De Broin has created numerous public artworks in Canada and Europe, including the Salvador Allende monument in Montreal.
[4] Since the 1990s, Michel de Broin has developed an interdisciplinary practice that questions the limits of social and technical systems.
For example, in his show "Dangerous Substance" (Matière dangereuse, 1999), he reinterpreted Kasimir Malevitch's famous "black square on white ground".
[12] A Toronto policeman issued a ticket[13] for "Operating an Unsafe Vehicle" to Dean Baldwin, the driver of the pedal car, but the charge was later dismissed in court.
[16] Overflow, a piece in the ruined remains of an old Toronto prison chapel, consisted of a waterfall bursting out of a window.
[23] De Broin's sculpture entitled Bloom, which was inaugurated in August 2015, is "one of the most visible landmarks on Calgary's St. Patrick's Island.
The sculpture, which was commissioned by the Calgary Municipal Land Corporation, is "23 metres-high, with working lights on many of its branches that illuminate its surroundings at night.