Calendar of Events
Tuesday, January 24, 2012
Tennessee Stage Company:15th Annual New Play Festival - Readings of Four New Plays
Category: Literature, spoken word, writing
Knox County Public Library is pleased to host Tennessee Stage Company's 15th Annual New Play Festival. The public is invited to watch the creative process unfold as playwrights and actors read and refine new plays that could become tomorrow's great masterpieces. The New Play Festival is an exciting opportunity for playwright, cast, and audiences to come together in a creative collaboration. After each reading, the playwright will engage the cast and audience into a discussion of the play with an eye towards refinement. The Festival is composed of four new plays, eleven readings in four libraries over three weeks from January 14 - 29.
All readings are free to the public.
The new plays to be read this year:
STATIONS OF THE CROSS by Brandon Daughtry Slocum - A dark comedy about two sisters who haven't spoken in years as they cross a bridge built of resentment, family secrets, and divergent religious views.
GRACE and CHRISTMAS IN THE SUMMER by Paul Leeper - Two very off beat looks at true love. As everyone knows, love is not for the faint of heart.
TIC TOC by Gayle Green - Successful attorney, Debra Chambers has it all...money, a trendy loft, and an expensive car. Everything except what she truly longs for. Knoxville playwright, Gayle Greene's romantic comedy, Tic-Toc (My Biological Clock Won't Stop) lends a new twist to the old song "first comes love, then comes marriage, then comes Debra with the baby carriage..."
SCHEDULE
Saturday, January 14, Carter Branch Library
11:00 am “Grace & Christmas†2:00 pm “Tic Tocâ€
Bearden Branch Library
11:00 am “Tic Tocâ€, 1:30 pm “Grace & Christmasâ€
Fountain City Branch Library
2:00 pm “Stations Of The Crossâ€
Saturday, January 21
Fountain City Branch Library
12:00 pm “Tic Tocâ€, 2:00 pm “Grace & Christmas"
Carter Branch Library
2:00 pm “Stations Of The Crossâ€
Saturday, January 28
Lawson McGhee Library
11:00 am “Stations Of The Crossâ€, 2:00 pm “Grace & Christmas In Summerâ€
Sunday, January 29
Lawson McGhee Library
2:00 pm “Tic Tocâ€
Friends of Knox County Public Library: an Evening with Marianne Wiggins
Category: Literature, spoken word, writing
Imagining the history of East Tennessee may be second nature to long time residents who walk the streets and enter the buildings named for our founders and business leaders. But for Marianne Wiggins, it was indeed an evidence of things unseen when she wrote her critically acclaimed novel, Evidence of Things Unseen (2003), which is set in East Tennessee in the early 20th century. Having never been to any part of Tennessee at all, she penned her tale about true love in the rise of the atomic age with impressive detail of locale and history. From post war life in downtown Knoxville to the rise of TVA and the build out of the Manhattan Project, Wiggins captures a backdrop that we know well. Her nuanced tale of love and science captures our hearts.
Friends of Knox County Public Library are pleased to host an Evening with Marianne Wiggins at 7:00 pm on Tuesday, January 24, 2012 at the East Tennessee History Center. In honor of a shared 125 year history of the Knox County Public Library and the Knoxville News Sentinel, the public is invited to attend this rare literary event with Marianne Wiggins. Books will be available for sale at the event.
K-town Sound Show Chorus Open House
Category: Music
K-town Sound Show Chorus is a chartered chorus with the worldwide organization of Sweet Adelines International. We sing 4-part harmony, a cappella, in the barbershop style. There are more than 500 Sweet Adelines choruses throughout the globe that meet regularly to practice, socialize, perform and sing a cappella harmony, barbershop style. It’s a sweet experience to sing with a worldwide chorus of friends. Whatever tone your voice, there is a singing part for you.
K-Town Sound is holding our open house on Tuesday, January 24 at 6:30 PM.
Fountain City Presbyterian Church, 500 Hotel Street, Knoxville.
