GALLERIES/ MUSEUMS
Burnaby Art Gallery
Molly Lamb Bobak: Talk of the Town & Julie McIntyre: Travel Stories. Two new exhibitions featuring work by Burnaby-raised artist Molly Lamb Bobak (1920-2014), and Julie McIntyre, a Vancouver print and fibre artist. • 6344 Deer Lake Ave., burnabyartgallery.ca
CityScape Community Art Space
19th Birthday Party: NVCAC has partnered with Housing Matters Media Project to bring the 19th Birthday Party to the North Shore. This media art installation was produced to explore issues relating to youth transitioning out of government care at age 19 and youth homelessness. • Opening reception Feb. 8, 7 p.m., runs until March 11 • 335 Lonsdale Ave., North Van, 604-9886844
Elissa Cristall Gallery
Mara Korkola’s practice over the last two decades as a self-professed landscape painter has encompassed cities, forests and airports. • Megan Hepburn and Brennan Stalford are emerging artists both working in abstraction. • 2239 Granville St., cristallgallery. com
Ian Tan Gallery
Vladimir Kraynyk — Epiphanies. Street art to fine art. This solo exhibition features the new works of emerging Winnipeg artist Vladimir Kraynyk. • 2342 Granville St., iantangallery.com/
Inuit Gallery
15th Annual Small Treasures 2018. This year’s collection offers a range of beautiful and intriguing sculptural works, including works from a wide range of Inuit communities • 206 Cambie St., inuit.com
Morris and Helen Belkin Art Gallery
Beginning with the Seventies: GLUT. The first of four exhibitions based upon the gallery’s research project investigating the 1970s, an era when social movements of all kinds began to coalesce into models of self-organization that overlapped with the production of art and culture. • 1825 Main Mall, UBC, belkin.ubc.ca
Museum of Anthropology
Amazonia: The Rights of Nature. Amazonian basketry, textiles, carvings, feather works and ceramics both of everyday and of ceremonial use. | The Fabric of Our Land: Salish Weaving — a journey through the past 200 years of Salish wool weaving. | In a Different Light: Reflecting on Northwest Coast Art. more than 110 historical Indigenous artworks and marks the return of many important works to British Columbia. • 6393 NW Marine Dr., UBC, moa.ubc.ca
Museum of Vancouver
City on Edge: A Century of Vancouver Activism. Drawing from the photo collection of The Vancouver Sun and The Province, this immersive exhibition revisits moments of action, transformation and detonation. • 1100 Chestnut St., museumofvancouver.ca
Surrey Art Gallery
Many Visions, Many Versions: Art from Indigenous Communities in India — features the work of twenty-four contemporary artists from four major Indigenous artistic traditions in India. • 13750 88th Ave., surrey.ca/artgallery
Vancouver Art Gallery
Takashi Murakami: The Octopus Eats Its Own Leg. The first-ever retrospective of international art icon Takashi Murakami to be presented in Canada. Featuring fiftyfive remarkable works, some newly created for the presentation in Vancouver, this exhibit offers a critical and serious meditation on the current state of Japanese society in the midst of a complex, global world. • 750 Hornby St., vanartgallery.bc.ca
Vancouver Maritime Museum
Into the Arctic: This exhibit encompasses more than 50 Arctic oil paintings and three films from Cory Trépanier’s four Arctic expeditions to the furthest reaches of the Canadian North. • 1905 Ogden Ave., vancouvermaritimemuseum.com
West Vancouver Museum
The Ceramic Art of Thomas Kakinuma: This exhibit is the artist’s first substantial retrospective offering a rare opportunity to see works from public and private collections. • 680 17th St., westvancouvermuseum.ca