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Celebrate Pride Month with these 4 events around Washtenaw County

Celebrate Pride Month with these 4 events around Washtenaw County

YPSILANTI, Mich. – Occurring every June, Pride Month celebrates the LGBTQ+ community and honors LGBTQ+ civil rights.

Across Washtenaw County, community organizations, committees and businesses are planning events in honor of Pride Month.

From picnics and performances to a queer art exhibit, here are four of them.

1. The Gallery at Stone & Spoon

The West Michigan Avenue gallery will debut “QUEER: Celebrating Work by LGBTQIA Artists” on Friday during a reception from 5-8 p.m. with three live performances.

During the reception, 10 percent of all artwork sales will be donated to Ypsi Pride, according to the gallery website.

The exhibition includes pieces from area artists and will run until July 24.

Find more details here.

2. Hamburger Mary’s

Ypsi Pride has been postponed until next year but that doesn’t mean you can’t celebrate. On Saturday, June 4, Ypsi residents can kick off Pride Month with hours of fun starting at Hamburger Mary’s.

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The Cross Street eatery will host drag shows, karaoke, belly dancers, DJ Edward Alan and kid’s activities until 10 p.m. Shows after 10 p.m. are recommended for those 18 years old and above.

Mary’s has more here.

3. Milan Comes OUT for a Picnic

Gather at Wilson Park, 147 Wabash St., for an inclusive and family-friendly event with treats, activities, music and community outreach on Thursday, June 9.

The event will run from 4-7 p.m. and is organized by ARC Milan.

Learn more here.

4. Pride Picnic

On Sunday, June 26, stop by Tefft Par, at 1866 Woodland Dr. E, for Pride Picnic.

Hosted by the City of Saline DEI Committee, the event will run from noon to 2 p.m. Water will be provided but participants will need to bring their own lunches.

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The committee is also hosting a Pride flag ceremony this Sunday and a presentation discussing ongoing issues within the LGBTQ+ community on June 23.

Check out the event page here.

Copyright 2022 by WDIV ClickOnDetroit – All rights reserved.

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Editors’ Picks: 11 Events for Your Art Calendar, From a Gallery for Un-Instagrammable Art to a Curators’ Talk on the Term ‘Latinx’ | Artnet News

Editors’ Picks: 11 Events for Your Art Calendar, From a Gallery for Un-Instagrammable Art to a Curators' Talk on the Term 'Latinx' | Artnet News

Each week, we search for the most exciting and thought-provoking shows, screenings, and events, both digitally and in-person in the New York area. See our picks from around the world below. (Times are all ET unless otherwise noted.)

 

Tuesday, May 24

Virtual Curatorial Leadership Summit. Courtesy of the Armory Show.

Virtual Curatorial Leadership Summit. Courtesy of the Armory Show.

1. “What’s in the X?: Making Sense of the Latin American/Latinx Art Debate” at the Armory Show, New York

The Armory Show kicks off its 2022 Curatorial Leadership Summit, chaired by Mari Carmen Ramírez, curator of Latin American art at the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, with a conversation about whether to say Latin American, Latino, Latina, or Latinx. The panel, moderated by Ramírez, will discuss the terminology’s historical and theoretical foundation, and how it relates to curatorial and institutional practices.

Price: Free with registration
Time: 1 p.m.–2:15 p.m.

—Sarah Cascone

 

Wednesday, May 25

Installation view “Peter Nadin, The Distance From A Lemon To Murder” at Off Paradise. Photo: Guillaume Ziccarelli. Courtesy of the artist and Off Paradise New York.

2. Peter Nadin in Conversation with Randy Kennedy at Off Paradise, New York

This week, artist Peter Nadin and author Randy Kennedy will be in conversation at Tribeca’s Off Paradise gallery, where an exhibition of Nadin’s work, titled “The Distance From a Lemon to Murder,” is on view through June 23. The show marks Nadin’s return to “painting from life,” after an extended departure from the commercial art world. In the series, Nadin focuses on the meticulous process of grafting a lemon scion (the fruit and branches that stick above ground) to the rootstock of a sour orange (the underground root system and trunk). Nadin’s sculptural paintings are musings on the notion of grafting information and experiences to form our individual realities. Speaking to the Paris Review ahead of their conversation, Nadin recalled reading that Stalin grafted lemon trees, a practice he would take part in between signing the death warrants of hundreds of individuals. “That difference between the actions, the careful grafting and the mass horror,” Nadin said, “I realize now, must have been in my mind without knowing it.”

