Social Media
We are grateful to the artists and organizations who shared their work with us. We recognize that it doesn't reflect the broad diversity of work and artists who work in the province, but invite you to add you own image using our frame
If you use the images provided, please also include the appropriate credits for the work, which are listed with each image. If you need any support, or have comments, let us know.
Thanks so much to Logan Robins for his work on the frames and logo.
Text for Social Media
Home is where the art is, and we need your help to make it strong, equitable, and vibrant for future generations in Nova Scotia.
The arts and culture community has been struggling throughout this pandemic and needs every voice to ensure we come out stronger than ever. While we are excited to reopen, we need help from the province to stabilize and reinvigorate the sector.
The arts bring social, emotional & economic benefits we all need to Restart and Rebuild Nova Scotia. We looked to artists & cultural workers to bring us through those lonely moments of lockdowns and isolation. Now we need to look to artists & cultural workers as part of the solution and help us be part of Nova Scotia’s full recovery.
We need Nova Scotians to share their love and support of arts and culture both through social media and through calling or writing your MLA. The time is now to make sure we have a vibrant, innovative and strong cultural sector.
Please tag and share this post and share your own stories from now till March 4 about why the arts matter in NS.
Get more info, send a message, download our free easy toolkit to meet or write your MLA asking for support for arts and culture in NS in the 2022 budget.
Link in bio or through http://nsarts.ca
#homeiswheretheartis #nsarts #nslive #liveartsns #artmattersNS #roadmaptorecoveryNS #buildingbackbetterNS
If you use the images provided, please also include the appropriate credits for the work, which are listed with each image. If you need any support, or have comments, let us know.
Thanks so much to Logan Robins for his work on the frames and logo.
Text for Social Media
Home is where the art is, and we need your help to make it strong, equitable, and vibrant for future generations in Nova Scotia.
The arts and culture community has been struggling throughout this pandemic and needs every voice to ensure we come out stronger than ever. While we are excited to reopen, we need help from the province to stabilize and reinvigorate the sector.
The arts bring social, emotional & economic benefits we all need to Restart and Rebuild Nova Scotia. We looked to artists & cultural workers to bring us through those lonely moments of lockdowns and isolation. Now we need to look to artists & cultural workers as part of the solution and help us be part of Nova Scotia’s full recovery.
We need Nova Scotians to share their love and support of arts and culture both through social media and through calling or writing your MLA. The time is now to make sure we have a vibrant, innovative and strong cultural sector.
Please tag and share this post and share your own stories from now till March 4 about why the arts matter in NS.
Get more info, send a message, download our free easy toolkit to meet or write your MLA asking for support for arts and culture in NS in the 2022 budget.
Link in bio or through http://nsarts.ca
#homeiswheretheartis #nsarts #nslive #liveartsns #artmattersNS #roadmaptorecoveryNS #buildingbackbetterNS
Images to share.
Please use the credits and image descriptions as attached
DANCE CREDIT:
Mocean Dance in These Versions of Us (2018) Photo Credit: Jeremy Mimnagh Choreography by Heidi Strauss Dance Artist: Susanne Chui [Image description: A lone dancer with dark hair stretches one hand out to the side with her head tilted up slightly and eyes closed.This image is within a frame of yellow and in the bottom right corner there are nautical themed letters saying Home is Where the Art Is, and the hashtag #NSArts. There is a small fish hook as part of this logo.] AUDIENCE CREDIT: The Highland Arts Theatre in Sydney, Cape Breton, Submitted by Wesley Chisholm
[Image description: a full, masked audience sits in a darkened theatre, seen from above, stage right. There are theatre lights, sending down lovely rays of deep colour, aimed at the stage where a lone performer stands, just out of the frame. This image is within a frame of yellow and in the bottom right corner there are nautical themed letters saying Home is Where the Art Is, and the hashtag #NSArts. There is a small fish hook as part of this logo.] |
THEATRE CREDIT:
Melanie Leblanc, Ursula Calder and Micha Cromwell in Two Planks and a Passion Theatre's production of Schoolhouse (2021) (Kings North) Photo: Logan Robins/ Costumes by Jennifer Goodman [Image description: Three adult actors dressed as children from the 1930s are running in a field. The first actor is grinning widely and wearing large glasses and short pants. The second is smiling and wearing a pinafore. The third, also in a pinafore, is happily running along side. This image is within a frame of yellow and in the bottom right corner there are nautical themed letters saying Home is Where the Art Is, and the hashtag #NSArts. There is a small fish hook as part of this logo.] SINGER CREDIT: Matt Minglewood at the DeCoste Centre, Pictou. Submitted by Troy Greencorn
[Image description: a middle aged caucasian man with long brown hair and a moustache, wearing a white shirt and a white hat with brown patterned trim sings into a microphone. He is spotlit on a dark stage, playing a guitar. This image is within a frame of yellow and in the bottom right corner there are nautical themed letters saying Home is Where the Art Is, and the hashtag #NSArts. There is a small fish hook as part of this logo.] |
DRUMMER CREDIT: Sobaz Benjamin at the Ross Creek Centre for the Arts, Canning. Photo by Logan Robins
[Image description: a middle aged African NS man with long brown locs, with sunglasses on top of his head, wearing a t-shirt and jeans, is standing in front of a building, outside. He is wearing a large drum with beautiful carvings on its base, and rope along the sides with a white skin head. His hands are lifted midair over the drum. This image is within a frame of yellow and in the bottom right corner there are nautical themed letters saying Home is Where the Art Is, and the hashtag #NSArts. There is a small fish hook as part of this logo.]
[Image description: a middle aged African NS man with long brown locs, with sunglasses on top of his head, wearing a t-shirt and jeans, is standing in front of a building, outside. He is wearing a large drum with beautiful carvings on its base, and rope along the sides with a white skin head. His hands are lifted midair over the drum. This image is within a frame of yellow and in the bottom right corner there are nautical themed letters saying Home is Where the Art Is, and the hashtag #NSArts. There is a small fish hook as part of this logo.]