This holiday season, take to the streets to explore a magical urban flower garden, relive the classics in dance and song, or head up to Whistler for the latest from international and local filmmakers. It’s the most wonderful time of the year for the arts and culture scene on the West Coast! Here’s a sampling of what’s on tap.
Whistler Film Festival | Whistler
Dec 3 – 7, 2025
Cue that mountain movie magic! The Whistler Film Festival comes to the world-famous resort town December 3–7, 2025, packing premieres, industry summits, talent programs, and special guests into a week that flips between red-carpet buzz and alpine thrills. This year marks 25 years of WFF and they are celebrating with a renewed focus on BC filmmakers. Catch exclusive screenings between ski runs, après by night as you bounce between theatres, parties, and Whistler’s stellar dining scene at Canada’s “coolest” film festival.

Toque Craft Fair | Vancouver
Dec 5 – 7, 2025
Hosted at Western Front in Mount Pleasant, this community market will feature a curated roster of some of the brightest local artists and artisans. From stained glass to custom leather and perfume, each participating craftsperson will proudly be showing their wares for you to peruse.

Fleurs de Villes NOËL | Vancouver
Dec 5 – 14, 2025
Downtown Vancouver blooms for the holidays in festive floral displays by top local artists all along Robson Street and other spots throughout the city core. Now in its 7th year, Fleurs de Villes’ creations this year are inspired by the 12 Days of Christmas, with each day’s “gifts” brought to gorgeous life with flowers and their signature couture mannequins. Follow the trail of petals with your map from the Fairmont Hotel Vancouver on a free self guided tour that makes for a perfect cozy holiday night stroll.

Photo credit: fleursdevilles.com
The Holiday Hive Market | Burnaby
Dec 6, 2025
Celebrating its first year, this free-to-enter, open-air event will feature over 30 local vendors selling a wide range of items, from small-batch baked goods to handmade holiday decorations. Mix and mingle with the other visitors as you listen to some of the area’s musical top talent performing all the catchy seasonal tunes you love.

The Gingerbread Men: A Holiday Cabaret | Surrey
Dec 13, 2025
A 1950’s TV Christmas special comes to life on stage at the Surrey Arts Centre with the smooth-as-new-fallen-snow crooning of The Gingerbread Men and their timeless holiday harmonies. From doo-wop, jazz, and Broadway to a cappella, these are the songs you know and love around this time of year, delivered with all the nostalgia, charm—and cheese—sure to make your Christmas spirits bright.

We call it Ballet: Sleeping Beauty in a Dazzling Light Show | Burnaby
Dec 19 – 20, 2025
You’ve never seen Sleeping Beauty quite like this. We Call it Ballet infuses traditional ballet with glow-in-the-dark costumes to breathe new “light” into classic shows. Dancers literally light up the stage, leaping and twirling in otherworldly swathes of colour to tell the timeless tale of the cursed princess who awakes to her true lover’s kiss. The show was created by María Farelo and Cristian Pérez of Luma Artistas S.L., and is danced by an all-local troupe of dazzling performers.

Winter Harp | Vancouver’s North Shore
Dec 18 – 19, 2025
Imagine a Christmas far, far away…in both time and place. The Winter Harp ensemble performs your favourite classic Christmas songs, as well as ancient tunes, on harps, flute and other rare medieval instruments live on stage at The BlueShore at CapU on Vancouver’s North Shore. Listen to poetry and enchanting folk tales, take in the scene of rich velvet gowns against a backdrop of cathedrals and snow, and instantly be transported to a Christmas long, long ago.

ONGOING
Abbas Akhavan: One Hundred Years | Vancouver
Until Dec 7, 2025
Examining how time is represented in narrative spaces, One Hundred Years uses site-specific installations, video and sculpture to explore meaning in various forms of reality. From stage to set to gallery, Abbas Akhavan finds a natural duality in each piece, whether it be hospitality and hostility, or institutional and domestic.

Kinesthesia: Body as Form | Surrey
Until Dec 14, 2025
Bringing together an eclectic gathering of artists whose work celebrates the human form and its movement, this group exhibition explores the intersection between visual art and dance. Contributors range from visual artists, choreographers, and dance collectives, as well as other performers from across the worlds of dance and art in Canada. It all makes for an inspiring look into how the way me move and what it says about us as individuals.

Christos Dikeakos: The Collectors | Vancouver’s North Shore
Until Dec 14, 2025
Showcasing portraits of art collectors from around BC and the world, this photo series presents a community whose love for art goes beyond passion. Sitting alongside their art collections, you can get a glimpse into the psyche of people on a journey of inspiration that can span a lifetime.

Burnaby Photographic Society | Burnaby
Until Dec 17, 2025
The Burnaby Photographic Society (BPS) is a diverse community of photographers ranging from amateurs, emerging artists, to professionals. This is a showcase of the wide range of voices from the group that has been operating in the area for over 50 years. Whether you’re interested in joining yourself or you’re looking to discover a few new creative perspectives, be sure to drop by this group showcase!

