Need to Know, Need to Go: November

By: Petra Chase, Arts & Culture Editor

Eastside Culture Crawl
Where: Various locations in Vancouver
When: November 17–20, varied times
Various ticket prices

The 26th annual Eastside Culture Crawl Visual Arts, Design & Craft Festival features over 425 artists. For four days, explore the art of diverse mediums and artists at streets and studios across Vancouver’s Eastside Arts District. The event includes demos and workshops, such as a stone carving demo and painting with alcohol ink. Use their map to find a spot hosting an event near you.

TWS Community Workshops: Feeling Bodies and Lyric In-Tension ($28.92)
Where: Online
When: November 20, 10:00 a.m.–12:30 p.m.

The Writer’s Studio is a recurring webinar that connects writers to guest instructors for unique writing lessons and workshops. This session is led by Sonnet L’Abbéa, a writer, professor, organizer and emerging musician. They are the author of three poetry collections: A Strange Relief, Killarnoe, and Sonnet’s Shakespeare. In this workshop, you’ll learn about the “elusive concept of a vibe,” and how to create tension in poetry.

Lunch Poems featuring Tawahum Bige & Heidi Greco
Where: Teck Gallery 515 W Hastings St. at SFU Vancouver’s Harbour Centre campus
When: November 16, 12:00 p.m.–1:00 p.m.

Lunch Poems is a favourite event here in the Arts section, and for good reason. Held at SFU Harbour Centre on the third Wednesday of every month, tune in to talented poets as they read their work at this free event. Tawahum Bige is a “Łutselkʼe Dene, Plains Cree poet and spoken word artist” who just released their debut poetry collection, Cut to Fortress, on top of an EP in May 2022. Heidi Greco is a Surrey-based writer, editor, and book reviewer whose environmental activism has influenced her work.

Was this article helpful?

Leave a ReplyCancel reply

Block title

“The fire that heals us”: a collaborative zine-making workshop

By: Noeka Nimmervoll, Staff Writer Content warning: conversations about sexualized violence and sexual assault. On January 28, SFU students and community members gathered in the SFPIRG Lounge for “the fire that heals us,” a zine-making workshop. The SFU Sexual Violence Support & Prevention Office (SVSPO), the Simon Fraser Public Interest Research Group (SFPIRG), and the Simon Fraser Student Society Women’s Centre hosted the collaborative event at the Surrey and Burnaby campuses. Open to all, this event aimed to provide a space to reflect on how personal healing can happen within a communal environment.  Participants received magazines, markers, and decor to create pages based on prompts about “ancestral, land-based, community-based healing.” The resulting pages will be compiled into a collaborative zine. A zine is an informal, independently...

Read Next

Block title

“The fire that heals us”: a collaborative zine-making workshop

By: Noeka Nimmervoll, Staff Writer Content warning: conversations about sexualized violence and sexual assault. On January 28, SFU students and community members gathered in the SFPIRG Lounge for “the fire that heals us,” a zine-making workshop. The SFU Sexual Violence Support & Prevention Office (SVSPO), the Simon Fraser Public Interest Research Group (SFPIRG), and the Simon Fraser Student Society Women’s Centre hosted the collaborative event at the Surrey and Burnaby campuses. Open to all, this event aimed to provide a space to reflect on how personal healing can happen within a communal environment.  Participants received magazines, markers, and decor to create pages based on prompts about “ancestral, land-based, community-based healing.” The resulting pages will be compiled into a collaborative zine. A zine is an informal, independently...

Block title

“The fire that heals us”: a collaborative zine-making workshop

By: Noeka Nimmervoll, Staff Writer Content warning: conversations about sexualized violence and sexual assault. On January 28, SFU students and community members gathered in the SFPIRG Lounge for “the fire that heals us,” a zine-making workshop. The SFU Sexual Violence Support & Prevention Office (SVSPO), the Simon Fraser Public Interest Research Group (SFPIRG), and the Simon Fraser Student Society Women’s Centre hosted the collaborative event at the Surrey and Burnaby campuses. Open to all, this event aimed to provide a space to reflect on how personal healing can happen within a communal environment.  Participants received magazines, markers, and decor to create pages based on prompts about “ancestral, land-based, community-based healing.” The resulting pages will be compiled into a collaborative zine. A zine is an informal, independently...
Exit mobile version