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"The Art Spirit": Creative Collective Discussion Group (Virtual)

“The Art Spirit”: Creative Collective Discussion Group (Virtual)

Tuesday, February 6

10:30 am - 12:00 pm

Registration Required Below
Have fun and make friends while cultivating your creativity in our weekly group discussions about art, creativity and so much more! Our facilitated conversations invite participants to consider imaginative and alternative viewpoints about the creative process in a congenial, relaxed Zoom setting. Empower your creativity and feed your brain by joining us in the Creative Collective Discussion Group! Throughout February and March, our exploration into the power of creativity continues with the book The Art Spirit by legendary art teacher Robert Henri.  Copies of the ebook are available on Hoopla. The Creative Collective meets weekly on Tuesdays.  Register once for all eight weekly meetings in this session, February 6 through March 26.
Click Here to attend Zoom Meeting  (For registered participants only)


K.R.A.B.S (Kids Raving About Books) for 4th, 5th and 6th Graders

K.R.A.B.S (Kids Raving About Books) for 4th, 5th and 6th Graders

Tuesday, February 6

4:00 pm - 4:45 pm

4th, 5th, and 6th graders are invited to attend our monthly book discussion group for younger readers on February 6th, to browse through new books, snack on cookies and chips, and talk about the books you’ve read recently. REGISTRATION IS REQUIRED.

Author Talk — 'White Wife/Blue Baby' (In-Person)

Author Talk — ‘White Wife/Blue Baby’ (In-Person)

Tuesday, February 6

7:00 pm - 8:00 pm

Registration Required Below How long does it take a white wife to unlearn racism? How do Black people keep rage from eating into their hearts? Redding author Gail Howard pursues these questions and more in her new memoir, White Wife/Blue Baby.  Set within the racial and political turmoil of the 1960s, and reflective of our current national divide, Gail's memoir interweaves two personal stories about marrying across the color line and nurturing a dangerously ill baby girl. Gail describes her experience: “From our first date, hate came at us fast.... I got the news about racism -- one sucker punch at a time. When our daughter Carolyn was born with heart disease, she spent a month in intensive care...  Chicago’s rage had brought us down, but her joy inspired our escape. DC’s racism was less virulent, but Carolyn’s life still hung by a thread. With 50 years of hindsight, my memoir pursues these questions: 'How did I survive this experience as a parent? Why is racism invisible to the very people who are defined by it?' A book sale and signing will be held after the program. About the Author With an MFA from UMass/Amherst, Gail Howard taught at area colleges and held private memoir workshops before retiring to write her own personal story. A survivor of childhood clergy sex abuse, she is a leader of SNAP CT (Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests), and has lived in Redding for 12 years.