Your guide to the heart of Litchfield County:
Discover local stories, hidden gems, and must-know events.

French Club at the Gunn

1:00-2:00 PM
Free

Immerse Yourself in French Culture with an Hour of French Conversation at the Gunn Memorial Library

The Gunn Memorial Library invites intermediate and fluent French speakers to join us for an hour of stimulating and immersive French Conversation.
Over the hour, participants will read articles from French magazines covering cultural topics and current events. Guided conversations will encourage lively exchanges, helping participants refine their French while deepening their appreciation for Francophone culture.
This program is an excellent opportunity to connect with fellow Francophiles, share perspectives, and experience the richness of the French language in a welcoming environment.
Join us for a meaningful cultural and linguistic experience!
Registration is required

The Gunn Memorial Library
5 Wykeham Road
Washington, CT 06793

https://www.gunnlibrary.org/calendar/french-club-for-adults/

Movie: Small Things Like These

Two Showing:
Monday, June 2, 2025 @ 1:00 PM
Thursday, June 19, 2025 @ 6:00 PM
Free

Enjoy viewing the acclaimed movie taken from a celebrated book!
Small Things Like These, the acclaimed 2024 historical drama directed by Tim Mielants and adapted by Enda Walsh from Claire Keegan’s Booker Prize–nominated novella, offers a powerful meditation on moral courage and institutional silence. Set in 1985 in a small Irish town, the film follows coal merchant Bill Furlong (Cillian Murphy). He uncovers disturbing truths about the local convent’s treatment of young women, echoing the real-life atrocities of Ireland’s Magdalene laundries.
Registration is required
1H 38M
PG-13

The Gunn Memorial Library
5 Wykeham Road
Washington, CT 06793

https://www.gunnlibrary.org/calendar/category/adultlib/2025-06/

Scrabble Fun At the Gunn

6:00-7:30 PM
Free

Join us for a night of words, wit, and friendly competition at the Gunn Memorial Library’s Scrabble Evening! Whether you’re a seasoned wordsmith or just love the fun of playing, this event is perfect for all skill levels. Scrabble is an excellent way to test your vocabulary, figure out strategies, and tap your creativity in a relaxed and friendly atmosphere.
We’ll provide the boards, tiles, and plenty of snacks—just bring your love of the game!
Whether you come to win or just to play for fun, Scrabble Night at the Library promises a fantastic evening of community and connection.
Registration is required

For more information or to register, visit our website at: https://www.gunnlibrary.org/calendar/category/adultlib/2025-06/

The Gunn Memorial Library
5 Wykeham Rd
Washington, CT 06793

https://www.gunnlibrary.org/calendar/category/adultlib/2025-06/

“Fine Art Festival” Sharon

The Voice of Art’s “Fine Art Festival” Sharon on the Green ​Returns on Memorial Day Weekend 2025!
Sat-Sun, May 24-25, 2025 (10am-5pm)
– Free and Open to the Public
– Fine Art & Functional Art (Artists are from CT plus six states)
– FAF Raffle Fundraiser
– Multiple Food Trucks!

The Voice of Art is thrilled to invite you to its fifth annual outdoor juried fine art show, “Fine Art Festival” in Sharon on the Green (formerly, Litchfield Art Festival)! This show will be a highlight for collectors and residents from the Tri-State region, New England and beyond. The Litchfield Hills have a history and reputation of featuring top fine artists from across the country, and also many well-known and beloved New England and CT artists who are widely admired by art enthusiasts.

Fine Art: Painting, Photography, Sculpture, Mixed Media, Digital Art, and Graphics/Drawing
Fine Functional Art: Ceramics, Wood Works, Metal, Glass, Fiber Art, Leather and Jewelry

Sharon Town Green (63 Main St. Sharon CT)

https://www.thevoiceofart.org/fine-art-festival-in-sharon

“Willy Loman Comes to China”

Screening of “Willy Loman Comes to China”
The Arthur Miller Writing Studio, Inc. together with the Minor Memorial Library, will screen the short documentary, “Willy Loman Comes to China” in Roxbury, CT.

Friday, June 6th, 2025 | 05:00 PM ET
Minor Memorial Library
23 South Street, Roxbury, Connecticut 06783
Q&A to be held after the screening. Refreshments will be served. Reservations are requested as space is limited.

