The Walrus just wouldn’t be The Walrus without extensive arts and culture reporting.
From literature and music to visual art, we offer something for every taste—stories guaranteed to stir up conversations about the state of the arts in Canada and beyond.
BY MICHELLE CYCA
Jani Lauzon has maintained she is Métis and her play 1939—now touring Canada—is based on her father’s experience at a residential school. What if none of it is true?
BY GRETA RAINBOW
Every time the names of products or microcelebrities appear in a book, they prick us like a targeted ad
BY TAJJA ISEN
The publishing industry’s troubling reliance on visual stereotypes
BY JASON MCBRIDE
The AGO wanted to shake things up with Wanda Nanibush. Then it balked
BY CANADIAN TIME MACHINE
Best known for Anne of Green Gables, Montgomery crafted characters who embody resilience and imagination
BY KC HOARD
For Court and Spark, Joni the lonely, Joni the soloist, did something nobody expected her to do. She hired a band
BY JUSTINA ELIAS
For years, I helped spread a glowing narrative about one of Canada’s most famous authors
BY LUC RINALDI
Norval Morrisseau was one of the most famous Indigenous artists anywhere. Then the fakes of his works surfaced—and kept coming
BY CONNOR GAREL
The media’s appetite for “gritty” Black stories turns misery into entertainment