Steven Fraser
@stevenfraserart
Steven is Spoken Word Editor for The Wee Review and also reviews theatre and movies. He studied animation and computer arts at university and currently freelances in illustration. He currently lives in Glasgow.
Reviews: 478
Other Articles: 32
First Time
Nathaniel Hall presents a powerful and passionate autobiographical performance
Bryony Kimmings: I’m a Phoenix Bitch
Bryony Kimmings is back and looking to lay her demons to rest
Lucy McCormick: Post Popular
An unpredictable and transgressive history lesson delivered with confidence and charm
Manual Cinema’s Frankenstein
This live animation makeover struggles to bring Frankenstein’s monster back to life
The Secret River
A powerful adaptation of Katie Greenville’s novel exploring Australian colonisation
Cat Hepburn: #Girlhood
Sonnet Youth co-founder Cat Hepburn looks at millennial life
Kiinalik: These Sharp Tools
A multimedia performance looking at Canadian identity and tradition
Unfix Festival
The Unfix Festival takes a performative look at climate change and the changing world.
Aye Write: We Were Always Here
An evening of poetry and words to celebrate the launch of queer anthology We Were Always Here
Aye Write: Viv Albertine
Former The Slits guitarist talks about her latest memoir To Throw Away Unopened
Aye Write: Charly Cox and Nadine Aisha Jassat
Two poets read from their new collections at Aye Write.
Aye Write: Matt Cain & Justin Myers
Two very different queer love stories are presented at the Aye Write Festival.
Aye Write: Murray Lachlan Young
The Mystery of Raddlesham Mumps is brought to life by poet Murray Lachlan Young
Aye Write: Jim Carruth Introduces Phoebe Power and Richard Scott
Two new poets are introduced to Glasgow audiences at the Aye Write Festival.
Nous Les Sauvages: Voices from the Banlieues
The French suburbs are the focus of this Glasgow Short Film Festival screening.
Anti-Ethnography
Adam Khalil presents a series of short films that look at the fetishism of ethnography.
Brazil: Luto para nós é verbo
Different minority communities in Brazil are highlighted in this short film programme.
Visible Cinema: RCS Curates Deaf Shorts
The Royal Conservatoire of Scotland and the Glasgow Film Theatre present a programme of deaf shorts.
Two Weirds is Too Weird: The Jackal Films of Alice Lowe & Jacqueline Wright
A selection of surreal, comedic and weird shorts at Glasgow Short Film Festival.
Points on a Space Age
Sun Ra and his legacy are the themes presented in this short film screening.