Calendar of Events

Friday, April 16, 2010

Knoxville Museum of Art: Uncertain Terrain - The KMA Collection

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Category: Exhibitions, visual art

Featuring a broad selection of works - paintings, photographs, drawings, and video - by artists whose chief inspiration stems from the surrounding landscape, whether rural or urban, perceived or imagined. The exhibition examines the many ways artists reference the external environment in constructing scenes marked by instability, ambiguity, deception, or fragmentation. Includes works by Jim Campbell, Patty Chang, Herb Creecy, Robert Van Deventer, Tomory Dodge, Chuck Forsman, Natasha Kissell, Alison Moritsugu, Brian Novatny, Hiraki Sawa, Darren Waterston, Roger Weik, and Charlotta Westergren.

Free admission. Hours: Tues-Thurs 10-5; Fri 10-8; Sat 10-5; Sun 1-5. 1050 World’s Fair Park Drive, Knoxville, TN 37916. 865-525-6101, www.knoxart.org, info@knoxart.org

Arrowmont: Spring Wildflower Artist of the Year Bob George

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Category: Exhibitions, visual art

Arrowmont School of Arts and Crafts, a sponsor of the 60th Annual Spring Wildflower Pilgrimage, is showcasing the watercolors, acrylics and drawings of Bob George, winner of the 2009 Spring Wildflower Pilgrimage Art Contest. Bob George relocated to Sevierville, Tennessee in 2002 after a career in Washington, D.C. as an illustrator, commercial artist and art director. Bob, a native of Key West, Florida, studied at the Ringling School of Art. His artwork has been featured at the Smithsonian’s National Air & Space Museum, the White House, Pentagon and U.S. Park Service Visitor Centers. Bob’s winning entry, “Bloodroot” was selected as part of a national juried competition and has been used as the Pilgrimage’s promotional image for 2010. Criteria for submission is that the artist’s primary subject included botanically accurate depictions of a spring flowering plant (or plants) native to Great Smoky Mountains National Park. “Bob’s skills as an illustrator and a painter are exquisite. It is evident that he has a strong relationship with and has mastered his media. His work brings the beauty and composition of nature to life on paper – the rendering of a simple stone becomes a captivating visual. We are proud to showcase Bob’s range of artworks and encourage you to come and enjoy this wonderful exhibit,” says Karen Green, Gallery Coordinator.

In the Loggia Gallery. Arrowmont School of Arts and Crafts, 576 Parkway, Gatlinburg, TN 37738. For information: 865-436-5860, www.arrowmont.org

UT Downtown Gallery: Urban Land Scouts Exhibition by Katie Ries

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Category: Exhibitions, visual art

The Urban Land Scouts are a new scouting group dedicated to helping modern urban people become better stewards of the land where they live. The gallery installation will display information, activities, embroidered patches, and literature associated with the Urban Land Scouts. Gallery visitors will be invited to join the Urban Land Scouts and take home things like plants, seeds, and printed ephemera, depending on their level of experience and interest.

Special Urban Land Scout Events (also at the Gallery; all events are free):
April 16th, Friday, 4:30 pm – Urban Land Walk with ULS founder Katie Ries
April 17th, Saturday, 1-3 pm – Seed Swap, Bring seeds, bags, envelopes and a pen.
April 22nd, Thursday, 4:30 pm – Urban Composting Talk with Knoxville Recycling Coalition
April 29th, Thursday, 4:30 pm – Herb talk with Nickie Bold

106 South Gay Street, Knoxville, TN, 37902. Hours: Wednesday – Friday, 11 am – 6 pm, Saturday 10 am – 3 pm. Closing reception April 30th, 6-9 pm. Information: 865-673-0802; Katie Ries - katie@urbanlandscouts.com; whoshareswins.com

Dogwood Arts Festival: Tapestry of Flowers

  • April 16, 2010 — April 23, 2010

Category: Festivals, special events

A first for Knoxville! A beautiful floral tapestry featuring a representation of dogwood blooms will be installed in Krutch Park. This 20 foot by 40 foot “carpet” will be a preview of a much larger tapestry of flowers, which will be on display at the Knoxville Botanical Garden in October of this year. The dogwoods featured in the design are representative of both our region’s spring blossoms and the Sweetwater Red Dogwood, which was discovered by the Howell family- original owners of the land in which Knoxville Botanical Garden resides. At the Krutch Park Extension. Information: 865-637-4661, www.dogwoodarts.com.

