"Bleeding Art Industries is a very special company with a staff of creative, skilled artists who can realize complex, difficult, one-of-a kind projects. All these exhibits are extraordinary for their beauty and artistry and attention to detail. The BAI team finished and installed all the work on time and on budget...It was a pleasure to work with them, and we look forward to many more collaborative projects." - May & Watkins Design, LLC


With the combination of our special effects expertise, theatre design, model making, customized sculpting, and prosthetics and creature/figure work, demand has increased for the work that we do for themed exhibits and attractions. The company knows how to come up with creative solutions to issues that clients might be facing with their projects, and to manage a project from that stage to putting ideas to paper, fabricating, and installing if required. In its first year exhibiting at IAAPA – the International Association of Amusement Parks and Attractions – Bleeding Art won First Place for Best Exhibit in its category (see images in the gallery section), and received comments from attendees and fellow exhibitors that it was the best exhibit they had seen in years. The exhibit Bleeding Art built exemplified the creativity and high quality integration of effects and fabrication the company is known for.


Some of the work we've done:


Air Canada Stampede Parade float (currently in production)
Stylized 6’ metal replica of Darwin’s Tree of Life (Tyrell Museum of Palaeontology)
William Van Horne bust (Mavericks installation at Glenbow Museum)
A 100’ “faux” hedge to camouflage a work construction site (Chinook Centre)
Good Farming/Bad Farming Model  (West Central Conservation Group)
Full-sized male animatronic lion installation (Calgary Zoo)
Blackfoot Chicken Dancer (Calgary International Airport)
5 native figures, including a firepit with flickering lights, imitation campfire smoke, and the scent of a campfire (Blackfoot Crossing Historical Park)
4  of the exhibits (Telus World of Science, Creative Kids Museum)
Teepee floor and faux rocks (Fish Creek Provincial Park, Burns Ranch)
A faux log cabin façade (Mountainscape Events)
Legs for mannequin exhibit in the Alberta Gallery (Museum of the Regiments)