Fall 2019 Happenings (Sep/Oct)

Fall leaves at arboretum

The Happenings List is my handpicked list of events for people who love art, craft, and culture. I can’t go to everything (no matter how much I’d like to), so I’d love your feedback on any Happenings you’ve participated in!

What would you go to if you could go to any event on this list?

Sunset in willcox

Worldwide

1. Sky Day

Sep 20
Everywhere

Free citizen art project that encourages people reflect on the beauty and importance of the sky. Participate by taking a photo that’s just the sky as you see it that day and post it to the SkyDay Project website or tweet it using #skydayproject.

 

Norton Simon Museum in Pasadena
Norton Simon Museum, Pasadena, CA

U.S.

2. Museum Day

Sep 21

Many U.S. museums are offering free admission and/or planning special events.

3. American Craft Week

Oct 4-13

 

Tucson Botanical Gardens
Tucson Botanical Gardens

+Arizona

4. Tucson Botanical Gardens

  • Now – Sep 29: Quilts in the Gardens. Nature-themed quilts on display and for sale in the gift shop. The event is in partnership with Quilts for a Cause, an organization that sells handmade quilts and quilt patterns to support breast and gynecological cancer research.
  • Now – Sep 30: Dog Days. Dogs are allowed in the Gardens! Dog admission $3 + human admission.
  • Sep 21, 9am-2pm: Plant Geek Festival + Sale. Over a dozen of Tucson’s growers and nurseries, local food vendors, and live music. Free admission.

 

Here in Tucson

5. Summer Night Market

Sep 27 from 6-10pm
MSA Annex, Tucson
A market under the stars with local vendors and MSA Annex shops open late.

 

6. Shining Brow

Opera about the life of famed architect Frank Lloyd Wright. Arizona Opera will present the World Premiere of the “Taliesin West Version” of Shining Brow.

  • Sep 27-29: Phoenix performances.
  • Oct 5-6: Tucson performances.
  • Curators at Taliesin West have installed an exhibit in the Arizona Opera Center in Phoenix detailing Wright’s most significant work in Arizona.

 

7. Made with Love Fall Market

Sep 28, Oct 12 + 26, Nov 9 + 30, Dec 7 + 14
Heritage Marketplace, Downtown Gilbert
70 vendors with items either handmade, baked, brewed, or designed by them personally. As well as local food, coffee, and hands-on activities for kids. Free admission.

 

Quechan eagle statue
Eagle sculpture at Fort Yuma Quechan tribal administration building

8. Quechan Indian Tribe Annual Indian Days Celebration

Quechan Tribe Stomping Grounds (460 Quechan Road) near Yuma
Oct 10-13

Weekend of games, competitions, booths, and traditional Quechan performances. Events include 5k and 1 mile Walk/Run, bird singing and dancing, a parade honoring murdered indigenous women, and tournaments in softball, boxing and senior chair volleyball.

 

Yuma Favorites: Part 2

9. Willcox Wine Country Festival

Oct 18-20
Railroad Avenue Park, Willcox
Festival with 15 Arizona wineries, along with live music, and fine arts, artisan foods, and vintage vendors. 6 tasting tickets + commemorative wine glass: $20 advance / $25 at the door. Free admission for designated drivers and other non-drinkers.

  • Oct 18, 6-9pm: Railroad Park Fundraiser at Railroad ParkTicket price includes dinner catered by Big Tex (pig roast, smoked brisket, hot buttered corn on the cob, etc.), wine tasting with a commemorative glass + 8 tastings, and live music. Tickets $35
  • Oct 20: Cellar Selection Sunday. Special tasting of reserve and library wines from Willcox Wine Country Partners’ cellars. Tickets $45

 

10. Membrillo Fest

Oct 19
Mission Garden, Tucson
Celebration of the membrillo (or quince) fruit, which ripens in October.

 

11. Dia de los Muertos Festival (Mesa)

Oct 26, 10am-5pm + Oct 27, 12-5pm
Mesa Arts Center, Mesa
Art and craft market, live entertainment, and artist demonstrations and altars. Free.

 

Downtown Mesa’s Día de los Muertos

 

12. Tucson Comic-Con

Nov 1-3
Tucson Convention Center, Downtown Tucson
Community-based pop culture convention with a mission statement of “Pop Culture For All!” Full weekend passes $35 through Sep 29 (early bird pricing).

 

13. All Souls Procession

Nov 2-3
Downtown Tucson
Two-mile long procession to both celebrate and mourn of the lives of our loved ones and ancestors. Leading up to the procession are art exhibits, performances, and other Dia de los Muertos events. Free. (Donations accepted.)

 

14. Loft Film Fest

Nov 7-14
The Loft Cinema, Tucson
Eight-day showcase of independent, foreign and classic cinema. Film fans can experience hand-selected festival favorites from Cannes, Sundance, SXSW, etc. and meet internationally-renowned artists from the world of independent cinema. Festival pass (for admission to all film screenings) $150.

 

Blue Boy
The Blue Boy painting at the Huntington Library

+California

15. Blue Boy Restoration Project

Now – Sep 30
Huntington Art Gallery, San Marino (Pasadena)
Watch the process of conservation work on the iconic painting The Blue Boy (ca. 1770) by Thomas Gainsborough each Thursday and Friday, 10am – noon + 2-4pm and 2-4pm on the first Sunday of the month. This is the last segment of  the yearlong Project Blue Boy.

 

16. Lady Filmmakers Festival

Sep 26-29
Beverly Hills
Festival of films made by women, along with screenplay contests, readings, parties, visual art, and music.

 

17. Stitch Retreat

Oct 19-26
San Francisco School of Needlework + Design, San Francisco
Individualized retreat to focus on further developing and enhancing your embroidery skills and knowledge with guidance from School of Needlework + Design instructors. Registration $1200

 

18. Death Valley Fall Star Party

Oct 25-26
The Oasis at Furnace Creek, Death Valley
Two evenings of stargazing under the largest International Dark Sky Site in the United States. After sunset, there will be Astronomy in the Park and a Laser-guided tour of the Night Sky. On Saturday, there will also be Solar Observing during the day.

  • Lodging: Reservations can be made at The Oasis Resort or at Furnace Creek Campground (http://www.recreation.gov). Other nearby National Park Service Campgrounds will be open with campsites available on a first come, first served basis.
  • To participate as an Astronomer on the Observing Field, you must have a telescope and be willing to work with the public during public viewing hours.
  • Registration is only required for astronomers bringing telescopes to the Observing Field. The general public does not need to register.

 

 

flowers

+Colorado

19. Golden Farmers Market

Now – Oct 5 (Saturdays), 8am-1pm
Golden Library, Golden
Held Saturdays in the parking lot just west of the Golden Library.

 

20. Sneffels Fiber Arts Festival

Sep 21-22
Ouray County 4H Events Center (on Hwy 550), Ridgway
Fundraising event for Weehawken Creative Arts, a non-profit arts education center in Ouray County. The festival features fiber vendors, food, workshops, classes, and demonstrations.

 

Seeing the Denver Botanic Gardens

21. Denver Botanic Gardens fall events

  • Sep 27-28, 9am-5pm: York Street Fall Plant + Bulb Sale. Hundreds of bulbs, perennials and Grown at the Gardens plants for sale and expert advice from our horticulturists. Free admission to the sale and to the Gardens both days.
  • Oct. 11-13, 9am – 5pm: Pumpkin Festival at Chatfield Farms. Tickets $8.
  • Oct 21-25, 5:30-9:30pm: Glow at the Gardens. Display of larger-than-life sculptures made with real pumpkins harvested from local farms. Tickets $21
  • Nov 2, 9am – 3pm: Día de los Muertos Celebration. Observance of Día de los Muertos with indoor screenings of Disney’s Pixar film “Coco.” Included with admission to the Gardens.

 

Millennium Park
Cloud Gate sculpture, Chicago

+Illinois

22. Wine Notes

Wednesdays, Thursdays, + Fridays through September, 5:30-9pm
ENO Wine Room, Chicago (inside the InterContinental Chicago Hotel)
Live music series of singer-songwriters performing in a restaurant with 180-degree views of the Magnificent Mile, seasonal wines by the bottle and glass, chocolates and cheese.

 

23. In a Cloud, in a Wall, in a Chair: Six Modernists in Mexico at Midcentury

Now – Jan 12, 2020
The Art Institute of Chicago
The transformative impact of six visionary artists and designers who lived or worked in Mexico between the 1940s and 1970s. The work of Clara Porset, Lola Álvarez Bravo, Anni Albers, Ruth Asawa, Cynthia Sargent, and Sheila Hicks has never been shown together before. Included with museum admission.

 

24. The Power of Children: Making a Difference

Sep 6 – Oct 13
The Elmhurst History Museum, Elmhurst

A special immersive exhibit about three children whose lives teach us about overcoming obstacles to make a positive difference in the world: Anne Frank, Ruby Bridges, and Ryan White.

 

25. Aquarium After Hours

September 12 + 27, 6-10pm
Shedd Aquarium, Chicago
After Hours events for adults (21+). Admission includes all aquarium exhibits, touch experiences, and entertainment. Food, beverages, and 4-D Experiences are available for purchase. $25 admission.

 

Chicago architecture biennial

26. Chicago Architecture Biennial

Sep 19 – Jan 5, 2020
Chicago Cultural Center, Chicago
The largest architecture and design exhibition in North America. The theme of the 2019 edition is #AndOtherSuchStories.

 

27. Adler Planetarium Events

  • Doane at Dusk: Monthly telescope viewings and discussions with Adler Astronomers after museum hours. Free and open to the public on a first come, first served basis, weather permitting. No tickets are needed. Upcoming dates: Sep 27, 7:30pm / Nov 22, 7pm / Dec 20, 7pm
  • Adler After Dark: Themed evening event for adults (21+) offering full access to museum exhibits, unlimited sky shows, special guests, hands-on programs, access to Doane Observatory, and live entertainment every third Thursday of the month from 6:00–10:00 pm. $20 advance / $25 at the door.

 

28. Chamber Music at the Art Institute of Chicago: Inspired by Tradition

Oct 6, 2–3:30pm
Art Institute of Chicago, Chicago

Celebrating work by composers and artists who lived and created in Mexico in the mid-twentieth century, this immersive afternoon showcases the marriage between modern thinking and indigenous tradition. Mexican composer Manual Ponce’s Petite suite dans le style ancien and String Trio are featured alongside Brahms’ Piano Quartet No. 2 in A Major. Presented with the Chicago Symphony Orchestra. Tickets $35

Chicago Sightseeing on a Conference Schedule

 

+Nevada

29. Cathedral Gorge Campout and Star Party

Sep 27-28
Cathedral Gorge State Park, near Panaca
All astronomers and visitors are welcome to join the Las Vegas Astronomical Society at one of our Cathedral Gorge Campout and Star Parties. Camping and Day Use fees are covered for current LVAS members. Non-members are responsible for their own park entry and camping fees. Register online.