For information call Jo Ann at 865 483 8790 or 865 742 4437
or email membership@ktownsound.org. Also visit our website at www.ktownsound.org.
Thank you so much and we appreciate your support of this awesome global event for our organziation!!
Cathy Bilbrey, K-Town Sound Show Chorus
Cumberland County Playhouse: Driving Miss Daisy
Category: Kids, family and Theatre
January 12 - April 14th
A Timeless American play that inspired the Academy Award winning film, Driving Miss Daisy, is the Affecting story of the decades long relationship between a stubborn Southern matriarch and her compassionate chauffeur
Admission: $24 for Adults, $23 for Seniors, $22 for groups (15 or more Adults/ Seniors), $12 Kids/Students. Includes a $3 Service/facility charge
The WordPlayers: “Walk Don’t Ride! - A Celebration of the Fight for Equalityâ€
Category: History, heritage and Theatre
The WordPlayers, a Knoxville theatre company, will tour “Walk Don’t Ride! - A Celebration of the Fight for Equality†by Peter Manos from January 20 through Feb. 29, 2012.
“Walk, Don't Ride†is a presentation of drama and song depicting events that helped shape American freedom. Events included are: The Montgomery Bus Boycott, The Nashville Lunch Counter Sit-ins, and The Greyhound/Trailways Freedom Rides.
“Walk, Don't Ride†is an example of the best kind of “edu-tainment,†and has been booked in 14 different venues, including middle schools, high schools, colleges, and churches.
There are seven public performances, the first being Jan. 25 at First Baptist Church, 510 Main St., Knoxville at 6:00 pm. For a complete list of performances, please visit www.wordplayers.org.
For more information, please call 865.539.2490 or visit www.wordplayers.org.
Ewing Gallery: Redefining the Multiple: 13 Japanese Printmakers
Category: Exhibitions, visual art and Lecture, panel
Curated by Sam Yates and Hideki Kimura, professor of art at Kyoto City University of Arts, Redefining the Multiple unites 13 printmakers from Japan who bring the techniques and concepts of printmaking to a wide range of contemporary and traditional media.
Of the selected participants, four make three-dimensional objects and installations, two paint with printmaking tools and techniques, three use digital photography and technology, while others utilize traditional and recognizable printmaking methods.
Participating artist and co-corator Hideki Kimura will give a lecture Thursday, January 19 at 7:30pm with a reception to follow. Please join us! All events are free and open to the public.
There will be 2 opening receptions for Redefining the Multiple. Join us, Thursday, January 19, after Professor Kimura's lecture, or come to the UT Downtown gallery Friday January 20, 2012 from 5-9pm!
For additional information on this exhibition, please call the Ewing Gallery at 865.974.3200 or visit us online at www.ewing-gallery.utk.edu.
UT Ewing Gallery of Art and Architecture - A+A Bldg. 1715 Volunteer Blvd., The University of Tennessee School of Art at the University of Tennessee, Knoxville.
Brown Bag Green Book Program
Category: Literature, spoken word, writing
Steve Scarborough, a founder of Dagger Canoe Co, will talk about The Ripple Effect: The Fate of Fresh Water in the Twenty-First Century by Alex Prud'homme, in the year’s first Brown Bag Green Book program, 12 p.m. on Wednesday, January 18 at the East Tennessee History Center, 601 South Gay Street.
The series continues on February 15th with Elandria Williams, Educational Consultant for Highlander Education and Research Center talking about My Work Is That of Conservation: An environmental biography of George Washington Carver by Mark D. Hersey.
On March 28th, Katie Ries, Marketing and Outreach Director for Three Rivers Market, will talk about Eating Animals by Jonathan Safran Foer.
On April 18th, David Massey, Neighborhood Coordinator for the City of Knoxville, will discuss the book Bringing Buildings Back: From abandoned properties to community assets by Alan Mallach.
