Summer is in full swing, and the West Coast art community is ready to get out there and capture every moment of sunny inspiration! Across the calendar this month, you’ll find all kinds of arty diversions. This is the season not only to see new exhibits and pieces, but to get to know other art-seekers while you’re at it. Along with the outdoor festivals and tours, you’ll be meeting fellow community members ready to discuss and connect over the wonderful things they’ve recently seen.
So don’t be shy! Stop by any of the following July happenings and keep your ears open for word-of-mouth suggestions that might lead you to your next bright outing.
Keerat Kaur: If Gardens Could Dream | Surrey
July 4 – August 30, 2026
Blending painting, sculpture, digital media, embroidery, poetry, and performance, Keerat Kaur draws from Sikh culture to create new pieces that speak to the poetic traditions of her family lineage. The Garden of the title refers to a place of living memory and belonging, and that’s what Kaur has created for her audience: a forum for visual stories that seed cultural knowledge across generations and geographies.

Courtesy of www.surrey.ca/
West Coast Modern Week | Vancouver’s North Shore
July 7 – 12, 2026
Ready to take a tour through some of West Vancouver’s most beautiful modern architecture? This yearly celebration of West Coast Modernism is your ticket to an inside look at some of the most gorgeous homes in the area. Across five days, the West Vancouver Art Museum will host all kinds of talks, tours, and parties, so get ready to mingle and see the city skyline from some of the most architecturally significant homes on the North Shore.

Photo credit: westvancouverartmuseum.ca
Greg Girard | Vancouver’s North Shore
July 10 – October 25, 2026
With an eye for capturing vibrant moments in day-to-day life, Canadian photographer Greg Girard finds a wealth of stories in what might first appear as routine. Chronicling his travels through Hong Kong, Shanghai, and Vancouver, this sprawling exhibition shows just how thorough he was in his exploration of each city and how curious he was about the people who lived there.

Courtesy of: thepolygon.ca/exhibition/greg-girard/
Khatsahlano Street Party | Vancouver
July 11, 2026
Vancouver’s biggest annual street party returns, with even more lively experiences, big and small! The 2026 theme is “Wonderland”, so you can expect all kinds of vibrant surprises as you tumble down the rabbit hole. Live music, artisan vendors, and plenty of local food trucks, this is an appointment you will not want to be late for!

Photo credit: khatsahlano.ca
Harmony Arts Festival | Vancouver’s North Shore
July 31 – August 9, 2026
With a lush oceanside park as its setting, The Harmony Arts Festival is one of the most beautifully exhilarating ways to spend a summer day/evening. The schedule is packed with all kinds of local performers across all genres, so bring your dancing shoes as you tour through the roster of incredible West Coast talent. And when you need to catch your breath, the nearby art market will keep you well supplied with new inspirations to take home with you.

Photo credit: vancouversnorthshore.com
Ongoing Events
Stephen Shore: Uncommon Places | Vancouver
Until July 19, 2026
Catch this one before it closes mid-month. A pioneer of colour photography as fine art, Stephen Shore turned his large-format camera on the everyday American landscape of the 1970s and 80s, finding quiet beauty in gas stations, motel rooms, parking lots, and main streets. The result is a body of work that reshaped how we see the ordinary world around us.

Into the Garden | Jing Xia | Vancouver’s North Shore
Until July 22, 2026
Also at the District Foyer Gallery via North Van Arts, Jing Xia’s Into the Garden offers a contemplative, nature-inspired body of work that unfolds like a stroll through a living landscape.

Items | Adrian Duchateau | Vancouver’s North Shore
Until July 22, 2026
Presented by North Van Arts at the District Foyer Gallery, Adrian Duchateau’s Items invites a closer look at the objects we accumulate and the meanings we attach to them.

Magic Show | Vancouver
Until July 25, 2026
At the artist-run Western Front, Vancouver’s Rosamunde Bordo presents a solo exhibition where the detective and the magician become twin guides for making meaning. Cast metal, blown glass, woodwork, sewn objects, and video come together as clues, talismans, and instruments, building on Bordo’s ongoing detective-fiction project The Denise File. Part investigation, part ritual, it rewards a slow and curious look.

