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Coombs artist opens up gallery to public for the summer

Kim Hancock, an artist based in Coombs, British Columbia, is opening her studio gallery, Arts Afire Gallery, to the public for the summer season. The gallery will be open Monday to Friday from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m., with Hancock often present outside those hours when her sign is out. She works primarily in abstract expressionism, using mixed media such as acrylic, latex, spray paint, crayon, oil, collage, and pastels. Hancock studied art at UBC and the Instituto Allende in Mexico, has traveled widely, and has operated her gallery in Coombs since 2000. She also teaches art classes, offers free classes for those who cannot afford them, and is currently entered in an online competition called the People’s Artist, with plans to upgrade her studio, offer free classes, and host an exhibition on love, loss, and cellular structures if she wins.

Parksville mixed media artist exhibits at Art Vancouver 2026

Parksville mixed media artist Silvina Lanusse represented the Parksville Qualicum Beach arts community at Art Vancouver 2026, held May 28–31 at the Vancouver Convention Centre. Lanusse, a resident artist at The Old School House Arts Centre (TOSH) in Qualicum Beach, exhibited works from her PaperScapes collection—layered torn paper landscapes inspired by Vancouver Island coastlines, memory, migration, and belonging. Originally from Buenos Aires, Argentina, Lanusse creates landscapes entirely through torn paper rather than paintbrush strokes. She previously exhibited at Pearl Ellis Gallery, McMillan Arts Centre, and the Federation of Canadian Artists gallery.

Retired Canucks legend ‘King’ Richard Brodeur opens B.C. art gallery

Retired Vancouver Canucks goaltender Richard Brodeur, known as 'King Richard' for his heroics in the team's 1982 Stanley Cup run, is opening a new art gallery in downtown Parksville, British Columbia. Named Gallery 35 after his jersey number, the space will feature Brodeur's own nostalgic paintings of backyard hockey rinks, landscapes, abstracts, and contemporary works, alongside art from half a dozen other artists. Brodeur has painted professionally for over 30 years, inspired by early mentorship from artist Claude Picher, and has sold his hockey-themed works across Europe, Asia, and Australia.