Location: Off Paradise, 120 Walker Street (the talk will also be livestreamed at @offparadise, and available later for viewing online.)
Price: Free
Time: 6:30 p.m.

—Caroline Goldstein

"Just Wide Enough to Hold the Weight," installation view. Photo courtesy of Baxter St Camera Club of New York.

“Just Wide Enough to Hold the Weight,” installation view. Photo courtesy of Baxter St Camera Club of New York.

3. “In Conversation: Just Wide Enough to Hold the Weight” at Baxter St Camera Club of New York

Baxter St. Camera Club of New York presents a virtual conversation with curators Drew Sawyer and Phalguni Guliani and photographers Marvel Harris and Siddhartha Hajra, in conjunction with the gallery’s current show, “Just Wide Enough to Hold the Weight” (through June 8). The exhibition, which also features work by Soumya Sankar Bose, is an exploration of the three artists’ queer and trans identities through self-portraiture and staged scenes.

Price: Free with registration
Time: 11 a.m.

—Neha Jambhekar

 

Faith Ringgold, Matisse’s Model: The French Collection Part I, #5 (1991). © Faith Ringgold / ARS, NY and DACS, London, courtesy ACA Galleries, New York 2022.

Faith Ringgold, Matisse’s Model: The French Collection Part I, #5 (1991). © Faith Ringgold / ARS, NY and DACS, London, courtesy ACA Galleries, New York 2022.

4. “On Faith: Artists on Faith Ringgold’s Influence” at the New Museum, New York

Catch artists Diedrick Brackens, Tomashi Jackson, and Tschabalala Self in conversation about the massive artistic influence of Faith Ringgold, timed to the nonagenarian’s current retrospective at the New Museum, “Faith Ringgold: American People” (through June 5, 2022). Writer and curator LeRonn Brooks, a contributor to the exhibition catalogue, will moderate.

Location: New Museum, 235 Bowery, New York
Price: $15 general admission
Time: 7 p.m.

Sarah Cascone

Thursday, May 26–Friday, June 24

Audrey Flack, <em>Glass Forest I</em> (1954). Courtesy of Hollis Taggart, New York.

Audrey Flack, Glass Forest I (1954). Courtesy of Hollis Taggart, New York.

5. “Audrey Flack: Force of Nature” at Hollis Taggart, New York

Audrey Flack celebrates her upcoming 91st birthday (on May 30) with a show of never-before-seen works on paper, as well as Abstract Expressionist paintings from the 1950s and ’60s. The gallery uncovered the early works on paper while conducting archival research in the artist’s studio. Dating from the period between Flack’s graduation from the High School of Music and Arts in Harlem, her time at New York City’s Cooper Union, and her studies under Josef Albers at Yale, these paintings show the young artist’s development as she came to embrace the Ab-Ex movement.

Location: Hollis Taggart, 521 West 26th Street, New York
Price: Free
Time: Open reception (RSVP required) 5 p.m.–8 p.m.; Tuesday–Saturday, 11 a.m.–6 p.m.

—Sarah Cascone

 

Thursday, May 26

Robert Motherwell’s studio in Greenwich, Connecticut, January 1986. Photo by Renate Ponsold, courtesy of Kasmin, New York.

Robert Motherwell’s studio in Greenwich, Connecticut, January 1986. Photo by Renate Ponsold, courtesy of Kasmin, New York.

6. “In Conversation: Robert Motherwell’s Lyric Suite” at Kasmin, New York

Katy Rogers of the Dedalus Foundation, the director of the Robert Motherwell catalogue raisonné project, will talk with Kasmin senior director Eric Gleason about the artist’s “Lyric Suite” series, which is currently featured in a show of 60 works on paper at the gallery (through June 4). Motherwell painted the works over just a few weeks in 1965, translating his mastery of color and form to an unusually small scale: nine-by-11-inch sheets of unryu paper, purchased at a Japanese store in New York.

Location: Kasmin, 297 Tenth Avenue, New York
Price: Free with registration (attendance is limited)
Time: 6:30 p.m.

