February brings a warm front of arty inspiration! Whether you’re looking to stoke your creative flame or you’re in search of a new spark for the year, you’ll find all kinds of possibilities around Metro Vancouver and Whistler this month. Genre-defining dance and performances, a papier-mâché workshop with a skilled paper professional, and there’s even a meet and greet gallery event for a mother-son artist duo!
Have a look at some of the new and ongoing events you can take part in this month, bundle up, and get ready to discover the BRIGHTER side of the winter forecast!
Bobbie Burgers: Assembly | Vancouver
Various dates in February
Bobbie Burgers is a Vancouver-based artist celebrated for her large-scale floral works that explore themes of ephemeral beauty and refined strength through expressive, gestural abstraction. Her work captures the tension between decay and vitality, inviting viewers into a sensorial experience of colour and form. As we enter late winter, with slivers of spring poking through the lengthening days, Burgers’ work offers contemplations on time and transition. Her work speaks to cycles; the lifecycles of flora and fauna, as well as cycles of human interaction and introspection. Assembly invites visitors not only to explore the lifecycle of an artwork, but also an invitation into the process of creation itself.

Date Nights: Papier-Mâché Vase with Mahnaz Moghaddasi | Vancouver’s North Shore
February 12, 2026
Led by Iranian–Canadian visual artist and cultural heritage specialist Mahnaz Moghaddasi, this Date Night invites participants to explore the tactile magic of papier-mâché. From childhood experiments with scraps and paste to professional practice in museum conservation, Mahnaz has spent a lifetime discovering paper’s expressive possibilities. Her work blends the care of heritage preservation with a playful, contemporary approach to material storytelling, turning humble materials into sculptural forms with memory and meaning.
In this workshop, Mahnaz will guide participants through making a refined sculptural bowl. Using simple, recycled materials, you will shape, layer, and texture your piece, learning how everyday paper can become something elegant and enduring.

Family Crafting: Family Portraits | Surrey
February 14, 2026
Learn to craft unique family portraits at this artist community meet-up. Follow along with the instructor or explore some of your own ideas with the art supplies provided. Suggested minimum donation of $5/ person to support similar local art initiatives!
Jane and Jonah Waterous in Whistler | Whistler
February 21, 2026
Join the Whistler Contemporary Art Gallery for an exclusive evening with Jane and Jonah Waterous on February 21st, from 4:00 PM – 6:30 PM at the Four Seasons Resort, Whistler. Enjoy cocktails, conversation, and the rare opportunity to connect directly with the celebrated mother-son artist duo.

Paint Nite: Peaceful Pine Lake | Burnaby
February 22, 2026
Stop by the Rec Room in Brentwood for an inspiring and social night of painting! This paint party includes all your materials, a step-by-step set of instructions, valuable tips, and expert advice from a locally based artist. Whether you’re a beginner or an experienced artist, you’re in for a fantastic event as you let your imagination run wild and create a beautiful painting to take home.
Seating is open, so be sure to arrive on time to secure the best seats. The painting demonstration will begin exactly 10 minutes after the listed start time!

Ongoing Events
PuSh Festival | Vancouver
Until February 8, 2026
The 2026 PuSh Festival is an invitation to the culturally fearless to those ready to step into fresh futurities and the expansive possibilities of live performance. In a time when dominant ways of knowing and being are collapsing into the polycrisis they have created, the artists gathered here embody ancestral and emergent ways of living, understanding, relating and dreaming.

Edge Effects | Burnaby
Until February 15, 2026
Ecologists use the term “edge effect” to describe the conditions created when two adjacent ecological communities meet. Edge conditions might be narrow and severe, like those of a forest meeting farmed land, or porous and deep, like the brackish water of a river estuary. The edge effects in such zones captivate scientists because they can support a uniquely abundant array of animal and plant life, allowing for rich and complex co-existence between species that would otherwise never interact.
The inaugural exhibit at The Gibson Art Museum at SFU’s Burnaby Mountain campus, Edge Effects features a collection of fifteen artists from various backgrounds and mediums. Ecologists use the term “edge effect” to describe the conditions created when two adjacent ecological communities meet. Edge conditions might be narrow and severe, like those of a forest meeting farmed land, or porous and deep, like the brackish water of a river estuary. The edge effects in such zones captivate scientists because they can support a uniquely abundant array of animal and plant life, allowing for rich and complex co-existence between species that would otherwise never interact.