Rhythm 'N Blooms

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Category: Festivals, special events and Music

Experience East Tennessee's historical and present role in Americana music with performances by more than 40 acts in nine venues across Knoxville, including: Market Square, Bijou Theatre, The Square Room, Knoxville Botanical Garden, Barley’s, UT Gardens, Back Room @ Remedy, Preservation Pub and Crown & Goose. Artists performing at the 2010 festival are as follows: BEN SOLLEE & DANIEL MARTIN MOORE • CARRIE RODRIGUEZ • THE OLD CEREMONY • SAMANTHA CRAIN • THE DIXIE BEE-LINERS • YARN • THE NEW FAMILIARS • SALLIE FORD AND THE SOUND OUTSIDE • 18 SOUTH • THE BLACK LILLIES • ELLIOT BROOD • RB MORRIS & HECTOR QIRKO • A SPECIAL SOLO PERFORMANCE BY POKEY LAFARGE • DAWN LANDES AND THE HOUNDS • SHOTGUN PARTY • HOT SEATS • GREENSKY BLUEGRASS • KRISTIN ANDREASSEN • KRIS DELMHORST • AMERICAN AQUARIUM • BALLHOG! • THE RHYTHM BREWERS • MEGAN MCCORMICK • SOULGRASS REBELLION • MEDFORD’S BLACK RECORD COLLECTION • HARPETH RISING • BRENDON JAMES WRIGHT AND THE WRONGS • THE DRUNK UNCLES • RUBBER KNIFE GANG • ROLLIN’ HIGHWAY REVUE • THECITYLIGHTS* • STEPHEN SEBASTIAN • TAYLOR BROWN • THE SONGBIRDS • KEVIN HYFANTIS • KELSEY’S WOODS • THENDERFIN • SARAH HARGETT • DANIELLE MADISON • SLOW BLIND HILL • CUTTHROAT SHAMROCK • TODD PRESTON • TRAVIS MANN BAND • GREG HORNE

Admission: $40 Festival Pass available at Pilot Stores and ORNL Federal Credit Unions.
Information: 865-637-4561, www.rhythmnbloomsfest.com

Museum of Appalachia: Spring Heritage Day

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  • April 16, 2010

Category: Festivals, special events and History, heritage

Gives schoolchildren a first-hand experience of typical springtime activities on a pioneer farm. Each spring, the winter’s growth of heavy wool is trimmed from the Museum’s flock of sheep. Children and adults alike customarily gather to watch the annual ritual. Master shearer Dean Fritz of Murfreesboro explains the process to onlookers, using old-fashioned hand-cranked shears operated by “student power.”
Demonstrations will show the entire process of gathering and using wool. Carmen Bonnell will be spinning wool into yarn on an old‐fashioned spinning wheel. Ruby Patterson will show how wool was used to fill quilts.

Sheep were common on early Appalachian homesteads, and most families raised a few sheep. Spring Heritage Day will also include gardening, plowing, soap-making, leather-working, playing the spoons, clogging, and churning ice cream. President and Mrs. Lincoln look-alikes will come for the day. An old-fashioned “school marm” will lead spelling bees, and the Hominy Mamas will give interactive musical programs.

Many of the demonstrations are hands-on, giving students the chance to “learn by doing.” Students can catch a glimpse of the Museum’s menagerie of animals in a natural farm setting: sheep, goats, a mule, chickens, guineas, and peafowl. A ranger from Norris Dam State Park will bring Tennessee “critters” for show and tell. The demonstrations are part of the Museum’s mission to preserve and pass along the Appalachian culture to future generations. Public, private, and home-schooled student groups are encouraged to attend; individual parents and children are also welcome to take part in this special program.

Included in the day is a self-guided tour of the Museum’s historic log structures, display buildings with authentic Appalachian artifacts, gardens surrounded by split rail fences, and a variety of farm animals in a traditional farm setting. Special admission rates apply; members admitted free.

A large craft and gift shop features handiwork from regional artisans, and a small restaurant offers hot lunches, fresh‐from‐the‐garden vegetables, and mouth‐watering desserts. Facilities are available for weddings, reunions, corporate meetings, and other events.

Museum of Appalachia, 2819 Andersonville Hwy., Clinton, TN 37716 (16 miles north of Knoxville at I-75, exit 122, then one mile east). Open every day except Thanksgiving and Christmas. Information: 865-494-7680, www.museumofappalachia.org

Festival of Cultures

  • April 16, 2010
  • 4:30-9:00 PM

Category: Festivals, special events

More than 20 countries will be represented at the third annual Festival of Cultures. The event brings together student and community representatives from Africa, Asia, Europe and North and South America in a celebration of cultures. This event is sponsored by the Access and Diversity Office and Pellissippi State’s International Club and Multicultural Awareness Club. Donations to support the clubs will be accepted and processed by the Pellissippi State Foundation. The Broadway Academy of Dance performs the Ghawazee, an Egyptian “gypsy” dance; the Ouled Nail, an Algerian dance; and traditional ballet dances. Additional musical presentations include the Pellissippi State Bluegrass Ensemble, Lucia’s Arte Y Pasion Flamenca and Chinese lion dancing by the Wah Lum Kung Fu School. Come and browse colorful and informative exhibits and booths and taste delicious international cuisine. Dor L’Dor klezmer band will perform Yiddish music at the event. Dor L’Dor, Hebrew for “generation to generation,” looks back to the practice of families of klezmer musicians passing down this rich musical tradition to their children. Artist Rafael Casco displays his art in the Goins Building Rotunda.

