By Kristin Lim Get ready for 18 days of innovative, risk-taking performances at the PuSh International Performing Arts Festival. From January 19th to February 5th, PuSh brings groundbreaking, contemporary works
One of Vancouver’s most magical winter events returns this month, and we couldn’t be more thrilled to get our glow on. The re-imagined Lumière Festival will once again be shining
By Jaclyn Hayward Maybe it’s the vibrant leaves colouring the ground beneath us, or the cold, wet wind challenging our daily routines — but there’s something about the silence and
When trying to describe ‘Mouthpiece’, currently exhibiting at New Media Gallery in New Westminster, it’s hard not to feel a bit like you’re looking through the eyes of an AI
By Madison Smart CityScape Community ArtSpace in North Vancouver recently celebrated the opening of Volver (to return, to become), a seven-person show curated by Miret Rodríguez. The works of Latin
What do the years 1848 and 2011 have in common? How are they dissimilar, and why bring these years into relation in the first place? By Miret Rodriguez With the
Surrey is one of BC’s most diverse cities, so it’s a natural home for the first public showing from collaborators from The Black Arts Centre. While the collective of artists
By Kevin Leung The fantastic thing about public art is that it can engage its audiences in ways that can’t always be achieved in a gallery. Whether it’s encouraging visitors
What is the throughline between artists and skaters?Both groups face their own challenges of confronting calls of illegitimacy from those in power, whether it’s aggressive architecture making skateboarding impossible or
If a tree falls in the metaverse, and nobody is logged on, does it make a sound? The upcoming Polygon exhibit, “Ghosts of the Machine,” looks at the line where
By Kristi Alexandra Great art often leaves you with more questions than answers, and the latest exhibition at the Gordon Smith Gallery of Canadian Art on Vancouver’s North Shore certainly
By Kristi Alexandra We are all connected, and yet completely separate. At least, that’s what the three works that are part of Assembly–a new exhibition at the Anvil Centre’s New