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Dundas Valley School of Art Dundas Valley School of Art Dundas Valley School of Art Dundas Valley School of Art

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  • About
    • About DVSA
    • Our History
    • Mission & Strategic Priorities
    • Faculty
    • Annual Report
    • Student Handbook
    • FAQ
  • Classes
  • Programs
    • Drawing
    • Painting
    • Pottery
    • Sculpture
    • Photography
    • Studio Fine Art Diploma Program
    • DVSA Art Fundamentals Certificate Program
    • Artists’ Connection Program
    • DVSA Bursaries
  • Events
    • Annual Art Auction
    • Little Black Frame
  • Support
    • Support DVSA
    • Donate
    • Volunteer
  • What’s Happening
  • Contact Us

Archives

Monthly Archive for: "February, 2021"
 DVSA Appoints Kathron Hann As New Executive Director
0
By Corinne Nyffenegger
In DVSA News
Posted February 27, 2021

DVSA Appoints Kathron Hann As New Executive Director

Dundas Valley School of Art Appoints Kathron Hann as New Executive Director   The Board of Governors for Dundas Valley School of Art have appointed Kathron Hann to be the school’s new Executive [...]

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 ’22 In Review Newsletter
0
By Keir Overton
In DVSA News, Featured
Posted February 26, 2021

’22 In Review Newsletter

Our newsletters share DVSA highlights and happenings. Read on to see what we’ve been up to. ’22 In Review Newsletter You can view previous versions of our newsletter here: Spring 2022 [...]

READ MORE
Recent Posts
  • Winter 2024 Registration Now On! Download The Course Brochure
  • Registration Is Open For Children & Teen March Break Art Camps
  • NEW! DVSA’s Diploma Program In Studio Fine Art Practice & Theory
  • Opening Night Is November 30 – Trevor Hodgson Retrospective Exhibition
  • Join us! FREE Family Art Holiday Hoopla – Sun., Dec. 10 • 1:30–4:30pm
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  • Dundas Valley School of Art
  • 21 Ogilvie Street
  • Dundas, Ontario, L9H 2S1
  • T: 905-628-6357
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  • E: info@dvsa.ca
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Dundas Valley School of Art acknowledges the negative impacts of colonization on the Indigenous Nations who lived and governed this land for thousands of years before colonization. We recognize the School is on Treaty Lands and Territory of the Mississaugas of the Credit First Nation as well as the traditional territory of the Huron-Wendat and Haudenosaunee peoples. This land is covered by the Between the Lakes Purchase, 1792, between the Crown and the Mississaugas of the Credit First Nation. For thousands of years pre-colonization, these Nations lived and cared for this land, governed by matriarchal social systems, trading extensively across Turtle Island and creating finely crafted art works: from decorative carvings, beadwork to the ornate pottery that was produced here in Southern Ontario on this very land by the Haudenosaunee. Today, the City of Hamilton is home to many Indigenous people from across Turtle Island (North America) and we recognize that our journey has just begun and will continue to evolve as we do more to learn about the rich history of these lands so that we are able to transform of our personal and institutional relationships with our indigenous friends and neighbours.