Homeschool Day: Using Your Voice
Join us for some history and Halloween fun at North Cemetery! Come in costume (if you want!), participate in a scavenger hunt with candy prizes, and learn about the history of North Cemetery and some of the famous Portsmouth figures buried there.
This program is designed for families and will highlight what an important resource cemeteries are for learning about the past. Though we will not be discussing anything gruesome, haunted, or scary, we will be talking about things like colonial funerals and headstone symbols, which include images of skulls and bones. If you’re unsure whether this program would be a little too spooky, please reach out to our cemetery guide, Sarah Robbitts-Terry ( sarah@portsmouthhistory.org) with any questions.
Thank you to our event sponsor:
My work explores elements of Culture, Womanhood, Armament, and Place. I seek a discourse with the contrasts I travel within. To have beauty there must be death.
My current work has become quite complex in technique, texture, and color. I have expanded my techniques and materials through constant experimenta- tion and revision. Grids, both formal and informal, play an important role for me compositionally and emotionally. Making art is an anxiety-inducing activity. Grids calm me and my paintings. I believe they ground my artistic instincts and allow me to more fluidly explore my visual interests.
My hope is that this discussion encourages reflection and dialogue about whose stories are valued and remembered in our city, and why. While acknowledging the painful events that have shaped Portsmouth, I also aim to highlight the ongoing efforts to uncover and elevate BIPOC narratives. History—as we present it today—is not set in stone; it changes and grows as the result of choices we make collectively.
Emily Cady, an illustrator and screen printer based in southern Maine, expresses her deep love for growing, cooking, and sharing food through her artwork. Rooted in themes of domesticity and nostalgia, her work often reflects the inti- mate moments tied to generational traditions and everyday acts of sustenance.