Calendar of Events
Wednesday, October 26, 2022
Knoxville Symphony Orchestra: Q Series at The Elks Lodge
Category: Culinary arts, food and Music
Wednesday, Oct. 26, 2022, at 12 p.m.
Elks Lodge
Featuring Principal String Quartet
WILLIAM BOLCOM: Three Ghost Rags
FRANZ JOSEPH HAYDN: Op. 76 No. 2 (“The Fifths”)
LUDWIG van BEETHOVEN: String Quartet No. 11 (“Serioso”)
Menu
Escalivada Salad (Eggplant with Onions, Olives, and Peppers) with Grilled Pork Tenderloin
Vegetarian option without pork
Double Chocolate Brownie
865-291-3310 or https://knoxvillesymphony.com/
UT School of Music: Kaleidos Duo: Miroslav Hristov, violin and Vladimir Valjarević, piano
Category: Free event, Music and Virtual
Kaleidos Duo: Miroslav Hristov, violin and Vladimir Valjarević, piano
The first concert in a series of Mozart's Complete Violin Sonatas.
October 26 at 7:30 p.m.
Sandra G. Powell Recital Hall
Natalie L. Haslam Music Center
UT School of Music: Unless otherwise noted, concerts are FREE and open to the public. Venues: Sandra G. Powell Recital Hall in the Natalie L. Haslam Music Center, 1741 Volunteer Boulevard; James R. Cox Auditorium and Performance Hall 32, Alumni Memorial Building, 1408 Middle Drive. Information: 865-974-8935, https://music.utk.edu/events/
The Bottom and the UT Department of English: Write It Out
Category: Classes, workshops, Free event and Literature, spoken word, writing
October - The Spells We Cast: A Generative Poetry Workshop
Have an interest in writing? Join us for a free monthly writing workshop co-hosted by The Bottom and the UT Department of English!
RSVP at https://www.thebottomknox.com/events-1/write-it-out-with-the-bottom-and-the-ut-department-of-english-2022-10-26-17-00
Oct 26, 5:00 PM – 7:00 PM
The Bottom, 2340 E Magnolia Ave, Knoxville, TN 37917, USA
Each month, we will explore a different aspect of writing and spend time developing our writing skills. This event is free and open to the public.
Arrowmont School of Arts and Crafts: Collaborative New Canons
Category: Exhibitions, visual art and Fine Crafts
SELECTIONS FROM ARROWMONT SCHOOL OF ARTS AND CRAFTS’ PERMANENT COLLECTION
OCTOBER 24, 2022 – JANUARY 9, 2023 | SANDRA J. BLAIN GALLERIES
Beginning with its founding in 1912, Arrowmont has always provided fertile grounds for growth. As the Pi Beta Phi Settlement School, Gatlinburg’s community came together to teach one another different handicraft techniques and traditions. This practice of knowledge sharing laid the foundation for the craft school that exists today. Never static, Arrowmont continues to evolve to better facilitate artistic exchange. It first developed its signature summer workshop program in 1945, which opened Arrowmont’s doors to artists and makers who resided outside Gatlinburg, Tennessee, and later creating Arrowmont’s Artists-in-Residence Program in 1991. This Artist-in-Residence Program offered early career artists with studio space, facilities, and access to the constantly shifting environment of artists, craftspeople, makers, and enthusiasts that comprises the Arrowmont community. Initially conceptualized around bringing together artists working in distinct craft categories, the Artist-in-Residence Program has recently expanded to promote multi- and interdisciplinary craft regardless of medium, thereby widening the perspectives, experiences, and creative explorations brought to Arrowmont’s campus.
The works in this exhibition highlight Arrowmont’s two distinct but interconnected goals: the promotion of individual artistic exploration and the development of community through collective, creative expression. For over a century, artists have converged in this specific place to practice, to make, to experiment, to play. Relatedly, the works on display range from donated workshop demonstrations and projects to works from professional artists who have connections to Arrowmont—past instructors, students, and staff. Arrowmont’s campus has proven to be the epicenter of a specific development of artistic exchange. Arrowmont is site-specific, a historic and cultural landmark nestled in the wooded hillside; Arrowmont is also conceptual, shaped by individual experiences and the legacies of its storied past. Diverse communities have shaped Arrowmont as Arrowmont—as site, as concept—has, in turn, shaped communities. Together, across time and medium, Arrowmont has carved its own body of principles, rules, standards, and norms, crafting past negotiations that continue in the present and will last into the future.
