Articles tagged with: St. Catharines

  • Dramatic Arts Professor honoured at local arts awards

    Assistant Professor of Dramatic Arts Mike Griffin receives the 2026 Arts in Education Award at the St. Catharines Arts Awards on June 18 at the FirstOntario Performing Arts Centre. (Photo credit: Bernardo and Nina Photography and Videography)

    published Tuesday, June 23, 2026 in The Brock News | by 

    From established performers and educators to emerging artists, members of the Brock University community are making an impact in the local arts scene through their creative vision and dedication.

    Brock graduates, faculty and guest artists were honoured as nominees across five categories for their creative talent and community engagement during the St. Catharines Arts Awards on June 18 at the FirstOntario Performing Arts Centre.

    For Assistant Professor of Dramatic Arts (DART) Mike Griffin, recipient of the 2026 Arts in Education Award, teaching theatre is about inspiring the future leaders of artistic communities.

    “As we train, we develop specialized skills, but we also create an appreciation for the thoughts, ideas and stories of others and for the beauty around us,” he said. “Theatre is about the exploration of humanity. The community that is developed through creating together and sharing that experience with an audience, that is one of the greatest gifts that we have.”

    A theatre educator, director and playwright, Griffin teaches acting, directing, devising, movement, mask and puppetry at Brock’s Marilyn I. Walker School of Fine and Performing Arts.

    He has also written and directed several DART productions, including The Mysterious Mind of Molly McGillicuddy, which explored mild traumatic brain injury and related mental health through full-mask and physical theatre, and Escape to Ilkanor: A Fantasy Play in Nine Chapters, which imagined the fantasy genre through a whimsical and theatrical lens using puppetry and mask.

    “I am so grateful to be recognized like this within my community amongst the many incredible artists, educators and supporters of the arts that were nominated,” he said. “What a rock star list of humans. I am inspired to go and see more art —  there is so much beautiful work happening in this city.”

    Comparative Literatures and Arts graduate Kosar Dakhilalian (MA ’23) received the 2026 Emerging Artists Award, nominated alongside Brock Studio Art grads Adam Wiebe (BA ’26), Jenn Judson (BA ’16) and Isabella Saranchuk (BA ’24).

    A director and playwright with a background in acting and literature, Dakhilalian was a two-time art resident with Suitcase in Point Multi-arts Company. A passionate arts educator, Dakhilalian has also taught in DART and delivered workshops on drama-based practices in education at Brock’s Centre for Pedagogical Innovation.

    Anne Carruthers (BA ’89, BEd ’95) and John Carruthers were awarded the Patron of the Arts Award, which recognizes an individual or business that has made a meaningful contribution to the arts in St. Catharines. The Carruthers were honoured for their generous support and advocacy for Niagara Artists Centre, extensive volunteer work and dedication to growing the cultural community in Niagara.

    Nicole Joy Fraser

    Multidisciplinary artist Nicole Joy-Fraser, a DART Walker Cultural Leader in 2025.

    Multidisciplinary artist Nicole Joy-Fraser, one of DART’s Walker Cultural Leaders for 2025-26, received the 2026 Jury’s Pick Award. A proud bear clan matriarch who grew up in Mississauga with Euro-Settler, Tsa’tinée, Nehiyaw and Métis bloodlines from Horse Lake First Nation in Alberta, Joy-Fraser played the role of the Métis Nutcracker in DART’s 2025 mainstage production.

    Nominees from the Brock arts community for the 2026 St. Catharines Arts Awards include:

    • 2026 Arts in Education Award — Mike Griffin, Assistant Professor of Dramatic Arts
    • 2026 Emerging Artist Award — Adam Wiebe (BA ’26), Studio Art graduate
    • 2026 Emerging Artist Award — Kosar Dakhilalian (MA ’23), Studies in Comparative Literatures and Arts graduate
    • 2026 Emerging Artist Award — Jenn Judson (BA ’16), Studio Art graduate
    • 2026 Emerging Artist Award — Isabella Saranchuk (BA ’24), Studio Art graduate
    • 2026 Making a Difference Award — Skye Rogers/retrograde: dance in motion (ARCS ’22, Certificate in Arts and Culture Studies)
    • 2026 Patron of the Arts Awards — Anne Carruthers (BA ’89, BEd ’95), Psychology and Fine Arts, Inservice Education graduate
    • 2026 Jury’s Pick Award — Nicole Joy-Fraser, Dramatic Arts 2025 Walker Cultural Leader

    A full list of this year’s award recipients is available on the City of St. Catharines website.

    Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,
    Categories: Alumni, Announcements, Current Students, Faculty & Instructors, Future students, In the Media, News, Uncategorised

  • Class blog takes centre stage with theatre criticism

    (Source: The Brock NewsFriday, July 3, 2015 | by . Photo: DARTcritics started as a class blog but has grown to fill the void of local arts criticism.)

