Jun 12 Friday
The Friends of the Westfield Athenaeum is seeking donations of gently used adult and children’s books, DVDs, and jigsaw puzzles for their upcoming book sale. Donations will only be accepted by curbside drop-off at the back door of the First United Methodist Church, 16 Court St., Westfield, during the weeks of April 6-11 and April 13-18 as follows: Monday, Wednesday, and Friday from 10-1; Tuesday and Thursday from 4-7, and Saturday from 9-12.Please note that we cannot accept musty or damaged books, encyclopedias, dictionaries, textbooks, Reader’s Digest books, or outdated manuals, travel books, or self-help books.The book sale will be held at the Church on Thursday, April 23, 10-7; Friday, April 24, 10-5; and Saturday, April 25, 10-2. On Thursday only, we are offering a $5.00 discount for educators (bring your ID!) and new Friends members joining at the door.The Friends of the Westfield Athenaeum is an all-volunteer 501(C)3 not-for-profit organization that supports the programs and services of the Westfield Athenaeum.
Discover the Pioneer Valley, one bookshop at a time! Visit 10+ bookstores to be entered into the Grand Prize drawing to win $800 in bookstore gift cards. Each additional bookstore you visit is another entry into the drawing! And the more bookstores you visit, the greater your chances of winning. More info: http://tinyurl.com/pvbc26
Sandglass Theater presents a series of special appearances and public workshops by stellar artists working in exciting interdisciplinary performance techniques. The Summer Series celebrates the crossroads of art forms and development of new works by professional and emerging artists. This year’s series will feature three performances and two special workshops. ‘The City That Slept’ is an imaginative puppetry performance by Tom Tuke that also features an original technique developed by Tuke: floating shadow puppets that glide across a pool of moving water, creating luminous images of motion and reflection. ‘Penelope in First Person’, performed by Keely Eastley and directed by Eric Bass is adapted from a book by Canadian poet Sue Goyette. The performance reimagines the story of Penelope from Homer’s ‘Odyssey’. The production blends poetic language, theatrical storytelling, music, and elements of magical realism. ‘Death and the Fool | A Medieval Folly’, presented by the ensemble of Happenstance Theater is inspired by medieval mystery plays and tarot imagery, combining puppetry, slapstick comedy, live music, and physical theater. The workshops will include a floating water puppets workshop with Tom Tuke and a physical comedy workshop with Happenstance Theater. All performances and workshops are at Sandglass Theater, 17 Kimball Hill in the heart of Putney, VT, just off of Exit 4 from I91. No one will be turned away from Summer Series performances for lack of funds.
An official selection of the San Francisco Transgender Film Festival, the East Coast debut of The Clayton Effect is on view throughout June at Split Level Gallery, 33 Hawley Street in Northampton, MA.
Flush with saucy humor, social commentary, and a semi-autobiographical view on transgender life, step inside the bathroom to experience The Clayton Effect. Inspired by the foundational film editing principle developed in the 1900s (known as the Kuleshov Effect), this silent-but-deadly movie, lathered with a throwback feel and a razor-sharp modern twist, takes the plunge into representations of gender. Jiggling the handle has never been more fun!
In addition to the short film, queer artist Jacob Clayton will be showing four mixed-media photo-based self-portraits, as part of We Contain Multitudes: A Curated Collective of 2SLGBTQIA+ and BIPOC Creatives’ Voices, curated by M. Rudder.
Discover the Lives of Berkshire Amphibians with Naturalist Tom Tyning
Next up in the Berkshire Nature Talk Series:
Back by popular demand: Tom Tyning: Frog Fables and Salamander Stories. Tom Tyning returns to offer an introduction to the incredible amphibians of Berkshire County, highlighting their remarkable life history strategies, amazing behaviors, and incredible beauty.
This engaging evening will explore questions as yet unanswered—how did amphibians arrive in the Berkshires after the glaciers? Who came first? Why do some species ignore water altogether? How can certain frogs survive without lungs? With stunning photos of frogs and salamanders in their natural habitats, and with a number of live specimens whose stories will be told, Tyning will bring these remarkable creatures to life.
