Margin of Eras Gallery - Archive
Archive
- February 2020 1
- January 2020 2
- December 2019 1
- October 2019 1
- September 2019 1
- August 2019 3
- July 2019 3
- June 2019 1
- May 2019 3
- April 2019 1
- March 2019 1
- February 2019 5
- January 2019 1
- December 2018 1
- November 2018 1
- October 2018 5
- September 2018 4
- August 2018 1
- July 2018 3
- June 2018 1
- May 2018 4
- April 2018 2
- March 2018 4
- February 2018 3
- January 2018 2
- December 2017 1
- November 2017 1

Digital Justice Lab Workshop — February 23rd, presented by Way Past Kennedy Road
The Digital Justice Lab Workshop is the final component of a series of programming at HABIBIZ, a group exhibit presented by Way Past Kennedy Road. This workshop is a FREE event led by Nasma Ahmed of Digital Justice Lab and Artist, Educator & Healer Kayla Carter on navigating surveillance and affirming that "you're not paranoid, its just colonialism".

WHAT A TIME TO BE BLACK by Our Women's Voices x Black Women With Wings — February 28th, 2019
Our Women’s Voices presents "WHAT A TIME TO BE BLACK", in collaboration with Black Women With Wings & Margin of Eras Gallery on February 28th. This event is inclusive and open to all POC/non-POC folks but is solely to celebrate black history, black women and spotlight black femme creatives.

"Sister Sister" Open Mic Event — March 1st, 2019
Sister Sister is a women’s exclusive open mic and art showcase, taking place Friday, March 1st 2019 from 6:30-10:30pm at Margin of Eras Gallery.

"The Feeling of Being Watched" — Screening February 15th, presented by Way Past Kennedy Road
When journalist Assia Boundaoui investigates rumours of surveillance in her Arab-American neighbourhood in Chicago, she uncovers one of the largest FBI terrorism probes conducted before 9/11 and reveals its enduring impact on the community. Assia Boundaoui is an Algerian-American journalist and filmmaker based in Chicago. Way Past Kennedy Road presents a FREE screening of "The Feeling of Being Watched" at HABIBIZ, a group exhibition.

Be My Habibi: Curators' Talk & Button-Making Workshop — February 14th, presented by Platform A and Way Past Kennedy Road
Presented by Way Past Kennedy Road & Platform A, Be My Habibi is a community conversation on place-making and surveillance facilitated by curators Jessica Kirk and Mitra Fakhrashrafi of Way Past Kennedy Road. Be My Habibi takes place during HABIBIZ , a group exhibit by Way Past Kennedy Road taking up Toronto’s Shisha Ban to consider what it means to illegalize already hyper-surveilled spaces and extending a conversation on radical traditions of place-making across the GTA.