At The ArQuives, we believe in the importance of acting as an educational resource to the community.

Our main avenues for providing educational support are through presentations about our LGBTQ2+ Inclusive Education resources for high schools, presentations about our collections, tours of our Jared Sessions House, where we hold public programming and our collections reside, and walking tours of Toronto’s LGBTQ2+ historical neighbourhoods.

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We Could Be Heroes (Just For One Day)

The ArQuives 34 Isabella Street, Toronto, Ontario, Canada

LGBTQ+ communities and community-based archives have long searched for ‘gay heroes’ to showcase both queer existence and accomplishment across time and space.

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Traces

The ArQuives 34 Isabella Street, Toronto, Ontario, Canada

For the solo exhibition Traces, Ottawa-based multidisciplinary artist Christos Pantieras brings together five of his existing series, all of which explore, appropriate, and recontextualize the remnants of everyday human practices.

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Dissident Family

The ArQuives 34 Isabella Street, Toronto, Ontario, Canada

"Dissident Family" brings together artworks that speak to the biological family that the artist grew up in, and to the family she has created and nurtured. It speaks to the central place of dissidence in her spiritual, political and familial life.

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Queering Space

The ArQuives 34 Isabella Street, Toronto, Ontario, Canada

Presented by The ArQuives in partnership with Nuit Rose, Queering Space invites celebrated Canadian queer artists to create contemporary multidisciplinary responses to The ArQuives’s historical collection, reigniting its relevance while exploring the evolution of queer sites across space and time.

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Butch: Not Like the Other Girls

The ArQuives 34 Isabella Street, Toronto, Ontario, Canada

Butch: Not Like the Other Girls is a photographic exploration of the liminal spaces occupied by female masculinity in contemporary communities by photographer SD Holman.

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Imaging Home: Resistance, Migration, Contradiction

The ArQuives 34 Isabella Street, Toronto, Ontario, Canada

The ArQuives’s 2014 WorldPride exhibition, Imaging Home: Resistance, Migration, and Contradiction, brings together documentary video and photographic work that raises significant questions about the meaning of “home” in a world that keeps refining homophobic and racist oppression.

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TAG TEAM: Gay Premises

The ArQuives 34 Isabella Street, Toronto, Ontario, Canada

Taken in tandem with the recent surge in interest, among younger and increasingly diverse generations of queer academic, activist, and artistic communities, in mining queer archives, Gay Premises: Radical Voices in the Archives, 1973-1983, timely in its confluence with The ArQuives’s 40th anniversary, operates at the threshold between Canada’s gay liberation past as a complex and contested foundation for the queer present and its potential futures.

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Sex Lives and Videotape

The ArQuives 34 Isabella Street, Toronto, Ontario, Canada

Sex Lives and Videotape is the latest in a series of interactive community events exploring the diverse materiality of artifacts within The ArQuives.

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Colour Coded: queer abstraction meets fruity frosting

The ArQuives 34 Isabella Street, Toronto, Ontario, Canada

Ian Phillips is a visual artist and publisher whose small literary and art press, Pas de chance, has been active for over twenty-five years. In a chance pairing, the artists’ unique bodies of work come together not only through a common interest in illustration, but also through the transformative and queer—potential of colour, shape, and form.

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No Looking After the Internet

The ArQuives 34 Isabella Street, Toronto, Ontario, Canada

Exhibit dates:  Tuesday, July 23, 2013 Description:  Co-facilitated with Erin Silver and Karen Stanworth Coordinated [...]