Conferences
The OAEA hosts annual conferences providing opportunities for educators to share and collaborate ideas for curriculum, instruction, and assessment standards to enhance professional learning in art education.
April 10th - 11th, 2026
April 10th-11th, 2026
Ontario Art Education Association champions the power of creative education in a time of rapid change, supporting educators who build vibrant, inclusive classrooms. We celebrate artistic exploration rooted in cultural connection, identity, and community—going beyond the product and fostering deep, meaningful learning through the creative process. There are many ways in which the arts build connections and preserve communities. Sustaining arts education enriches traditions, practice, creative processes, and the time and space to do those things. By spotlighting Canadian artists, enriching practice, and nurturing joy, we help educators and students create art with purpose, skill, and a true sense of belonging.
Prices
Members: registration will be behind the member wall, please sign in
- Member – Early Bird* $225 / Regular $275
- Member – Student $99 (must make a membership, but it’s free! Click here.)
Not a member? Become a member for only $50 and save! Or join us with this non-member rate:
- Non-Member – Early Bird* $300 / Regular $375
*Early bird prices end on midnight of February 28th March 14th
FAQ
?
Western University Faculty of Education
Located in Western University, Althouse Building
Address: 1137 Western Rd, London, ON N6G 1G7
Venue Map
Conference Venue Map

551 Windermere Road
London, ON N5X 2T1
519-679-4546
Guaranteed a special conference room rate, including breakfast:
- $170 for single occupancy (one queen bed)
- $190 for double occupancy (one queen bed)
- $200 for a room (2 queen beds), (2 breakfasts), +$20 for supplementary breakfast if more than 2 people
+ Plus applicable taxes.
*includes parking!
Check-In/Out: Please be advised that your check-in time is 3:00 PM and your check-out time is 11:00 AM. Rooms occupied after 11:00 am are subject to a late departure charge. Early check-in is based on availability and on an individual basis.
Click here for the SCHEDULE PDF.
(Working Draft: subject to change)
See our workshop descriptions and presenters bios here
Keynote Speakers
Syrus Marcus Ware
Friday Night Keynote Speaker
Syrus Marcus Ware
Friday Night Keynote Speaker
Some of Syrus' curatorial projects include That’s So Gay (2016-2021), Re:Purpose (Robert McLaughlin Gallery, 2014) and The Church Street Mural Project (ChurchWellesley Village, 2013). He is also co-curator of The Cycle, a two-year disability arts performance initiative of the National Arts Centre.
He is part of the Performance Disability Art Collective and co-programmed Crip Your World: An Intergalactic Queer/POC Sick and Disabled Extravaganza as part of Mayworks, 2014. He is the co-editor of the best-selling Until We Are Free: Reflections on Black Lives Matter in Canada (URP, 2020) and co-edited Queering Urban Justice: Queer of Colour Formations in Toronto (University of Toronto Press, 2017) and Marvellous Grounds: Queer of Colour Histories of Toronto (Between the Lines Publishing, 2017).
Syrus is a core-team member of Black Lives Matter–Toronto and a co-curator of Blackness Yes!/Blockorama. He is on the executive team of the Wildseed Centre for Art and Activism and a faculty member of the inaugural Black Arts Fellowship. He has Syrus Marcus Ware short bio, 414 words won numerous awards, including the TD Diversity Award in 2017 and the Steinert and Ferreiro Award (2012), and was voted “Best Queer Activist” by NOW Magazine (2005).
Syrus completed his PhD at York University in the Faculty of Environmental Studies in 2021 and is an Assistant Professor in the School of the Arts (Theatre and Film Studies) at McMaster University.
Pearl Van Geest
Saturday Speaker
Pearl Van Geest
Saturday Speaker
SweetThings is the collaborative partnership of James Fowler and Pearl Van Geest, developed through years of co curating, co producing, and co making. Together they create place responsive projects that use collaboration to nurture connection, reflection, and purpose. Through initiatives such as Nuit Rose, Queer Up North, Wild Waysides, Natural Variations, the Eco Art Van, Terrain of Sensation, and The 10X10 Photography Project, SweetThings brings artists and communities into relationship through mapping, mark making, storytelling, and public programming, with a focus on queer ecology, environmental justice, kinship, and belonging across urban and rural geographies.
