Cori Brewster
March 2024
Cori’s music career spans over thirty-four years. She has released five CDs, performed across Canada, Germany, and New Zealand, taught songwriting workshops, and co-wrote songs with some masterful songwriters. Her lyrics appear in a poetry anthology, Vistas of the West: Poems and Visuals of Nature, and John Riley’s book, Bad Judgement. In 2009, the Canada Council awarded her a grant to produce a CD called Buffalo Street: Historic Characters of the Canadian Rockies. Her music knits together folk, roots, and storytelling with a strong Canadiana flavour, covering a range of subjects from the personal to the historical and from the genealogical to geographical, which evoke a time, a sense of place, a character, and a range of emotions. Since the release of Four Horses in 2016, Cori has been writing personal essays. She attended classes offered by the Alexander Writers Guild and Writers Guild of Alberta to learn the craft and is putting the finishing touches on a new project called 55 ~ 5 Songs 5 Stories. Cori is a mother, daughter, sister, aunt, friend, and a devoted Buddhist practitioner and traveler. She lives happily in Canmore, with her wife, Lori.
https://www.coribrewster.com/
Amanda Chesney
February 2024
Amanda Chesney is a printmaker, visual artist and instructor as well as a biologist. She makes works on paper in small editions and as unique originals using traditional and modern sustainable printmaking techniques. Amanda regularly teaches various printmaking classes at the Arts Council of Princeton and Artworks Trenton in addition to being a guest instructor elsewhere.
Amanda’s prints capture the fleeting and sometimes unexpected beauty of the natural world to appeal across cultures and times. She uses found and reclaimed materials and upcycled papers to reflect the locations and seasons where she makes her work. Amanda currently resides in New Jersey and continues to work on both sides of the Canada / USA border, bringing her mix of scientific and artistic skills to capturing an image onto paper. Check out Amanda’s web page here.
Adalia Pemberton Smith & Isaac Smeele
January 2024
Adalia Pemberton-Smith is a highly trained and sharp individual who brings playfulness and deep curiosity to all her projects. She has studied theatre at the Dome, performed for over a decade with Le Nouveau International, teaches improvisation at Theatre Sainte Catherine, and is currently studying for a BFA in Contemporary Dance with a minor in First Peoples studies at Concordia University. Adalia is passionate about creating equity and ecological sustainability in the arts sector. She is a co-founder of the non-profit organization Mossy Society leading their yearly festival, Festival d'Arts Entralaces (Interwoven Arts Festival - faemtl.com) and heading the granting and fundraising efforts that keep things running.
Kyle Flemmer
December 2023
Kyle Flemmer is an author, editor, and publisher from Calgary in Treaty 7 territory. He recently completed an MA in English Literature at the University of Calgary, where he researched digital poetics. Kyle founded The Blasted Tree Publishing Company in 2014 and served as Managing Editor of filling Station magazine from 2018-2020. He has published several chapbooks, most recently Little Songs by No Press and The Heavy Crown by nOIR:Z. Kyle's first book, Barcode Poetry, was published by The Blasted Tree in 2021. Please find more information at @kyleflemmer on Twitter or kyle_flemmer on Instagram
Carol Williams
October 2023
A cultural historian, Carol Williams taught for eleven years as an itinerant sessional across Canada and the western United States before having the good fortune and privilege to secure a permanent position at the University of Lethbridge in the traditional territory of the Siksikaitsiitapi. Originally trained as an interdisciplinary artist at Simon Fraser University, Williams was one of the founders of two artist-run centres in the late 1980s: Worksite: A Feminist Collective and the Association for (N)On Commercial Culture. She has published on Canadian-based contemporary artists including on Lorna Brown, Jin Me Yoon, Marion Penner Bancroft, Dagmar Dahle, Lorna Russell, Rebecca Burke, among others.
Benj Gallander
September 2023
Benj is the author of three best-selling books. Some have been translated into other languages. He writes for The Globe and Mail and various other publications in Canada and the United States. Six of his plays have seen the stage across Canada. He is a co-founder of one of Canada’s largest performance festivals, SummerWorks, started in 1991 and continuing to thrive. Speaking engagements, which he loves, have included Toronto, Vancouver, Calgary, Palm Springs, South Africa and many universities. Benj has traveled to over 35 countries, working in many of them. This included a stint with the Centre for International Studies and Cooperation (CECI) doing anti-poverty work in Nepal; teaching in Czechoslovakia soon after the Velvet Revolution and working in the Middle East and France. All the roads were a set-up to the Wallace Stegner House in Eastend, Saskatchewan!!!
Ayaz Pirani
November 2023
Ayaz’s books include Happy You Are Here, Kabir’s Jacket Has a Thousand Pockets and How Beautiful People Are. His work recently appeared in ARC Poetry Magazine, The Antigonish Review, Guest 16 and The Malahat Review. His books have been reviewed in The Globe and Mail, Toronto Star, ARC Poetry Magazine, Qwerty Magazine, The Dalhousie Review, The Ampersand Review, and HA&L Hamilton Arts and Letters.
Laura Kassar
August 2023
Laura Kassar holds an M.A in Philosophy from the University of Montreal and is now a Ph.D candidate in the department of Religious Sciences. Her doctoral research is funded by the Canadian Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council (SSHRC). She is a member of the Quebec inter-university feminist studies network (RéQEF). In recent years, she has also taught French as a second language in Germany and has been involved with an inclusive and alternative welding coop in Montreal called La Coulée, where she has learned to experiment with metalworking techniques. She is currently interested in reflecting upon the relationships between sculptural and interpretive practices.
Félix Lamarche
August 2023
Félix Lamarche is a Montreal-based independent filmmaker exploring the possibilities of the documentary praxis. "Far Away Lands", his first feature, was released in 2017 and won the Pierre and Yolande Perrault award the same year for best first documentary feature. Since then, he directed and produced a string of short films which were screened at film festivals in Canada and abroad. In 2021, he participated in an intensive 11 days international workshop with filmmaker Werner Herzog, which led to the completion of a short fiction film. "A Night Song", his most recent documentary, had its world premiere at Dok Leipzig in Germany in October 2022. His work deals with relationships between humans and the landscape through an exploration of subjective visions, as well as the many strange facets reality can take. He is interested in both traditional and experimental film language and is currently working on his second documentary feature.
Amanda Hale
July 2023
Amanda Hale is a multi-genre Canadian writer with four novels, two collections of short fiction, and two poetry chapbooks published. She won the Prism International prize for creative non-fiction and has twice been a finalist for the Relit Fiction award. She is the librettist for Pomegranate, an opera to be toured by the Canadian Opera Company in 2023, based on her poetry collection - Pomegranate: A Tale of Remembering. For more information about Amanda check here: www.amandahale.com