Sep 25 Thursday
Artists: Marianne Connolly and Rebecca MullerStart Date: September 4, 2025End Date: September 27, 2025Reception Date: Thursday, September 4, 5–7:00 pmArt Forum Online: September 18, 7:30 pmLocation name: Gallery A3Hours: Thursday-Sunday, 2–7:00 pmAddress: 28 Amity St. 1D, Amherst, MACity/Town: AmherstWebsite: www.gallerya3.com Description/info: In Counterspells, Marianne Connolly works with intimately-scaled photography and hand-cut, hand-pasted collage, exploring familiar themes of nests, light, and winged beings while experimenting with new materials and methods. In Concatenations, Rebecca Muller exhibits several series of large-format photopolymer etchings and small groupings of mixed media assemblages composed of disparate matter and debris.
As part of this year’s Climate Preparedness Week programming, Forbes Library welcomes Echoes of Nature: Hampshire County, a unique interdisciplinary performance by singer-songwriter Jess Martin and poet Kim Hoff.
Echoes of Nature combines live music, poetry, and projected visuals to explore themes of place, memory, and environmental care. Rooted in the landscapes of Western Massachusetts, the performance celebrates local ecologies while reflecting on identity, belonging, and community action in the face of climate change.
This special event aligns with the 2025 Climate Prep Week theme: Caring for the Earth, Yourself, and Your Community. Through storytelling and song, the artists invite audiences to reflect on their relationship to land and each other — offering a space of shared connection and creative resilience.
About the performers: Jess Martin is a queer singer-songwriter whose raw, lyrical style blends punk blues with folk traditions. Kim Hoff is a poet, essayist, and environmental educator whose work highlights the intersections of ecology and identity. Together, their collaboration amplifies the voices of place and people through an innovative, immersive performance format.
The program is funded in part by grants from the Amherst, Belchertown, Easthampton, and Williamsburg Cultural Councils — local agencies supported by the Massachusetts Cultural Council. Additional funding is provided by Forbes Library.
Trad is the hilarious and poignant Irish play about a son, 100-year-old Thomas, and his even older Da, who set off on a quest to find the son that Thomas thinks he fathered 70 years ago. After all that time on earth, they want to know if the family line will survive. An award-winning comedy by Mark Doherty that keeps you laughing all the way to an unexpected finale.
Winner of the prestigious Fringe First Award, Edinburgh Festival Fringe
Trad is being presented in the Barn.
Directed by Alison Weller, the production features Scenic and Lighting Design by James P. Byrne and Costume Design by Robin McLaughlin. Holly Erin McCarthy serves as the Production Stage Manager.
Macklin Devine’s (Archibald Avery) and Seton Brown’s (Prelude to a Kiss) return to the Cape Rep stage in the roles of a 100-year-old son, Thomas, and his even more geriatric father. Ian Hamilton (Sunday in the Park) rounds out the cast as Sal and Father Rice.
Sep 26 Friday
William Baczek Fine Arts, in Northampton, Massachusetts is pleased to announce the opening of two solo exhibitions which will run concurrently during the month of September. Charlie Hunter and Jeff Gola are two artists who focus on the American landscape, but in very different styles and mediums. Jeff Gola will be exhibiting a new body of work in egg tempera paintings and Charlie Hunter will be showing oil and acrylic paintings. The two exhibitions will be on display from Wednesday, September 3 through Saturday, October 18, 2025. The public is invited to an opening reception on Saturday, September 6 from 4 to 6 p.m.
The Norman Rockwell Museum is honored to present a rare series of early twentieth century lighting advertisements by Norman Rockwell and fellow Golden Age illustrators Maxfield Parrish, N.C. Wyeth, Dean Cornwell, Stanley Arthurs, Worth Brehm, and Charles Chambers created for Edison Mazda Lamps, a division of the General Electric Company. These luminous, richly painted works were widely circulated in published advertisements through the 1920s and are on loan to the Museum for the first time through the generosity of GE Aerospace.
Dr. Claudia Gold presents her book Getting to Know You, which is relevant not just for practitioners working with infants, but also parents and caregivers. The book comes from both developmental science and extensive clinical experience and describes how taking a stance of not-knowing can help us find our way into another person’s experience, offering the greatest opportunity for connection, growth, and healing.
An interdisciplinary dance work by Michael Bodel, blending movement, language, live sound, and 30 sheets of cardboard. This one-hour performance explores our shifting relationship to knowledge—its pursuit, loss, and wonder—in a time when trust in understanding has faltered.
Presented as part of the Vermont Dance Alliance Residency Program, which supports Vermont choreographers through creation, touring, and community engagement.
Celebrated for creating diverse, timely and relevant opera, White Snake Projects (WSP) returns to Boston’s Strand Theatre, September 26-28, 2025, for the world premiere of White Raven, Black Dove, in a season dedicated to addressing the climate crisis through art. Composed by Jacinth Greywoode and Andrew Lynch, and written by librettist Cerise Lim Jacob, White Raven, Blake Dove is an original work of science fiction fantasy exploring two issues consuming America today – race and climate change. An early adopter of innovative technology, WSP continues to lead the vanguard in shaping new operas with tech advancements. This groundbreaking production comprises a live performance by some of today’s leading opera singers, an orchestra with electronics and chorus, augmented by computer generated imagery and animation created in the video game platform, Unreal Engine.