On May 16th, Dr. Agricola Odoi, Associate Professor in UT’s College of Veterinary Medicine will talk about Changing Planet, Changing Health: How the Climate Crisis Threatens Our Health and What We Can Do about It by Paul R. Epstein
The Brown Bag Green Book program series is sponsored by the Knox County Public Library (KCPL) and the City of Knoxville. For more information, please call Emily Ellis at 215-8723.
Athens Area Council for the Arts: Paintings by Bain Butcher
Category: Exhibitions, visual art and Free event
BAIN BUTCHER: PAINTINGS
Exhibit Opening Reception
5:30-7:00PM January 20th
Come and meet the artist!
Exhibit Dates: January 18 - February 24, 2012
Oak Ridge Art Center: Ebony Imagery XIV
Category: Exhibitions, visual art
Opening Reception: Sunday, January 15, 2012 from 2-4 PM. Gallery Talk 2 PM.
Oak Ridge Art Center, 201 Badger Avenue, Oak Ridge, TN 37830. Hours: Tuesday-Friday, 9AM-5PM; Saturday-Monday, 1-4PM. Information: 865-482-1441, www.oakridgeartcenter.org
McClung Museum: Continents Collide: The Appalachians and the Himalayas
Category: Exhibitions, visual art and Free event
Curated by Professor and Distinguished Scientist Robert D. Hatcher, Jr. and Assistant Professor Micah Jessup, both from UT's Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences, the exhibition focuses on the formation of mountain ranges and the forces that continually alter them. Our own beautiful landscapes of East Tennessee and western North Carolina, part of the Appalachian Mountains, whose genesis was more than 250 million years ago, is one focus of the exhibit; the other is the striking and rugged Himalaya Mountains, the much younger and still rising result of tectonic movements, the global effects of which we learn about often in the news.
Introducing the subject in the gallery will be a fifteen minute video, created by award-winning producer Steve Dean (the Heartland Series) and featuring views of a number of sites in the Blue Ridge and Smokies sections of the Appalachians as well as original images of Himalayan locales and the Tibetan plateau. The dynamics of plate tectonics and processes of erosion are explained in animated segments.
Breathtaking as the surface topography may be, the exhibit will also delve into the structure of the respective ranges, as that is where the keys to the how and the why may be found. Three-dimensional maps, video animations, and of course, rocks will show visitors how we know what we know, and perhaps give viewers a new way to look at the world as well as the landscape around them. The past, the present, and the tectonic future await.
Frank H. McClung Museum, 1327 Circle Park Dr on the UT campus, Knoxville, TN 37996. Hours: Monday-Saturday, 9AM-5PM; Sunday, 1-5PM. Information: 865-974-2144, http://mcclungmuseum.utk.edu
Tennessee Mountain Writers January Jumpstart Workshops
Category: Classes, workshops and Lecture, panel
Tennessee Mountain Writers January Jumpstart workshops - January 13-15, 2013
Tennessee Mountain Writers will present "January Jumpstart XIII" featuring a fiction workshop led by Darnell Arnoult, Writer-in-Residence at Lincoln Memorial University, and a poetry workshop led by Nashville poet Bill Brown. The event, to be held at the Magnuson Hotel in Sweetwater, will open with an informal social hour on Friday evening; workshop sessions will run from 9 a.m. - 4:30 p.m. on Saturday and from 8:30 - 11:30 a.m. Sunday. Participation is limited to 20 per workshop. The registration fee of $110 includes lunch on Saturday; there will be an optional catered dinner at the hotel Saturday night for an additional $16. For registration information, see www.tmwi.org, or email theorrs@usit.net.
Arrowmont School of Arts and Crafts: Sevier County Invitational
Category: Exhibitions, visual art and Free event
Opening Reception: Friday, January 13, 2012 6:00-8:00 p.m.
Open Monday - Saturday 8:30 am to 5:00 pm
Arrowmont School of Arts and Crafts, 556 Parkway, Gatlinburg, TN 37738. Information: 865-436-5860, www.arrowmont.org