Apr23-25

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“Red Hot” opens at Ontario Shores – May 5

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“Hope” by Aynsley Risto.

Why not experience the opening of a new art show in Whitby and let your senses be sizzled by the up and coming “Sulky” band?  Did you even know there’s an art gallery at Ontario Shores Centre for Mental Health Sciences? 

The Gallery has been running since 2008, partnering with local art groups, councils and organizations such as The Robert McLaughlin Gallery and Station Gallery in Whitby to support and aspiring and established artists from all around Durham Region.  Not only do they host art shows but also provide diverse art educational programming to use art as a medium to promote mental health awareness. There’s so many things going on at Ontario Shores, it’s worth checking our their Community events.

Download My Durham Desktop to have other intriguing images of Durham Region delivered to your desktop. My Durham Desktop is a computer desktop calendar that serves up the beauty of Durham Region visual art and photography every week.  Each new wallpaper is accompanied by a pop-up window that informs you of local events and happenings.

feb21-23

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Whitby’s Station Gallery

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When I saw this photo, I had to go to Whitby’s Station Gallery. I love glass; think I must have been a magpie in a previous life.

The gallery is home to a permanent collection of 300 original prints, paintings, sculpture, and mixed media works.  Additionally, several permanent installational pieces were commissioned for the newly built facility into which Station Gallery moved in 2006.

And there’s an exciting new exhibit opening on February 26.

In 2006, Jane Eccles began a series based on painting dresses loaned to her by women who have inspired her. These paintings evoke the stories of the women who once owned the garments, betray their life stories and reflect the souls of their original owners.

In a recent interview for the Toronto Star, she says “I think it’s my life’s work . . I learned that women who wore very feminine little delicate dresses often were tough, the leaders, the ones people depended on to bring the whole together.”

The Star article continues “Invariably the stories behind the dresses were finely nuanced tales of fidelity, denial, self-destruction, illness, strength, and even murder. Eccles wrote them all down to accompany the dresses.”

The Jane Eccles collection opens at the Station Gallery on February 26.

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Tall ship in Whitby Harbour

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Whitby Harbour Days (July 24)

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Would-be mariners have a chance to cruise on The Tall Ship Empire Sandy when she arrives for Whitby Harbour Days on Saturday. 

According to Wikapedia, the Empire Sandy was built in England in 1943 as a deep sea tugboat for the Royal Navy to salvage merchant ships damaged in the Battle of the Atlantic and other naval engagements during the Second World War.   In 1952 she was sold to Great Lakes Paper Company and named Chris M; that began fifteen years towing timber rafts for Lake Superior logging companies.

In the early 1970s the ship was to be sold for scrap, but the steel hull was still in very good condition and she was bought by Nautical Adventures Co.  She was completely rebuilt as a three masted schooner in the style of the 1880s and assumed her original name, the Empire Sandy.

This photograph courtesy of Durham Region photographer Paul James.   Download My Durham Desktop to have other gorgeous images of Durham Region delivered to your desktop.

For more information about other events in Durham Region, or to add your own, please visit www.ExploreDurham.ca/events.