    They call themselves critics with class.

    But more than being clever, the student writers behind the DARTcritics website are providing theatrephiles with thoughtful arts criticism about performances in Niagara and beyond.

    That wasn’t always its purpose, however. The two-year-old theatre review website, which was recently relaunched with a new look, started as a forum for Dramatic Arts Prof. Karen Fricker to post standout assignments by students in her theatre criticism class. But it soon became apparent the site served a larger purpose.

    DARTcritics picked up where slashed and shrunken newsrooms left off with their arts coverage. Other than a handful of metro and national dailies, few newsrooms boast a dedicated arts and entertainment reporter anymore, leaving a void to be filled.

    “What we discovered was that in some instances, the reviews that we published were among the only, if not the only, review response that productions would receive, because there is so little arts criticism in Niagara,” Fricker said. “This was a startling and empowering realization for the students — that they were in dialogue with art and artists in a privileged way.”

    Of course, seeing their names in print was nothing short of thrilling, too. Hayley Malouin was hooked the moment she got her first byline for her review of London Road, a musical about an English town coping with the murders of five of its women.

    “I thought ‘OK, we’ll see some shows,’” said Malouin, who signed up for Fricker’s class in her third year. “I wrote the first review and got it up on the blog and was ‘This is like crack.’”

    Being published was an incentive, but writing reviews for posting was ultimately a way for Malouin to use what she had learned from Fricker about articulating her opinions of a production beyond saying whether or not she like it.

    “I hated (London Road) and finding out why I hated it was so fun,” she explained. “It really changed my view of what happens in theatre. There’s this critical side to it – this analytical side to it…. I think you can be analytical and creative and that’s a really special thing.”

    Fricker, a former critic with The Guardian in the U.K., capitalized on the opportunity to turn DARTCritics into a bona fide source of arts criticism last April when Malouin and fellow student Nick Leno landed funding from BUSU to cover St. Catharines’ In the Soil Arts Festival.

    She also coached the duo to be editors and social media curators. This summer, they’re running the site like a newsroom with two staff writers, fourth-year DART students Elizabeth Amos and Alex Jackson. Together, they cover theatre in Hamilton, Niagara, Toronto and Stratford, thanks to support from the Match of Minds program run by the Office of Research Services and BUSU.

    The relaunch of the DARTcritics site coincides with this summer’s move of Dramatic Arts to the new home of the Marilyn I. Walker School of Fine and Performing Arts in downtown St. Catharines, Fricker noted.

    “It’s such an exciting moment for the arts at Brock and in St. Catharines more broadly, with the new First Ontario Performing Arts Centre opening in the autumn, as well as our own building,” she said. “This seemed the perfect occasion for us to take DARTcritics to a new level with a new look, and more reviews.”

    Fricker will resume the editor’s post when classes resume in the fall, but for summer, the site is “Nick and Hayley’s baby.”

    “It’s a great experience of entrepreneurialism and leadership for them.”

    It has also carved out a potential career path for Malouin. Theatre criticism has become something she would like to pursue further, either as a freelance writer or by developing her own theatre review site.

    Still, there has been one downside to being a DARTcritic: it’s tough to shut off and watch a show for pleasure.

    “I see theatre and can’t not be critical now,” Malouin said. “People see that as a negative but it’s not. I’m always on now when I see a show. I do wish I could go see a Mirvish show and say ‘That’s great!’”

    Visit DARTcritics

    Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,
    Categories: Alumni, Current Students, Faculty & Instructors, In the Media, News

  • Dramatic Arts sponsors the Arts in Education Award for 2013

    arts-awards-web

    The Department of Dramatic Arts is pleased to sponsor the Arts in Education Award for 2013. Nominate a deserving artist now!

    The St. Catharines Arts Awards recognize and celebrate excellence in all areas of artistic creation. The Arts Awards seek to increase the visibility of St. Catharines’ artists and cultural industries, honour cultural leaders and their achievements, and cultivate financial and volunteer support for the arts sector. Each award winner will be presented with a civic certificate of appreciation and a cash prize of $300.

    Nominations are now being accepted!

    Six Arts Awards categories are open for nominations this year. Nominations can be submitted using the forms below.

    Nomination Deadline April 15, 2013 at 4:30 p.m.

    The recipients of the City of St. Catharines Arts Awards will be announced on Saturday June 8, 2013 at the St. Catharines Museum and Welland Canals Centre. All nominees will be provided with advance tickets to the event.

    Save the Date! Tickets for the Arts Awards are $10 and will go on sale in March.

    Connect with St. Catharines Cultural Services on Facebook

    Looking for inspiration? View a list of past winners

    Arts in Education Award

    The Arts in Education Award celebrates an individual, collective or organization that has demonstrated an outstanding commitment to engaging St. Catharines residents through arts education activities.

    View the Arts in Education Award Nomination Form

    Tags: , , , ,
    Categories: Announcements, News