Tom Tyning brings over four decades of experience as a field biologist, author, professor, and passionate naturalist. He currently teaches Environmental Science at Berkshire Community College and is widely recognized for his work on amphibians, reptiles, butterflies, and habitat conservation across Massachusetts and beyond.
Free for West Stockbridge Historical Society members; $10 suggested donation for nonmembers. Please register at weststockbridgehistory.org.
CitySpace Presents: LevyosnYiddish song ensemble
The Western Mass release of Levyosn’s 2nd album, Levyosn's Dream
Levyosn (“leviathan”) is a Boston-based Yiddish/klezmer ensemble, featuring Adah Hetko (vocals), Lysander Jaffe (violin/vocals), Raffi Boden (cello), and Lexi Ugelow (keyboard/vocals). Levyosn is celebrating the release of their second album, Levyosn’s Dream, featuring new Yiddish songs and klezmer compositions, innovative arrangements of archival folk songs, and a cappella vocal pieces. Levyosn’s Dream will be released by Borscht Beat Records in 2026.
Founded in 2021, the ensemble has made its mark with thoughtful arrangements of originals, hidden gems, and Yiddish classics. Their sound is influenced by Ashkenazi and Americana sound worlds, featuring rich vocal harmonies and a healthy dash of jazz, pop, Philip Kutev, and chamber music sensibilities. They have performed at major Yiddish/klezmer festivals, universities, and folk venues around the U.S. and Canada.
Levyosn’s Dream was recorded with support from Combined Jewish Philanthropies and Club Passim’s Iguana Music Fund.
The School for Contemporary Dance & Thought, Inc presentsThe Hatchery Young Artist Performance Project in ASTEROID B612, a love story- a live performance inspired by THE LITTLE PRINCE
Family-friendly and inspirational.The Hatchery Young Artist Company is a dynamic creative program where young artists collaborate to create original performance work for the public. More than a recital, Hatchery produces inspiring art for all.Original work by The Hatchery Dance Company & Hatchery Pit Band
WHEN?Friday, June 12th at 7:30 PMSaturday, June 13th at 2:00 PM ( with the Hatchlings ) & 7:30 PM
WHERE? 33 Hawley Street, Northampton, MA in A.P.E.'s WORKROOM THEATER
Directed by Jen Polins, Katherine Kain & Ashirah Devi Dalomba
Special Guests: Sakina Ibrahim, Gabriella Carmichael, Erik Elizondo
Hatchery Company Choreographers: Irina Andrews, Lila Gilman-Hollabaugh, Serena Gross, Andrew Jones-Monahan, Agnes MacLean, Frances Slabich, Ida Pitcher, Jamie Rose, Inna Selman
For over 20 years, Django in June has been bringing world class jazz manouche -- that is, jazz in the tradition of Sinti guitarist Django Reinhardt -- to Western Massachusetts. For one fine week in June, hundreds of avid students of the style descend on the campus of Smith College to study and "djam." At week's end, the artists who have been teaching at Django Camp offer two concerts at the Academy of Music. They range this year from Austin (Hot Club of Cowtown) to Nantes (Gwen Cahue Quartet), and from a young North American prodigy (Sam Farthing), to one of the most celebrated Sinti artists of the last 40 years (Fapy Lafertin.)
Postunderground’s ongoing music series returns with an immersive night of BLUES & SOUL featuring The MWALIM TRIO on Friday, June 12, 2026 at 7:30 PM. Led by award-winning composer and performer Mwalim, the trio delivers a dynamic blend of blues, soul, jazz, and original works built on deep groove, live improvisation, and spontaneous musical conversation with ZYG 808 on drums and Richard Johnson on bass.
This is live music in its most immediate form with no barriers and no background noise, just a room, a band, and an audience experiencing the music as it is created in real time.
Postunderground (VFW 364) 386 Washington Street. Doors 7:00 PM. Show 7:30 PM.Arrive early and settle in for a night where the performance does not just happen, it unfolds.