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Events

Fri February 4, 2022

Today's Events

No events scheduled today

Ongoing Events

Quill Violet Christie-Peters: spilling out, spilling over

Jan 14 - Apr 22, 2022

Quill Violet Christie-Peters' work conceptualizes “spilling over boundaries” through Anishinaabekwe practices, moving beyond the material plane to a spiritual form of art-making

Charlene Vickers: Big Blue Smudge

Jan 21 - Apr 22, 2022

Charlene Vickers’ practice explores memory, healing and embodied connections to ancestral lands

material + time

Jan 24 - Apr 15, 2022

Drawn from the University of Saskatchewan Art Collection, the exhibition presents divergent associations with structural modes, moving away from static moments towards an understanding of structure as an ongoing process of dissolution

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Upcoming Events

Uncovering Process with Ravi Jain and Miriam Fernandez

Feb 15, 2022

Part of the Fine Arts Research Lecture Series in Drama

Film screening: Lordville

Feb 17, 2022

Considering ghosts, the act of walking, and demarcations of ownership, Lordville asks “What does it mean to own the land?”

Literature Matters: A Tribute to Lee Maracle

Feb 18, 2022

A panel discussion about the celebrated Indigenous writer and academic

The Elixir Ensemble presents: Two Tales of Russia

Feb 19, 2022

USask Department of Music professor Kathleen Solose is artistic director of the Elixir Ensemble

Webinar: Transforming Indigenous Risk Reduction and Response

Feb 25, 2022

The webinar will focus on the transformative Indigenous capacities that contribute to self-determination through community-led emergency management and disaster recovery

Opera, As In: Writing One

Feb 28, 2022

A talk in the Fine Arts Research Lecture Series in Music (FARLS)

(NEW DATES) Greystone Theatre: Paradise Park

Mar 1-5, 2022

In this Charles Mee play, all of America becomes an amusement park

Film screening: Persistence

Mar 3, 2022

Persistence is a meditation on the time just after a great historical event, about what is common to moments such as these, about the continuous and discontinuous threads of history," writes Daniel Eisenberg