Kitchen Table Sesh with Chris Leonard
A community dinner for Black caregivers, grief and death-care workers
*NEW DATE*
Saturday, March 28, 2026
Social Art Studio Space
Youngplace
180 Shaw Street, Lower Level
Toronto, M6J 2W5 | Directions
7:00 - 10:00 p.m.
Special guest:
Chris Leonard,
Community grief worker
Early bird tickets: $25
On sale February 14th
(until March 7th)
Tickets: $30
About Kitchen Table Sesh:
Kitchen Table Sesh is a series of community dinners that offer food as ritual, remembrance, and celebration. Each gathering hosts an invited elder who carries wisdom relating to the confluence of art, grief, and death care. And one recipe from the African diaspora is prepared communally.
We are honoured to have Chris Leonard join us as at our inaugural event. She is a long-time Toronto grief worker, with over four decades of doing this work in community.
What to expect:
We will prepare one recipe together, as cooking communally, especially for an elder, serves as an offering — an act of gratitude, respect, and care. And at this session, we will be cooking an Ital Rundown (a vegan Caribbean stew made of vegetables in a coconut milk sauce), as well as a dessert.
Enjoy refreshments and appetizers, enlightening discussions, good vibes, and good people.
Attendees are welcome to bring something to share if they wish, but it is not expected. This will be an informal, intimate and interactive event, where we will connect, share resources, eat food, and learn from our guest of honour and each other.
The purpose of Kitchen Table Sesh is to provide opportunities to network, hold space, and build an intergenerational community of Black caregivers and death-care workers.
Please email us if you have questions or a food allergy we should know about.
Venue:
Social Art Studio Space (formerly Sketch) is a fully accessible venue in the Ossington and Queen West neighbourhood.
About Chris Leonard:
Chris Leonard is passionate about supporting transformative change in communities. She brings mindful awareness and compassionate presence to her work, which focuses on grief and loss, worker well-being, and restorative approaches for care and repair. Chris acknowledges her ancestors for their guidance and grounding.
Please read our recent interview with Chris to learn more about her work.
Kitchen Table Sesh is genrously supported by: