John Leroux (PhD’20) is an architect, art historian and currently Manager of Collections and Exhibitions at the Beaverbrook Art Gallery in Fredericton, New Brunswick. John has a wealth of knowledge and experience in the fields of art history, architecture, visual art, curation, and education. He holds a Bachelor of Architecture from McGill University, an M.A. in Art History from Concordia University, and a PhD in History from UNB. He has worked at award-winning architecture firms in Toronto, Atlanta, Saint John, and his hometown of Fredericton – and has taught at the New Brunswick College of Craft and Design, the University of New Brunswick, and St. Thomas University. He’s also won many awards for architectural and public art projects throughout Canada. A passionate advocate for the arts and for architectural conservancy, John has authored 16 books on architecture and visual culture, including Building New Brunswick: An Architectural History and Building a University: The Architecture of UNB. 

In this episode:   

The magnificent historical architecture of New Brunswick and the not-so-magnificent modern architecture of New Brunswick.  What it means to love a place and steward it   Why the places that are popular are because of the quality of the environment  John’s favourite building in New Brunswick  The unique nature of wooden architecture in the Maritimes John’s favourite buildings on UNB’s campuses and why they’re significant  The history behind the built environments of the Saint John and Fredericton campuses John’s favourite artwork in Fredericton – and it’s on the UNB campus!  His thoughts on the expansion of the Beaverbrook Art Gallery     

 Links and resources:   

John’s website 

Beaverbrook Art Gallery 

Building a University: The Architecture of UNB 

Thanks to:   

Our alumni host, Katie Davey 

Music by alumni artist, Beats of Burden  

Our alumni Affinity Partners, TD Insurance and Manulife

 To listen to UNBeknownst and for more info on the podcast, the hosts and how to subscribe to new episode alerts, visit our website 

John Leroux (PhD’20) is an architect, art historian and currently Manager of Collections and Exhibitions at the Beaverbrook Art Gallery in Fredericton, New Brunswick. John has a wealth of knowledge and experience in the fields of art history, architecture, visual art, curation, and education. He holds a Bachelor of Architecture from McGill University, an M.A. in Art History from Concordia University, and a PhD in History from UNB. He has worked at award-winning architecture firms in Toronto, Atlanta, Saint John, and his hometown of Fredericton – and has taught at the New Brunswick College of Craft and Design, the University of New Brunswick, and St. Thomas University. He’s also won many awards for architectural and public art projects throughout Canada. A passionate advocate for the arts and for architectural conservancy, John has authored 16 books on architecture and visual culture, including Building New Brunswick: An Architectural History and Building a University: The Architecture of UNB. 

In this episode:   

The magnificent historical architecture of New Brunswick and the not-so-magnificent modern architecture of New Brunswick.  What it means to love a place and steward it   Why the places that are popular are because of the quality of the environment  John’s favourite building in New Brunswick  The unique nature of wooden architecture in the Maritimes John’s favourite buildings on UNB’s campuses and why they’re significant  The history behind the built environments of the Saint John and Fredericton campuses John’s favourite artwork in Fredericton – and it’s on the UNB campus!  His thoughts on the expansion of the Beaverbrook Art Gallery     

 Links and resources:   

John’s website 

Beaverbrook Art Gallery 

Building a University: The Architecture of UNB 

Thanks to:   

Our alumni host, Katie Davey 

Music by alumni artist, Beats of Burden  

Our alumni Affinity Partners, TD Insurance and Manulife

 To listen to UNBeknownst and for more info on the podcast, the hosts and how to subscribe to new episode alerts, visit our website