Our tenth edition of Winter Lights marks a milestone moment. Over the past decade, the experience has grown and brightened into the capital’s most ambitious light art festival, with this year’s DREAMSCAPE theme representing our boldest vision yet. This year’s artists have created an extraordinary world of illusion, reflection and playfulness, transforming the dark nights of January into a celebration of creativity. We can’t wait to welcome visitors to what will be our most immersive and transportive edition yet.”
The festival has been designed with accessibility in mind, ensuring the artworks can be enjoyed by all.
Maps are available on the Canary Wharf website, via the Canary Wharf app and from event stewards throughout the festival.
For more information on the upcoming Winter Lights festival visit canarywharf.com/winter-lights. Visitors are encouraged to attend on weeknights, as the weekends get extremely busy.
Line-up
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Out of Body Experience by AlaaMinawi(Netherlands, Palestine, Lebanon)
Riverside
A mesmerising installation celebrating dance as a universal human expression. Abstracted, shifting silhouettes of dancing figures evoke the dreamlike sensation of slipping beyond one’s physical form into an ‘out of body’ release.
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Lacto-Reacto-Lightby Jack Wimperis (UK)
Riverside
A large-scale interactive light sculpture made entirely of recycled plastic milk bottles. A motion sensor tracks visitors’ movements, transforming them into glowing patterns, flickers and flame-like animations across the array.
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FloWeЯPoWeЯ by Aerosculpture/ Jean-Pierre David and Christian Thellier(France)
Westferry Circus
Harnessing the phenomenon of persistence of vision, this installation creates hypnotic spirals and flashes of colour that bloom like digital flowers. A hallucinatory celebration of peace, love and luminous beauty.
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In BloombyKumquat Lab (UK)
Wren Landing
Inspired by flower pollination, ten glowing spheres act as ‘musical blooms’. Touching one triggers a note, transforming the natural dance of pollinators into a collaborative act of music-making and connection.
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TrisphericGarden by REELIZE.STUDIO (Australia)
Cabot Square
Six shimmering illuminated obelisks encircle the fountain, each containing mirrored orbs that refract light into dreamlike ripples. Together they form a ‘dreaming pond’, dissolving the boundary between reality and imagination.
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For Ever and Everand Ever by Anna Lomax (UK)
Newly commissioned by CWG
Cabot, Canada & Jubilee Place
A triptych of works exploring repetition, reflection and colour. From towering neon loops to recycled-glass infinity lights and calm glowing monoliths, the trio creates a journey through shifting moods and surreal spaces.
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SolbyArtistic/ Janis Petersons (Latvia)
Crossrail Place Roof Garden
A miniature solar system suspended among the treetops. This celestial installation brings planets into our world, inviting visitors to wander among them and reflect on harmony, creativity and connection.
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AetherbyArchitecture Social Club (UK)
Montgomery Square
Created in collaboration with musician Max Cooper, Aether is a woven field of lights translating sound into moving patterns. Evolving like a dancer, it visualises music in space with hypnotic, phosphorescent beauty.
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BlueprintbyStudio Vertigo (UK)
Water Street
An ode to the DNA double helix, Blueprint uses real genetic data from the TLR7 gene, animating light and sound to make the hidden architecture of life both visible and audible in an almost dreamlike landscape. Sitting within a district home to more than 40 organisations working in life sciences and healthcare innovation, the installation connects the cutting-edge work in advanced therapies and genomic medicine taking place in Canary Wharf’s lab spaces with the public realm — uniting scientific discovery with human experience.
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Hulahoopby Scale (France)
Union Square
A poetic, kinetic sculpture that blends light, movement and sound. The sweeping arcs of light mesmerise viewers, pulling them into a trance-like state where peripheral reality fades away.
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SanctuarybyIthaca (UK)
Newly commissioned by CWG
Union Square
A towering sculptural sanctuary of shifting light and sound. Visitors step inside to experience jewel-like tones, warm glows and meditative atmospheres; a peaceful refuge from the pace of urban life.
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Un-Reel AccessbyKappa/ Patrick and Kaori Jones (UK/Japan)
North Lane
A locked door with one glowing, unspooled corner invites the curious to imagine alternative paths beyond barriers. A metaphorical portal urging viewers to rethink the boundaries of possibility.
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Colour RushbyLiz West (UK)
Co-commissioned by CWG, Illuminate Oldham and Light Night Wigan
East Lane
A kaleidoscopic octagonal light box inspired by vibrant ink drawings. Placed on a mirrored plinth, it multiplies colour and form, encouraging visitors to move around it and immerse themselves in shifting reflections.
Co-commissioned in partnership with Light Night Wigan and Illuminate Light Night Oldham
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ManifestationbyMarcus Lyall (UK)
Newly commissioned by CWG
West Lane
A 12m arc of light telling an ethereal narrative inspired by Victorian spiritualism. Laser-generated figures morph between abstraction and apparitions, recalling early experiments in ‘visual music’.