Beautifully Broken – Kintsugi by Naoko Fukumaru | Burnaby
Until February 21, 2026
Kintsugi, the Japanese art of “golden joinery,” is a 500-year-old tradition of repairing broken ceramics with natural Urushi lacquer and powdered gold. Rather than disguising damage, it highlights it…honouring imperfection and the passage of time. Vancouver-based artist Naoko Fukumaru draws on this ancient practice as both a craft and a meditative process. Through her work, she offers a powerful metaphor for personal healing: like broken pottery, our cracks can become part of our story…transformed, illuminated, and made beautiful.

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.

NDN Giver | Vancouver
Until Feb 22, 2026
NDN Giver explores the layered meanings within both everyday and extraordinary gifts that circulate through the potlatch. Blankets, coppers, canoes, prints, mugs, trade beads and devil’s club strung into necklaces all become carriers of law, memory, and relation to one another.
The title NDN Giver reclaims a phrase rooted in colonialism that mocked Indigenous generosity. In reality, the practice of giving upheld in the potlatch reflects the complexity of responsibilities in Indigenous governance and exchange. To give is to strengthen ties, and to receive is to take on the responsibility of carrying them forward.

Fei Disbrow: The Familiar Unfamiliar | Vancouver’s North Shore
Until February 28, 2026
To turn down the noise of daily life, Fei Disbrow seeks out-of-the-way places where she can find small, unusual organisms. It is in these places where she observes and records unfamiliar, miniature lifeforms which are integral to this body of Disbrow’s work. Her research focuses on cryptogams, resilient and ancient organisms that cover 30% of earth’s soil surface and play a foundational role in ecosystems around the globe. Found in the Arctic, the desert, forests and cities, they are global extremophiles thriving in hostile habitats, capable of surviving death-like desiccation. This exhibition explores the rich, often-overlooked world of cryptogams (mosses, lichens, and algae) through Disbrow’s sculptural work.

What We Hold Close | Vancouver’s North Shore
Until February 28, 2026
What We Hold Close is an exhibition exploring the physical and symbolic spaces of domestic life. From textiles to tortillas, twenty artists explore the notion of home – being remembered, being celebrated, the act of leaving, and everything in-between.
The artists explore and question what they hold close; what comforts or confines them, and how their relationships to domestic space evolve across generations and geographies.
What We Hold Close presents a multiplicity of perspectives, inviting dialogue around belonging, memory, and the layered nature of home.

Sojourner Truth Parsons – Louise | Vancouver
Until February 28, 2026
For more than ten years now, the paintings of Sojourner Truth Parsons have trafficked in the saturated and sensorial. Plumbing the space between abstraction and legibility, feeling and form, the language of Parsons’ work is an intuitive one. Building depth through accretion, collapsing interior and exterior realms, and traversing a shifting set of references — from the history of dance to the Gee’s Bend quilts of Alabama to her garden in the Catskill Mountains — her paintings give shape to intensities both atmospheric and embodied.
Louise brings together a selection of works produced by the Vancouver-born, New York-based artist over the past several years, surveying the dexterity of her movement between figuration and form and her canvases’ elemental approach to sensation, texture and tone. Titled after the work of poet Louise Glück — known for her decades-long meditation on the illusions and agonies of the self — the exhibition traces the enduring emotional registers, both individual and collective, that occupy Parsons’ time in the studio: desire, loss, isolation, redemption, resurgence.

Sojourner Truth Parsons, Dark Blue Bells VI, 2024. Courtesy of Esther Schipper, Berlin/Paris/Seoul/New York. Photo: Christopher Stach.
Justen LeRoy: Lay Me Down in Praise at Surrey Art Gallery | Surrey
Until March 1, 2026
This three-channel film speaks to Black environmentalism, Black resistance, and Black liberation. By blending visuals and sound of Black performers with scenes of geological activity, themes of resilience and renewal are highlighted. LeRoy’s work and practice speak to the importance of Black people reclaiming space with nature and amplifying sounds rooted in Black communities with climate change through liberation.

remember the earth, remember the sky | Surrey
Until March 22, 2026
Growing from the 2023 Gallery exhibition Invisible Fish, and inspired by the Joy Harjo poem “Remember,” remember the earth, remember the sky, is a group show focusing on ancestral connections through land, air, and memory as experienced and understood by early career artists connected to this territory and in conversation with works from the Gallery’s permanent collection by Salish artists.

Vitalities: Reflections on Landscapes by Toni Onley and Arnold Shives | Vancouver
Until March 23, 2026
British Columbia-based artists Toni Onley and Arnold Shives each shared a love of landscapes at great heights – achieved by hiking, mountaineering, and even flying above them. Onley once said of their distinct approaches: “We see the same place but come up with very different imagery.” Vitalities brings together selections of each artist’s formidable career to offer reflection and repose in the face of the region’s impressive land, water, and skyscapes.

