On Oct 10th, 2018, her Honour Elizabeth Dowdeswell, the Lieutenant Governor of Ontario, hosted an advance private screening of Into The Arctic 3: The Last Chapter, in her suite at Queen's Park. Her honour delivered opening remarks to an audience of distinguished guests, members of parliament and legislature, and some of Cory and Janet's patrons. With a deep connection to the environment, her Honour Elizabeth Dowdeswell served as assistant deputy minister at Environment Canada which brought her to the Arctic, and she also led the United Nations Environment Programme in Nairobi, Kenya. Cory and Janet are most grateful to...

Travelogue/short film (20 minutes): Cory embarks on a 100km+ hiking journey for 2 weeks in the dramatic landscapes of Auyuittuq National Park on Baffin Island. Accompanied by his 19 year old daughter Sydney, he seeks to begin new paintings plein air for his internationally touring INTO THE ARCTIC Exhibition. One of the big goals during the hike is to find a view of Mount Asgard for a major new 9 to 10 foot wide painting....

The first screening of Cory's Into The Arctic 3: The Last Chapter, was a wonderful affair at the spectacular Museee Oceanographique de Monaco. In attendance was Prince Albert II, who Cory had the pleasure of meeting and having an official photo taken with below a 1906 painting of his great great grandfather's (HSH Prince Albert I) expedition to the Arctic in Svalbard. His highness first stepped foot in the Arctic in 2006, on an expedition to the North Pole by dog sled. It was the same year Cory first explored the Canadian Arctic with his wife Janet and their daughters....

Dan Wanshura's story about Cory's INTO THE ARCTIC, and his exhibition and film screening coming to Traverse City, Michigan. [sc_embed_player fileurl="https://intothearctic.ca/wp-content/uploads/2017/09/09152017-InterlochenDanielWanschura.mp3"] The Green Room Daniel Wanschura: Arts & Culture Reporter/Producer ...

'Stark, Raw and Wild:' Dennos exhibition takes viewers 'Into the Arctic"™ By Marta Hepler Drahos, Features writer Read on Record Eagle website TRAVERSE CITY "” Cory Trepanier was a commercial artist when he began painting the northern shoreline of Lake Superior. The project kicked off his fine art career and gave him the "bug" to paint the wilderness "” particularly the vast and rugged Canadian Arctic Circle, one of the planet's last great landscapes virtually untouched by man. "It's stark but it's raw, it's wild," said Trepanier, a Canadian artist, explorer and filmmaker who lives north of Toronto, Ontario. "I wanted to feel the earth...