 

Lyndhurst Mansion
via Lyndhurst Mansion

+New York

30. Fall Crafts at Lyndhurst

September 13, 14, 15
Lyndhurst mansion grounds, Tarrytown
Festival of fine craft and food with 300 modern American artists on the grounds of the Neo-Gothic Lyndhurst mansion. Artwork for sale will include fine art painting, printmaking, drawing and photography, as well as fashion and accessories, and functional and sculptural works in ceramics, glass, metal, fiber, wood and mixed media. There will also be gourmet foods, concessions, and tastings from local distilleries, wineries and cider houses. Admission (cash or check only): adults $12 / kids, age 6-11 $4

  • Demos of wheel thrown pottery and silk scarf painting.
  • Tours are available of the 67-acre estate.
  • For kids: interactive puppet theater, hands-on craft workshop, face painting, stilt walkers, and storytelling.
  • Complete online form to be emailed a $1 off admission coupon.
  • Free parking.
  • h/t Margaret Wozniak Ceramics

 

31. NY State Sheep and Wool Festival

Oct 17-30
Dutchess County Fairgrounds, Rhinebeck

Fiber festival with a fleece show and sale, a wide variety of workshops, livestock displays, shepherd talks, competitions, and used equipment auctions. Some workshop fees include show admission. Day passes $9 advance / $12 at the gate

 

Virginia
Old Virginia map

+Virginia

32. Neptune Festival Art + Craft Show

Sep 27 (12-7pm), Sep 28 (10am-7pm), Sep 29 (10am-6pm)
20th – 31st Street, VIrginia Beach Oceanfront
Show featuring over 250 artisans displaying handmade work including paintings, sculptures, photography, and glasswork.

 

Washington Mall
National Mall in Washington DC

+Washington D.C.

33. March on Washington Film Festival

Sep 22-29
Venues across Washington, D.C.
Festival that uses film screenings and panel discussions as a platform for  uplifting the untold stories of the Civil Rights era to inspire renewed passion for activism.

PUCA Festival - Trim Castle
Trim Castle, Ireland via Púca Festival

INTERNATIONAL

+Ireland

34. Púca Festival

Oct 31 – Nov 2
Meath and Louth counties
A new festival celebrating Ireland as the birthplace of Halloween with music, film, storytelling, and light installations.

 

La Tavola Marche in Italy
La Tavola Marche inn and cooking school in Piobicco, Italy.

+Italy

35. La Tavola Marche Classes

Piobicco, Le Marche

  • Oct 15-20: Made in Le Marche: D.O.C. Wine Tour, Artisan Meat and Cheese Market Trip, Craft Beer Tasting + 3 Cooking Classes. Includes 5 nights’ accommodations, welcome dinner, 3 half-day cooking classes with meals, wine + handmade apron gift, 1-day wine tour with lunch and transportation, Pizza Night Dinner, Apecchio market tour and tasting, breakfast daily. €1025/person (Price based on double occupancy.)

EN: This is the place where we stayed, hiked, and took a cooking class in the countryside. I highly recommend it!

 

A Hike in Le Marche

+Papua New Guinea

36. Bougainville Chocolate Festival

Sep 21-22
Buka Autonomous Region of Bougainville, Papua New Guinea
Two-day culinary festival in celebration of award-winning Bougainville cocoa.

Art Inspires Expeditions in “Headhunt Revisited” Documentary

 

Double decker bus London

+UK

37. Shetland Wool Week

Sep 28 – Oct 6
Shetland Islands
Annual nine-day festival of of Shetland’s textile heritage with classes, knitting, spinning, dyeing, weaving, tours, exhibitions, open studios, teas, talks and tours.

 

38. London Restaurant Festival

Oct 1-31
across London

Festival celebrating London’s diverse range of restaurants with restaurant-hopping tours, tasting menus, master classes, chef-hosted events, and gastronomic weekends.

 




Event descriptions are based on information provided by the organizers. I fact check as much as I can and edit them for length and clarity. Of course, things can change and typos can happen, so be safe out there!


See captions for photo credits / sources. Uncredited photos are by Phillip or Stephanie Liebold.

Summer 2019 Happenings (Jun/Jul/Aug)

Seattle Center

Given the limits of space and time, I can’t go to every event that catches my eye when I walk by a poster in a shop window or see a message from an artist I follow or get sidetracked online while I’m looking for something else.

colorado

So I share them with you.

Because maybe you’ll just happen to be in central Indiana during the Elwood Glass Festival (see #17). Or D.C. for the Art Book Fair (#21). Or maybe you’ll decide to take a detour for a wood oven workshop in Italy (#37). Maybe one of these 44 things is right in your neighborhood.

But, even if I can’t be there, it makes me smile to know that all around the world people are making things and enjoying community festivals and finding new meaning in old traditions and eating good food.

How about you?

 

peonies at Alaska Blooms Farm
via Alaska Blooms Peony Farm

+Alaska

1. Bear Extravaganza!

June 23-25 or July 5-7
Sterling and Lake Clark National Park (Meet at Homewood Suites in Anchorage)
3-day photography tour in bear country, where you can view about 20-40 bears each day with Lisa Langell plus an additional photography instructor. Includes all meals, transportation (including round trip sea plane flights to/from lodge) and lodging (1 night in Sterling and 2 nights in a lodge adjacent to Lake Clark National Park.) $2695 per person

2. Peonies in Bloom

July 13, 14, 20 + 21 from 10am – 4pm
Alaska Blooms Peony Farm, Wasilla
Visit peony fields an hour outside of Anchorage during peak bloom time to wander garden paths and take photos. Admission: adults $10 / free for children under 12

Editor’s Note: An Instagram post with big bunches of peonies caught my eye just as the season was wrapping up last year. Alaska isn’t the first place that comes to mind when I think of flower farms, but those long summer days produce some striking results! 

 

food from Seis Kitchen

+Arizona

3. The Irish in Latin America exhibition

Now – Jun 27
McClelland Library (Exhibit Hall), Phoenix

Traveling exhibit of twenty-three informative panels on the history of Irish immigrants and their descendants across Latin America from 1611- 1968. Tickets $10 (free for ages 6 and under).

4. Arizona Highways and Ted DeGrazia

Now – Jan 29, 2020
DeGrazia Gallery in the Sun, Tucson
The exhibit will commemorate artwork by Ted DeGrazia that was featured in Arizona Highways magazine. Museum admission: adults $8

5. Summer Night Market

May 31, Jun 28, Jul 26, Aug 30, Sep 27 from 6-10pm
MSA Annex, Tucson
A market under the stars the last Friday of the month (May through September) with local vendors and MSA Annex shops open late.

EN: MSA Annex is a newer sister property to one of Phillip and my favorite Tucson hangouts, Mercado San Agustin. The Annex is about a block away and features local businesses in repurposed shipping containers. A night market is great for avoiding the Arizona sun in the heat of the day – and shop local!

6. Cinema Appreciation

Jun 6 + 13, Jul 11 + 18 at 11am
Washington Activity Center, Phoenix
View and discuss a series of films on a theme over 4 sessions. Ages 16+. Fee $4 + Recreation Pass.

EN: I don’t think I’ve seen a cinema appreciation class at a city rec center before. We’re not always aware of all the great resources that exist in our own cities!

7. Tucson 23 Mexican Food Festival

Jun 15, 6–9pm
JW Marriott Tucson Starr Pass Resort + Spa, Tucson
Mexican food festival featuring food demonstrations and education, live music, and weekend stay-cation packages. A 23-mile area that includes the City of South Tucson, downtown and lower midtown Tucson is home to a high concentration of diverse Mexican restaurants, many of which are family-owned and decades old. It’s known as the “Best 23 Miles of Mexican food in America.” Festival admission $65

 

April 2018: Downtown Tucson

8. Independents Week

Jun 30 – Jul 8
statewide
Week-long celebration of local Arizona businesses. Shop local and save 20% with a Golden Coupon, which you can download from Local First Arizona’s site or pick up at one of the hundreds of participating businesses.

EN: “Independents” Week! The week of July 4th! Get it?!

9. 70th Annual Navajo Festival of Arts + Culture

Aug 3-4
Museum of Northern Arizona (MNA), Flagstaff
Traditional and contemporary art for sale, artist demonstrations, authentic food, musical performances, heritage programs, and hoop and social dances. Daily admission (2018) $12

 

Huntington Library, Pasadena

+California

10. Blue Boy Restoration Project

Now – Sep (estimated)
Huntington Art Gallery, San Marino (Pasadena)
Watch the process of conservation work on the iconic painting The Blue Boy (ca. 1770) by Thomas Gainsborough each Thursday and Friday, 10am – noon + 2-4pm and 2-4pm on the first Sunday of the month. This is one segment of Project Blue Boy, which is ongoing from September 22, 2018 to September 30, 2019.

  • Free admission with advance reservation 1st Thursday of every month, 10am–5pm.

EN: Usually art conservation work happens in some museum back room or secret basement, so it’s really awesome that much of this yearlong project is open for public viewing – especially since it’s such an iconic painting!

11. Art Around Adams

Jun 1, 12-8pm
San Diego
2-mile music and art walk in the Adams Avenue District.

Escaping the Heat

12. Palo Alto Festival of the Arts

Aug 25-26, 10am – 6pm
University Avenue, Downtown Palo Alto
Outdoor fine art festival with original work by 300 artists.

  • Chopin and Chandeliers: sidewalk piano virtuosos on the plaza at University + Tasso Streets.
  • Italian Street Painting Expo: 60 chalk artists creating larger-than-life works of art on Tasso Street.

EN: Fun to have a fine art festival outdoors with people playing the piano on the sidewalks!

13. Lady Filmmakers Festival

Sep 26-29
Beverly Hills
Festival of films made by women, along with screenplay contests, readings, parties, visual art, and music.

 

Golden, Colorado

+Colorado

14. Golden Farmers Market

Jun 1 – Oct 5 (Saturdays), 8am-1pm
Golden Library, Golden
Held every Saturday, except for July 27 (Buffalo Bill Days) in the parking lot just west of the Golden Library.

How to press flowers while traveling

15. Movies + Music in the Park

August 2, 9, 16 + 23
Parfet Park, Golden
Friday night music and a family-friendly movie on a giant inflatable screen under the stars at Parfet Park at 10th Street and Washington Avenue in downtown Golden.

  • 7pm: Bands
  • 8:30pm: Movie
  • Food will be available to purchase food from local vendors and food trucks, or you can bring a picnic. (No alcohol.)
  • Seating: Bring blankets or low-slung chairs.
  • Leashed dogs are welcome.

EN: I like the idea of having local bands play before an outdoor movie night!

 

House of Glass in Elwood, Indiana

+Indiana

16. Concerts on the Canal

May 30 – July 18 (Thursday nights)
Kruse Family Stardust Terrace at the History Center, Indianapolis
Summer outdoor concert series.