James Fowler
Saturday Speaker
James Fowler
Saturday Speaker
SweetThings is the collaborative partnership of James Fowler and Pearl Van Geest, developed through years of co curating, co producing, and co making. Together they create place responsive projects that use collaboration to nurture connection, reflection, and purpose. Through initiatives such as Nuit Rose, Queer Up North, Wild Waysides, Natural Variations, the Eco Art Van, Terrain of Sensation, and The 10X10 Photography Project, SweetThings brings artists and communities into relationship through mapping, mark making, storytelling, and public programming, with a focus on queer ecology, environmental justice, kinship, and belonging across urban and rural geographies.
Tracey-Mae Chambers
Closing Speaker
Tracey-Mae Chambers
Closing Speaker
Since July 2021, I have been dedicated to the ambitious #hopeandhealingcanada project, creating and installing over 180 site-specific fibre art pieces. These installations have been placed at significant locations across the country, including residential school historical sites, museums, and public spaces. The core mission of this ongoing project is to bridge the historical and cultural divide between settlers and First Nations, Métis, and Inuit peoples. By creating art that is approachable and non-confrontational, I aim to facilitate critical conversations vital to decolonization and reconciliation efforts in Canada. I continue this work both through new installations and by creating weavings from the fibres that have traveled across the country as part of the original project.
In September 2024, my dedication to this work was recognized when I was honored to receive the King Charles III Coronation Medal from Governor General Mary Simon. This distinguished accolade acknowledged my efforts to foster understanding and dialogue between Indigenous and non-Indigenous peoples through public art that challenges conventional perspectives and decolonizes shared spaces.
Currently, I am serving as an Artist in Residence at Harbourfront Centre, developing a poignant new body of work that addresses Canada's devastating opioid crisis. This project is a response to societal grief and the pervasive stigma surrounding mental health and addiction—an issue that became devastatingly personal when my beloved 23-year-old son, Parker, was tragically among the 216 opioid-related deaths recorded in Ontario in February 2023. While I know art cannot solve this immense crisis, my work serves as an unyielding visual reminder of its scale and the fact that no one is immune. This forthcoming work will function as a powerful memorial to those lost, aspiring to evoke empathy, encourage open dialogue, and break the surrounding silence and discomfort. This project is entitled They Are Loved-an epidemic of grief.
2026 Sponsors and Trade Fair Partners
Is your company interested in participating? Here is a link to the Industry Partner document.
GOLD SPONSOR
GIFT SPONSOR
TRADE FAIR
INDUSTRY PARTNERS
Engage in collaborative transformations, explore new directions, and excite yourself and your students about new possibilities. Develop creative and innovative ways of thinking about global cultures, universal ideas, and a sense of self in a connected world. You will enjoy a series of interactive, hands-on workshops and keynote presenters. Join artists, educators, and contemporary speakers who will inspire you to build a joyful sense of community.
Friday
Opening Keynote Speaker
Que Rock
Title of presentation: Making the Woodlands Dance
Bio: I am a Nipissings First Nation born, multi-disciplinary artist. I started life learning my Anishnaabe and Odawa cultures through ceremonies. As an Anishnaabe graffiti artist, my work has matured from quick pieces into large scale street art projects and canvas work. Using my Anishnaabe teachings and methods, I focus on creating smooth transitions of color, blending abstract form with realism and expressionism. I call my style, “Making the Woodlands Dance.” My goal is to portray the teachings of my ancestors, sacred geometry in all my art forms and create visual healing experience to the viewers.
My art has allowed me to work closely with art directors, city officials, and corporate clients to make their visions come to life. I enjoy working with the people and have collaborated with many artists on projects of all scales from graphic books to videos to murals around the world. I love traveling and seeing art. Most of all, I love to make art and have people enjoy my work.
To learn more about the artist and his work, follow Quentin Commanda’s Instagram @que_rock_
The Original 6 Nations Peace Treaty: A Visual Healing Art Experience
Saturday
Closing Keynote
Kenneth Montague
Title of Presentation: The Wedge Collection – Celebrating Art of the African Diaspora
Description of Presentation: Dr Kenneth Montague is an art collector, curator, and educator. In his talk, he will explain how growing up in a first-generation Caribbean Canadian family informed his life as a promoter and supporter of Black artists. He will showcase some of his many art exhibitions, publications, student workshops, and public programs from the past 25 years, including the celebrated book, album, and touring art show As We Rise: Photography from the Black Atlantic. Montague will also share several examples of artworks from his personal Wedge Collection.
