QAF Community Art Show

QAF Community Art Show

| June 14 – 28 | Tues – Sat, 12 – 6 | SUM gallery |
OPENING RECEPTION: June 14, 5 – 8pm | Free |

It’s no exaggeration to say the QAF Community Art Show is the backbone of our festival. It was the original event, begun in 1998, that would grow into the Queer Arts Festival as we know it today. The QAF Community Art Show showcases and celebrates some of the outstanding artists and artwork from our local 2SLGBTQIA+ communities. Over the years the name and location may have changed, but the spirit remains the same.

The 2025 QAF Community Art Show is supported by the Parachute Fund.

Artists
Jasper Berehulke
Kaila Bhullar
Ash Boan
Brandon Cotter
JC Fung
Danya Gorodetsky
Marina Levit
Rowen Lobo
Nicole Mandryk & Margaret August
Liz Oakley
Jai Sallay-Carrington
Niloufar Samadi
Suze Shore
Malina Sintnicolaas
Taryn Walker
Valerie d. Walker
The QAF Community Show runs June 14th to 28th at SUM Gallery.

Join us for the opening reception on June 14th 5 – 8pm!
Varied Editions Opening Reception Tickets available here.

Night Owl

Night Owl: Erica Roozendaal, accordion

| Sunday, June 8 @ 7pm | SUM gallery | Pay-What-You-Wish |

We’re thrilled to present the QAF debut of Dutch accordionist Erica Roozendaal. Visiting us from the Hague, Roozendaal shares an intimate program at SUM gallery that includes music by the iconic Pauline Olivieros, plus Erica’s own autobiographical showpiece, Night Owl. This beautiful and moving performance subtly addresses the theme of abuse and growing up in an unsafe environment. Erica Roozendaal—performer, visual artist, and accordionist—created the script and performs the monologue in a restrained, captivating manner while alternating with playing the accordion. Presented in partnership with Vancouver InterCultural Orchestra.


About Erica Roozendaal

Within the versatility of all art forms, Erica Roozendaal sees herself primarily as a “storyteller”: expressing a story, an experience or emotion, using the medium that best serves that purpose. As a classically trained accordionist, music is her biggest focus and always plays a role on stage, though she is equally at home in the worlds of visual art and theatre.

As a musician, Erica enjoys collaborating with composers, which has resulted in dozens of new solo pieces and chamber music works. After studying classical music, she further developed in folk and improvised music. Curiosity about (still) unknown music, culture, history, brings a broad musical palette, which she also likes to interconnect. So she prefers to play concerts in which the common thread is a theme or a story, with music from all sorts of angles and eras. In 2016, she founded Roadrunner, an ensemble that sits between contemporary, folk and improvised music with an emphasis on her own written work. Every year they organize the Roadrunner Academy week, a week for young composers concluding with a concert featuring the new pieces.

In addition to being a performing artist, Erica has been affiliated with the Royal Conservatory of Music in The Hague since 2020. Among other things, she teaches accordion within PI: a program designed specifically for preschoolers, and Young KC, a preliminary program for children ages 6 to 10. Empathizing with young children’s experiences, teaching aurally, stimulating curiosity and creativity: these are the key elements of her teaching practice.

Varied Editions

VARIED EDITIONS — Curated by Edward Fu-Chen Juan & Cheryl Hamilton

| Jun 6 – 28 | Tues – Sat, 12 – 6 | On Main Gallery | Free |

Now in its third year, Varied Editions celebrates the diversity of printmaking practices within queer communities. Borrowing its name from the printmaking technique where artists alter individual prints within an edition, the exhibition reflects on queerness as a shared yet uniquely expressed experience, as well as printmaking’s long-standing connection to queer activism at pride marches and protests. Varied Editions features works by Paul Wong, Tajliya Jamal, Zoë Grace-Ann Laycock, Juneau MacPhee, and exhibition curators Cheryl Hamilton and Edward Fu-Chen Juan. The exhibit is expanded by a series of printmaking and zine workshops, emphasizing the medium’s longstanding ties to activism, protest, and collective expression. Presented in partnership with Malaspina Printmakers Society.

Varied Editions runs June 6th to 28th at On Main Gallery, launching with an opening reception on June 6th, as well as workshops on June 7th, 8th, and 14th at Malaspina Printmakers Society.


About the Curators

Cheryl Hamilton is a visual artist living on the Coast Salish Territories. Her artwork includes sculpture, painting, printmaking and illustration. She graduated from Emily Carr College of Art and Design in 1990. Her work has been influenced by her queer identity, satire, humour, surrealism, craft and pop culture. Cheryl has a deep commitment to sharing her artwork in the public realm, and has artwork in public and private collections across North America.