  • 5pm: Stardust Terrace Café opens. All alcohol must be purchased and consumed on site.
  • Food: Visitors are welcome to bring their own food and nonalcoholic beverages.
  • On concert Thursdays, the History Center offers free admission, extended hours (10 am-8 pm), and special exhibits.

House of Glass

17. Elwood Glass Festival

Aug 16-18
Elwood
Festival celebrating the town’s heritage of hand-blown art-glass produced at The House of Glass and Carol’s Legacy Glass. Activities include factory tours, a parade, carnival rides, arts and crafts, food, collectibles, bus tours, demonstrations, photography, a quilt show, contests, and the Vintage Rollers Car Show. Free admission.

  • Live bands and other entertainment at the Jim Knoop Amphitheater at Callaway Park. Friday 7-9pm: Helpling, a singer/songwriter from Elwood. Saturday 7-9pm: Magnolia Soul, a group based out of Anderson, Indiana.
  • Free bus tours available daily 12-4pm with stops at Carol’s Legacy Glass and the Historic Elwood Opera House.
  • Crafts + Commercial Market tents open Friday 12-10pm, Saturday 10am-10pm, and Sunday 10am-4pm.

EN: Although we weren’t there during the Glass Festival, we got to see pieces being made at The House of Glass and tour the Historic Opera House when we visited Madison County, Indiana.

 

ceramic sculptures at Barrick Museum

+Nevada

18. The Inside World: Contemporary Aboriginal Australian Memorial Poles

Now – June 23
Nevada Museum of Art, Reno

94 works by contemporary Aboriginal artists from Arnhem Land. Traditionally, these poles (named lorrkkon or larrakitj) marked the final point in Aboriginal mortuary rites. Today, they are made as works of art. Museum admission: $10 (free for children under 5)

 

ArtBar

19. VESSEL: Ceramics of Ancient West Mexico

NowAug 17
Marjorie Barrick Museum of Art, Las Vegas
Exhibition exploring form and function through ceramic vessels from West Mexico. Suggested voluntary contribution: $5

 

 

National Museum of Women in the Arts

+Washington D.C.

20. NMWA’s New York Avenue Sculpture Project

Now – Sep 20, 2020
New York Avenue (east of the White House)
Public art space featuring changing installations of contemporary works by women artists. Currently on display is Huellas y cicatricez (Traces and scars), four totemic sculptures by Mexico City-based Betsabeé Romero that speak to themes of human migration and the natural environment. The structures are constructed from carved tires with gleaming metallic paint and interior lighting.

 

Women in the Arts and a Pop-up Makerspace

21. DC Art Book Fair #3

Jul 7, 12-5pm
National Museum of Women in the Arts (NMWA), D.C.
40+ artists will sell art books, zines, comics, and other work. Free admission to both the Fair and Museum.

22. Capital Fringe Festival

Jul 9-28
Southwest D.C.
Showcase of both unjuried and curated shows. 94 productions in seven venues with 13 stages — all within walking distance of each other in SW DC. 60% of the participating artists reside in the DC Metro area. Single ticket $20

 

Seattle Center

+Washington

23. Open Sesame! The Magic of Artist’s Books Revealed

Now – Jun 9
Bainbridge Island Museum of Art (BIMA), Bainbridge Island
Installation of Artist’s Books, a lesser-known art form, which may combine drawing, painting, printmaking, collage, gluing and binding, sculpture, photography, textiles, creative writing, and storytelling. While many university libraries have artists’ books in their Special Collections, BIMA seeks to make the art form more visible to the public. Free.

 

24. Pigment-Making Workshops with Heidi Gustafson

  • Jun 1, 10am-3pm: Island Pigment Foraging Workshop on Whidbey Island. Gather natural mineral colors from sandstone, glacial clay, green earth, and sea-weathered minerals on various coastal and forest walks. Fee $200
  • Aug 10-11, 10am-3pm: 2-Day Intensive Earth Pigments at Heidi’s rural studio north of Bellingham. Learn to make pigment from ethically foraged mineral materials, like ochre, soil, clay, dirt, and rock. Includes one day of field work in a Cascade mountain landscape, one day of learning to process minerals according to their particular properties, and your own set of personal earth pigments. Does not include transportation or lodging. Fee $460.

25. Urban Craft Uprising Summer Show

Jun 22-23, 11am-5pm
Seattle Center Exhibition Hall, Seattle
Urban Craft Uprising aims to build a local community of artists, crafters and designers through events where indie crafters and artists can connect with their fans. Free admission.

Handcrafted postcards

26. Seattle Street Food Festival

Jul 6-7
South Lake Union, Seattle
Food festival spanning 5 city blocks, serving over 100,000 attendees and helping to launch new chef-preneurs.

 

traditional craft and a casbah in Morocco
via Talleres Nómadas (Morocco tour)

INTERNATIONAL

+Australia

27. Bello Winter Music Festival

Jul 11-14
Bellingen, NSW
4-day boutique music festival in a historic riverside town in New South Wales with over 60 acts in multiple venues. Adult single-day passes $60-80 (+ processing fee).

 

Felted hummingbirds
via Tuckamoor Wildcrafts

+Canada

28. Manitoulin Art Tour

Jul 19, 20, 21 from 10am-5pm
Manitoulin Island

Self-guided tour of diverse artist studios, which includes photographers, painters, sculptors, and potters from across Manitoulin Island. The route is a scenic drive across the largest freshwater island in the world.

Your 2018 Local Art Loves

29. Tuckamoor Wildcrafts Felting Workshops

Oromocto, NB

  • Jul 20, 9am-4pmFelted Landscape Workshop. Make a large felted wool “painting” of a landscape scene. Learn different techniques for various trees, moons, sunsets, northern lights, flowers, etc. and then how to mount your artwork when you take it home. Students must bring small sharp scissors, 2-3 large bath towels, and a piece of cushion foam (at least 2” thick and 24” x 16”). Other materials provided. Beginners and experienced felters welcomed. Fee CA$110
  • Jul 21, 10-2 pm: Needle felted Hummingbird Workshop. Learn the art of needle felting and make two or three 4” hummingbirds with clay beaks. Includes a felting kit (felting foam and felting needles), wool, clay, and glass eyes for 4” hummingbirds. Students must bring small sharp scissors and a multi-felting needle holder. If you do not have one, you can purchase one at the class for $15-$20 each. Beginners and experienced felters welcomed. Fee CA$70

EN: I follow Tuckamoor Wildcrafts on Instagram, and they make the cutest little felted animals! Those little hummingbirds are so adorable, I just had to share the workshop info with you!

30. Yukon Culinary Festival

August 1-4
Whitehorse (+ surrounding areas), Yukon Territory
Festival showcasing the Yukon’s culture, local food, and culinary experts.
EN: I’m so fascinated with far northern places – such different climates and cultures than the hot desert I call home. I think I actually spotted this event last year, but they didn’t have the dates up in time for last summer’s happenings list.

31. Regina Folk Festival (RFF)

Aug 9-11
Victoria Park, Downtown Regina, Saskatchewan
Celebration of music and community that seeks to be a forum for positive artistic, social and cultural development in Regina and Saskatchewan. Tickets: single night CA$70 / general admission CA$148 / free for children under 12

 

+Finland

32. Arctic Art Week

Aug 7-13
Kakslauttanen
Sculptors, painters and other artists from around the world seek inspiration in northern nature and create works of art that will stay at Kakslauttanen on view for future visitors.

+France

33. Géants disparus VR (Extinct Giants VR)

Grande Galerie de l’Évolution in the Cabinet de Réalité Virtuelle (Virtual Reality Room), Paris
30-minute immersive virtual reality journey into the time of the giant animals that populated the earth after the extinction of the dinosaurs. Ages 12+. Advance registration is highly recommended. Tickets may be purchased on site if available. €5 + Galerie admission

  • The titanoboa snake, the giant rhinoceros (baluchithère), the megalodon shark, and the giant sloth (megathère) are modeled in 3D with realistic 360° scenery.
  • A paleontologist explains the reasons for each animal’s size and discusses the mystery of their disappearance.

EN: I happened to see this right after reading an article about these huge caves in Brazil that were most likely carved by giant sloths or other now-extinct animals. I’d love to be able to see them – even if it is through virtual reality goggles.

34. Les Bals des Pompiers (Fire Brigade Balls)

Paris
Bastille Day parties hosted at a dozen fire stations throughout Paris as fundraisers.

EN: I shared this last year, because I think the idea of an annual dance held in a firehouse was pretty cool. I’m sharing it again because I think Paris firefighters deserve an extra shoutout for fighting the Notre Dame blaze, while saving so much of its art.

 

Rockin Food Festival
via Rockin Food Festival

+Ireland

35. Rockin’ Food Festival

Aug 2-5
Enniscorthy, Co. Wexford
Food and music festival with over 80 local and artisan vendors, outdoor concerts with an international line-up of rock ‘n’ roll artists, food and drink workshops, events and classes.

 

La Tavola Marche in Italy
La Tavola Marche inn and cooking school in Piobicco, Italy.

+Italy

36. Arena di Verona Opera Festival

Jun 21 – Sep 7
Verona amphitheatre, Verona
Festival with five opera performances, one concert, one gala night, and a ballet in the spectacular setting of the Verona amphitheater.

37. La Tavola Marche Classes

Piobicco, Le Marche

  • Jul 3-6 or Sep 4-7Wood Oven Workshop. Includes 3 nights’ accommodations, welcome dinner, Wood Oven class with snacks, wine + handmade apron gift. 3 dinners, 1 lunch, breakfast daily.​ €1080/couple or €864/single
  • Oct 15-20: Made in Le Marche: D.O.C. Wine Tour, Artisan Meat and Cheese Market Trip, Craft Beer Tasting + 3 Cooking Classes. Includes 5 nights’ accommodations, welcome dinner, 3 half-day cooking classes with meals, wine + handmade apron gift, 1-day wine tour with lunch and transportation, Pizza Night Dinner, Apecchio market tour and tasting, breakfast daily. €1025/person (Price based on double occupancy.)

EN: This is the place where we stayed, hiked, and took a cooking class in the countryside. I highly recommend it!

38. Leopardi Writing Conference

July 20-28
Recanati, Le Marche
An immersive program for both new and experienced authors with the purpose of fostering community. Conference consists of writing workshops, readings, panel discussions, and craft talks in fiction, nonfiction, and poetry. Tuition $875 (does not include airfare or lodging)

  • There will be a free day to explore the City of Recanati and the surrounding Region of Le Marche.
  • The Gallery Hotel has discounted rates for writers attending the conference.

 

Talleres Nómadas
via Talleres Nómadas

+Morocco/Spain

39. Nomad Workshops: El Valle Feliz 

Jul 31 – Aug 4
Marrakech + Ait Bouguemez (“El Valle Feliz”)
5-day expedition to experience the art and craft of Marrakech and artisan villages in the Atlas Mountains, organized by Duduá (which is dedicated to teaching traditional craft techniques in Barcelona) and local guide Hafida.  €1100 (including IVA). Includes transportation within Morocco, room and board (except Sunday lunch and dinner), excursions, workshops, and tours. Does not include airfare.

