Showing Now! Itee Pootoogook: Hymns to the Silence
The Muse is excited to have the exhibition Itee Pootoogook: Hymns to the Silence on display at the Douglas Family Art Centre until April 2.
The Muse is excited to have the exhibition Itee Pootoogook: Hymns to the Silence on display at the Douglas Family Art Centre until April 2.
We’ve just opened! A new year of exhibitions, programming and special events lie ahead and we’d love you to be a part of them with us.
If you are 55+ years, you are invited to join us for FREE cultural programming for seniors at The Muse from February to March 2022.
The Muse is excited to to announce that both the Lake of the Woods Museum and the Douglas Family Art Centre will be reopening to the public on February 1st.
The Sioux Narrows Arts Council is seeking applications for artists interested in participating in the 2022 Sioux Narrows Arts Festival.
If it were not The Canadian Film and Photo Unit, Canada would not have any first hand footage of the battles of World War II.
Here’s a question for ya— why did everyone stand to watch hockey at the Thistle Rink? There is even people standing in the rafters!
Before they named the newly built Thistle Rink in the 1920s there were many names in the running. Here are just a few!
The Muse (the Lake of the Woods Museum and the Douglas Family Art Centre) will remain closed to the public until January 27th.
In this locket from the Lake of the Woods Museum collection, you can find the photo of someones cherished cat.
In the late 1800s, the Willis family encountered an albatross on a sailing trip. This albatross muff is part of the LOTW Museum collection.
In Victorian times, it was all the rage. It’s hair jewellery. Not jewellery to put in your hair, but jewellery with hair in it.
Why Do We Cry? is a picture book that uses metaphors and beautiful imagery to explain why we cry, and that everyone is allowed to cry.
The holidays are just around the corner, and we’ve got a couple holiday ornament making workshops coming up for children and youth.
The Douglas Family Art Centre is excited to offer two guided tours of the textile exhibition, Nancy Bergman: Somewhere in the Sky.
Happy World Kindness Day! Today, we are featuring two books from Shop the Muse that can help you make the world a kinder place.
The first World War had already been raging for three years when this poppy was picked in 1917 by Harold Machin in a field in France.
The Douglas Family Art Centre is excited to offer two guided tours of the exhibition, Ruth Cuthand: Beads of Truth in November.
November 9th is is Go to an Art Museum Day! And what better way to celebrate than with a trip to The Muse?
On Thursday, local artist Nancy Bergman visited the Douglas Family Art Centre to talk about her solo-exhibition Somewhere in the Sky.
There is only one week left to see the architecture exhibition Kahnowiilyaa / Everyone at the Douglas Family Art Centre before it closes on November 4th.
It was on this day in 1884 that Walter Joseph Phillips was born in Barton-on-Humber, Lincolnshire, England.
Bakaan nake’ii ngii-izhi-gakinoo’amaagoomin / We Were Taught Differently: The Indian Residential School Experience is closing tomorrow, October 20th.
In the early twentieth century, women’s hats were over the top. They were usually decorated with frills, flowers, feathers, and even birds!