Bio: Dr Kenneth Montague is a Toronto-based dentist, art collector, and the founding director of Wedge Curatorial Projects, a non-profit arts organization. Since 1997 Montague has been promoting both emerging and established artists via exhibitions, lectures, and workshops. His focus is African Canadian and Diasporic art, which he also showcases in his privately-owned Wedge Collection.
Montague has served on the African Art Acquisition Committee at Tate Modern as well as the Photography Curatorial Committee at the Art Gallery of Ontario; he is currently an AGO Trustee and an advisor to their Department of Arts of Global Africa and the Diaspora. He is also a Trustee of the Aperture Foundation, and a recent member of the jury for the Scotiabank Photography Award, Canada’s largest photography prize. Montague is a frequent panelist at international art symposiums and has been invited to lecture on contemporary art at the National Gallery of Canada, the National Gallery of Art in Washington, DC, and the Studio Museum in Harlem, among other institutions. His curatorial projects include ‘Becoming: Photographs from the Wedge Collection’ and ‘Position As Desired: Exploring African Canadian Identity’. In 2021 the Aperture Foundation published the award-winning title ‘As We Rise: Photography from the Black Atlantic’, a celebration of works from his Wedge Collection; an associated exhibition is currently touring North America.
For his efforts in supporting the arts and his mentoring of emerging creatives, Montague received an Honorary Doctorate from OCAD University, Toronto (2016).
Please join us Friday, April 19th at 7 pm for our Keynote speaker and an opening reception.
Toronto Catholic District School Board
Address: 80 Sheppard Ave E, North York, ON M2N 6E8
Saturday
The Ontario Art Education Association, in partnership with the Toronto Catholic District School Board, is pleased to share the expertise, face-to-face, with visual arts and media arts educators who are committed to OAEA’s mission to “provide leadership in the development and support of visual arts and media arts education in the province of Ontario.”
Designed by colleagues, for colleagues, the OAEA Conference offers a breadth and depth of professional learning opportunities to inform, inspire, and prompt exemplary education practice, supported by timely and practical research. All session proposals were thoroughly adjudicated by a panel of OAEA members and the Conference Committee to ensure a range of viewpoints and diverse experiences in elementary, secondary, college/university, museum/gallery, and Community.
Check out some of the previous conferences hosted by the OAEA to learn about keynote speakers, presenters, and their presentations.

To see the content for all the conference sessions, login to the member-only content.
If you are currently not a member but are interested in accessing member content Please Join Us.
Professional Documents
Engage in collaborative transformations, explore new directions, and excite yourself and your students about new possibilities. Develop creative and innovative ways of thinking about global cultures, universal ideas, and a sense of self in a connected world. You will enjoy a series of interactive, hands-on workshops and keynote presenters. Join artists, educators, and contemporary speakers who will inspire you to build a joyful sense of community. See the conference content here!
Reshaping the future of the world through art
Remodeler l’avenir du monde par l’art
Emergence occurs when divergent, multiple, and at times contrasting elements interact and come into relation within a larger system. We turn to art so that we can open spaces for transformative collaboration. We invite everyone to re-imagine how the world can be reshaped by visual art for the future and to address emergent art education sub-themes including decolonization, gender, social activism, accessibility, environmentalism, wellness, creative process, play, intersectionality, and embodiment. See the conference content here!
Our theme focuses on innovative partnerships, contemporary arts practice, inspiring online solutions for virtual Visual and Media Arts classrooms, and the celebration of authentic voices & diverse perspectives.
See the list of past Speakers & Presenters.
To see the content for all the conference sessions, login to the member-only content.
If you are currently not a member but are interested in accessing member content, please Join Us.
Our theme is “Moving Forward” – Visual & Media Arts Education, which supports innovative contemporary arts practice and celebrates authentic voices & diverse perspectives. We emphasize student-centred, inquiry or project-based pedagogy, and are supported by classroom practice and/or research evidence; That model approaches to global competencies; Inspire leadership and cooperation among arts educators and/or students; Provoke meaningful debate and dialogue about current issues and directions that define visual and media arts education; Showcase strategies for designing curriculum and assessment that supports Ontario guidelines; Present diverse perspectives in response to timely trends and practices in contemporary visual, media & popular culture.
