Thomas Pashko

Managing editor  

  • CRITIPEG: United Skates

    United Skates is a documentary exploring the subculture of roller skating rinks. 

  • Arts briefs

    The Mariachi Ghost and Zrada at WECC // Central Canada Comic Con // WOKE Comedy Hour // Casablanca live at WSO // Faces in the Mirror // Black on Black fundraiser

  • Whose House? Kelly’s House!

    Kelly Amaujaq Fraser just moved to Winnipeg in September to start a new position with the Aboriginal School of Dance. 

  • Arts briefs

    Workshop with Leesa Streifle // Kenny Omega returns to Winnipeg // Cineméntal Film Festival // Sense and Sensibility at MTC // Steven Erikson book launch // Bourbon Street Parade

  • Arts briefs

    Scattered Seeds Craft Market // Creepy Winnipeg // Aisslinn Nosky with the Manitoba Chamber Orchestra // Soles on Fire // Jakob Bro at The Good Will // Attention | Intention | Emergence

  • Arts briefs

    Manitoba Podcast Festival // Flash Photographic Festival // Free admission at the WAG (and Nuit Blanche)! // Ingmar Bergman retrospective // Prairie Nurse at Prairie Theatre Exchange // Lights of the North

  • Mythologizing Winnipeg

    Which of the following statements about Winnipeg are true?

  • Arts briefs

    Aretha Franklin tribute // Fringe fundraiser // Madeleine Roger album release // The Lytics CD release party // Winnipeg Design Festival // Winnipeg Crankie Festival

  • Arts briefs

    Viva Non album release show // Special screenings at Cinematheque // Sovereign Traces book launch // International metal at The Park Theatre // Song of Hope - Five Women Artists // Education at Winnipeg Film Group

  • Arts briefs

    Shoot Some 16mm — A 16mm film workshop // Shining Tapestry // Secret Cinema with david Knipe // Prairie Art Book Fair // Ms Pat at Rumor's // Leaving Impressionists at the WAG

  • When Winnipeg went dry

    Imagine living in a tense and highly mobilized political climate.

  • CRITIPEG: Aida’s Secrets

    Aida’s Secrets is another entry in the genre of “long-lost family” documentaries that have seen a recent explosion in popularity.

  • Whose House? Rachelle’s House!

    Contemporary dance artist and DJ Rachelle Bourget has a simple motto for her downtown home: “Nothing new.

  • CRITIPEG: Littoral Landscapes

    Winnipeg artist Tracy Peters’ Littoral Landscapes, a video-based installation running at Gallery 1C03 until April 7, uses a minimalist approach to explore local concerns about shores, water and time. 

  • Tinker, Tailor, Sparrow, Water

    As the old song says, “Everything old is new again.” But when the old things are nuclear tensions, anxieties about espionage and global power struggles, is it anything to sing about?

  • Whose House? Alan’s House!

    Cultural economist Alan Freeman’s career has spanned the fields of politics and art, multiple countries and several decades.

  • Sea Levels

    Laine Groeneweg’s Sea Levels is a collection of works derived from aquatic dreams. Utilizing traditional printmaking techniques dating back centuries, Groeneweg’s work examines oceanic imagery with a storybook cadence and a fairytale sense of darkness.

  • Whose House? Damien’s House!

    Filmmaker Damien Ferland’s work often deals with the absurd and comedic. 

  • CRITIPEG: Human Flow

    Human Flow, the new film from Chinese artist and dissident Ai Weiwei, is more than just a powerful activist documentary. 

  • Whose House? Mike and Allie’s House!

    Since 1986, the Neon Factory has served triple duty: it makes new signs, restores old ones and preserves treasures of Winnipeg’s past. This spirit of preservation is on full display in the North End home of its founder Mike Wolchock and photographer Allison Slessor.

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