Events
There is always something to do in Vancouver from arts and theatre to movies to concerts to trade shows to nightclub events. We put together Vancouver events from May 22, 2013. Feel free to browse our Vancouver events calendar.
In late 2009, artist James Hart began designing a large-scale sculpture titled The Dance Screen (The Scream Too) and began carving the work in 2010.
CO-MIX: A Retrospective of Comics, Graphics and Scraps, is the first retrospective exhibition of the acclaimed comic artist, Art Spiegelman, and includes examples from all facets of his diverse career.
Since receiving international acclaim in the mid-1980s for his portraits of Italian aristocratic families, Patrick Faigenbaum has situated his work within the heart of the pictorial tradition, emphasizing the expressive power of photography and its position within art history.
The launch of this microsite marks the public introduction of Grand Hotel, a major exhibition commissioned and produced by the Vancouver Art Gallery. Between now and the presentation of the exhibition in summer of 2013,
Heartfelt and hilarious, the story of an aging mother’s peculiarities and a son’s flawed devotion. A celebration of what holds a family together, suffused with subtle theatrical magic. Canadian Premiere.
Full of onstage joy and backstage drama, the musical Dreamgirls tells the rags-to-riches tale of a 1960s girl group, loosely based on The Supremes.
Display Week is the premier annual showcase of the display industry, which is valued at over US$100B annually.
The famed Canadian clown duo Mump and Smoot return to The Cultch with a new work that will take Vancouver audiences yet again into the giddy, scary world of pure imagination.
ICASSP is the world’s largest and most comprehensive technical conference focused on signal processing and its applications.
FCM’s Annual Conference and Trade Show program is shaping up to be our best ever. This year, Canada’s largest national municipal conference heads west to BC and will be held at the Vancouver Convention Centre.


