—Sarah Cascone

 

Thursday, May 26–Saturday, July 16

Keisha Prioloeau-Martin, Morning Routine: Water the Plants (2022). Courtesy of Olympia.

7. “Keisha Prioleau-Martin: Garden Party” at Olympia, New York

Olympia presents the first solo exhibition of New York artist Keisha Prioleau-Martin, curated by Nilufa Yeasmin. Having spent her whole life in New York, Prioleau-Martin paints verdant scenes of indoor and outdoor urban spaces. The joyful works depict people coming together to share and enjoy nature as it is available to those in populated cities. The show also presents a new body of sculptures by the artist.

Location: Olympia, 41 Orchard Street, New York
Price: Free
Time: Opening Reception, 6 p.m.–8 p.m.

—Neha Jambhekar

 

Saturday, May 28–Sunday, July 24

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8. “What a Long Strange Trip” at Analog Diary, Beacon, New York

Derek Eller, Abby Messitte, Katharine Overgaard, and Franklin Parrasch are teaming up to open a new gallery, Analog Diary, in Beacon, New York. The new venture will be “a space where thinking about art without the mind clutter of an Instagrammable frame of reference is possible,” according to a statement for the inaugural exhibition. “What is off the table is the notion of ‘off the table’—concepts of exclusion and a restricted mindset are not a thing here.” Reflecting this rejection of prescribed categories, the gallery is opening with a wide-ranging group show featuring Jose Alvarez (D.O.P.A.), Radcliffe Bailey, Nicole Cherubini, Zoë Charlton, Al Freeman,  Miles Huston, Lee Quiñones, and Dorothea Tanning, among others.

Location: Analog Diary, 1154 North Avenue, Beacon, New York
Price: Free
Time: Opening reception, 4 p.m.–6 p.m; Saturday and Sunday, 12 p.m.–6 p.m.

—Sarah Cascone

 

Through Saturday, June 25

Moonlight Room, Installation View, Courtesy of Carvalho Park

9. “Moonlight Room: Krista Louise Smith and Rosalind Tallmadge” at Carvalho Park, Brooklyn

Carvalho Park presents a two-person painting exhibition by Brooklyn-based artists Krista Louise Smith and Rosalind Tallmadge. Both artists present serene, monochromatic works in various shades of pale pastel, “offering a transcendent cohesion” of their styles. Dreamy pink and blue hues of the sky appear in Smith’s paintings, often inspired by her travels, and particularly her recent trips to New Mexico’s desert. Tallmadge’s works are infused with light and glimmer, invoking geological elements through the use of materials such as fabric, mica flakes, and marble dust. The effect of them together is like “being wrapped in a serene, feminized glow,” according to co-founder Jennifer Carvalho.

Location: Carvalho Park, 112 Waterbury Street, Brooklyn
Price: Free
Time: Thursday–Saturday, 12 p.m.–6 p.m.

—Neha Jambhekar

 

Through Sunday, August 28

Renee Cox, <em>Miss Thang</em>, from the series "The Discreet Charm of the Bougies"</em> (2009). Photo courtesy of the artist.

Renee Cox, Miss Thang, from the series “The Discreet Charm of the Bougies” (2009). Photo courtesy of the artist.

10. “Black Venus” at Fotografiska New York

This wide-ranging show curated by Aindrea Emelife examines Western representations of the Black female body. By including archival images from 1793 to 1930, as well as contemporary photography from 1975 to the present, the exhibition allows Black women to reclaim their agency, rejecting the fetishization and sexual objectification faced by previous generations. Featured contemporary artists were born from 1942 to 1997, with an intergenerational mix that includes Kara Walker, Carrie Mae Weems, Zanele Muholi, and Renee Cox.

Location: Fotografiska, 281 Park Avenue, New York
Price: $26 general admission
Time: 9 a.m.―9 p.m.

—Sarah Cascone

 

Through Saturday, June 18 

Evelyn Statsinger, Forest Gift (1987). Courtesy of Gray New York.

Evelyn Statsinger, Forest Gift (1987). Courtesy of Gray New York.