Shipyards Christmas Market | Vancouver’s North Shore
Until Dec 24, 2025
One of Metro Vancouver’s most visited holiday markets, this year, the annual tradition is adding even more ways to make merry. Over 100+ local vendors will be selling unique artisanal gifts that will make finishing your shopping list easy. There’s also an ice rink, seasonal treats, beautiful lighting displays, and of course, Santa’s chalet. A wonderful outing for the whole family!

Otani Workshop: Monsters in My Head | Vancouver
Until Jan 4, 2026
In his first North American solo, Japanese artist Otani Workshop turns the Alvin Balkind Gallery into a maze of earthen mounds, tree stumps, and stone, from which raw, endearing creatures—boys, bears, antlered spirits—are born simultaneously of the artist’s imagination and somehow, our memory. Much of the installation is built with materials foraged locally, and several works nod to the Pacific Northwest, shaped during Otani’s Deer Lake residency at Burnaby’s Shadbolt Centre.

Marika Echachis Swan ƛ̓upinup: A Circle Strong Enough to Hold Both Sides | Burnaby
Until Jan 25, 2026
Burnaby Art Gallery presents the first solo-exhibition by Marika Swan, in A Circle Strong Enough to Carry Both Sides. An artist of mixed Tla-o-qui-aht, Scottish, and Irish descent, Swan projects an unique emotional visual language onto her woodblock printmaking to depict the truth about the human experience through playful imaginings of spiritual realities, interpreting anew the traditional aesthetic of her Nuu-chah-nulth lineage.

Charles Atlas: Hail the New Puritan | Vancouver
Until Jan 25, 2026
Vancouver’s Contemporary Art Gallery brings a cult landmark to the Alvin Balkind Gallery: Charles Atlas’s 1985–86 “docufantasy” film which follows Scottish choreographer Michael Clark through a day of rehearsals for his 1984 work New Puritan and into the nightlife in cutting style: part faux-cinéma vérité, part dance film, all post-punk London attitude. There’s cameos and music from The Fall and members of Wire, with Atlas bringing performance and portraiture together into one kinetic wave. Admission is free.

Lee Miller: A Photographer At Work (1932—1945) | Vancouver’s North Shore
Until Feb 1, 2026
Famed American photographer Lee Miller was renowned for her work across a wide range of subject matter, from shooting perfume and cosmetics ads to reporting from war zones for the British edition of Vogue. The scope of her work may have been broad, but her vision was marked by a dedication to her craft, regardless of the subject. This exhibition tells the story of how she pivoted between dramatically different tones without sacrificing her creative voice.

What Bodies Know | Surrey
Until Feb 1, 2026
Reflecting on the lived experiences and social conditions of Vancouver’s Downtown Eastside, What Bodies Know explores how art can serve as a tool for community connection and transformative dialogue. Created by the artist group WePress, the exhibition presents their findings from leading community workshops centring on immunocompromised and disabled participants.

Geoffrey Farmer: Phantom Scripts | Whistler
Until Feb 2, 2026
From Vancouver-born, by way of Kaua’i, Hawai’i, artist Geoffrey Farmer, comes Phantom Scripts, a revisit to three works from the Audain Art Museum’s Permanent Collection — Vampire Archive, November 22, 1974 (2010 – 2025), The Politics of Appearing (2012 – 2025), and The Good Sweeper (2017 – 2025). The combined exhibition presents these sculptures and installations with new timely scripts, annotations and didactic texts from Farmer himself, reframing his works in light of ever-changing awareness and attention on colonial entanglements and queer disidentification. It’s a fascinating look at how time can transform not just the artist, but the art he creates as well.

Within the mould; Against the Grain | Surrey
Until Feb 21, 2026
At The Black Arts Centre, co-curators Vanessa Fajemisin and Olumoroti Soji-George gather lens-based works, schematics, and sonic installations by Tati au Miel, Odartey Aryee, Isabel Okoro, and DeForrest Brown Jr in an exhibition inspired by Brown Jr’s Assembling a Black Counter-Culture and other writing on Black popular culture and identity. This intimate show combines image, sound, and theory into a living study of how Black culture is made, named, and resisted.

Enemy Alien: Tamio Wakayama | Vancouver
Until Feb 22, 2025
The first major solo exhibition and retrospective of works by documentary photographer Tamio Wakayama, Enemy Alien spans over fifty years of images. Beginning with the civil rights movement in the southern US, Wakayama’s work became instrumental in documenting social justice movements and countercultures of the 1960s and 70s.

We who have known tides: Indigenous Art from the Collection | Vancouver
Until April 12, 2026
An examination of how living near the ocean has shaped the work of Indigenous artists, We who have known tides cultivates new perspectives about the Pacific and its influence on both community and the individual. Drawn predominantly from the Vancouver Art Gallery’s permanent collection, this exhibition asks us to consider our location on the West Coast on a deeper level.

From Sea to Sky – The Art of British Columbia | Whistler
Until May 18, 2026
An extended presentation of the Audain’s made-from-BC holdings, featuring masks, paintings and photography, tracks the story of West Coast art from the 18th century to now. Discover one of the world’s preeminent collection of Northwest Coast First Nations masks, alongside important paintings by Emily Carr, and the dramatic photography of Jeff Wall, amongst others to get an in depth look at the cultural differences that continue to shape BC’s identity.

Photo credit: audainartmuseum.com