  • Activities: Visit rural artisan towns, attend a tapestry workshop with local artisans, visit textile and agricultural cooperatives, take a cooking class with a Berber family, and tour a rose distillery.
  • Lodging in a historic restored kasbah.
  • Once-a-year trip with a group limited to 9 people.
  • 30% deposit required to reserve your spot.

EN: Every part of this trip sounds amazing. 

 

Riddu Riđđu
Foto: Ørjan Bertelsen via Riddu Riđđu

+Norway

40. Riddu Riđđu Festivàla

Jul 10-14
Northern Troms, Norway
28-year-old international festival focused on fostering pride in the art and culture of the Sámi and other indigenous peoples through music, film, seminars, workshops, art, literature, and theatre. Adult day pass 800 NOK / weekend pass 1,400 NOK

  • Camping is free.
  • Takes place annually in the coastal Sami Gáivuotna – Kåfjord municipality in Northern Troms.
  • Riddu Riđđu means “little storm on the coast” in Sami language.

 

Art Inspires Expeditions in “Headhunt Revisited” Documentary

+Papua New Guinea

41. Bougainville Chocolate Festival

Sep 21-22
Buka Autonomous Region of Bougainville, Papua New Guinea
Two-day culinary festival in celebration of award-winning Bougainville cocoa.

 

AgitÁgueda Art Festival
via AgitÁgueda

+Portugal

42. AgitÁgueda Art Festival

July 7-29
Águeda
Music and street art festival with a mission to showcase both established artists and new musical projects. There are local handicraft vendors, concerts, performance art, DJs  Public art in the city of Águeda includes the Umbrella Sky Project, an installation with thousands of umbrellas over the city’s streets.

 

On an Uphill Track: Funiculars

+UK

43. Shetland Wool Week

Sep 28 – Oct 6
Shetland Islands
Annual nine-day festival of of Shetland’s textile heritage with classes, knitting, spinning, dyeing, weaving, tours, exhibitions, open studios, teas, talks and tours.

Shetland sheep
By @foulawool via Shetland Wool Week



The Happenings List is my handpicked list of events for people who love art, craft, and culture. I edit event descriptions for length and clarity and do my best to make sure everything is accurate at the time I’m writing it. (Of course, it’s possible that it’s not.) 

Let me know if you go to anything on this list!



See captions for photo credits. Uncaptioned photos by Phillip or Stephanie Liebold.

Spring 2019 Happenings (Mar/Apr/May)

Spring is just around the corner and not only are wildflowers popping up in the desert, so are a ton of festivals, workshops, exhibitions, and other intriguing events.

cactus and wildflowers

In fact, I’ve picked out 55 of them from Australia, Italy, New Zealand, South Korea, and across the U.S. to share with you.

I thought you might like to attend a traditional pottery festival in South Korea (#54) or hunt for mushrooms in Australia (#46), wander amongst tulip fields (#37) or cherry blossoms (#40), go to a Star Wars Day screening at a cultural center (#5) or an office party that’s actually a dance performance (#23 + #30), see contemporary Aboriginal Australian art in Reno (#32) or ancient terra cotta warriors in Wellington (#50), attend Arizona’s longest-running film festival (#15) or its festival with the shortest films (#7). I’m also including a few summer and fall events that require advance booking, in case you’d like to learn wood oven cooking in an Italian farmhouse (#49) or photograph brown bears in Alaska (#2), for example.

If you could go anywhere on the list, where would it be?


 

Sculpture by Gertrude Svarny
AND SHE BORROWED HER HUSBAND’S EAGLE FEATHER CAPE by Gertrude Svarny via Anchorage Museum

+Alaska

1. Gertrude Svarny: UKUQANAADAN

Now – Apr 14
Anchorage Museum, Anchorage
Exhibition of work by Unangan artist, carver, and weaver Gertrude Svarny, who interprets her history and culture using traditional materials, such as local mineral pigments, seal intestine, and sea lion whiskers.

2. Bear Extravaganza!

June 23-25 or July 5-7
Sterling and Lake Clark National Park (Meet at Homewood Suites in Anchorage)
3-day photography tour in bear country, where you can view about 20-40 bears each day with Lisa Langell plus an additional photography instructor. Includes all meals, transportation (including round trip sea plane flights to/from lodge) and lodging (1 night in Sterling and 2 nights in a lodge adjacent to Lake Clark National Park.) $2695 per person

 

Steamroller prints
Steamroller prints at Phoenix Art Detour.

+Arizona

3. Spring Out to Lunch Concert Series

Now – Mar 14, Thursdays at 12:30pm
Wells Fargo Garden performance area at Mesa Arts Center, Mesa
Weekly outdoor concerts featuring a variety of music. Bring a folding chair or blanket. Pack a picnic lunch or purchase food on-site. Free.

4. NAU’s College of Arts and Letters (CAL) Film Series

Now – Apr 30, Tuesdays at 7pm
Cline Library
at Northern Arizona University, Flagstaff
Film series on youth in the movies with films about coming of age. A local film expert introduces each film and puts it in context. Each film is followed by a discussion. Free. Donations accepted.

  • The CAL film series blends well-known audience favorites along with lesser-known movies, as well as a mix of genres, artists, and decades, moving chronologically from past to present so that audiences can see the evolution of the art form.
  • Free parking behind Cline Library in lot P13 with permit. Create a Guest Account at nau.edu/guest. Then contact NAU Parking by calling 928-523-6623 or emailing ask.parking@nau.edu. Print an evening parking permit for each film and display it on your vehicle dashboard.

 

shamrocks and sunset

5. Irish Cultural Center Events

Downtown Phoenix

  • Now – Jun 27: The Irish in Latin America exhibition in the McClelland Library’s Exhibit Hall. Traveling exhibit of twenty-three informative panels on the history of Irish immigrants and their descendants across Latin America from 1611- 1968. Tickets $10 (free for ages 6 and under).
  • Mar 16, 10am: St. Patrick’s Day Parade, starting at 3rd Street and Sheridan. Free.
  • Mar 16: St. Patrick’s Day Faire at Hance Park, following the Parade. Irish music and dance performances, food, crafts, Irish clubs, vendors, and children’s area. Tickets $12 (free for ages 12 and under). Free parking at 1850 North Central Avenue garage and round-trip event shuttle (9am-6pm) with purchase of St. Patrick’s Day Faire Ticket.
  • May 4, 1pm: “Star Wars: The Force Awakens” screening in the Great Hall. Part of the Irish Family Film Series held on International Star Wars Day, this is a celebration of modern cinema in Ireland, where parts of the movie were filmed. Costumes encouraged. Free.

6. Sedona International Film Festival

Feb 23 – Mar 3
Sedona

25th anniversary celebration of this festival with over 160 independent films from around the world, including features, shorts, documentaries, animation, foreign films, and student films. 10-ticket pack $130.

Museum of contemporary art Tucson

7. Museum of Contemporary Art (MOCA) in Tucson Events

  • Mar 2, 11am-2pm: Soundwalk with MOCA. Urban hike through downtown Tucson’s streets, washes, gardens, and parks led by local field recordist David Dearmore, who will help you discern the distinct sounds of the city using a combination of “naked-ear” and amplified listening. Participants are encouraged to bring their own recording gear, though some will be provided. Not wheelchair accessible. Registration recommended. Fee $30.
  • Mar 29, 2:30-9:30pm: Echo Chamber: a day of experimental music performances in The Great Hall. Admission $5.
  • Apr 27: New Histories: AZ Juried Youth Art Exhibition. MOCA Tucson’s inaugural juried statewide youth art exhibition for painting, sculpture, photography, video, performance, and all 2D/3D and time-based mediums.
  • May 24: 5 Minute Film Festival on Cox Plaza. Festival of documentary, short films, animation, and experimental video that are 5 minutes in length or shorter by filmmakers living or working in Southern Arizona. Free.

8. Molé Feast

March 2, 10am–2pm
Amerind Museum, Dragoon
Prepare three traditional Oaxacan Molés — Molé Negro (which uses over 20 ingredients, including bittersweet chocolate), Molé Rojo (which adds dried fruit), and Molé Manchamantales (the “tablecloth stainer” with vibrant red chiles and tomatoes, fresh pineapple, plantain, and honey, and no chocolate). The feast will be rounded out with roasted chicken, rice, tortillas, and a spicy hot chocolate pudding for dessert. To register, call Amerind at 520-586-3666 or email Debbie@amerind.org. Cost: $85 for non-members (feast included!)

9. Field to Feast Tour

March 6, 8am-1:30pm
Visitor Information Center, Yuma
(201 N. 4th Ave.)
Half-day farm tour. Hands-on harvesting instruction from a local grower followed by lunch made from the produce you picked. Includes transportation, some veggies to take home, and a healthy, field-fresh lunch. Tickets $55.

 

Rosson House Museum in Heritage Square, Phoenix

10. Modern Calligraphy Workshop

March 7 @ 6:00 pm – 8:00 pm
The Bungalow@Heritage Square

Learn how to upgrade your handwritten projects with modern calligraphy. You will receive attentive instruction, time to make a few projects, and a goodie bag of supplies to take home, including an instruction booklet. Fee $20 – $22

 

11. Art Detour

Mar 14-18
Downtown Phoenix

Five-day, multi-faceted exploration of Phoenix arts and culture at approximately 100 artist studios, galleries, pop-up spaces and other venues, open to the community. Meet artists, see and shop for art, and enjoy live performances.

  • Mar 14: Opening night Art D’Core Gala at Warehouse215 at Bentley Projects to benefit Artlink Inc. Advance tickets: $20/person, $35/pair. At the door: $25/person, $45/pair. Creative cocktail attire encouraged.
  • Mar 15-17: Self-guided art space tours, performances, and events.
  • Mar 16, 11am: Guided tour of the art and architecture of Burton Barr Central Library.
  • Mar 18: Creative City Symposium.

Steamrolled Art

12. Spring Heritage Pecan + Wine Festival

Mar 16- 17
Community Field, Camp Verde
Wine tasting and all-ages festival with a pie baking contest, archaelogy fair, canoe and kayak racing, 40 vendors, and activities for kids.

  • Mar 17, 11am: Pecan Pie Contest. Competition for the best pecan pie made with local ingredients.

13. Arizona Quilters Guild Quilt Show

March 21-23
Mesa Convention Center, Mesa
Non-juried show that gives quilt makers the opportunity to share their work with the community. There will be quilts on display, lectures, vendors, quilt appraisals ($75), and a live auction. One-day pass $15 / two-day pass $20.

  • Mar 21, 5-8:30pm: Preview night. $5 admission.

