Between January and May 2006, the Central Kennebec Heritage Council sponsor three hands-on workshops for its member museums along the Kennebec-Chaudière Heritage Corridor. The three programs have been designed to address diverse aspects of exhibit preparation, from label writing to acid-free materials to affordable mounts and displays. Although the workshops are intended mainly for an audience of museum staff and volunteers, they will be open to the public. If you are interested in attending, please contact Deborah Staber at the L.C. Bates Museum in Hinckley, (207) 238-4250 or lcbates@gwh.org.
Back to the TopIn partnership with the Union of Maine Visual Artists, Schoodic Arts for All is bringing the Maine Masters Project, a series of films about contemporary Maine artists, to Hammond Hall in Winter Harbor. The series will include seven of the nine documentary films that have already completed in this ongoing project. Some of the artists profiled will be present for discussions following the films. Screenings and discussions will begin at 7 p.m. on February 15; March 1, 15, and 29; and April 5. For further details, please contact Mary Laury, Executive Director of Schoodic Arts for All, at (207) 963-2569.
Back to the TopThe Portland Public Library will hold a Poetry Festival during the months of March and April 2006. The festivities begin on March 9 with a poetry workshop and reading given by Tony Marino at 6:30 p.m. A poetry-writing contest for all ages will run from March 15 to April 15. On March 30 at 7 p.m., Say It Loud, an all-girls spoken word and hip-hop group, will perform. Noontime readings and discussions will be led by Paul Janeczko (April 12) and Betsy Sholl (April 19). Outside the library's doors on April 19, look (and listen!) for a poetry read-a-thon. April 20 brings "An Evening with Moon Pie Press," including readings and music. Finally, on April 26, celebrate Shakespeare's birthday by attending a reading and lecture by Professor Peter Saccio at noon. For more details about any of the Festival events, please visit www.portlandlibrary.com or call (207) 871-1700.
Back to the TopIn March 2006, students from a children’s literature course at St. Joseph's College in Standish will expose K-6 students from the Otisfield Community School, as well as local librarians, to the work of two renowned children's book creators — Kevin Hawkes of Gorham and Lea Wait of Edgecomb. The college students will arrange a program with Kevin Hawkes at the Otisfield Community School, and will return to the school for a follow-up visit involving art and literature activities. They will also bring students, teachers, and parents from the school to the St. Joseph’s campus to meet Lea Wait. For more information, please contact Dr. Cynthia Mowles, Assistant Professor of Education at St. Joseph's, at cmowles@sjcme.edu.
Back to the TopAs part of a year-long effort to get patrons excited about poetry, the Belfast Free Library will hold a series of two workshops on "Odes and Other Forms of Praise." Poet and University of Maine English Instructor Kathleen Ellis will facilitate the workshops on April 8 and 29, 2006. Each workshop will include the reading and discussion of a variety of odes, collaborative and interactive writing exercises, and solo writing assignments for writers of all levels. To learn more about this opportunity, please contact the library at (207) 338-3884.
Back to the TopThe annual Bullying Prevention Conference at Newport/Plymouth Elementary School will be expanded this year to address issues of culture and ethnicity. Sherry Mitchell, a member of the Civil Rights Training Team, will arrange presentations on Native American culture, storytelling, history, and crafts. Allen Sockabasin, author of Thanks to the Animals, a new picture book about a Passamaquoddy family, has also been invited to participate. This year's conference, entitled “Picnic of the World,” takes place on April 12, 2006. For details, please contact Assistant Principal Barbara Brown at (207) 368-4470.
Back to the TopAuthor Gerry Boyle will give a free public reading of his work at 5:30 on Thursday, April 13. He appears courtesy of the Literacy Volunteers of Greater Saco-Biddeford, who will be hosting a raffle, refreshments, and a sale of Boyle’s novels (in partnership with Nonesuch Books) during the evening. Boyle, who lives in Maine, will read at the Crown & Anchor Inn on North Street in Saco. For more information, please call the Literacy Volunteers at 283-2954.
Back to the TopOn Monday, April 24, 2006, the Academic Council for Post-Holocaust Christian, Jewish, and Islamic Studies at the University of Southern Maine presents "Never Again? Genocide and Indifference." This program will feature Paul Rusesabagina, the real-life hero of the film Hotel Rwanda, who saved over 1,000 lives during the 1994 Rwandan genocide. He will speak at 7:30 p.m. in the Hannaford Lecture Hall at USM's Abromson Community Education Center in Portland. April 24 is also the official commemoration date of the 1915 Armenian genocide, and the program will recognize the occasion. To learn more, please contact the Director of the Academic Council, Professor Abraham Peck, at (207) 780-5331.
Back to the Top"Maine's Place in the Environmental Imagination" is a conference devoted to the ways in which Maine has figured in the nation's environmental consciousness, and the ways practicing writers think of the state as a symbol, myth, image, and setting in their work. The University of Maine at Farmington serves as host and sponsor; the Association for Literature and Environment will co-sponsor. During the three-day conference, three events will be open to the public. The keynote address on June 2, 2006, at 7 p.m., will be delivered by University of Southern Maine professor Kent Ryden. On Saturday, June 3, Northeast Historic Films will be screening films on Maine logging, while a panel of writers (including Wes McNair and Bob Kimber) will speak at 4 p.m. For details or to register, please contact Michael Burke, (207) 778-7205 or mdburke@maine.edu.
Back to the TopDuring the 2006 Seal Bay Festival, composers and instrumentalists will interact with Vinalhaven residents in workshops that explore the creative links between verbal narrative, visual imagery, physical movement, and music composition. The workshops will use musical improvisation as a starting point for discussion and discovery. The residents who will participate are middle-school students from Vinalhaven and North Haven schools and visual artists at Vinalhaven's Arts & Recreation Center. The workshops will take place on June 7 and 9, 2006; for a full schedule, please visit www.sealbayfestival.org.
Back to the TopSacred At Any Cost, an exhibit focusing on the contributions and sacrifices made by the men and women of the Fifth Regiment Maine Volunteer Infantry during the Civil War, will be on view at the Fifth Maine Regiment Museum (located at 45 Seashore Avenue on Peaks Island) from June through November, 2006. The centerpiece of the exhibit is the Regiment’s battle flag, which survived the Regiment’s three-year term of service without being captured and became a point of pride among the veterans. The grand opening of the exhibit will take place on June 11, when the flag (currently being treated by a professional textile conservateur) is returned to the museum. For information and exhibit hours, please contact the museum at (207) 766-5514 or fifthmaine@juno.com.
Back to the Top