11. “Evelyn Statsinger: Currents” at Gray New York 

For decades, the Chicago-based artist Evelyn Statsinger (1927–2016) created drawings, paintings, and sculptures of the natural world. The artist’s early works from the 1950s were kind of all-over botanical patterns and drew the admiration of the likes of Mies Van Der Rohe. In fact, Statsinger had two exhibitions of her work at the Art Institute of Chicago, first in 1952 and then again in 1957. Statsinger’s later works, though, are particularly beguiling, as this exhibition organized by writer and curator Dan Nadel makes clear. In these peculiar visions, the artist forgoes naturalism and identifiable forms for abstracted and fantastical depictions of nature that feel both wholly out of this world and of the moment. 

Location: Gray New York, 1018 Madison Avenue, 2nd floor, New York
Price: Free
Time: Tuesday–Saturday, 11 a.m.–5 p.m

—Katie White

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Vancouver’s 4/20 event returns to Art Gallery location Wednesday | Globalnews.ca

Vancouver’s 4/20 event returns to Art Gallery location Wednesday  | Globalnews.ca

Vancouver’s annual 4/20 event will be held Wednesday at its original downtown location but new organizers will be running it.

A group called the 4/20 Market has come together to plan its own event at the Vancouver Art Gallery.

Read more:

Cannacurious: What we really know about cannabis

These organizers say they need to protest against the Canadian government, saying they believe cannabis has become too expensive for B.C.’s most vulnerable population.

The organizers told Global News they see this event as an opportunity to speak up.


Click to play video: 'Annual Vancouver 4/20 event moves online'







Annual Vancouver 4/20 event moves online


Annual Vancouver 4/20 event moves online – Apr 20, 2020

“It’s a protest just like every year,” Adilynn McArdle, one of the event organizers said.

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“(The) Supreme Court of Canada says every Canadian citizen deserves reasonable access to cannabis and unfortunately our federal government hasn’t yet given us reasonable access. While they’ve legalized it, they’ve kind of locked out all of the people who were standing up in the first place.”

The previous organizers, who shifted the event to the Sunset Beach location, say they were unable to organize their annual April event because COVID-19 regulations were not lifted in time.

Read more:

Where to hold Vancouver’s annual 4/20 event in the future?

The return of 4/20 is certain to reignite the heated annual debate over whether the event is a protest or an unlicensed festival.

According to a leaked memo from Vancouver city staff, the 2018 event cost taxpayers more than $583,000.

The now-28-year-old event has grown to attract tens of thousands of attendees and high-profile musical acts like Cypress Hill, who performed at Sunset Beach in 2019.

© 2022 Global News, a division of Corus Entertainment Inc.

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4/20 cannabis event returns to Vancouver Art Gallery plaza under new organizers | Globalnews.ca

4/20 cannabis event returns to Vancouver Art Gallery plaza under new organizers  | Globalnews.ca

It appears Vancouver will play host to a 4/20 cannabis event this year after all.

The core group of organizers who shifted recent events to their controversial Sunset Beach location had said COVID-19 regulations were not lifted in time to organize the annual April 20 event to their standards.

However, an unaffiliated group called the 4/20 Market is planning its own event at the protest-festival’s long-time former site in the Vancouver Art Gallery’s North Plaza.

Read more:

Large crowd gathers at Vancouver’s Sunset Beach on 4-20 despite COVID-19 restrictions

“It’s been two years of very limited 4/20s happenings, and we had an amazing 4/20 just before the pandemic hit, so we want to reclaim the day and bring back the vibe and bring back that ability of ours to get the message out about what’s not right with cannabis laws in this world,” said Neil Magnuson, one of the event organizers and founder of the Cannabis Substitution Program, which works to help people get off opioids with the help of high-dose cannabis edibles.

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Click to play video: 'Large crowd gathers at Vancouver’s Sunset Beach on 4-20 despite COVID-19 restrictions'







Large crowd gathers at Vancouver’s Sunset Beach on 4-20 despite COVID-19 restrictions


Large crowd gathers at Vancouver’s Sunset Beach on 4-20 despite COVID-19 restrictions – Apr 21, 2021

While Cannabis was legalized in 2018, Magnuson said the need to protest was as real as ever, arguing that the path Canada pursued has actually made the product more expensive and harder to get for sick or vulnerable people.

Prices, he said, especially for high-dose products like the ones his group provides to people struggling with addiction, have actually gone up under legalization.

