Mon Jul 26 – throughout festival
Zoom access | Register
In the connective void that has been this pandemic pause, QAF takes you on a few house calls. We visit with several festival artists in their creation spaces, a digital dialogue to allow a connection from the artist in their corner of space to you and where you call your place.
Return to this page on the date and time of the Studio (ob)Session you are interested in and CLICK HERE to join the Zoom session with the artist(s). Alternatively, CLICK HERE to register for the entire series and receive email reminders including the Zoom link, prior to each session.
Watch now:
Carrie Hawks – Jul 26, 7:30pm (ASL)
Carrie Hawks makes art to promote healing primarily focusing on queer and POC experiences via filmmaking, object-making, drawing, and performance. Their works have been exhibited at the Ann Arbor Film Festival, the Brooklyn Museum, CinemAfrica (Stockholm), Cape Town, and Tokyo. They harness the magic of animation to tell stories. Their film black enuf* won numerous awards and had its broadcast debut on American Public Television’s World Channel in 2019.
Falak Vasa – Jul 27, 7:30pm
Falak Vasa (they/she pronouns, b. 1995) is an interdisciplinary artist, writer, and educator currently based in Kolkata. They graduated from the School of the Art Institute of Chicago in 2018 and have attended artist residencies at the Skowhegan School of Painting and Sculpture, and ACRE. Her practice is a decolonizing and queering of oppressive power structures through gesture and language, filtered through humour.
Upcoming:
Lili Robinson – Jul 30, 7:30pm (ASL)
Lili Robinson (she/they) is a playwright, poet, actor and community organizer based on the unceded territories of the Musqueam, Squamish, and Tsleil-Waututh First Nations. Lili is passionate about centering voices at the intersections of queerness, Black diaspora, socio-economic diversity and femme identity in their work.
Rachel Kiyo Iwaasa & Evan Ducharme – Aug 1, 7:30pm (ASL)
Rachel Kiyo Iwaasa is recognized among Canada’s foremost contemporary music pianists. Selected to close the ISCM World New Music Days 2017 in Vancouver, Rachel has performed in the Netherlands, Germany, US and across Canada.
Evan Ducharme is a multidisciplinary Metis artist with ancestral ties to the Cree, Ojibwe, and Saulteaux peoples, and was raised in the historic Metis community of St. Ambroise, Manitoba (Treaty 1 Territory). His eponymous clothing label examines Metis history and cultural iconography in dialogue with Indigenous perspectives on gender, queerness, and environmental responsibility.
Eva Wong & Naoko Fukumaru – Aug 3, 7:30pm
Eva is a transgender developer, writer, and artist who often helps out in the online questioning community. She combines concepts from a variety of disciplines in her works, including literature, mathematics, music, technology and more. She’s heavily interested in Japanese tradition and subculture, which often heavily inspire her various projects.
Naoko Fukumaru is a Kyoto-born, Vancouver-based kintsugi artist and a professional ceramic and glass conservator. She worked at the Detroit Institute of Arts Museum and Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York. Her present work aims to take these skills beyond invisible perfection, to make the imperfect beautifully visible. She applies her experience of Western and European invisible restoration towards the more artistically creative methods of traditional Japanese Kintsugi.
Alvin Erasga Tolentino – Aug 5, 6pm
Alvin Erasga Tolentino is one of the most active Asian/Canadian dance artists, whose work continues to provoke, fascinate and bring a fresh voice to the national and international dance scene.
Zachery Longboy – Aug 9, 7pm
Zachery Longboy is a multidisciplinary artist born in Churchill, Manitoba, of Sayisi Dene lineage. His work has been shown at the National Gallery of Canada; the Glenbow Museum; the Edmonton Art Gallery; and the Museum of Modern Art, New York.
Duane Isaac – Aug 10, 7:30pm
Duane Isaac is a First Nation Mi’gmaq from Listuguj, QC. He is a contemporary artist who uses the photography medium in combination with his mask making. His work has been featured in multiple online publications, most recently Canadian Art Magazine. He currently resides in Listuguj, QC.
El Chenier – Aug 12, 7pm
Over the course of my career I have maintained a deep commitment to producing forms of representations that are affirming while also revealing the complexity of human experience. We want triumphalist narratives of gender-affirming surgery but the stories our bodies tell are never that simple. My aspiration with this series is to capture the fullness of that experience.