Edward Fu-Chen Juan identifies as a queer Taiwanese-Canadian visual artist primarily working in printmaking and paper-making. Edward’s ongoing projects combine techniques such as copper plate etching, aquatint, silkscreen, and chine-collé. Since 2023, he has been researching the impact of human rights movements in the Taiwanese-Canadian community. The work involves collecting oral histories, portrait sketches, and photo-documenting places in Canada and Taiwan. His intention is to experiment and create work that highlights the democratic discourses and challenges between Taiwan and its Western counterparts.

Presently Edward lives and work in Vancouver, BC. or the unceded traditional territories of the xʷməθkʷəy̓əm (Musqueam), Sḵwx̱wú7mesh (Squamish), and Sel̓íl̓witulh (Tsleil-Waututh) Nations.  Edward is a Taiwanese person with ethnic roots to the Hakka and the Plain First Nations People of Taiwan.

ArtParty! 2025

ArtParty!

| June 21 | 5-8pm | Centre A |

Step through the portal and into the party! Join us on June 21 from 5–8pm at Centre A for the 2025 QAF ArtParty, launching our signature exhibition Portals—a powerful exploration of migration, identity, and transformation, curated by Diane Hau Yu Wong and Mark Takeshi McGregor. Celebrate with art, community, and irresistible beats by guest DJ OShow, as we celebrate QTBIPOC resilience and creativity. Come early, stay late, pay-what-you-wish. All are welcome in this gateway to new possibilities!

PORTALS

Queer Arts Festival

PORTALS: June 6 – 28, 2025

Festival Theme: Portals

Portals are gateways to transformation—liminal spaces of transition, possibility, and change. For the 2025 Queer Arts Festival, Portals explores queer and trans experiences of crossing thresholds, stepping into new identities, and imagining futures beyond imposed boundaries. Presented in partnership with Centre A, this year’s curated visual exhibition also examines diasporic journeys, highlighting the intersections of queerness, migration, and belonging. In a time of rising anti-trans and anti-queer rhetoric, Portals is a call to reimagine the world, celebrating art’s power to forge new paths, challenge oppression, and open doors to liberation. Step through—what’s on the other side?

Festival Listings

Portals Art Party image

ArtParty! 2025

ArtParty! | June 21 | 5-8pm | Centre A | Step through the portal and into the party! Join us on June 21 from 5–8pm at Centre A for the 2025 QAF ArtParty, launching our signature exhibition Portals—a powerful exploration of migration, identity, and transformation, curated by Diane Hau Yu Wong and…
Varied Editions Banner

Varied Editions

VARIED EDITIONS — Curated by Edward Fu-Chen Juan & Cheryl Hamilton | Jun 6 – 28 | Tues – Sat, 12 – 6 | On Main Gallery | Free | Now in its third year, Varied Editions celebrates the diversity of printmaking practices within queer communities. Borrowing its name from…
Night Owl Banner

Night Owl

Night Owl: Erica Roozendaal, accordion | Sunday, June 8 @ 7pm | SUM gallery | Pay-What-You-Wish | We’re thrilled to present the QAF debut of Dutch accordionist Erica Roozendaal. Visiting us from the Hague, Roozendaal shares an intimate program at SUM gallery that includes music by the iconic Pauline Olivieros,…
QAF Community Art Show Banner

QAF Community Art Show

QAF Community Art Show | June 14 – 28 | Tues – Sat, 12 – 6 | SUM gallery |OPENING RECEPTION: June 14, 5 – 8pm | Free | It’s no exaggeration to say the QAF Community Art Show is the backbone of our festival. It was the original event,…
Portals Curated Visual Art Exhibition banner art.

QAF Curated Visual Art Exhibition: Portals

Curated Visual Art Exhibition: PORTALS — Curated by Mark Takeshi McGregor & Diane Hau Yu Wong | June 21 – August 23 | Wed – Sat, 12 – 6 | Centre A: Vancouver International Centre for Contemporary Asian Art | Free | Our QAF 2025 theme is fully realized in this special…
Queer Clothing Swap banner

Queer Clothing Swap

Queer Clothing Swap | June 22, 2 – 4pm | Sun Wah Centre, 4th Floor | Free | Looking to spice up your summer wardrobe? Look no further: We’re bringing back our super popular Queer Clothing Swap! Bring your clean, gently worn, unscented clothes over to the Sun Wah Centre…
Long Live Kings Banner

Long Live Kings

Long Live Kings — Directed by Romi Kim | June 22, 1pm | SUM gallery | Free | Long Live Kings is a multi-episode series that puts a much needed spotlight on the vibrant Drag King scene on the unceded territories of the Musqueam, Squamish, and Tsleil-Waututh peoples (aka Vancouver)….
Presenting a Trio of Events in Partnership with Vancouver International Jazz Festival
Bruno Hubert Trio With Brad Turner Banner

