Talks and Lectures

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Mountainside Gallery proudly presents an Exhibition by Angela Morgan.

Her work celebrates humanity through the use of colour, pattern, and line.

Angela Morgan's human figures express the poses of life; the jubilation of dance, the contemplation of parenthood, and the melancholy of summer's end.

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Come out for a full day of enjoyable storytelling and effective communication.

11:00 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. at the Public Library enjoy some Family Fun! Bring the kids (along with your inner child) for 90 minutes of delightful tales that will transport you to worlds of imagination. Perfect for the young and the "young at heart"!

Next, from 1:30 p.m. to 3:00 p.m. it's an interactive workshop allowing you the chance to share your own story! Learn the art of storytelling in a supportive and like-minded environment.

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Trivia Tuesdays

Bring your team (any size will do) for Trivia night at Somewhere Inn led by our staffers.

Tuesdays @ 7PM in June, July, August

Open to guests and the public

128 St Paul St, Collingwood, ON L9Y 4X9

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COLLINGWOOD WALKING FOODIE TOUR

Join our friendly and knowledgeable local guides every Wednesday at 11:00 a.m. and taste your way around Collingwood. Our two hour foodie tour is like trick or treating for grown ups! We stroll at a leisurely pace, and snack along the way at some of our awesome eateries! Enjoy the company of new friends and learn the stories of how some of our favourite restaurants came to be. You will leave full! Reservations required.

Learn more at: www.collingwoodFREEwalkingtours.com

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Yonnhe’ón:we Indigenous Arts Series returns with Kwah io ianereh, a unique evening of storytelling weaving video, dance and music. Dancers Kean Buffalo and Jaeili Rae, will delight audiences with a mix of pow-wow and hip-hop creating a unique experience of dance performance. Set against the backdrop of music videos by contemporary Indigenous musicians STOIK, DJ Shub, Prolific the Rapper and Halluci Nation (A Tribe Called Red), it will be an evening to remember.

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This urgent documentary about activist Layla Staats shows the faces and personal stories behind the struggle of First Nations reserves to receive a basic human right: drinkable water.

Activist Layla Staats is our guide to the struggle of First Nations reserves to receive a basic human right — drinkable water. Canadians often hear statistics about this: there are currently 32 long-term boil-water advisories in 28 communities throughout the country. But this film puts faces and personal stories to the numbers, in a very accessible way.