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Entertainment & Arts Amateur Photographers Invited to Submit Photos Storytelling (Re)Collected at Saratoga Arts

SCHUYLERVILLE — Amateur Photographers are invited to submit photos to the Photography Exhibit at the Schuylerville Garden Club’s Annual Standard Flower Show.
The show entitled “Road Trip, New York” will be held on July 22 and July 23 at the Town Hall in Schuylerville.

All photos should be the work of the exhibitor and be scenes of New York State in keeping with the flower show theme. The photography section is entitled “Oh, What a View.”
The classes are as follows:
Class 1 “Make Memories” –My favorite place to visit in NYS
Class 2 “Discovering Nature” –Showing a natural wonder in NYS
Class 3 “Inside Looking Out” – Seen through the window in NYS
Photos should be 8 x 10 inches with a white 11x14 inch mat. Photos must be pre-registered. For details and an entry form, visit www.schuylervillegardenclub.org or call Nancy Derway, Photography Consultant at 518-796-4797 campderway@ yahoo.com.

SARATOGA SPRINGS — Saratoga Arts and Ndakinna Education Center have collaborated to create an interdisciplinary exhibition experience in the Dee Sarno Theater that will inspire questions about how history and stories are recorded, and learning about history through all different genres of art affects the way in which we communicate with each other.
Opening Night is 5-8 p.m. on Thursday, June 1 at the theater, located at Saratoga Arts, 320 Broadway, Saratoga Springs.
Exhibition Dates: June 2 – Aug. 24.
To accurately reflect the diversity of our regional indigenous cultures, this exhibition includes both historical and contemporary work made with traditional Abenaki methods incorporating sound, language and storytelling.
A Saratoga Arts/ Ndakinna Education Center collaboration opens June 1.

The works on display showcase Ndakinna’s commitment to keeping Indigenous history alive, as well as how the things we make create relevancy and meaning regarding identity, inspire new narratives and bring into sharp focus the under-told or sometimes inaccurate stories of native and indigenous peoples of the northeastern United States. Summer exhibitions are created primarily to inform our programmatic work for K-12 summer camps, adult classes, special events and collaborative programming with other organizations like Ndakinna Education Center.