Bruno Hubert Trio with Brad Turner

Bruno Hubert Trio with Brad Turner | Granville Island Jazz | June 25, 2pm | Performance Works | Pay-What-You-Wish Bruno Hubert is one of Canada’s most expressive jazz pianists, with a deep sense of swing and melody that evokes Erroll Garner, Herbie Hancock, and Bill Evans—while always remaining unmistakably Bruno!…
Raagaverse Banner

Raagaverse featuring Cassius Khan

Raagaverse featuring Cassius Khan | Granville Island Jazz | June 26, 8:30pm | Ocean Artworks | $15 at the door 2025 JUNO nominees for Jazz Album of the Year (Group), creative Indo-Jazz fusion band Raagaverse pays homage to two historical and culturally-significant genres: classical Hindustani music and jazz. Led by vocalist…
Allie Lynn King, Nate McBride and Kenton Loewen banner

Allie Lynn King, Nate McBride, and Kenton Loewen

Allie Lynn King, Nate McBride, and Kenton Loewen | Granville Island Jazz | June 28, 5pm | Revue Stage | Pay-What-You-Wish Anchored in improvisation, Vancouver guitarist Allie Lynn King blends the roots of blues and jazz with the heaviness of doom metal and the abrasion of noise. Bassist Nate McBride…

QAF 2021 dispersed:

it’s not easy being green

Jul 24 – Aug 13, 2021

QAF shows artists upcycling & recycling apocalyptic fear & dread into art & social change. Green symbolizes not only our relationship to each other & the lands we occupy, but also difference & marginalization, exemplified by popular culture green underdogs Elphaba the Wicked Witch of the West & Rainbow Connection, Kermit the Frog. It’s not easy being green, fighting for a world that consistently rejects us. With imminent climate catastrophe upon us, we witness the world grappling with the end times, but when were the queered privy to life outside the apocalypse? 

Green is the complex terrain of extended kinship ties of Indigiqueer/two-spirit and queer settlers. Green spectrals haunt the hyphened margins of the subaltern; enduring perpetually frequent gaslighting(s) of post-traumatic settler-colonial and concurrent disorders. Together/apart WE endure our own private apocalyptics. Cataclysmic temporal end-points that exist as seemingly fixed and an unavoidable global terminus – from which Indigiqueer/queer resurgence erupts relentlessly into the ongoing colonial.

QAF shows artists cast as see-ers/oracles/alchemists upcycling/rebranding/reclaiming/transgressing/transforming apocalyptic visions towards queer utopic landscapes, transmuting fear, dread and a collective broken heart of forced disslocations with departures and arrivals, using art as transformative praxis and practice towards social and spiritual metamorphoses.

QAF 2021 Dispersed: it’s not easy being green  runs 3 weeks from your computer, our home base, the Sun Wah Centre in Vancouver’s historic Chinatown, and Vancouver’s only cemetery, Mountain View Cemetery. 

When green is all there is to be
It could make you wonder why,
but why wonder?
– Kermit the Frog
Buy festival PASS here:

2021 EVENTS AT A GLANCE

ArtParty!

Sat Jul 24, 7-10pm
Festival Opening | SUM & Sun Wah 268 Keefer

QAF’s Gala opening party: With music, dazzling views, and art on multiple levels of the Sun Wah Centre to explore, we’re launching the Dispersed QAF in champagne style (have a glass or two or a nibble or three on us) with DJ O Show!


it’s not easy being green: Curated Visual Art Exhibition and Tour


Sat Jul 24 – Fri Aug 13, from 12 – 6pm
Visual Art | SUM  & Sun Wah 268 Keefer Lower Ground

Jeffrey McNeil-Seymour and SD Holman curate artists who transmute our collective broken heart of forced dislocations with departures and arrivals, using art as transformative praxis and practice towards social and spiritual metamorphoses.

Tue Jul 27, 5pm
Visual Art Tour | SUM & Sun Wah 268 Keefer

Come together for our Visual Art Tour with the curators Jeffrey McNeil-Seymour and SD Holman, guest artists, and a gallery of intimate friends old and new.


Language as a Virus: Queer Isolation Stories

Sat Jul 24 – Fri Aug 13
Sonic Installation | around False Creek & Online

An interactive audio/radio/networked soundwork from Bobbi Kozinuk that invites the user to explore themes around the COVID-19 pandemic and its effect on queer and diverse communities. Featuring Jae Lew. 


