Go behind the art at Amelia Douglas Gallery
The gallery’s next exhibit will be Stefanie Denz’s The End of the Affair: Re-Imagined Roles and 20th-Century Cinema, which opens on September 15.
The gallery’s next exhibit will be Stefanie Denz’s The End of the Affair: Re-Imagined Roles and 20th-Century Cinema, which opens on September 15.
The Amelia Douglas Gallery presents its latest exhibit, Louise A. DeGagné and Gregg Steffensen’s this part remains with me as part of the 13th Annual New West Cultural Crawl.
The American Authors have returned with their second full-length studio album, What We Live For.
An accomplished 27-year-old actor with over 60 film and television credits, Anton Yelchin died suddenly in a freak car accident on June 19. Although his passing was tragic, he left behind a collection of films and TV shows that showcase his amazing talent.
Nature is alive and radiant in Madelyn Hamilton’s Rhythms and Energy of Nature, the latest exhibit in the Amelia Douglas Gallery. The semi-abstract, mixed media landscapes feature multi-layered textures and vibrant depictions of movement.
This April, the Amelia Douglas Gallery will feature Kelowna artist Madelyn Hamilton’s nature-inspired artwork in the Rhythms and Energy of Nature exhibit. The vibrant, textural art depicts nature in a stylized way, inviting viewers to explore each piece in detail.
The Douglas College Creative Writing department released its latest anthology of student works, Pearls 35, on April 1 with an evening of student readings in the Studio Theatre at the New Westminster campus.
After producing two successful comic collections and a remarkable crowdfunding campaign, the Toronto Comics Anthology team are back on Kickstarter to raise funds for Toronto Comics: Volume 3.
It’s a woman’s world in Douglas College’s production of John Murrell’s Waiting for the Parade.
Greenlinks 2016: Celebrating the Urban Garden explores the beauty of flora and fauna. The Amelia Douglas Gallery exhibit features nature photography by Wendy Schmidt, semi-abstract floral paintings by Lauren Morris, and educational displays by Douglas College’s Institute of Urban Ecology’s UNIBUG (User Network for Insect Biology in the Urban Garden).