
Events are being held across the country Saturday to mark Indigenous Peoples Day
First observed in 1996, Indigenous Peoples Day is meant to recognize First Nations, Inuit and Métis cultures and traditions.
Prime Minister Mark Carney will take part in a closed event to mark the day.
The office of Gov. Gen. Mary Simon said she will host youth at Rideau Hall in Ottawa to mark the day by crafting paper hearts with 'messages of reconciliation, hope and commitment.'
The Governor General will plant the hearts in Rideau Hall's 'heart garden,' which honours Indigenous people who died in residential schools, along with survivors.
'Each heart is a symbol of our collective responsibility to listen to and carry forward their stories — of pain and disappointment, strength and courage — and to commit to the Truth and Reconciliation Commission of Canada Calls to Action,' Simon's office said.
Weekly
A weekly look at what's happening in Winnipeg's arts and entertainment scene.
This year's Summer Solstice Indigenous Festival takes place Saturday and Sunday at Wesley Clover Parks in Ottawa. The festival features a competition powwow, traditional foods and teaching sessions.
Starting Saturday, the Forks in Winnipeg will host Many Nations, One Heartbeat, an 11-day festival of Indigenous performances, games, fashion and crafts.
Organizers say the festival will honour 'the stories, strength, and resilience of Indigenous communities, especially in this moment of significant displacement due to Manitoba's wildfire.'
And in Toronto, the Na-Me-Res Traditional Powwow and Indigenous Arts Festival will take place Saturday at the Fort York National Historic Site, featuring traditional dances, live concerts and a food market.
This report by The Canadian Press was first published June 21, 2025.
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Toronto Star
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How AI, robotics and late artist Morrisseau are helping fight art fraud
Acrylic Robotics founder Chloë Ryan poses for a photograph with an in-progress copy of Norval Morrisseau's 'Bear Father, Bear Son,'made by a robot trained on artificial intelligence, at Acrylic Robotics' studio and offices, in Montreal on Tuesday, July 8, 2025. Christopher Katsarov / The Canadian Press flag wire: true flag sponsored: false article_type: : sWebsitePrimaryPublication : publications/toronto_star bHasMigratedAvatar : false :


Winnipeg Free Press
9 hours ago
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How AI, robotics and late artist Morrisseau are helping fight art fraud
Famed Indigenous artist Norval Morrisseau was browsing a Vancouver gallery with his longtime friend Cory Dingle around 1993 when a painting stopped them in their tracks. The pair asked who created it. The answer? 'Norval Morrisseau.' The trouble? The artist had never seen the work, let alone painted it. 'We had a little chuckle and we left,' Dingle recalled. 'Then, I said, 'What do you want to do about this?' He said, 'You know, you can't police the world.'' Morrisseau, who died in 2007, was a self-taught, trailblazing artist known for his pictographic style and membership in the Indian Group of Seven. He was the first Indigenous artist to have his work shown in a contemporary gallery in Canada and now his paintings sell for millions. But the incident Dingle remembers proved to be an omen. At least 6,000 fake paintings have since been uncovered, costing Morrisseau's estate $100 million in losses. The phenomenon amounts to what police have called the biggest art fraud in world history. 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'There's two schools named after Norval. There are healing institutions. There are academic institutions. There are remote Indigenous communities,' said Dingle, sitting in front of a rarely-shown Morrisseau. 'They could never afford to buy this painting, to hang it in their halls, to have the healing and the lessons of it, so we need to be able to produce high level reproductions that bring the life of that painting to these places.' This report by The Canadian Press was first published July 20, 2025.


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