Give A Sheet Press Revived at Take Cover Books
Give A Sheet Press Revived at Take Cover Books
By
Cirilla Bowman
and
·
December 16, 2025
Give A Sheet Press' first offerings in 30 years feature poetry and short stories from local authors and artists.
Love It Or Hate It, It's "One Battle After Another"
Love It Or Hate It, It's "One Battle After Another"
By
Cirilla Bowman
and
·
December 4, 2025
"One Battle After Another" is a three-hour masterpiece of shit I love to hate.
Remembering Drew Struzan
Remembering Drew Struzan
By
Allen Barnier
and
·
December 4, 2025
A tribute to the life and artwork of Star Wars and Indiana Jones poster artist, Drew Struzan.
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Artspace Welcomes Adrien Crossman’s “Babe, yr my religion” to Peterborough
Artspace Welcomes Adrien Crossman’s “Babe, yr my religion” to Peterborough
By
Louanne Morin
and
·
September 15, 2025
The exhibition will be running until November 22nd
Don't Be Left in the Dark
Don't Be Left in the Dark
By
JC Buuck
and
·
August 28, 2025
A semi-true story of contributor JC Buuck's first time in downtown Peterborough.
When Art Stops Being Art
When Art Stops Being Art
By
Georgia Dunning
and
·
August 28, 2025
What happens to music when TikTok clips and influencer-led bandwagons become our primary means of engaging with it?
"Wicked: For Good" is a Bittersweet Goodbye Between Two Friends
"Wicked: For Good" is a Bittersweet Goodbye Between Two Friends
By
Wesley Braid
and
·
December 3, 2025
Wicked: For Good carries a lot of heart and lessons about friendship.
"CAMP" Comes to the Art Gallery of Peterborough
"CAMP" Comes to the Art Gallery of Peterborough
By
Nevan Hinks
and
·
November 14, 2025
Couzyn van Heuvlen's massive sculptural exhibition is a prominent display of Inuit celebration and resilience on display at the AGP until January 4th, 2026.
 Guillermo Del Toro’s Frankenstein Should Live on the Big Screen
Guillermo Del Toro’s Frankenstein Should Live on the Big Screen
By
Wesley Braid
and
·
November 14, 2025
Wesley Braid reviews Guillermo Del Toro's 2025 film Frankenstein.
Lanthimos Doesn't Pull Punches in "Bugonia"
Lanthimos Doesn't Pull Punches in "Bugonia"
By
Jonny Milton
and
·
November 11, 2025
Yorgos Lanthimos’ absurdist black comedy thriller opens to mixed audience reactions.
"who will save the night sky?": Philip Geller Brings Existential Indigenous Theatre to Trent
"who will save the night sky?": Philip Geller Brings Existential Indigenous Theatre to Trent
By
Cirilla Bowman
and
·
November 10, 2025
"It all started with one night I was sort of contemplating things in an existential moment, going, who am I? What's happening? And I looked up at the night sky."
TUAAC Prom: A Night to Remember
TUAAC Prom: A Night to Remember
By
Allen Barnier
and
·
November 10, 2025
Prom reimagined as "a safe space for people to come and be themselves."
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Sadleir House Giving Campaign 2025
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To Honour and Respect: How 13 Quillwork Baskets Crafted by Michi-Saagiig Women in 1860 Arrived Back in Peterborough and What They Continue to Teach About Indigenous Arts and Our Relations
To Honour and Respect: How 13 Quillwork Baskets Crafted by Michi-Saagiig Women in 1860 Arrived Back in Peterborough and What They Continue to Teach About Indigenous Arts and Our Relations
By
Sebastian Johnston-Lindsay
and
·
August 11, 2023
In this feature article, Sebastian Johnston-Lindsay tells the story of how international curators, museum staff, and city staff worked alongside Indigenous communities to bring these ancestors back for a visit to their territory after 163 years. Since April of 2023, the makakoon have been on loan from the Royal Collection Trust and have since been on display at the Peterborough Museum and Archives as part of a six-month-long exhibit entitled “To Honour and Respect: Gifts from Michi Saagiig Women to the Prince of Wales, 1860.” 
Am I Become Stale, Destroyer of Cinema?: A Review of Oppenheimer
Am I Become Stale, Destroyer of Cinema?: A Review of Oppenheimer
By
Connor Stinson
and
·
August 11, 2023
In a three-hour runtime that found itself meandering at times, and struggled to fruitfully address b-plots, I found a disheartening lack of Japanese and Indigenous perspective or reference in this film. The story of Robert J. Oppenheimer is more than just a tale of philosophical and ethical quandary, there is a less than subtle layer of American exceptionalism wielded in the face of one of the most depraved war crimes in modern military history.