14. Chef’s Wine Dinner Series

Mar 23 + April 25
Garden at Bar Bianco, Phoenix

Monthly four-course meal with local and seasonal ingredients hosted by Bar Bianco. Each dinner will be paired with wines from a different winery. Reception starts at 6:30pm with dinner to follow. Tickets $150-250.
Featured wineries:

  • Mar 23: POE
  • Apr 25: Chef’s Choice

Independent Filmmaker Insights from AZIFF

15. Arizona International Film Festival (AZIFF)

April 10-21
The Screening Room (and other venues), Tucson
Film festival with a focus on independent cinema and diverse cultures.

16. Agave Heritage Festival

Apr 23 – May 5
Downtown Tucson
Celebration of the agave plant that includes culinary events, art, music, garden tours, and seminars.

agave at hotel congress in tucson

17. Verde Valley Birding + Nature Festival

Apr 25-28
Cottonwood
4-day event with guided walks, workshops, vendors, and exhibitors focused on the Verde Valley habitat. Register online by April 17 or on-site starting April 24.

  • Apr 27, 6:30-8pm: Food + Fun: For the Birds at Calavera Mexican Restaurant, (747 S Main St., Cottonwood). Mixer with a taco bar and musical program and storytelling by Still on the Hill. $40 advanced registration required.
  • 2019 Featured Artist Michelle Haveri.
  • Keynote Speaker: John Marzluff, Professor of Wildlife Science, University of Washington.
  • Camping available at Dead Horse Ranch State Park.

18. Sedona Spring Artist Open Studios Tour

April 26-28
Studios throughout the Verde Valley

Tour over 50 artists’ studios in Sedona and nearby towns. Free.

19. Free Comic Book Day

May 4, 10am-5pm
Gotham City Comics and throughout Downtown Mesa
Participating downtown Mesa businesses will give away over 10,000 comic books (while supplies last) and host meet-and-greets with comic book artists. There will also be live music, a cosplay contest and a scavenger hunt. Free.

 

Pasadena roses
Pasadena City Hall.

+California

20. Bright Black World

NowMar 30
Casemore Kirkeby Gallery, San Francisco

Exhibition of new work by artist Todd Hido. It explores the dark topography of the Northern European landscape during his first foray extensively photographing territory outside of the United States.

21. Origami in the Garden²

NowApr 14
Rancho Santa Ana Botanic Garden, Claremont
Outdoor sculpture exhibition of larger-than-life origami creations by Jennifer and Kevin Box.

 

Jungle Garden

22. Blue Boy Restoration Project

NowSep (estimated)
Huntington Art Gallery, San Marino (Pasadena)
Watch the process of conservation work on the iconic painting The Blue Boy (ca. 1770) by Thomas Gainsborough each Thursday and Friday, 10am – noon + 2-4pm and 2-4pm on the first Sunday of the month. This is one segment of Project Blue Boy, which is ongoing from September 22, 2018 to September 30, 2019.

  • Free admission with advance reservation 1st Thursday of every month, 10am–5pm.

23. Happy Hour

Monica Bill Barnes + Company’s immersive dance show at an after-work office party.

  • Mar 28, 6pm at The Loft – Weill Hall, Sonoma State University, Rohnert Park. Tickets $25-45.
  • March 30, 7 + 9:30pm at Laxson Auditorium (Arts Room 108), California State University Chico, Chico. Tickets $35.

24. Public Program: Land + Texture: Exploring Iceland For Content In Artists Books

Apr 2, 6–8pm,
San Francisco Center for the Book, San Francisco

Book artist and letterpress printer Brooke Holve reports back on Book Iceland, her 2018 residency project, where she led artist book workshops focused on the process of making and inspired by Iceland’s landscape.

  • Presentation begins promptly at 6:30pm.

 

San Francisco is for makers

25. Spring Open Studios

April 6-7, 12-6pm
1890 Bryant Street Studios, San Francisco

Open studios event at a center for fine artists and craftspersons including bakers, ceramicists, designers, jewelers, musicians, painters, photographers, printmakers, sculptors, and vintners.

  • Apr 5, 6-9pm: Friday Preview Reception.

26. Jackalope Art Fair

A weekend of shopping featuring local, hand-selected artisans, crafters, and DIY enthusiasts selling original fashion, jewelry, ceramics, paper goods, housewares, art, and photography. Both locations below are handicap accessible, open to all ages, and allow leashed pets. Free admission.

  • Apr 27-28, 10am – 5pm: Central Park, Pasadena.
  • May 18-19, 11am – 7pm: Downtown Burbank Arts Festival (San Fernando Blvd), Burbank.

 

1957 Silver Streak Trailer
Photo via Forney Museum of Transportation, Denver.

+Colorado

27. Home Is Wherever You Park

NowMar 30
Forney Museum of Transportation, Denver

Exhibit of vintage camping trailers that looks at the history and various styles of the “Home away from home.” Museum admission $12.

28. Winter Park Express

Mar 1-3, 8-10, 16-17, 23-24, 30-31
Denver Union Station

Historic weekend train trip from Denver Union Station to Winter Park, which originated in 1912. Tickets $39, $49, $59, subject to availability.

29. Annual Denver March Pow-wow

Mar 22-24, 10am-10pm
Historic Denver Coliseum, Denver

Performance of historical tribal dances by over 1,000 American Indian Dancers, accompanied by 30+ drum groups. $7/day, elders (60+) $3, children under 6 free

 

Monica Bill Barnes + Company's Happy Hour performance
Photo via Monica Bill Barnes + Company.

+Massachusetts

30. Happy Hour

Mar 12-16, 6pm
District Hall, Boston

Monica Bill Barnes + Company’s immersive dance show at an after-work office party. Tickets $35.

 

art sent to Hearts4Vegas

+Nevada

31. Hearts4Vegas Touring Exhibition

NowApr 15
Veterans Memorial Community Center, Las Vegas
A traveling exhibition of items sent to Las Vegas from all over the world expressing love and support in the aftermath of the tragic events of October 1, 2017.

32. The Inside World: Contemporary Aboriginal Australian Memorial Poles

Now – June 23
Nevada Museum of Art, Reno

94 works by contemporary Aboriginal artists from Arnhem Land. Traditionally, these poles (named lorrkkon or larrakitj) marked the final point in Aboriginal mortuary rites. Today, they are made as works of art. Museum admission: $10 (free for children under 5)

33. VESSEL: Ceramics of Ancient West Mexico

NowAug 17
Marjorie Barrick Museum of Art, Las Vegas
Exhibition exploring form and function through ceramic vessels from West Mexico. Suggested voluntary contribution: $5

 

ETA in NH
Enormous Tiny Art Show via Nahcotta Gallery in Portsmouth, NH.

+New Hampshire

34. Enormous Tiny Art Show

Nahcotta gallery, Portsmouth, NH
Year-round exhibition both online and in the gallery with hundreds of pieces of original art — each ten by ten inches or smaller — made by artists from all over the globe. The aim is to give art lovers the ability to acquire well-curated, small works of art.

 

Dumplings at local roots
Photo via Local Roots NYC.

+New York

35. Local Roots Dumpling Making Party

Feb 28, 6:30pm
WeWork, New York
Learn how to make your own dumplings with cookbook author Cathy Erway. Workshop is open to the public. Admission $50 (including online ticket fee).

  • Followed by baked bao demonstration and snacking on dumplings.
  • Complimentary beer available courtesy of WeWork.
  • To celebrate the year of the pig, you can take home 1 pack of Local Roots ground pork for making more dumplings.

36. Rini Music

Apr 20, 7pm
Rockwood Music Hall Stage, New York

Concert of Indian electronica and art rock. Ages 21+. General admission $10.

  • Doors: 6:30pm
  • Two drink minimum.

 

Tulip fest at Wooden Shoe Tulip Farm
Photo via Wooden Shoe Tulip Farm.

+Oregon

37. Wooden Shoe Tulip Fest

Mar 23 – Apr 2
Wooden Shoe Tulip Farm, Woodbury

Festival with fresh flowers and food. Stroll through 40 acres of blooming tulip and daffodil bulbs with views of vineyards and distant mountains. All ages and dogs (on leashes) allowed.

  • Individual admission (one person for one day) $5
  • Family car day pass (one carload of people for one day) $20
  • Season pass (one carload of people for the entire festival) $40
  • Children ages 12 and under are free.

 

+Tennessee

38. Annual Spring Tennessee Craft Fair

May 3-5
Centennial Park Lawn, Nashville
Outdoor event celebrating and supporting American handmade craft.

 

Prince Michel wine from ablemarle county virginia

+Virginia

39. Spring Wine Festival + Sunset Tour

May 17-19, 6-9pm
Mount Vernon
Sample wines made in Virginia, while enjoying views of the Potomac River. Tickets $42-52

  • Take a Mansion tour and visit Washington’s wine cellar. Learn about the Founding Fathers’ successes and failures with wine.
  • Bring a blanket and relax on the lawn.
  • All proceeds benefit the ongoing preservation and restoration of Mount Vernon and its educational programs. 

 

 

Washington monument

+Washington D.C.

40. National Cherry Blossom Festival

Mar 20 – Apr 13
National Mall area

  • Mar 23, 5pm: Opening Ceremony at Warner Theatre. Performance of selections from the new musical “Pretty Guardian Sailor Moon.” Advance tickets required. $5 fee.
  • Mar 30, 10am-4:30pm: Blossom Kite Festival at Washington Monument Grounds. Kite competitions and demonstrations, public field for flying your own kite, kids’ kite-making activity station, and kite vendors. Free.
  • Apr 13, 10am-12pm: Parade along Constitution Avenue with floats, giant helium balloons, marching bands, and entertainment. Standing along the route is free, Grandstand Seating $20.

41. Shenson Chamber Music Concerts

National Museum of Women in the Arts (NMWA)
Annual concert series of women musicians. Free, subject to availability. Registration required.

Women in the Arts and a Pop-up Makerspace

42. NMWA’s New York Avenue Sculpture Project

Now – Sep 20, 2020
New York Avenue (east of the White House)
Public art space featuring changing installations of contemporary works by women artists. Currently on display is Huellas y cicatricez (Traces and scars), four totemic sculptures by Mexico City-based Betsabeé Romero that speak to themes of human migration and the natural environment. The structures are constructed from carved tires with gleaming metallic paint and interior lighting.

 

Seattle Space Needle

+Washington

43. Spencer Finch: The Western Mystery

Now – Mar 3
Olympic Sculpture Park, Seattle

Installation of suspended glass panes that are, in the words of the artist, “creating a moving abstraction of a sunset.”

 

44. Open Sesame! The Magic of Artist’s Books Revealed

Mar 1 – Jun 9
Bainbridge Island Museum of Art (BIMA), Bainbridge Island
Installation of Artist’s Books, a lesser-known art form, which may combine drawing, painting, printmaking, collage, gluing and binding, sculpture, photography, textiles, creative writing, and storytelling. While many university libraries have artists’ books in their Special Collections, BIMA seeks to make the art form more visible to the public. Free.

 

St Erth Garden in Victoria
The Garden of St Erth via The Diggers Club Pty Ltd.

