Subscribe
Queen's Journal
  • Home
  • News
    • Student Politics
    • Elections
    • University
    • City Council
  • Features
    • Investigations
    • History
    • Featurettes
  • Editorials
    • Our Perspective
    • Signed Editorials
  • Opinions
    • Letters to the Editor
    • Op-Eds
  • Arts & Culture
    • Theatre
    • Music
    • Literature
    • Visual
    • Film
    • Pop Culture
    • Student Life
    • Lifestyle
    • Fashion
  • Business, Science, & Technology
    • Business
    • Science
    • Technology
  • Sports
    • Football
    • Basketball
    • Hockey
    • Club Sports
    • Rugby
    • Soccer
    • Volleyball
    • Cross Country
  • Postscript
  • Videos
Queen's Journal
  • Home
  • News
    • Student Politics
    • Elections
    • University
    • City Council
  • Features
    • Investigations
    • History
    • Featurettes
  • Editorials
    • Our Perspective
    • Signed Editorials
  • Opinions
    • Letters to the Editor
    • Op-Eds
  • Arts & Culture
    • Theatre
    • Music
    • Literature
    • Visual
    • Film
    • Pop Culture
    • Student Life
    • Lifestyle
    • Fashion
  • Business, Science, & Technology
    • Business
    • Science
    • Technology
  • Sports
    • Football
    • Basketball
    • Hockey
    • Club Sports
    • Rugby
    • Soccer
    • Volleyball
    • Cross Country
  • Postscript
  • Videos

Tag: contemporary art

Modern Fuel spring exhibits unusual, yet effective

  • April 4, 2018
  • Arts & Culture

Continue reading

New exhibits are a modest attempt at a big idea

  • January 26, 2018
  • Arts & Culture

Continue reading

Kent Monkman on decolonizing art and history

  • January 23, 2018
  • Arts & Culture

Continue reading

“Can Artists Really Save the World?” has no easy answers

  • January 16, 2018
  • Arts & Culture

Continue reading

Agnes funding increases

  • January 12, 2018
  • Arts & Culture

Continue reading

A preview of the Agnes’ winter exhibition

  • January 12, 2016
  • Arts & Culture

Continue reading

Katie Strang’s Settle uses chicken wire to create three athletes. They represent the struggle students feel when finding their place in the world after finishing school.

Brawn on the lawn

  • June 28, 2011
  • Arts & Culture

Continue reading

Queen's Journal

With Us
Contribute
Contributor Handbook
Corrections
Editorial Board
Archives
Journal Policy
Masthead
Op-Ed Guide
Journal Board Minutes
Production Schedule
Subscribe

© All rights reserved.

Back to Top

Subscribe

Please use the form below to subscribe to Campus Catch-Up, the new twice-weekly newsletter from the editors at The Queen’s Journal.