Sep 10 Wednesday
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.
Calling all artists for a FREE Grant Writing Workshop that Wylder Ayres teaching! Wylder will support all participants in all the ins and outs of the application process, communication strategy, and materials organizing for the MassCultural Council’s Grant for Creative Individuals. These awards are unrestricted grants of $5,000 to Massachusetts artists, culture bearers, and creative practitioners with the intention of equitably advancing state-wide creative expression throughout diverse communities.
I believe that public art is public health. As a development director, teaching artist, musician, and arts advocate, I am committed to uplifting and supporting historically marginalized artists.
Please bring a laptop. If you don’t have access to a computer - bring a phone or reach out to wylderayres@gmail.com for questions & support.
For more information on the grant: https://massculturalcouncil.org/artists-art/grants-for-creative-individuals/
Steve Binder, 2h 3m
Justly celebrated for its incandescent performances by James Brown and the Rolling Stones — who chose, unwisely, to play after him — The T.A.M.I. Show‘s overview of “teenage music” circa 1964 serves as a primer in the tensions that would shortly rip the culture wide open. The variety-show staging and the goofy intros by emcees Jan and Dean act as a security blanket for anxious parents, assuring them that this rock & roll madness won’t get too out of hand. But by the time Brown and the Stones have worked their will on the crowd, you can feel a riot coming on. — The Rolling Stones
Co-presented with Next Chapter Records
Sep 11 Thursday
Consistently rated the best local scavenger hunt since 2016!
Puzzling Adventures are a cross between a scavenger hunt, an adventure race, and an informative self-guided walking tour. Each adventure consists of a series of locations that you are guided to where you are required to answer a question or solve a puzzle to receive your next instruction. Compete as a group, individually or create multiple teams and race each other. Almost all of our adventures are designed to be wheelchair and stroller friendly and all are carefully crafted to be entertaining and informative with something to appeal to all ages. Complete the adventure as quickly as possible to win first place or take your time and enjoy the journey. Price is per team, not per person. Groups can be any size, but small groups are recommended for the best experience.
Enter the code EVENTPASS on the payment page for a $10 discount!
Most locations are available daylight hours every day.
Do we own our memories? The Onion is a new opera in which family secrets collide with a memory-enhancing AI. Through contact with their younger selves, its characters bring to the surface the experiences that have shaped their lives: a sexist theft of scientific work, the vanishing of a parent, the erasure of a gender identity. Will the intervention of an AI hurt or heal?
The opera unfolds on an island in the Pacific Northwest where a neuroscientist has sequestered herself with her daughter to create the Onion, an AI device that allows anyone using it to re-live a personal memory. Rounding out the human roles are the Onion’s young co-inventor and the neuroscientist’s ex-partner. The Onion itself is a character in the opera: its independence and influence on the human characters seem to grow each time they use it.
The Onion is a creation of composer/librettist Eric Sawyer and director/librettist Ron Bashford . The performance features a cast of five prominent Boston vocalists. The orchestra will be conducted by Ryan Turner, Music Director of Emmanuel Music. The production is co-presented by MassOpera.
Sep 12 Friday
Celebrate the release of Northampton-based artist Althaea's debut album! As Althaea, multi-instrumentalist Charlotte Malin Collins puts forth an immersive and soulful debut with Welcome Home. Derived from ancient Greek, Althaea means “to heal”, which is Malin Collins’ motivation behind the crafting of this work. With an ethereal voice accompanied by lush strings and delicate guitar, Althaea uses song as a healing force, guiding listeners on a soul-folk journey toward deeper connection with their own hearts.
The album offers a home for each traveler as they pass on their winding way. Life’s road inevitably passes through dark patches, thickets in the woods, then yields into dappled light. We are bound in kinship through our common experiences of love and loss, and Althaea’s Welcome Home stands on the roadside, enchanting and warm, inviting us to set ourselves down for a while and be soothed by the knowing that all is well. We can always come home.