Curated by Kelli Fisher, the 2022-23 Kenneth R. Trapp Craft Assistant/Curatorial Fellow.
Arrowmont School of Arts and Crafts, 556 Parkway, Gatlinburg, TN 37738. Information: 865-436-5860, https://www.arrowmont.org
Arrowmont School of Arts and Crafts: Prevailing Winds: Kaleena Stasiak
Category: Exhibitions, visual art and Free event
OCTOBER 24 – DECEMBER 16, 2022 | GEOFFREY A. WOLPERT GALLERY
Whether gentle or destructive, wind has the power to create change. Windsocks, whirligigs, and weathervanes were once vital sources of information, measuring wind direction and speed. Now these formerly functional objects accumulate in antique malls and roadside souvenir shops, their utility relinquished for kitsch and nostalgic value. While these adornments are steeped in history and collective meaning, they are also outward expressions of an individual’s relationship to our past. Domestic scenes, normally relegated to interior spaces, are translated through weatherproof materials like steel and wood and projected outwards into public viewing spaces. The front yard becomes a gallery where the nuances of regional and personal identity are expressed through layers of symbols.
In Prevailing Winds, Kaleena Stasiak continues her exploration into the performative reproduction of formerly functional objects as a method for interpreting history and re-envisioning the future. In a moment of disillusionment with institutional knowledge, by hearkening back to human rituals of survival, these weather predictors point to the cyclical nature of time, and offer hope for the future. For Stasiak, making becomes an act of historical role playing as she invokes the generations of makers who came before her, and translates these objects for a contemporary art context.
Kaleena Stasiak is an interdisciplinary artist who uses an assortment of haptic media to explore collective mythmaking, and its relevance to the present day. Digging through a lexicon of symbols and imagery evoking American colonial times, folk art, and quilts, she reframes the dominant ideologies surrounding early history and domestic labor. Her graphic cyphers denote the power and breadth of traditional women’s work, functional handicraft, and the impulse to create. Decoration and ornamentation become expressions of desire, signifiers of identity, and autobiographical documentation of lives omitted from text-based historical narratives and artistic discourse. Originally from Ontario, Canada, Stasiak holds a BFA in Printmaking from the Ontario College of Art and Design and an MFA in Printmaking & Book Arts from the University of Georgia. Recent shows include Tournament of Lies at Wassaic Project in Wassaic, NY, Ancient Art Objects at Whitespace in Atlanta, GA, and Identity Measures at the Contemporary Art Center in New Orleans, LA. In 2017 Stasiak founded the South East Women Wrestlers, a performance troupe based in Athens, GA, that uses the spectacle of wrestling to reframe stereotypes and representations of femininity. She currently teaches Printmaking & Foundations at Valdosta State University in Valdosta, Georgia.
Arrowmont School of Arts and Crafts, 556 Parkway, Gatlinburg, TN 37738. Information: 865-436-5860, https://www.arrowmont.org
Michael Alvis Art Gallery: Exhibition by Mark Wade
Category: Exhibitions, visual art and Free event
A solo exhibition of works in a variety of media by Mark Wade of Houston, TX
Opening reception and celebration of the renovated and renamed gallery: Mon Oct 24, 3-5 PM
The Michael Alvis Art Gallery (formerly known as the Omega Gallery) at Carson-Newman University, Warren Art Building, corner of Branner & Ken Sparks Way, Jefferson City, TN 37760. Gallery hours: M-F 8-4. Information: 865-471-4985, www.cn.edu
Pellissippi State: Sheri Fleck Rieth and Tom Lee: Swansong
Category: Exhibitions, visual art, Fine Crafts and Free event
Sheri Fleck Rieth and Tom Lee: Swansong, an exhibition of prints and sculpture
Hardin Valley Campus of Pellissippi State: 10915 Hardin Valley Road, Knoxville, TN 37932. Bagwell Center Gallery hours: M-F 9-5. Information: 865-694-6405, www.pstcc.edu/arts
Ijams Nature Center: Hallo-Week
Category: Festivals, special events, Kids, family and Science, nature
Hallo-Week Is Coming Oct. 24-29!