Read more:

4-20 Vancouver celebration packs Sunset Beach despite recent backlash

“The government did well for a bunch of wealthy people that wanted to invest in the cannabis market place and sell shares to people, and they’re making off like bandits,” he said.

“The people who bought shares, not so much. The people who actually need to use cannabis and would like to use cannabis daily, they’re priced right out of this unless they are really wealthy.”

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Click to play video: 'Organizers, park board assess impact of controversial 4/20 event'







Organizers, park board assess impact of controversial 4/20 event


Organizers, park board assess impact of controversial 4/20 event – Apr 21, 2019

The return of 4/20 is certain to reignite the heated annual debate over whether the event is a protest or an unlicensed festival.

According to a leaked memo from Vancouver city staff, the 2018 event cost taxpayers more than $583,000.

Read more:

Where to hold Vancouver’s annual 4/20 event in the future?

The now 28-year-old event has grown to attract tens of thousands of attendees and high profile musical acts like Cypress Hill, who performed at Sunset Beach in 2019.

Both city council and the Vancouver Park Board have fought a multi-year battle with organizers over the beach location, but efforts to find an alternative, permanent home have failed.

City officials and organizers of similar large-scale events like Vancouver Pride have argued that 4/20 has outgrown its protest roots and become a festival, and so should act accordingly.

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In response, 4/20 organizers say they continue to protest Cannabis law and do not receive civic subsidies the way events like Pride does.

© 2022 Global News, a division of Corus Entertainment Inc.

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National Gallery of Art Bringing Back Night Events This Spring

National Gallery of Art Bringing Back Night Events This Spring

A night at the museum!

The National Gallery of Art is bringing back its special evening program this spring. But, for the first time, the events will be held at the museum’s West Building.

The National Gallery will be opening its doors to the public from 6 p.m. to 9 p.m. on April 14, May 12 and June 9. The events will feature music, performances, pop-up experiences and art-making activities, according to a press release. Snacks and drinks will be available for purchase.

The events are free, but registration is required. You can get tickets for the April 14 event here. Registration for May and June will open one month in advance: April 15 and May 13, respectively.

Each night’s event will have a different theme: Flowers After Hours for April 14, Prom for May 12 and French Connections for June 9. Attendees will also be able to enjoy a nighttime visit to the museum’s new exhibition Atlantic Histories, which opens on April 10.

Masks and proof of COVID-19 vaccination are not required but they’ll let visitors know if there are any updates to the policy, NGA said.

The events mark the gallery’s first in-person programming since 2020. Previously, NGA Nights used to be held on the East Wing, but that building is closed until June for renovations.

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Painting party, live music, art talks on tap at Deer Lake Gallery

Painting party, live music, art talks on tap at Deer Lake Gallery

Find arty fun for folks of all ages at Burnaby Arts Council’s gallery.

Live arts have returned in full force – and the Burnaby Arts Council is ready to celebrate. 

The arts council’s Deer Lake Gallery has some special events going on in March.

Here’s a few options for those who are eager to get back out into the world again:

Paint party: Saturday, March 19, 7 to 9 p.m.

Are you ready to paint?

Enjoy an evening with paint, drinks, snacks and good company, as arts council member and local artist Alyx Essers-Silverman leads a paint-along with step-by-step instructions.

No experience is needed, just your enthusiasm to follow along and have fun. The ticket price includes all art supplies, plus a drink of your choice. Light snacks will also be provided.

Tickets are $20 for general admission, $15 for children. One ticket includes a drink, apron, and all painting supplies. Sign up in advance through Eventbrite.

 

Art Talks artists meet and greet: Saturday, March 19, noon to 4 p.m.

You can drop in to the gallery to meet artists participating in the current exhibition, Art Talks.The final of three Saturday drop-ins happens this weekend (March 19) with artists Dorothy Doherty and Sande Walters.

 

Art Talks closing reception: Friday, March 25, 3 to 5 p.m.

With the COVID-19 restrictions in place at the time, the gallery was only able to host a virtual opening for the show – so it’s making up for it with a live, in-person closing reception. All the artists will be on hand to celebrate the show one final time.

Keep an eye on the arts council’s website for full details as the reception approaches.

 

Live at the Gallery: Classy with Will Clements, Sunday, March 26, 6 to 8 p.m.

