You may be tempted to dismiss sculpting in the snow as something kids do in the backyard. In fact, Snow Sculpting is widely considered a legitimate art.

The Minneapolis Institute of Art, for example, has scheduled a panel discussion for January, 2026 with master snow carvers from Denmark, Mexico, and Turkey who will be in Minnesota along with other global teams for the prestigious annual World Snow Sculpting Championship .
This video is a good overview of the annual championship in nearby Stillwater. Here is that competition’s main link.
This is the 2025 winning entry, built by a team from Mongolia. Canada won in 2024,


A similar competition has run for three decades in Breckenridge, Colorado, with 12 teams from around the world each given identical blocks of snow. See this video from 2024 for more.

For Canadians, and hundreds of thousands of international visitors, the Quebec Winter Carnival held annually in February has snow and ice sculpting of note, including buildings made of ice, along with endless other winter activities. (Below, a typical group of festival carvings)

Canada has other major winter festivals that feature snow sculpting, including:
Winterlude in Ottawa/Gatineau – January 30 to February 16, 2026
Festival du Voyageur, Winnipeg – February 13 to 22, 2026
Snow Days Festival, Lake Louise, Alberta – Jan. 16 – Feb. 8, 2026
Smaller winter festivals right across the country almost always include snow sculpting or ice carving, no matter how compact the event. These are welcome celebrations of community artistry every winter.
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Absolutely AMAZING!!
Gorgeous.
Ephemeral, but so incredible!
Yes exactly, ephemeral, great word for it. Thank you.