Photo Credit: Arthur Miller (right) during rehearsal of Death of a Salesman at the People’s Art Theater. Beijing, China, 1983. © Inge Morath / Magnum Photos

Minor Memorial Library
23 South Street, Roxbury, Connecticut 06783
Free, donations accepted

Documentary Screening: Willy Loman Comes to China

Argentine Tango and Party

Every Saturday, join our group class from 6:00–7:30 PM, then stay for open social dancing until 9 PM—practice your steps, meet fellow dancers, and enjoy authentic Tango together. $25 All included! You don’t need to bring a partner, everyone dances with everyone.

170 Flood Bridge Rd, Southbury CT

ARGENTINE Tango

Scott Reinhard ArtWall Reception

Join us for our ArtWall reception honoring our newest ArtWall exhibit, Scott Reinhard: “Here Here Here Here”, on Saturday, June 7th from 5-7pm! This event is free and open to the public.

Reinhard’s Here Here Here Here is a must-see for anyone interested in the intersection of art and science. The exhibition takes viewers on a journey through the expanse of our solar system, down to our planet Earth and over several towns in the Northwest Corner of Connecticut and adjacent to New York State, including Falls Village, the home of the David M. Hunt Library. While always looking down from above the earth, one can see how ice age glaciers created the clusters of the Berkshires and the tapestry of its valleys, rivers, and lakes.

Using USGS elevation data as the raw material for formal exploration, the central installation is a sixteen-foot-wide grid covering 445 square miles, roughly the area from Millerton, New York to Barkhamsted Reservoir in Connecticut and from North Canaan down to Cornwall. Composed of alternating cyanotypes and printed Tyvek squares, Reinhard challenges traditional perceptions of maps by transforming them into bridges between the visible and liminal, both literal and abstract. Individual squares from the installation will be for sale.

Scott Reinhard’s work with design, technology, data, aesthetics and place has been influential to the field of cartography. “My work emerges during the process of play as a way to understand why things are the way they are, why they look the way they look, and what might be possible beyond what we currently know.” Scott has been producing maps since 2016 both as an artist and as a professional, most significantly designing maps and data visualizations for The New York Times where he was involved in multiple Pulitzer Prize-winning efforts.

Here Here Here Here opens with a reception on Saturday, June 7, from 5PM to 7PM and will remain on display through July 3rd. In addition, Scott Reinhard will give an art talk at the library on Thursday, June 12 at 5:30PM. Attendees will have the opportunity to hear directly from the artist about his work as a cartographer and his techniques in creating unique maps revealing the topography of the real and the imagined.

The David M. Hunt Library is honored to host Here Here Here Here as part of its commitment to supporting local artists and fostering cultural enrichment in Falls Village and the greater Northwest corner of Connecticut. Our exhibitions are all free and open to the public.

For more information about the exhibition, reception, or art talk, please contact 860-824-7424 or visit huntlibrary.org/art-wall. For more information about Scott Reinhard and his maps visit scottreinhardmaps.com.

David M. Hunt Library
63 Main Street
Falls Village, CT 06031

ArtWall Reception — Scott Reinhard: “Here Here Here Here”

ArtWall Exhibit Scott Reinhard

Renowned cartographer and artist Scott Reinhard invites the public to explore his groundbreaking inaugural exhibition, Here Here Here Here, on display at David M. Hunt Library in Falls Village (CT) in June. This thought-provoking showcase merges historical local cartography with innovative design principles, resulting in maps that are simultaneously informative and artistic.

Reinhard’s Here Here Here Here is a must-see for anyone interested in the intersection of art and science. The exhibition takes viewers on a journey through the expanse of our solar system, down to our planet Earth and over several towns in the Northwest Corner of Connecticut and adjacent to New York State, including Falls Village, the home of the David M. Hunt Library. While always looking down from above the earth, one can see how ice age glaciers created the clusters of the Berkshires and the tapestry of its valleys, rivers, and lakes.

Using USGS elevation data as the raw material for formal exploration, the central installation is a sixteen-foot-wide grid covering 445 square miles, roughly the area from Millerton, New York to Barkhamsted Reservoir in Connecticut and from North Canaan down to Cornwall. Composed of alternating cyanotypes and printed Tyvek squares, Reinhard challenges traditional perceptions of maps by transforming them into bridges between the visible and liminal, both literal and abstract. Individual squares from the installation will be for sale.

