- About
- Centre for Communications and the Arts
- Calendars of Events & Happenings
- Event Poster Collection
- The Communications Centre: Experiment in human experience
- Jade: Flower-child happenings and conceptual art projects in 1969
- Nini Baird: A Day in the Hectic Life of the Arts Centre Director
- Sound Recordings: Faculty Lectures from 1967 Communications Course
- Dance
- Film
- Literary Arts
- Music & Sound
- Music & Sound image gallery
- My "a-ha" moment with Murray Schafer
- World Soundscape Project
- Phillip Werren's electronic music
- Radio CKSF "on the air" fall 1966
- Robert Aitken performs with the Purcell String Quartet & Soundscape on radio
- David Skulski and the early music revival at ¶¡ÏãÔ°AV
- Phyllis Mailing: ¶¡ÏãÔ°AV Singer Who Reached the Top
- Purcell String Quartet: In High Demand
- Theatre
- Theatre image gallery
- How the early days of the arts at ¶¡ÏãÔ°AV changed my parochial little life
- Norm Browning, Jackie Crossland and Cece Granbois in Beverley Simons' new 1-act play "Greenlawn Rest Home"
- The Centralia Incident: "A theatre in search of a town—A town in search of its memory."
- The only escape: The early years of the ¶¡ÏãÔ°AV theatre
- Robin Patterson and the ¶¡ÏãÔ°AV Mime Troupe
- Theatre of Total Limbo
- Visual Arts
Explore stories, images and archival materials from ¶¡ÏãÔ°AV's past
-
Learn how the Centre for Communications and the Arts changed over time and find out what was happening each semester by browsing our timeline of seasonal event listing brochures from 1967-1975
-
Browse a curated and annotated timeline of posters from the Centre for Communications and the Arts to meet the artists and performers who made the new university a hub of creativity.
-
Located in the ¶¡ÏãÔ°AV Theatre and initially part of the Faculty of Education, the Centre for Communications was tasked with managing all arts activities on campus, as well as communication studies and related courses for future teachers. In 1966, Irene Thomson interviewed its faculty and staff to understand the grand vision for the new program.
-
In 1969, Peak Publications captured the Centre for Communications and the Arts at the height of its magic as campus creative hub. Read "Jade" for a taste of the creative voices at work in ¶¡ÏãÔ°AV's early days.
-
Learn how one dynamic woman organized the daily excitement at the Centre for Communications and the Arts into a unique and thriving creative community.
-
The Sonic Research Studio & Word Soundscape Project has collected recordings of historical faculty lectures from CMNS 100, a course offered by the Centre for Communication and the Arts in 1967.