ShongRokkhon: Reimagined Threads | Vancouver’s North Shore
Until August 4, 2026
On the second floor of the Lynn Valley Library, the District Library Gallery presents Faria Firoz’s textile-based exhibition, where preloved fabrics, often garments worn by elders, become the surface for paint, dye, beadwork, stitching, and block stamping. Adapting Bangladeshi craft methods with improvised tools, Firoz shows how inherited textile traditions survive and transform through displacement. Presented through North Van Arts’ Art in the Community program.

Simranpreet Anand: Living With The Eternal | Vancouver’s North Shore
Until August 23, 2026
Simranpreet Anand returns to The Polygon Gallery with her latest body of work, which weighs the spiritual significance of sacred materials against the costs and modes of their mass production. Working from a Sikh perspective, her installation of ceremonial fabrics, lenticular prints, and embroidered photographs considers the notion of the “eternal” in terms of religious significance and the synthetic nature of products manufactured to last forever.

Myfanwy MacLeod: Trophies | Burnaby
Until August 30, 2026
In her new solo exhibition at the Burnaby Art Gallery, Myfanwy MacLeod turns the building’s own past as a former fraternity house into her subject. With sharp wit and a keen eye, she connects ancient Greek rites and sculpture to the rituals and codes of contemporary frat culture, leaning into the idea of a “trophy” as a marker of success, failure, and recognition.

Photo credit: burnaby.ca
Return to Paueru Gai: 50 Years of Powell Street Festival | Burnaby
Until September 5, 2026
Marking 50 years of the Powell Street Festival, Return to Paueru Gai tells the story of art, community building, and activism connected to Canada’s longest-running Japanese-Canadian festival. The exhibition reflects on the festival’s roots in Vancouver’s historic Japanese Canadian neighbourhood and its ongoing role in sustaining intergenerational dialogue, creative expression, and social justice.

Bard on the Beach 2026 | Vancouver
Until September 19, 2026
Bard is in full swing under the tents at Vanier Park, with a summer-long repertory of the Stratford master’s most enchanting tales. Known for their inventive restagings, this year’s lineup includes Macbeth, Antigone, The Merry Wives of Windsor (reimagined as a lively, music-filled romp in a soccer-obsessed suburb), and Goblin: Oedipus (yes, as performed by goblins).

Vistas: From Takao Tanabe’s Travels | Whistler
Until September 21, 2026
A companion exhibition to the Inside Passage retrospective, Vistas gathers work inspired by Tanabe’s travels across British Columbia, North America, the Arctic, and Europe. Camera always in hand, he translated the geography and atmosphere of the places that sparked his curiosity into paintings that balance careful observation with poetic reflection.

I Use My Haida Eyes: The History Robes of Jut-ke-Nay-Hazel Wilson | Vancouver
Until October 12, 2026
A singular body of work by the late Jut-ke-Nay-Hazel Wilson (1941-2016), a Haida artist who dedicated her life to Haida cultural work, I Use My Haida Eyes presents a collection of 51 “history robes,” which recount specific episodes of Haida history in stunning detail, from a Haida perspective.

Photo by Rachel Topham.
James Harry: Eye of the Ancestor | Vancouver’s North Shore
Until October 18, 2026
A striking new sculpture has arrived at The Polygon Gallery! Created by James Harry, Eye of the Ancestor is a striking yellow cedar wooden sphere, carved with Coast Salish designs on the surface and holding a mirror-polished steel sphere inside. The composition creates layered reflections and viewpoints that shift with the viewer’s movements around the sculpture, so be sure to experience this new piece from every angle!

Takao Tanabe: Inside Passage | Whistler
Until October 19, 2026
Marking the 100th birthday of one of Canada’s most extraordinary artists, this Whistler retrospective is a celebration of the master painter’s life work. Known for his striking abstract and representational landscapes, you’ll get a tactile sense of Tanabe’s distinctive brushwork and his elevated control of form and colour.

Feature image: Artists at Harmony Arts Festival waterfront arts celebration Ambleside Park North Shore
Photo credit: vancouversnorthshore.com
