Art Matters
North America's largest student-run arts festival, running until the end of March.
Art and design exhibitions, film festivals, vernissages, concerts, theatre shows and dance performances – this year, students in Concordia's Faculty of Fine Arts will present their end of year work in many different forms. We'll update this page as new events pop up, so be sure to visit often to catch all the creative work being produced by our fine arts students.
North America's largest student-run arts festival, running until the end of March.
Undergraduate journal of Art History annual conference 2024: Unveiling Narratives - March 22-23-24.
Design & Computation Arts programs present FUSION exhibition, undergrad from April 19-21.
Advanced screen print students, led by Bonnie Baxter will present exhibition "I am not a robot / Je ne suis pas un robot" at Val-David's community centre, from April 20 to April 21.
Fibres (FBRS 480) present its exhibition "YARN (for some of us)" at the VAV Gallery, from April 29 to May 3.
Fibers Up! Fibres Student Association (FSA) exhibition, April 15 to 22, at the POPOP Gallery in the Belgo building.
Fibres & Material Practices MFA Showcase at the MFA Gallery, on April 22.
ARTT 399 B 2223 - Body, Arts, and the State: The Artists as Multi-hyphenate presents an exhibition at the VAV Gallery, May 6 to Friday to May 11. Vernissage and Book (Freight: recordings of our movements) launch on May 9.
Shaping Currents - Choreography 1: Dramaturgy by instructor Erin Flynn and the students of Choreography I, April 5 and 6.
Professor emerita, and founder of the Conversations in Contemporary Art series, Ingrid Bachmann will present Emotional Machines and Other Stories, Department of Studio Arts, April 5.
End-of-year concerts (Jazz, Choir, Eclectic, Ensemble) in the Music Department, March 22 to April 29.
Staged Readings of Contemporary Non-Canadian Plays, on until April 5.
Just: Short works festival from the Theatre students, April 4 to 6.
Concordia Film Festival, an annual student-run film festival, May 9 to 12.
© Concordia University