Crowe was born to working class parents in Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, moving to Spruce Grove, Alberta in 1969.
[4] Noted work includes: stop-motion animation Queer Grit which has traveled to video and film festivals internationally;[5] digShift (ongoing), a decolonizing and environmental reclamation project using site specific performance and multichannel installation to explore the shifting layers of an abandoned gas station;[6][7] Lifting Stone, a queer femme performance/installation creating intimate poetic encounters;[8] and My Monument,[9] a multimedia exhibition with artists cam bush, Steven Leyden Cochrane and Paul Robles.
Quivering Land is a queer Western, engaging with poetics and politics to reckon with the legacies of violence and colonization in the West.
"[16] Other scholarly writing includes: "So You Want our Ghetto Stories: Oral History at Ndinawe Youth Resource Centre"[17] with Robin Jarvis Brownlie.
Remembering Mass Violence: Oral History, New Media and Performance,[18] S. High, E. Little, Thi Ry Duong (eds).
"digShift: a Queer Reclamation of the Imagined West,"[20] Multimedia essay, No More Potlucks: Online Journal of Contemporary Arts, "Wound," Issue 7, Jan. 2010.
The Art of Writing Inquiry, L. Neilsen, J. G. Knowles, & A. L Cole, editors, Backalong Books, 2001, pp 125–131.