With Live at the Gallery, the arts council connects the visual and the musical arts, and the fans of both, to present live music in the gallery setting.

This performance series features all kinds of performers, from the sweet sounds of classical music to chilled-out beats of local folk bands. 

The coming session features “classy friends, fancy clothes, and an evening with drinks, snacks and jazz,” as the arts council bills it.

It features Will Clements, a Vancouver-based performer, educator, recording artists and arranger – who’s been described by CBC Music as having a “fantastic and easy voice.”

Register for the session at Eventbrite.

 

What to know about COVID-19 protocols at Deer Lake Gallery

If you just want to drop in to the gallery, you don’t require proof of vaccination, but if you’re attending an event (including all of those listed above), you will need to show your proof of double vaccination (18+ years old) with a piece of government-issued photo ID.

For youth, the following policy applies:

Youth aged 12 to 18 can carry their own BC Vaccine Card or have a trusted adult carry it for them. Youth are not required to show valid government photo ID.

  • 12-year-olds only need to show proof of one dose of vaccine
  • 13- to 18-year-olds need to show proof of two doses of vaccine

Masks are required while indoors at all times for everyone who enters the gallery or participates in an event.

The gallery is at 6584 Deer Lake Ave.

Follow Julie MacLellan on Twitter @juliemaclellan.

Email Julie, jmaclellan@newwestrecord.ca.

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Expect huge crowds near the Vancouver Art Gallery this weekend with three rally events planned

Expect huge crowds near the Vancouver Art Gallery this weekend with three rally events planned

The Vancouver Art Gallery and surrounding streets will host two very different demonstrations this weekend, and one counter-protest. 

Community Over Convoys (COC), a group formed earlier this month to counter recent anti-vaccine mandate protests in Vancouver has warned its followers of a large “freedom rally” planned this Saturday (Feb. 26). The “freedom rally” is expected to take place outside the CTV Vancouver newsroom on Robson Street, not far from the art gallery where a large Ukraine anti-war rally is to be held also. 

In total, there are three groups expected to be out in the downtown core this weekend, the “freedom rally” participants, members of the COC opposing them and the Ukraine anti-war demonstrators.

“We recognize this isn’t great optics,” COC wrote in a statement on social media, simultaneously asking their supporters to do their best to avoid conflict.

The Ukraine anti-war rally takes place as Vladimir Putin launched a full-scale invasion of Ukraine earlier this week, unleashing the largest ground war in Europe since World War II. The act sparked many demonstrations across the province and around the world.

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Indoor programs and events return to Belleville Library and the Parrott Art Gallery

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LIBRARY LINE

Belleville Public Library and the Parrott Art Gallery are pleased to announce the return to full operations starting on March 1. We are no longer asking patrons to limit their stay in the building and computer use has been returned to 2-hours per day maximum. Study tables do not require bookings or time limits, and more lounge furniture and computers will be available. Indoor programs and events will return, including children’s storytimes, art workshops, and March Break programming. Room rentals are also available again for community and business groups needing a space to meet or run events. There are no proof-of-vaccine requirements for library access, indoor programs or room rentals. All patrons 3 years of age or older must wear a mask or face shield at all times while in the building. The library is also looking forward to opening on Sunday again from 1-5 pm, starting Sunday March 27. Please see bellevillelibrary.ca for details including hours of operation for the library and gallery.

We are excited to plan for indoor programs and events, including over March Break from March 14-19. The theme is “Unlock your own adventure” and we have some great adventures waiting for your kids. Some highlights are the City Building and Robot Rampage programs on March 16, Top o’ the Morning Crafts and Fun and Games programs for St. Patrick’s Day on March 17, and an exciting live performance by Mystic Drumz on Saturday March 19 at 1:30 p.m. Come join the adventure in world music as they blend multicultural themes and invite the audience to participate. Please see bellevillelibrary.ca/marchbreak to register for these and other programs. Don’t delay as several programs are already full, with wait lists available.

If you have any questions about the Library or Gallery, or would like help finding your next great read, please visit, call us at 613-968-6731 ext. 2035 or email infoserv@bellevillelibrary.ca

Trevor Pross is the CEO of Belleville Public Library and John M. Parrott Art Gallery.