INTERNATIONAL

+Australia

45. St Erth Workshops

St Erth Gardens, Blackwood, Victoria

  • Mar 31, 2pm: Flower Power: A Complete Flower Garden. Learn how to have a variety of flowers all year round. Fee: $49
  • Apr 14, 11am: Starting Your Apple Orchard. Learn about the best cider-making fruit varieties and rootstocks, and how to grow and maintain your own fruit trees at home. Afterwards, tour the St Erth orchard and stay for the afternoon cider making session. Fee: $49
  • Apr 14, 2pm: Cider Making At Home. Learn about the basic equipment you need to brew your own cider. Fee: $49
  • Apr 28, 11am: Basketry With Natural Fibres. Intimate Masterclass on gathering and drying natural fibres, and weaving with Random weave and Stitching weave methods. Bring your own snips. All other materials supplied. Includes a light lunch and glass of wine. Fee: $99
  • May 19, 2pm: Organic Pest Control. Learn how to control pests and weeds in your garden the natural way.  Fee: $49

 

46. Anzac Day Mushroom Hunt

Apr 25, 12-4:15pm
Gellibrand, Victoria
Introductory workshop on Kingdom Fungi in the Otways region, as well as wider Australian and global contexts. Fungi will be discussed in regard to their ecological roles, edibility, and toxicity. Fee: $50

  • 90-minute interactive session on the basics of fungus identification where participants will get to handle, examine and identify various fungi.
  • 2-hour foray through various local ecosystems to search for species of interest.

 

La Tavola Marche in Italy
La Tavola Marche inn and cooking school in Piobicco, Italy.

+Italy

47. Carnival of Venice

Now – Mar 5
St. Mark’s Square, Venice
Pre-Lenten celebrations with revelers in elaborate masks and costumes.

48. Salone del Mobile.Milano

Apr 13-14
Fiera Milano, Rho (Milan)
Showcase for Italian furniture and design trends. Admission €25 online / €29 at the door

49. La Tavola Marche Classes

  • Jul 3-6 or Sep 4-7Wood Oven Workshop. Includes 3 nights’ accommodations, welcome dinner, Wood Oven class with snacks, wine + handmade apron gift. 3 dinners, 1 lunch, breakfast daily.​ €1080/couple or €864/single
  • Oct 15-20: Made in Le Marche: D.O.C. Wine Tour, Artisan Meat and Cheese Market Trip, Craft Beer Tasting + 3 Cooking Classes. Includes 5 nights’ accommodations, welcome dinner, 3 half-day cooking classes with meals, wine + handmade apron gift, 1-day wine tour with lunch and transportation, Pizza Night Dinner, Apecchio market tour and tasting, breakfast daily. €1025/person (Price based on double occupancy.)

A Hike in Le Marche

+New Zealand

50. Terracotta Warriors: Guardians of Immortality

Now – Apr 22
Toi Art, Level 4, Wellington
Exhibition featuring eight of the famous 2,300-year-old terra-cotta warriors found at the tomb of China’s First Emperor, two full-size horses, two half-size replica bronze chariots, and over 160 works of ancient Chinese art (from 1046 BCE – 220 CE) crafted from gold, jade and bronze. Admission $9.

 

51. Māoriland Film Festival

Mar 20-24
Ōtaki
New Zealand Film Festival that welcomes Indigenous filmmakers from around the world to celebrate Indigenous creativity and storytelling.

 

52. CubaDupa

Mar 30-31
Wellington
Festival with a wide range of street performances, including theater, bands, and opera, as well as a parade and interactive art installations. 2019 performers include Cha Wa (New Orleans), Tequila Mockingbird Orchestra (Canada), Electric Fields (Sydney), Hot Potato (Sydney), Alien Weaponry (NZ), Touch Compass (NZ), Tunes of I (Wellington), Phoenix Foundation (Wellington). Free.

 

Lotus Lantern Festival parade in Seoul
Lotus Lantern Festival via Visit Korea.

+South Korea

53. Awakenings: Art in Society in Asia 1960s – 1990s

Now – May 6
National Museum of Modern and Contemporary Art, Gwacheon
Large-scale international exhibition illuminating the social, political, and cultural changes that occurred throughout Asia from the 1960s to the 1990s and subsequent changes in Asian contemporary art. Includes approximately 170 works by 100 major artists from 13 Asian countries: Korea, Japan, China, Taiwan, Hong Kong, Singapore, Malaysia, Indonesia, the Philippines, Thailand, India, Myanmar, and Cambodia.

54. Mungyeong Traditional Chasabal Festival (문경 전통찻사발축제)

Apr 27 – May 5
Mungyeongsaejae Open Set in Gyeongsangbuk-do
Festival of traditional ceramics. Visitors will be able to join in traditional tea ceremony and pottery-making programs, operated by local artisans.

55. Yeon Deung Hoe (Lotus Lantern Festival) (연등회)

May 3-5
Jongno Street, Cheonggyecheon Stream, Jogyesa Temple, and Bongeunsa Temple, Seoul
Thousand-year-old festival to celebrate Buddha’s birthday and wish the world happiness by lighting lanterns.

  • May 3-12: Exhibition of Traditional Lanterns.
  • May 4, 7-9pm: Lantern Parade on Jongno Street (from Dongdaemun Gate to Jogyesa Temple). Thousands of lanterns will create waves of light flowing through the heart of metropolitan Seoul. Anyone can participate.
  • May 4, 9:30-11pm: Cultural performances at Jonggak Intersection. Lively group dance under a rain of flowers.
  • May 5, 4-7pm: Traditional Cultural Events in front of Jogyesa Temple. Folk performances including songs, dances and rope walking, along with Buddhist performances, plus a variety of hands-on cultural experiences, such as lantern making and temple food tasting.
  • May 5, 7-9pm: Yeondeungnori (Final Celebration) from Insa-dong to Jogyesa Temple. Following the performance groups, another lantern parade will be held to express the aspiration for peace and happiness all over the world.

 

Blossoms in Southern Arizona
Spring blossoms at Chiricahua National Monument near Willcox, Arizona.



The Happenings List is sourced from a combination of places I’ve visited, Instagram posts, posters I’ve walked by, internet rabbit trails, small-town community bulletin boards, email lists I’m on, and old fashioned hearsay. I fact check as much as I can and edit event descriptions for length and clarity.

I can’t go to everything (no matter how much I’d like to), so I’d love your feedback on any Happenings you’ve participated in! 

-S



See captions for photo credits. Uncredited photos by Phillip or Stephanie Liebold.

50 Places To Go in 2019: Winter Happenings List

2019 is a year you can kick off with an organ concert in San Diego (see #27) or a cliffside mansion tour in Superior (#9). In February, treat your sweetie to dinner under the date palms of Imperial Valley (#5), wear a carnival mask in Venice (#44), visit Southwest Maker Fest in Mesa (#21), celebrate Waitangi Day in Wellington (#47), or take in the mineral shows in Tucson (#19).

What are your plans for the new year?

To get you started, here are 50 happenings coming up in the U.S., Canada, Italy, New Zealand, and Peru in the first part of 2019. I thought these were all worth checking out, so, instead of ranking them, I ordered them by place and time.

 

AND SHE BORROWED HER HUSBAND’S EAGLE FEATHER CAPE by Gertrude Svarny via Anchorage Museum

+Alaska

1. Gertrude Svarny: UKUQANAADAN

Now – Apr 14
Anchorage Museum, Anchorage
Exhibition of work by Unangan artist, carver, and weaver Gertrude Svarny, who interprets her history and culture using traditional materials, such as local mineral pigments, seal intestine, and sea lion whiskers.

 

Date night salad
Yuma Date Night Dinner

+Arizona

2. Merry Main Street: Winter Wonderland Ice Rink

Now – Jan 4
Mesa City Plaza, Downtown Mesa

  • Monday – Friday 5-10pm, Saturday + Sunday (+ Jan 1) 12-10 pm.
  • $10 per person, including skates, for 1 hour.
  • Free parking in all open lots and on-street parking areas in Downtown Mesa.

 

3. Teotihuacan: City of Water, City of Fire

Now – Jan 27
Phoenix Art Museum, Phoenix
Major traveling exhibition exploring the archaeological history of Teotihuacan, the first metropolis on the American continent, through more than 200 artifacts – both art and domestic objects – from the National Museum of Anthropology in Mexico City. The Aztecs discovered the ruins of the city on the Mexican Central Plateau in the 14th century and named it Teotihuacan, “the place where gods were born.” Included with paid Museum admission. $5 during voluntary-donation times.

 

4. Chef’s Wine Dinner Series

Now – April
Garden at Bar Bianco, Phoenix

Monthly four-course meal with local and seasonal ingredients hosted by Bar Bianco. Each dinner will be paired with wines from a different winery. Reception starts at 6:30pm with dinner to follow. Tickets $150-250.

Featured wineries:

  • Jan 24: Vineyard Brands
  • Feb 26: Field Recordings
  • Mar 23: POE
  • Apr 25: TBA

 

5. Date Night Dinners

Jan 4 + 18, Feb 8 + 16, Mar 1
Imperial Date Gardens (near Yuma)

Gourmet dinner served outdoors in a date grove with dates in every course. Presented by Yuma Visitors Bureau. Tickets $80.

  • 5:30pm: On-site walking tour.
  • 6pm: Dinner.

 

The Ultimate Date Night

 

6. Field to Feast Tour

Jan 9, 10, 16, 17, 23, 24, 30, 31
February 6, 7, 9, 13, 14, 27
March 2, 6
Visitor Information Center, Yuma
(201 N. 4th Ave.)
Half-day farm tour. Hands-on harvesting instruction from a local grower followed by lunch made from the produce you picked. Includes transportation, some veggies to take home, and a healthy, field-fresh lunch. Tickets $55.

 

7. Spring Out to Lunch Concert Series

Jan 10 – Mar 14, Thursdays at 12:30pm
Wells Fargo Garden performance area at Mesa Arts Center, Mesa
Weekly outdoor concerts featuring a variety of music. Bring a folding chair or blanket. Pack a picnic lunch or purchase food on-site. Free.

 

8. Spirit of the City Guided Bike Tours

Visitor Information Center, Yuma (201 N. 4th Ave.)

  • Jan 11 + Feb 15: Downtown Bike Tour of the Colorado River Historic State Park, Armed Forces Park, Main Street, and the Sanguinetti House Museum. Includes bike, helmet, water, fun pack, and lunch. Tickets $45.
  • Jan 22 + Feb 22: Riverfront Bike Tour. Explore East and West Wetlands paths, viewpoints, history and wildlife, plus the history of the Territorial Prison Cemetery. Includes bike, helmet, water, fun pack, and lunch. Tickets $45.

 

9. Picket Post House Tour

Jan 12-13, Feb 2-3
Boyce Thompson Arboretum State Park (BTA), Superior

Rare opportunity to walk through Colonel William Boyce Thompson’s mansion on the cliffs overlooking the Arboretum. Purchase tickets at the BTA gift shop on the day you’d like to go – they will not be sold in advance. Tickets $20 (for self-guided Picket Post House tour) plus Arboretum admission ($15).