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At the HandbyPatrice LaCroix (Canada)
Newly commissioned by CWG
Harbour Quay Gardens
A volumetric light sculpture forming a monumental hand made of floating light cubes. Visitors’ gestures animate the structure, creating a moment of reflection on the relationship between humans and technology.
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AmplitudesbyLimbic Cinema (UK)
Newly commissioned by CWG
Eden Dock
A large-scale water-screen projection where waveforms ripple like holograms across mist and wind. Paired with synchronised music, it creates a meditative fusion of science, nature and light.
Permanent:
Bit.Fall by Julius Popp (Germany)
Chancellor Passage
A mesmerising curtain of falling water droplets form constantly changing words, each drawn from live news feeds. In a world where information moves faster than ever, Bit.Fall turns the overwhelming pace of digital communication into something physical and fleeting. By stripping the words from their original context, the work also highlights how easily meaning can shift and distort.
The Clew by Ottotto (Portugal)
Cubitt Bridge
Composed of 100 glowing red circles, The Clew wraps elegantly around Cubitt Steps Bridge. Its minimal structure casts beautiful reflections across the water and reframes this everyday walkway as a striking architectural feature.
Stack by Nathaniel Rackowe (UK)
Newfoundland Place
Nathaniel Rackowe uses the mass manufactured derivative products – glass, corrugated plastics, concrete, scaffolding, breeze blocks, and strip lights – to recreate the collective experience and visual sensations of urban contemporary life. By decoding these experiences his works capture the sensations of desolate streets at dawn, the atmosphere as daylight fades into night, and the shadows created by obtrusive cranes and scaffolding.
Shine Your Colours by Tine Bech (Denmark)
Riverside
First created for Summer Lights 2021, this interactive artwork invites visitors to experience the world through vibrant, shifting hues. Six transparent coloured glass panels now come alive with illumination for the first time, giving the piece a bold new visual dimension.
Captivated by Colour by Camille Walala (France)
Adams Plaza Bridge
Originally designed for the London Mural Festival, Walala’s geometric, colour-saturated tunnel has become one of Canary Wharf’s most iconic permanent artworks. The long perspective and rhythmic patterns expand and contract as visitors walk through. For Winter Lights, dynamic lighting activates the mural, enhancing its optical illusions and bringing the space vividly to life.
We Could Meet by Martin Richman (UK)
Crossrail Place, Level -1, Quayside
More than 500 illuminated acrylic rods sit within a water channel, their colours and rhythms shifting throughout the day. Viewed from above, the installation subtly mirrors the changing environment, blurring the boundaries between natural movement and programmed light.
Elantica ‘The Boulder’ by Tom & Lien Dekyvere (Belgium)
Crossrail Place, Level -1, Quayside
This faceted sculptural form blends the organic with the digital, using discarded circuit boards to mimic a natural rock. The piece explores how technology increasingly reshapes our reality, and how repurposing e-waste can help bridge the gap between technological progress and environmental harmony.
Whale on the Wharf (Skyscraper) by Studio KCA
Water Street
5 tonnes of plastic was pulled out of the ocean and transformed into an 11-meter-tall whale leaping from the dock water, serving as a reminder of the millions of tonnes of plastic waste still swimming in our oceans, and that, pound for pound, there is more plastic in our oceans than there are whales.
Here, Whale on the Wharf is illuminated, helping to guide visitors along our Winter Lights route.
Lightbenches by LBO Lichtbank (Germany)
Jubilee Park
These much-loved illuminated benches are a staple of the area’s permanent collection. Glowing with soft, shifting colours, they light up their surroundings and offer visitors a moment of rest; the perfect place to pause as visitors near the end of the trail.
Notes to Editors
About Canary Wharf Group (‘CWG’)
Canary Wharf Group (CWG) is the developer of the largest urban regeneration project in Europe. CWG develops, manages and currently owns interests in approximately 9 million square feet of mixed-use space and over 1,400 Build to Rent apartments. Canary Wharf’s retail offering is ranked the UK’s number one shopping destination by Green Street.
CWG is committed to turning sustainability ambition into impactful action. Examples include purchasing 100% electricity from renewable sources since 2012, our partnership with the Eden Project creating a place for nature and people and working to deliver our Science-Based Targets.
CWG has created a 24/7 city where people can live, work and thrive and enjoy all the benefits that Canary Wharf provides: great transport links, access to 16.5 acres of green spaces and waterside living; and a wide range of amenities including an award-winning arts and events programme. Canary Wharf’s retail and leisure offer includes over 80 bars, cafes and restaurants and more than 320 shops, including 8 grocery stores, pharmacies and health clubs all within 15 minutes’ walk. CWG recorded its highest annual footfall of more than 76 million in 2025.
Website: www.canarywharf.com group.canarywharf.com
LinkedIn: @CanaryWharfGroup
Instagram: @canarywharflondon
X: @CanaryWharfGrp @Level39CW