At the Pellissippi Campus, Goins Building Auditorium & College Center. For information, contact Gayle Wood, director of Access and Diversity, at (865) 539-7160 or gwood@pstcc.edu.

Civil War Encampment and Spring Festival

  • April 16, 2010
  • 4:00 PM

Category: Fundraisers and History, heritage

At the Thompson-Brown House and Blount County Historical Museum, 1006 E. Lamar Alexander Pky Rt. 321. Living History presentations of early life in Blount County including: Period costumes, Music, Open fire Cooking, Farm life and Stories. Civil War Re-enactors will camp and demonstrate over the weekend. Cannon firings, Camp life, and Skirmish demonstrations. Food will be available for purchase. Sponsored by The Blount County Historic Trust, The Cades Cove Preservation Association and the Blount County Historical Museum. Although there is no admission fee, Donations would be appreciated.

Clarence Brown Theatre: Man of La Mancha

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Category: Music and Theatre

Opening night, April 16. Written by Dale Wasserman; Music by Mitch Leigh; Lyrics by Joe Darion. to dream the impossible dream. . . Journey with Cervantes’ knight errant as he rides in a hopeful quest for love and valor amid trying times.

1714 Andy Holt Avenue on the UT Campus, Knoxville, TN 37996. For information: 865-974-5161, www.clarencebrowntheatre.org

UT School of Art: 2010 MFA Thesis Exhibitions

Category: Exhibitions, visual art

Daniel Maw, Erin Mullenex

Ewing Gallery, 1715 Volunteer Blvd, Knoxville, TN 37996. Hours: Monday & Thursday: 10AM-8PM; Tuesday, Wednesday & Friday: 10AM-5PM; and Sunday: 1-4PM. For information: 865-974-3200, www.ewing-gallery.utk.edu

Athens Community Theater: Dearly Departed

Category: Theatre

By David Bottrell and Jessie Jones in the Sue E. Trotter Theater at The Arts Center in downtown Athens. The play is sponsored by Dick & Sylvia Pelley, G. David Brown & Jan Burleson, Art & Ellen Kimball, and Kathryn Hunter & The Wildman. In the Baptist backwoods of the Bible Belt, the beleaguered Turpin family proves that living and dying in the South are seldom tidy and sometimes hilarious. Despite their earnest efforts to pull themselves together for their father’s funeral, the Turpin’s other problems keep overshadowing the solemn occasion: first-born Ray-Bud drinks himself silly as the funeral bills mount; Junior, the younger son is juggling financial ruin, monster kids, and his own infidelity; their spinster sister Delightful, copes with death as she does with life, by devouring junk food; and the neighbors add more than two cents. Amidst the chaos, the Turpins turn for comfort to friends and neighbors, an eccentric community of misfits who just manage to pull together and help each other through their hours of need, and finally, the funeral. Dearly Departed is directed by G. David Brown. The cast includes Bob Roseberry, Jan Burleson, Beth Harris, Sarah Maynard, Art Kimball, Karen Siklosi, Colby Dempsey, Jason Carusillo, Amanda Haun, Autumn Lowry, Sarah Philpott, Jeanne Williams, Grady Williams, and Steve Walker. Tickets for the opening night dinner theater on April 15 are $25 by reservation only. Doors open at 6:00 PM with a cash bar, dinner at 6:30 PM and show at 7:30 PM. Tickets for all other performances are $10 for adults, $8 for student. Showtime is 7:30 PM on April 16, 17, 22, 23, and 24. One matinee is offered at 2:00 PM on Sunday, April 18. Thursday, April 22nd is “Student Night” when students are admitted for $5.00. Groups of 10 or more receive the student price at any performance besides dinner theater. Tickets are available by phone at 423-745-8781, online at www.athensartscouncil.org, or at The Arts Center, 320 North White St., Athens, Tennessee.

Gallery 1010: Mars Massengale

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Category: Exhibitions, visual art

Gallery 1010 is a student-run exhibition space for the University of Tennessee students, faculty, staff and alumni. We strive to offer the university community, and the growing downtown Knoxville gallery district with stimulating visual art experiences by consistently exhibiting innovative, contemporary artwork.

Gallery 1010: 113 S. Gay Street, Knoxville, TN 37902. Hours: Thursday-Saturday 12-4PM; Opening Reception: Friday 6-9PM. http://sunsite.utk.edu/gallery1010/Site/About_Gallery_1010.html

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