"Golden Threads"
Results from January 1st to May 1st, 2025 for Guest Speaker & Public
In this artist talk, Zoë Laycock discusses their journey across Turtle Island and her shift from “capturing” to “gathering” media through field recordings for her immersive installation work.
Join us for a teepee raising, inspiring alumni speakers, a lunch of beef stew and frybread, engaging panel discussions from Indigenous leaders, a scholarship announcement and more.
Alumna Marjie Crop Eared Wolf is a Káínai Secwépemc Multidisciplinary Artist as well as an Indigenous writer, designer, and liaison.
Samia Henni's work addresses questions of colonization, wars, resource extraction, deserts, forced displacement, and gender dynamics.
What is the Future of Queer History? by Dr. Justin Bengry
Nora Wilson & Koda Maxon
This talk covers the development of Heather Kehoe’s textile-based practice leading to her upcoming exhibition The Gift of Vacancy in the Project Space at Casa.
"Why Arthur Erickson Matters" by architecture critic and historian Trevor Boddy & film screenings of "Arthur Erickson’s Dyde House" and "Eppich House II"
"Digging a Hole with a Garden Hose: Celebrations of Queer Survival Through Failure"
Jessenia Buzunis-Delagneau, a student in Dr. Shelley Hoover’s lab studying bumble bees, will give a talk on her findings for Nature Lethbridge at the Helen Schuler Nature Centre.
Addiction can affect anyone, regardless of age, background or circumstances. Recovery isn’t a single moment; it’s an ongoing journey that often begins long before treatment and continues well after.
Join Dr. Anne Dymond for her talk titled From a Communist Doctor to Madonna's Cone Bra: Museums and Cultural Diplomacy in Troubled Times
"Stop buying things: an artist’s take on land ethics and productivity"
"The Anti-colonial Planner and Ethical Space"
Join us for the first Music at Noon concert of the fall 2025 semester!
"Murals²: 15 years of public collaboration in the streets."
Dr. LaPier is an award-winning Indigenous writer, environmental historian and ethnobotanist.
How We Moralize and Why It Matters
forest!: building a body of work over time, through the pressure of commissions, through testing and previews, along with iterations, until each work takes its shape.
Mackenzie Kelly-Frère will present recent projects and ongoing research focused on cloth as a sensual and textual object that enmeshes social histories and ways of thinking and being.
What is Quantum and Quantum Computing? To understand this, Lunch and Learn workshops will be held on October 7 and 9 at Tecconnect, Lethbridge. Registration is free.
A recital program that explores the many shades of love through timeless and contemporary works.
Nurturing Your Creative Voice: Music, Self, and the Art of Becoming with Flautist Jodi Groenheide, Soprano Lisa Stanford, and Pianist Brad Parker
land and gift giving