(All ages) Enjoy a week of fun-filled, family-friendly fall programs during Hallo-week at Ijams Oct. 24-29! Have a hoot at an owl prowl, go underground on a cave trip and more!
https://www.ijams.org/hallo-week-at-ijams
Ijams Nature Center, 2915 Island Home Ave, Knoxville, TN 37920
Pivot Point Gallery: Suzanne Jack
Category: Exhibitions, visual art and Free event
We are excited to announce our first Guest Artist Show featuring Knoxville based artist Suzanne Jack. We offered a guest artist show to two winners selected from the annual TN Artist Association Annual Show. In addition to our award, one of her pieces earned "Best in Show"! Her art is worth seeing (and owning)!
Please join us for the Show Opening Thursday, Oct. 20 from 5 - 7pm.
Pivot Point Gallery, 15 Emory Place, Knoxville, TN 37917. Information: 865-248-0050, www.pivotpointgallery.com
Hispanic Film Fest
Category: Film, Free event and History, heritage
The Hispanic Film Fest will be featuring five independent award-winning films in Spanish with English subtitles. The Hispanic Film Fest seeks to enrich the moviegoer experience by presenting UT professors as guest speakers before the screenings. Every Wednesday in October and November, at 6:30pm (Lindsay Young Auditorium 101 Hodges Library). Contact Dr. Betsabé Navarro (bnavarro@utk.edu). FREE ADMISSION. https://mfll.utk.edu/hispanicfilmfestival/
Parking Information
The G17 Garage at 1800 Lake Ave, free parking to the general public beginning at 6pm weekdays (no overnight parking 3am-6am)
The Vol Hall Garage at $1 per ½ hour
Regular street parking in the Fort Sanders area
Hosted by Modern Foreign Languages & Literatures, College of Arts & Sciences
Clarence Brown Theatre: Adaptive Radiation
Category: Theatre
Four millennials discover who they really are when catapulted into whimsical chaos by a strange, other-worldly spec of light. An energetic, alternative rom-com adventure! For mature audiences.
Hannah Benitez’ “Adaptive Radiation” will run in the Clarence Brown Theatre’s Lab Theatre. For tickets: https://clarencebrowntheatre.com/plays/adaptive-radiation/
Information on theatre safety protocols are available here: https://clarencebrowntheatre.com/faq/
Behind the Scenes Sunday will take place following the October 23rd matinee. A Talk Back will take place Sunday, October 30th following the matinee. The Open Captioned performance is Sunday, October 6th at 2:00 pm.
Clarence Brown Theatre, 1714 Andy Holt Ave on the UT campus, Knoxville, TN 37996. For information/tickets: 865-974-5161, www.clarencebrowntheatre.com
James White's Fort: HearthScares Tours
Category: Festivals, special events, History, heritage and Kids, family
The Ghostly Tour of Downtown Knoxville! Come and join the spirits for a tour of Downtown Knoxville's scariest landmarks. The tours which last approximately two hours each, will visit the sites of some of Knoxville's best kept secrets.
Stories for 2022: The legend of Knoxville's own Frankenstein, a man's search for a simple drink "A Glass of Water", and the murder of a traveling-man "Oysters in September". This year's tour will also include two new tales: "Death by Fire" and "Murder at The Church Door".
This year's tours will be on October 18, 20, 21, 25, 27 & 28, 7:00 p.m. each evening promptly
The tours are about one mile in length. All tours begin at James White's Fort located at the intersection of Hill Avenue and Hall of Fame Drive. Ample free parking is available for tour participants at the Fort. Enjoy roasting marshmallows by the fire in the courtyard with hot chocolate after the tour.
Adults $10
Children (6 – 15) $6
James White's Fort, 205 E. Hill Ave, Knoxville, TN 37915. Information: 865-525-6514, www.jameswhitefort.org