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The Gallery Singers usually perform 4 concerts annually. The choir is under the artistic direction of Jonathan Quick, a prominent Vancouver conductor, composer, arranger and singer.
Geordie Productions is a Montreal-based, non-profit charitable organization producing theatre for young audiences since 1980.
The Georgian Bay Symphony was founded in 1972 by a small group of dedicated area musicians. Since then the GBS has grown to an outstanding community orchestra with over 65 volunteer members and a core group of professionals. They perform under the baton of John Barnum Music Director. The GBS performs five main concerts in the Regional Auditorium each season as well as three chamber concerts in smaller venues. Several of these concerts feature some of Canada’s best musical talent. Our Youth Orchestra consists of 40 young people ranging in age from 8 to 18 and they perform one main concert a year. Along with the Youth Orchestra GBS encourages talented young people with a bursary and scholarship program supported in part by our subscribers. The Symphony also has a Composer-in-Residence program to encourage the production of Canadian music and assist with education in area schools and with our audience.
The GIT is a not-for-profit, private educational institute specializing in experiential group learning in the Gestalt method of psychotherapy. Personal development workshops and one-on-one therapy sessions are also available with our faculty and post-graduate students.
GGC is the leadership organization for girls and women in Canada, with over 90,000 members from coast to coast to coast. Guiding is bold, fun, energetic and empowers girls and women to face challenges with confidence. Guides welcomes girls and women to be part of the following groups: Sparks (5 and 6), Brownies (7 and 8), Guides (9 to 11), Pathfinders (12 to 14), Rangers (15 to 17+), and Adults - as leaders, mentors, team members and more. For girls, Guiding is an accepting environment with diverse and exciting programs and activities that offer the opportunity to discover new interests, valuable leadership skills and make lasting friendships. Guiding gives girls the tools and resources they need to acheive greatness. For women, Guiding is a chance to make a difference in the lives of girls and young women. It's a place for personal growth, mentoring and travel.
Fine Educational, athletic and cultural opportunities, as well as landmark architecture, are all part of the contribution GPRC makes to community life in Grande Prairie and the Peace River region. More than 2,000 students annually pursue university studies, career and academic upgrading programs, and trades and agricultural studies at GPRC and its Fairview College Campus and some 6,000 students register in training programs and continuing education classes each year. The Grande Prairie Campus is situated on a picturesque urban lake and is adjacent to trails well-suited for walking, biking and cross country skiiing. The Fairview College Campus includes a 300 seat theare, racquet ball and squash courts, community pool and weight room, all located on a large parcel of land that is a cornerstone to the community of Fairview, Alberta. GPRC is also stewards for community learning centres in Edson, Grande Cache,Hinton and Jasper, Alberta.
Symphony Hamilton, a full size, high-caliber community-based symphony orchestra, enriches the cultural life of the Hamilton, Burlington and surrounding area by offering amateur musicians the opportunity to perform a wide repertoire of symphonic music under professional leadership and by presenting symphonic concerts accessible to a large public. Our annual Young Artists' Competition gives outstanding young soloists from the region the opportunity to perform a concerto with full orchestra.
VIFF is among the top five film festivals in North America, with 150,000 admissions and 380 films from 75 countries. The 16-day festival is a microcosm of its home city: cosmopolitan, friendly, culturally complex, laid-back and accessible. VIFF’s slogan is “Same Planet. Different Worlds.” Films are exhibited within 10 main programming strands. Three of these are pillars of the festival and help make it unique: the major Nonfiction Features section (42% of the 232 feature-length films screened in 2009 were docs); the popular Canadian Images program makes VIFF the biggest showcase of Canadian film in the world; and the Dragons & Tigers: The Cinemas of East Asia program is the largest exhibition of East Asian film outside that region.
We believe that young people deserve the opportunity to see high quality, professional theatre that will inspire them in their daily lives Your donation will enable Green Thumb to: • Promote positive youth role models • Create awareness of contemporary social issues among young people • Encourage critical thinking and problem solving • Help young people to be an active part of their community “Thank you for coming to my school and performing the play. I thought that it was very funny and taught me how to stand up to bullying." — Jacey, Elementary Student
Guelph Arts Council is the umbrella/co-ordinating body for arts, culture and heritage in the Guelph (Ontario) area. Since the organization was founded in 1975, its major roles have included: facilitating/collaborating in the establishment of community arts projects and groups; providing services including information, resource and administrative services as well as an innovative arts website portal for artists, arts groups and the community at large; presenting community programs such as historical walking tours, Doors Open Guelph, workshops and Schmoozefest networking gatherings for artists and arts groups; representing arts, culture and heritage on community and regional committees and task forces; advocating in support of arts and heritage both locally and beyond.
Guido de Brès serves the Canadian Reformed churches as a high school with its basis in the Word of God as confessed in the Reformed confessions. The school has been serving the Canadian Reformed community in southern Ontario since 1977. As a Christian private school, Guido de Brès does not receive any government funding and is financially supported through tuition payments and through many donors who believe in the importance of Reformed education. The school is named after Guido de Brès, a preacher of the Reformed Churches in the Netherlands who died as a martyr to the faith in the year 1567. He was the chief author of the Belgic Confession, one of the doctrinal standards of the Reformed Churches. A statement from article 12 of this Confession inscribed in the wooden plaque in the front lobby summarizes our school's vision: " ...to the end that man may serve his God".
Rails End Gallery & Arts Centre is located in Haliburton Village, Ontario in a historic railway station. We present a year round schedule of contemporary art exhibitions and related activities. On the fourth weekend of July we host the Haliburton Art & Craft Festival in Head Lake Park.