Language as a Virus: The Tour

Mon Jul 26, 5pm  
Audio Art Tour | Creek Side CC (TBC) False Creek

Take a stroll or a bike ride along False Creek and tune in to WENR 88.9FM Isolation Radio with your host Bobbi Kozinuk and explore her multi-layered work, Language as a Virus: Queer Isolation Stories.


Studio (ob)Sessions

Mon July 26 – throughout festival
Digital Discourse | Online

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.


Screen Greenery

Sat Jul 31, 9pm
Media Art Screening | SUM & Sun Wah 268 Keefer Rooftop

Curated by Fergie and Ben!  Rooftop screening of very queer and rather green short films.


Queerotica

Mon Aug 2, 8pm | Literary Readings | SUM & Sun Wah 268 Keefer Rooftop & Online

Curated by Josie Boyce, slip into something a little more comfortable and enjoy readings by Vancouverite writers.

Attend in person or at home via streaming.

Ceremony for Rebel Spirits – Onibana Taiko and Alvin Erasga Tolentino

Sat Aug 7, 8pm 
Dance and Musical Performance | Mountain View Cemetery
*NEW* ONLINE | Tue Aug 10 | 24 hours

When Japanese folk tradition meets punk, audience members are invited to commune with the ancestors via Obon dance, song, sensu (fan) cheerleading, fue, shamisen and kick-ass taiko.


Piano Burning

*POSTPONED* Sun Aug 8, 8pm
Performance Art | Mountain View Cemetery & Online

With Full Circle First Nations Performance, we build on Annea Lockwood’s conceptual classic music composition with a new commission by Lil’wat composer Russell Wallace, a fireproof ball gown created by Métis designer Evan Ducharme, and a piano on fire played by Rachel Kiyo Iwaasa.

Attend in person or at home via streaming.


Glitter is Forever

Fri Aug 13, 7-10pm  
Closing | SUM & Sun Wah 268 Keefer Rooftop  

Join us for the festival closing with DJ O Show and your last chance to see all the art @ QAF 2021 with us at the Sun Wah Centre, from the basement, to the SUM gallery, to the rooftop (take it all in!! the art, the views!!). 


SATELLITE ACADEMY : Workshops, Community,  Discourse + 

Multidisciplinary outreach and community programming rooted in the  premise that 2SLGBTQ+ lives are relevant and universal as artistic inspirations. Title inspired by writer Sarah Schulman’s Satellite Academy


Kindred Spirits

Sat Jul 24 – Fri Aug 13
Community Visual Art | Online

The digital culmination of the Kindred Spirits digital artist residency run by and for 2Spirit and Indigiqueer artists. Guided by Faculty members Dayna Danger, DJ O Show, Raven Davis and Art Auntie Shane Sable, this digital exhibition focuses on re-storying 2Spirit identities and futures through community connection and self-portraiture beyond colonial constructs.


Pride in Art Community Show

Sat Jul 24 – Fri Aug 13, from 12 – 6pm
Visual Art | SUM & Sun Wah 268 Keefer

The community show honours Pride in Art founder, activist, and Two-Spirit artist Robbie Hong’s legacy with an open community exhibition. This year, we’re throwing what was once refused up on our walls. Join community artists in a Salon des Refusés (or perhaps Recyclés) celebrating works that were previously censored or rejected.


Pillows for the Pandemic

Wed Jul 28, 7:30pm 
Workshop | SUM gallery or Online                                                             

Falak Vasa leads us in a pillow-making workshop, based off of their own series of pillows created during the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic offering small controllable comforts.


Gathering of Wishes and 1000 Paper Butterflies

Wed Aug 4, 6pm | Workshop | SUM gallery or Online

Naoko Fukumaru and Eva Wong in Phase 1 of Mass Reincarnation of Wish Fragments 願片大量転生 (Ganhen Tairyou Tensei), where participants create origami and utilize the ink bleeding process to create a butterfly with their own unique patterns and colours. 


Queerer than Queer: Lessons from Nonduality for Deep Planetary Healing

Thu Aug 5 & Fri Aug 6, 7pm | Workshop | SUM gallery or Online 

Is the universe queerer than we can suppose? From the foot of the Himalayas in Himachal Pradesh, Tejal Shah will guide us through this two-part interactive workshop that explores the fine line between illusions and reality. We will explore the possible impact an embodied understanding of nonduality can have on our affective world and on our relationships with ‘others’.

Curator Tour with Guest Artists

Tue Jul 27, 5pm

Visual Art Tour | Sun Wah 268 Keefer, Lower Ground Floor

Come together for our Visual Art Tour of our exhibition it’s not easy being green, with the curators Jeffrey McNeil-Seymour and SD Holman + guest artists.

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