 

January 2017 Photo: Mansion View

10. Amerind Museum Events

Amerind Museum, Dragoon

  • Jan 12, 10:30am + 2:00pm: Agave is Life documentary screening. Q+A with the film’s producer and director immediately following each showing. Included with Museum admission.
  • Feb 2–3, 10am–4pm: The Art of Jewelry Workshop with master jeweler-metalsmith Duane Maktima (Hopi-Laguna). To register call Amerind at 520-586-3666 or email amerind@amerind.org. Class fee: $200 per person (includes lunches). / Class fee with accommodations: $430 per person (double occupancy, includes overnight accommodations and meals).
  • February 8–10, 10am–4pmMata Ortiz Show and Sale. Art on display and for sale by Chihuahua pottery artists Hector Gallegos Jr., Laura Bugarini, Graciela Martinez. and Hector Gallegos Sr.; Zapotec weaver Porfirio Gutierrez; and Taxco Silver jewelers. Daily weaving presentations at 2pm and pottery demonstrations. Included with Museum admission.
  • February 18-22: Navajo Weaving Workshop with 5th generation Navajo weavers Barbara Teller Ornelas and Lynda Teller Pete. To register call Amerind at 520-586-3666 or email amerind@amerind.org. Class fee: $1530 per person (includes all supplies and lunches).  / Class fee with accommodations: $2160 per person (double occupancy, includes all supplies, overnight accommodations and meals).
  • March 2, 10am–2pm: Molé Feast! Prepare three traditional Oaxacan Molés — Molé Negro (which uses over 20 ingredients, including bittersweet chocolate), Molé Rojo (which adds dried fruit), and Molé Manchamantales (the “tablecloth stainer” with vibrant red chiles and tomatoes, fresh pineapple, plantain, and honey, and no chocolate). The feast will be rounded out with roasted chicken, rice, tortillas, and a spicy hot chocolate pudding for dessert. To register, call Amerind at 520-586-3666 or email Debbie@amerind.org. Cost: $85 for non-members (feast included!)

 

11. Well Fed Artist Workshop Series

3rd Wednesday of every month (January – June 2019)
Mesa Arts Center (Contemporary Art Building Classroom), Mesa
A series of workshops lead by working artists on networking and professional skills for artists, entrepreneurs, and makers. Refreshments provided. Free. Registration required.

  • Jan 16: DIY Publishing: How to share your voice through zines with Charissa Lucille from Wasted Ink Zine Distro
  • Feb 20: Active Listening: Sharing People’s Stories Through Podcasting with Jaye McAuliffe, audio journalist and producer.

 

12. East Valley Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Parade and Festival

Jan 21, 11am
Downtown Mesa
Parade and community celebration from the Mesa Convention Center down Center Street and 1st Street, ending near the IDEA Museum (route map). Free.

  • 12-4pm: Festival at Macdonald Street, just north of Main. Music and art celebrating the legacy of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.

 

13. A Wild Life: Talk by Photographer Bertie Gregory

Talk by photographer Bertie Gregory, who specializes in intimate shots of animals in their natural environment, including spaces where nature and humanity coexist.

  • Jan 22, 7:30pm: Del E Webb Center, Wickenburg. Tickets $35.
  • Jan 23, 7:30pm: Mesa Arts Center, Mesa. Tickets $27-41.
  • Jan 24, 10:15am: Student Matinee with Q+A. Recommended for grades 3-8. Mesa Arts Center, Mesa. Student, teacher + chaperone tickets $4. Reservations: 480-644-6540.

 

old city hall in yuma arizona
Old City Hall, Yuma

14. Savor Yuma

Jan 22, Feb 12 + 19, Mar 5
Old City Hall, Yuma

Progressive dining experience with a tour bus that takes you to sample food at several Yuma eateries. Tickets $60.

 

15. We Shall Overcome: A Celebration Of Martin Luther King, Jr.

Jan 25, 7:30pm
Piper Repertory Theater at Mesa Arts Center, Mesa
Concert of music from across African American traditions interwoven with spoken word from Dr. King’s speeches. Tickets $41.

 

16. Brunch Bash

Jan 26, 10am – 4pm
Cityscape, Phoenix
Festival of brunch with food and cocktail samples, live music, and beach games. A portion of the proceeds go to One N Ten. General Admisison $8 online / $10 at the door / free for kids (ages 12 and under). Additional food and beverage items available for purchase ($2-$15).

 

17. Tempe FanCon (formerly Tempe Public Library Comicon)

Jan 26, 10am – 4pm
Tempe Public Library, Tempe

Celebration of comics and pop culture with costume contests, authors and artists, photo ops with characters, fandom related items for sale, and food trucks. Free.

 

2018 Quilt, Craft + Sewing Festival

18. Quilt, Craft + Sewing Festival

Jan 31 – Feb 2
Arizona Fairgrounds
Expo with sewing, quilting, needlework, and craft supply vendors (both local and national), as well as workshops and presentations. Admission $12 (full event). $2 off with online coupon (printable PDF).

 

19. Tucson Gem, Mineral & Fossil Showcase

Feb 2-17
Tucson
Two weeks of gem shows, including the original Tucson Gem + Mineral Show® plus dozens of satellite shows – many with free admission.

  • Jan 24 – Feb 16, 9am-6pm: Granada Gallery. Minerals, fossils, jewelry and sculptures carved from gemstones, plus natural history displays.
  • Feb 2-17, 7am-6pm: African Art Village at Cushing Street + Linda Avenue. Approximately 125 exhibitors from various countries in Africa showcase masks, beads, statues, fabrics, shea butter, and food. 
  • Feb 14-17: Tucson Gem & Mineral Show® at the Tucson Convention Center. 65th annual expo presented by the Tucson Gem + Mineral Society with exhibits, vendors, giveaways, lectures, and junior education area. Tickets $13 (available Jan 16) / Kids 14 and under are free with paid adult. / $2 off with online coupon (printable PDF).

h/t Visit Tucson

 

Tucson Music Hall

20. Greater Phoenix Jewish Film Festival

Feb 10-24
Peoria, Scottsdale, Tempe
Merger of the Phoenix Jewish Film Festival (PJFF) and the East Valley Jewish Film Festival (EVJFF) that presents films on the themes of Jewish life worldwide. The Festival aims to increase awareness in the Valley of the Sun of the variety and richness of Jewish culture.
Single tickets: $11 online / $13 at the door. Festival Pass: $150

 

21. Southwest Maker Fest

Feb 16, 10am – 4pm
Downtown Mesa

Collaborative, one-day festival of makers seeking to achieve the vision of a connected community, empowered by creativity. Free admission.

Southwest Maker Fest 2016

 

22. Sedona International Film Festival

February 23 – March 3
Sedona

25th anniversary celebration of this festival with over 160 independent films from around the world, including features, shorts, documentaries, animation, foreign films, and student films. 10-ticket pack $130.

 

The Blue Boy painting
The Blue Boy (ca. 1770) by Thomas Gainsborough at The Huntington

+California

23. Blue Boy Restoration Project

Now – Jan or Feb 2019 (estimated)
Huntington Art Gallery, San Marino (Pasadena)
Watch the process of conservation work on the iconic painting The Blue Boy (ca. 1770) by Thomas Gainsborough each Thursday and Friday, 10am – noon + 2-4pm and 2-4pm on the first Sunday of the month. This is one segment of Project Blue Boy, which is ongoing from September 22, 2018 to September 30, 2019.

  • Free admission with advance reservation 1st Thursday of every month, 10am–5pm.

 

Jungle Garden

 

24. Museum of Latin American Art (MOLAA) Exhibits

Long Beach

  • Now – Feb 3: Ink. Photography exhibit exploring the histories of Long Beach, the US Navy, and LA Chicano culture through tattoo art and the personal stories of 6 community members. Ink looks at the importance of the tattoo art form in Southern California and throughout the world.
  • Jan 12, 10am: Dream Mask Workshop. Day-long workshop with psychotherapist Lynne Okon Scholnick, who will lead participants in making a mask by casting their own face and then personalizing it with images or objects related to a dream they’re had. Participants should bring photographs or found objects related to the symbology of their dream, as well as a sack lunch. All other materials will be provided. Fee: $45
  • Free Museum admission Sundays 11am–5pm + 4th Friday of every month, 5–9pm.

 

25. Origami in the Garden²

Now – Apr 14, 2019
Rancho Santa Ana Botanic Garden, Claremont
Outdoor sculpture exhibition of larger-than-life origami creations by Jennifer and Kevin Box.

 

26. PostSecret Exhibtion 

Now – 2020
Museum of Man, San Diego

A collection of the handmade postcards submitted to the PostSecret community art project from millions of people from all over the world anonymously sharing their secrets. Included with admission ($13).

  • You can submit a postcard of your own or share you secret by leaving a voicemail at 619-269-3894.

 

27. Spreckels Organ New Year’s Day Concert

Jan 1, 2-3pm
Spreckels Organ at Balboa Park, San Diego
Outdoor concert celebrating the 104th Anniversary of the Spreckels Organ with Civic Organist Emeritus Jared Jacobsen. All ages. Free admission.

June 2018: Spreckels Organ

 

28. Craftcation: Business + Makers Conference

Apr 3-7
Ventura Beach Marriott, Ventura
Four days of creative business classes and craft workshops. Registration $475 (+ticket fee) through Jan 17 / $498 (+ticket fee) Jan 17 – Mar 1

 

Golden, Colorado
Golden, Colorado

+Colorado

29. MLK Day 2019 Celebration

Jan 17-21
Grand Junction

  • Jan 18, 7pm: Poetry Slam at Charlie Dwellington’s.
  • Jan 19, 4pm: MLK Jr. Celebration Potluck
  • Jan 20: Avalon Theater Movie Day. “42” at 3pm + “The Hate U Give” at 7pm. Tickets for each film are $5.
  • Jan 21: Commemorative March.

 

30. Colorado Environmental Film Festival (CEFF)

Feb 21-23
The American Mountaineering Center (AMC), Golden
Screenings of films that aim to motivate audiences to awareness and action on environmental issues.

 

DIA paper dolls
via DIA

+Michigan

31. Detroit Institute of Arts (DIA) Exhibits

Detroit

  • Now – Feb 17, 2019: Lost + Found. Exhibition showcasing the “accidental” art form of vernacular photography, featuring salvaged snapshots by amateur photographers, including over 500 of 1970s Detroit.
  • Jan 11, 7pm + 8:30pm: Friday Night Live! The Michigan Philharmonic’s Miniature Masterpieces. Included with admission.
  • Jan 12 + Jan 13, 2pm: DFT Animation Club: Liyana. Screening of the film Liyana, which follows five orphaned children from Swaziland as they craft a collective fairytale drawn from their darkest memories and brightest dreams. Their fictional character, Liyana, is brought to life as she embarks on a perilous quest to rescue her young twin brothers. Ages 10+. General admission $5

Drop-In Workshops

Make and takes in the Detroit Institute of Arts – Art-Making Studio. Included with DIA admission.

