With International Women’s Day on March 8, there’s no better time to celebrate the women shaping the West Coast’s vibrant arts scene. Across the region, female artists and curators are leading bold, thought-provoking exhibitions that challenge perspectives and spark conversation. Visit any of the following art events to get a glimpse of the diverse talent that calls the West Coast home. Consider this your cue to grab your calendar, these are the shows you won’t want to miss!
Tania Willard: Photolithics | Vancouver
Mar 7 – May 27, 2026
The largest solo exhibition to date of artist, curator, and scholar Tania Willard, Photolithics presents ten years of her experiments with photography as a tool of both colonization and decolonization. Combining new and existing works that showcase her inventive use of printing, materials, and presentation techniques, Willard transforms the gallery itself into an artwork, with sunlight streaming through the building altering the pieces throughout the day and offering new experiences at every visit.

Atheana Picha: Portals | Surrey
Until March 22, 2026
Expanding on her Salish Weaving Residency at the Surrey Art Gallery in summer 2023, Picha’s new exhibition brings together a dynamic body of work that spans carving, sound elements, and a hand-spun, hand-woven Salish blanket. For this collaborative piece, Picha invited mentors, friends, colleagues, family, and other significant figures in her life to contribute blanket pins. Traditionally used to fasten woven garments worn in ceremony and as regalia, the pins become both functional and symbolic, anchoring the work in family, community, and shared history.

JAAD KUUJUS – Everyone Says I Look Like My Mother | Vancouver
Until March 29, 2026
Jaad Kuujus–Meghann O’Brien, a weaver of Haida, Kwakwaka’wakw, and Irish descent, merges the ancient threads of Northwest Coast, weaving with contemporary materials and digital media. Each of her works are woven expressions of kinship, ancestry, and community, where every stitch contributes to a return to traditional knowledge. Working with hand-spun mountain goat wool, cedar bark, and collaborative digital practices, this show at Museum of Anthropology bridges tradition and innovation.

Woven Pathways: Fashion and Cultural Continuity | Whistler
Until April 5, 2026
Bringing together a collective of Squamish and Lil̓wat artists and designers, this Whistler exhibition showcases fashions and accessories that are both inspiring and stylish. Guest curated by Rebecca Baker-Grenier, an Indigenous Designer of Kwakiutł and Sḵwx̱wú7mesh ancestry, the show is a glimpse into how Indigenous creators express their identities through contemporary design while honouring their connection to lineage, land, and culture.

Nan Goldin: Stendhal Syndrome | Vancouver
Until April 6, 2026
Spanning the last 20 years of Nan Goldin’s work, Stendhal Syndrome pairs intimate portraits of her friends, family, and lovers with images of Classical, Renaissance, and Baroque masterpieces. Presented as single-channel videos, the exhibition draws on the concept of Stendhal Syndrome, a psychosomatic reaction of dizziness, confusion, or even hallucination triggered by encounters with intense beauty.

Bobbie Burgers: Assembly | Burnaby
Until April 19, 2026
Vancouver-based artist Bobbie Burgers is known for her large-scale floral works that fuse expressive abstraction with themes of fleeting beauty and quiet strength. Her paintings, collages, and prints capture the tension between decay and vitality, immersing viewers in a sensory world of colour and form. By reimagining familiar floral motifs, Burgers engages with the long tradition of still-life in Western art while creating a distinct visual language that challenges conventional ideas of femininity and domesticity.

Gelareh Raufi – Lighter Days | Vancouver’s North Shore
Until April 20, 2026
Vancouver-based Iranian-Canadian artist Gelareh Raufi creates abstract compositions that blur the boundary between nature and human-made structures. She explores the hidden harmony between these contrasting elements, weaving together shapes, lines, patterns, and textures, often incorporating leaves, trees, and homes. Rather than depicting reality literally, her paintings evoke emotion, movement, and the interplay of forms, inviting viewers to see the world from a fresh perspective.

Nature’s Presence: Landscapes of the Pacific – Eileen Fong | Vancouver’s North Shore
Until April 21, 2026
Acrylic paintings inspired by the diverse landscapes of British Columbia, Nature’s Presence: Landscapes of the Pacific showcases Eileen Fong’s ability to reveal fresh perspectives on the familiar. Using layered light, texture, and movement, Fong brings glacier-carved mountains, misty coasts, and forest wildlife to life, capturing both their visual beauty and emotional essence with each stroke.

The Suitcase Project – Museum of Vancouver | Vancouver
Until November 8, 2026
With The Suitcase Project, photographer Kayla Isomura asks: What would you pack if you were forcibly removed from your home today? Featuring portraits of over 80 fourth- and fifth-generation Japanese Canadians and Americans, each image echoes the 1942 internment and incarceration of their ancestors on the West Coast. The exhibition is especially timely today, with the ongoing debates about belonging, citizenship, and representation that seem to have consumed some conversations about diversity.