Scott Reinhard’s work with design, technology, data, aesthetics and place has been influential to the field of cartography. “My work emerges during the process of play as a way to understand why things are the way they are, why they look the way they look, and what might be possible beyond what we currently know.” Scott has been producing maps since 2016 both as an artist and as a professional, most significantly designing maps and data visualizations for The New York Times where he was involved in multiple Pulitzer Prize-winning efforts.

Here Here Here Here opens with a reception on Saturday, June 7, from 5PM to 7PM and will remain on display through July 3rd. In addition, Scott Reinhard will give an art talk at the library on Thursday, June 12 at 5:30PM. Attendees will have the opportunity to hear directly from the artist about his work as a cartographer and his techniques in creating unique maps revealing the topography of the real and the imagined.

The David M. Hunt Library is honored to host Here Here Here Here as part of its commitment to supporting local artists and fostering cultural enrichment in Falls Village and the greater Northwest corner of Connecticut. Our exhibitions are all free and open to the public.

For more information about the exhibition, reception, or art talk, please contact 860-824-7424 or visit huntlibrary.org/art-wall. For more information about Scott Reinhard and his maps visit scottreinhardmaps.com.

David M. Hunt Library
63 Main Street
Falls Village, CT 06031

Exhibition — Scott Reinhard: “Here Here Here Here”

ArtWall Talk — Scott Reinhard

Join us for an art talk by Scott Reinhard on his newest ArtWall exhibit, Scott Reinhard: “Here Here Here Here”, on Thursday, June 12th at 5:30pm! Attendees will have the opportunity to hear directly from the artist about his work as a cartographer and his techniques in creating unique maps revealing the topography of the real and the imagined. This event is free and open to the public.

Renowned cartographer and artist Scott Reinhard invites the public to explore his groundbreaking inaugural exhibition, Here Here Here Here, on display at David M. Hunt Library in Falls Village (CT) in June. This thought-provoking showcase merges historical local cartography with innovative design principles, resulting in maps that are simultaneously informative and artistic.

Reinhard’s Here Here Here Here is a must-see for anyone interested in the intersection of art and science. The exhibition takes viewers on a journey through the expanse of our solar system, down to our planet Earth and over several towns in the Northwest Corner of Connecticut and adjacent to New York State, including Falls Village, the home of the David M. Hunt Library. While always looking down from above the earth, one can see how ice age glaciers created the clusters of the Berkshires and the tapestry of its valleys, rivers, and lakes.

Using USGS elevation data as the raw material for formal exploration, the central installation is a sixteen-foot-wide grid covering 445 square miles, roughly the area from Millerton, New York to Barkhamsted Reservoir in Connecticut and from North Canaan down to Cornwall. Composed of alternating cyanotypes and printed Tyvek squares, Reinhard challenges traditional perceptions of maps by transforming them into bridges between the visible and liminal, both literal and abstract. Individual squares from the installation will be for sale.

Scott Reinhard’s work with design, technology, data, aesthetics and place has been influential to the field of cartography. “My work emerges during the process of play as a way to understand why things are the way they are, why they look the way they look, and what might be possible beyond what we currently know.” Scott has been producing maps since 2016 both as an artist and as a professional, most significantly designing maps and data visualizations for The New York Times where he was involved in multiple Pulitzer Prize-winning efforts.

The David M. Hunt Library is honored to host Here Here Here Here as part of its commitment to supporting local artists and fostering cultural enrichment in Falls Village and the greater Northwest corner of Connecticut. Our exhibitions are all free and open to the public.

For more information about the exhibition, reception, or art talk, please contact 860-824-7424 or visit huntlibrary.org/art-wall. For more information about Scott Reinhard and his maps visit scottreinhardmaps.com.

David M. Hunt Library
63 Main Street
Falls Village, CT 06031

ArtWall Talk — Scott Reinhard: “Here Here Here Here”

Midsummer Party for Conservation

Save the Date
Saturday, August 16

This year, NCLC is celebrating 60 years of land conservation! Join us for a delightful evening with friends at the Midsummer Party for Conservation, hosted by Leni and Peter May at Maywood in Bridgewater.

This annual fundraiser supports NCLC’s conservation programs. It is a wonderful opportunity to enjoy delicious food and great company—all to benefit conservation in our community.

We look forward to seeing you there!
PURCHASE TICKETS

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