Leanne Dunic (2022)

Leanne Dunic

Dates of residency: 13 June ~9 July 2022

Artist URL:https://www.leannedunic.com/

 

Leanne Dunic was a child growing up on Vancouver Island when she first started dreaming about Paul McCartney. Those dreams led her to words and music, arms reaching for instruments, random library discoveries, and opportunities to make you laugh. She transgresses genres and form to produce projects such as To Love the Coming End (Book*hug/ Chin Music Press 2017) and The Gift (Book*hug 2019). Her lyric memoir, One and Half of You, was published Spring 2021 by Talonbooks.
Leanne is an adjunct professor at University of British Columbia, the fiction mentor at Simon Fraser University’s The Writer’s Studio, and the fiction editor at Tahoma Literary Review.
She is the leader of the band The Deep Cove, and lives on the unceded and occupied traditional territories of the Squamish, Musqueam, and Tsleil-Waututh people.

She stayed for the purpose of shooting a short film and shooting for an environmental magazine.
She was energetically researching and shooting around Saiko every day.

 

 

 

Leanne Dunic (2022)

Leanne Dunic

 

Dates of residency: 13 June ~9 July 2022

 

Artist URL:<a href=”https://www.leannedunic.com/”>https://www.leannedunic.com/</a>

 

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Leanne Dunic was a child growing up on Vancouver Island when she first started dreaming about Paul McCartney. Those dreams led her to words and music, arms reaching for instruments, random library discoveries, and opportunities to make you laugh. She transgresses genres and form to produce projects such as To Love the Coming End (Book*hug/ Chin Music Press 2017) and The Gift (Book*hug 2019). Her lyric memoir, One and Half of You, was published Spring 2021 by Talonbooks.

Leanne is an adjunct professor at University of British Columbia, the fiction mentor at Simon Fraser University’s The Writer’s Studio, and the fiction editor at Tahoma Literary Review. 

She is the leader of the band The Deep Cove, and lives on the unceded and occupied traditional territories of the Squamish, Musqueam, and Tsleil-Waututh people.

 

She stayed for the purpose of shooting a short film and shooting for an environmental magazine.

She was energetically researching and shooting around Saiko every day.