High school
High school tour
Have your class experience an interactive art gallery tour while building on prior knowledge to communicate feelings and ideas.
These customizable tours take Ontario Curriculum Connections and your specific expectations into account when planning out tours.
Looking at The Creative Process and The Critical Analysis Process from The Arts Curriculum, students will be able to find connections with themselves.
Tours are recommended as 1 hour and 30 minutes in length.
Schedule your tour based on our exhibition schedule.
Fall 2025
the stories we share are the light we carry
Late November 2025 to March 2026
At the heart of this exhibition is NansiRoachy, a media sculpture by artist Debbie Ebanks inspired by Anansi, the West African "Lord of All Narratives." This living archive gathers the stories, memories, and voices of the Black Caribbean diaspora, inviting visitors to reflect on how we might create more welcoming ways to preserve and share the stories rooted in our bodies, memories, and culture.
Land, Sea, Sky: Inuit Art from PAMA’s Collection
July 26,2026 to March 29, 2026
This exhibition showcases Inuit prints, sculptures, drawings, and traditional dolls. Each piece reflects the deep relationship Inuit artists have with their environment and connects visitors to the varied cultures that have thrived in the Arctic for generations.
Remember | Resist | Redraw: A Radical History Poster Project
August 23, 2025 to Spring 2026
This collaborative project from the Graphic History Collective offers alternative perspectives on well-known historical events in what is today known as Canada. Artists and writers highlight histories that are often overlooked or marginalized in mainstream historical accounts.
Created by the Graphic History Collective.
Yours to Discover: Sights and sites of Peel Region
Permanent exhibition
Peel Region extends from the shores of Lake Ontario to its northernmost point, where it borders Dufferin and Simcoe Counties. Historically, the area was inhabited by Indigenous Nations, and today, it is home to over 1.5 million people from diverse Indigenous and settler backgrounds. As visitors and residents, many artists have been inspired to capture the essence of the region through painting and photography, creating visual records that reflect a unique sense of place in the history of Peel region.