 

Barrick Museum UNLV

+Nevada

32. VESSEL: Ceramics of Ancient West Mexico

Now – Aug 17
Marjorie Barrick Museum of Art, Las Vegas
Exhibition exploring form and function through ceramic vessels from West Mexico. Suggested voluntary contribution: $5

 

7 Vegas Things to Do Off the Strip

Vogue Knitting Live
via Vogue Knitting LIVE

+New York

33. Judson Dance Theater: The Work Is Never Done

Now – Feb 3, 2019
The Museum of Modern Art, Floor 2, Marron Atrium

Gallery exhibition, print publication, and performance program that celebrates the Judson Dance Theater, a group of choreographers, visual artists, composers, and filmmakers in the 1960s who would go on to profoundly shape all fields of art in the second half of the 20th century.

 

34. Vogue Knitting LIVE

Jan 25-27
New York Marriott Marquis, New York
Experiential knitting event with workshops at all skill levels on fit and shaping, pattern writing, lace, and socks. The weekend also includes designer fashion shows, a knitted art gallery, and a Marketplace with new yarn and accessories from around the world. 2-day Marketplace Ticket: $25 / Single 3-Hour Class: $120 / Packages: $130-985

 

+Pennsylvania

35. The Space in Between

Now – Feb 11
Old City Publishing (InLiquid Vestibule), Philadelphia
Signature fiber installation of the intricate hand-crocheted work of artist and international yarn-bomber Melissa Maddonni Haims.

 

+Oregon

36. Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art Exhibitions

University of Oregon, Eugene
Admission $5. Voluntary donations Wednesdays 5-8pm, the first Friday of each month, and home football game weekends.

  • Now – Jan 20: Matthew Picton: Cultural Mapping. Three-dimensional aerial cartographies each based in a particular city and feature layers of cultural references and historical text.
  • Now – Feb 3: Exploring Identity and Place through the Arts. Through travel as well as artistic appreciation and creation, UO students, with little to no background in art, artistically and historically reflect on autonomy, social construction, and power relations in their personal lives.
  • Now – Feb 3: Paper Weight: Works in Paper by Elsa Mora. 2D and 3D pieces made solely of paper and glue, inspired by the intricacies of the human brain, the wonders that it can produce, and its potential for destruction and chaos.

 

new york ave dc
New York Avenue in Washington D.C.

+Washington D.C.

37. No Spectators: The Art of Burning Man

Now – Jan 21
Renwick Gallery

Large-scale, participatory artwork from Burning Man will take over the entire Renwick Gallery building, as well as extending into the surrounding neighborhood. The in-gallery exhibiton will include immersive room-sized installations, costumes, jewelry, and ephemera, along with photographs and archival materials from the Nevada Museum of Art. Free.

 

38. Narwhal: Revealing an Arctic Legend

Now – 2019
Natural History Museum

Understanding this unique tusked whale through traditional Inuit knowledge and scientific research. Free.

 

39. NMWA’s New York Avenue Sculpture Project

Now – Sep 20, 2020
New York Avenue (east of the White House)
Public art space featuring changing installations of contemporary works by women artists. Currently on display is Huellas y cicatricez (Traces and scars), four totemic sculptures by Mexico City-based Betsabeé Romero that speak to themes of human migration and the natural environment. The structures are constructed from carved tires with gleaming metallic paint and interior lighting.

 

+Washington

40. Spencer Finch: The Western Mystery

Now – Mar 3
Olympic Sculpture Park, Seattle

Installation of suspended glass panes that are, in the words of the artist, “creating a moving abstraction of a sunset.”

 

Québec Winter Carnaval
via Carnaval de Québec

INTERNATIONAL

+Canada

41. Carnaval de Québec

Feb 8-17
Old Quebec
Quebec Winter Carnival of outdoor activities, including Ice Canoe Race, two Parades, and live music at Jos’ Camp. Official pass: $11.53

 

Venice
Carnival mask shop in Venice, Italy

+Italy

42. Marina Abramović: “The Cleaner”

Now – Jan 20
Palazzo Strozzi, Florence 
Retrospective of more than 100 of artist Marina Abramović’s works, including video, photography, paintings, objects, installations, and performances from the 1970s up to the 2000s.

 

43. World’s Largest Christmas Tree

Now – Jan 7
Gubbio, Umbria
Every year, a group of volunteers arrange lamps on a hillside at the base of Mount Ingino to create what is known as the “Largest Christmas Tree of the World”. More than 300 green lights outline the shape of a 650-meter-high Christmas tree with over 400 multi-colored lights filling the center, and it becomes a backdrop to the medieval town of Gubbio.

 

44. Carnival of Venice

Feb 16 – Mar 5
St. Mark’s Square, Venice
Pre-Lenten celebrations with revelers in elaborate masks and costumes.

A Glimpse of Venice

+Netherlands

45. Openluchtmuseum (Open Air Museum) Winter Concerts

Jan 13, 14, 20, 21 at 1:30pm + 2:15pm + 3pm
Zeeland church at Openluchtmuseum, Arnhem
Half-hour performances by various choirs, bands and singing groups.

 

 

Otaki Kite Festival
photo via Otaki Kite Festival.

+New Zealand

46. Gardens Magic

Jan 8-27
Wellington Botanic Garden – Soundshell stage, Wellington
Nightly outdoor concerts (8-9:30pm) and lighting installation (9-10:30pm) at the Botanic Gardens. Picnic while you watch local Wellington musicians perform. Free.

 

47. Waitangi Day

Feb 6
Wellington waterfront
Live performances, activities, and food to celebrate the National Day of New Zealand.

  • 10am at Te Wharewaka o Pōneke: Maori performers and activities
  • 10:30am – 12pm at Karaka Cafe: Traditional pit-oven cooked Hāngi available for purchase ($15).
  • 12–7:30pm at Waitangi Park.

 

48. Otaki Kite Festival

Feb 16-17
Otaki Beach

Bring (or buy) your own kite to fly and watch Japanese Rokkaku fighting kite battles and stunt kite flying demonstrations on the beach, as well as live performances on stage. Free.

 

49. Māoriland Film Festival

Mar 20-24
Ōtaki
New Zealand Film Festival that welcomes Indigenous filmmakers from around the world to celebrate Indigenous creativity and storytelling.

 

Virgen de la Candelaria festival
via Peru’s Ministry of Culture

+Peru

50. Festivity of Virgen de la Candelaria of Puno

Jan 25 – Feb 8
Puno

Festival that mixes the ancient Quechua and Aymara rituals of the Puno region with Catholic traditions. It includes a religious procession with the image of the Virgin carried aloft, Andean dance contests, mask-making, and music.
h/t UNESCO

 




This is my handpicked Happenings List! I’ve edited down event descriptions to be more clear and concise. As much as I try to make sure everything accurate, it’s possible it’s not. Let me know if you see anything that should be changed.  

Have fun!

-S



Alaska photo via Anchorage Museum.

Michigan image via Detroit Institute of Arts.

New York photo via Vogue Knitting LIVE.

Canada/International photo via Carnaval de Québec.

New Zealand photo via Otaki Kite Festival.

Peru image © Ministry of Culture, 2012.

Happenings List: Holiday 2018 (November/December)

thanksgiving picnic centerpiece

We are on the brink of another holiday season, and, even though it seems impossibly soon, 2018 is about to wrap up.

As the pace picks up for the final months of the year, here are a sampling of workshops, festivals, exhibitions, performances, tastings, and tours worth taking notice of. Let me know if you go!

 

THE DANCING UNANGAN by Gertrude Svarny

+Alaska

Gertrude Svarny: UKUQANAADAN

Now – Jan 20, 2019
Anchorage Museum, Anchorage
Exhibition of work by Unangan artist, carver, and weaver Gertrude Svarny, who interprets her history and culture using traditional materials, such as local mineral pigments, seal intestine, and sea lion whiskers.

 

Anchorage International Film Festival

Nov 30 – Dec 9
Anchorage
Festival of local and international “films worth freezing for,” which includes original films, filmmaker workshops, and events like Martini Matinee and the Golden Oosikar Awards.

 

 

Black Cloud by Carlos Amorales

+Arizona

Teotihuacan: City of Water, City of Fire

Now – Jan 27, 2019
Phoenix Art Museum
Major traveling exhibition exploring the archaeological history of Teotihuacan, the first metropolis on the American continent, through more than 200 artifacts – both art and domestic objects – from the National Museum of Anthropology in Mexico City. The Aztecs discovered the ruins of the city on the Mexican Central Plateau in the 14th century and named it Teotihuacan, “the place where gods were born.” Included with paid admission. $5 during voluntary-donation times.

  • Nov 15, 5-8pm: After Hours. Music by DJ Byron Fenix, performances by Grupo Coatlicue, and no-host bar. Tickets $8 each / 2 for $12, includes admission to Teotihuacan: City of Water, City of Fire exhibition.
  • Dec 12, 6pm: Indigenous Astronomy Lecture and Workshop. 45-minute overview of the cosmogony, archaeoastronomy, and astronomies of native peoples from the American Southwest, followed by a workshop on sky watching with hands-on demonstrations and tutorials. Both will be presented by Dr. David Koerner, Professor of Astronomy at Northern Arizona University. Advance registration recommended for workshop. Lecture only: $5 / lecture + workshop: $10

 

Mighty Monarchs and the Plant Protectors

Now – Nov 18
Desert Botanical Garden, Phoenix
Fall Butterfly Exhibit with Monarch butterflies and other beneficial insects. Included with admission.

 

The Mural Marigold Project

Oct 30 – Nov 3, 11am-5pm
Tlaquepaque Arts + Craft Village, Sedona

26-foot long community mural in the tradition of Dia de los Muertos, which honors friends and family who have passed on. Everyone is encouraged to paint their own tributes and remembrances. Paints and brushes are provided.

 

Astronomy Nights

Nov 2 + Dec 7, every 30 minutes from 6-10pm
Mesa Community College, Mesa

Monthly planetarium shows open to the public the first Friday of the month during the Fall semester. There is also telescope viewing (if the skies are clear) and hands-on activities. Free planetarium show tickets at the door (first come, first served, starting at 5:30pm). Advance tickets available online for $3 each.

  • You can line up for seating 15 minutes before the show starts. No late entry.
  • The planetarium is wheelchair accessible.
  • Free parking in the lots south of the planetarium, except in spaces marked “EMPLOYEES,” which are reserved until 6pm.

 

All Souls Procession

Nov 2-4
Tucson

Two-mile long procession to both celebrate and mourn of the lives of our loved ones and ancestors. Leading up to the procession are art exhibits, performances, and other Dia de los Muertos events. Free. (Donations accepted.)

 

DIY Día de los Muertos

Camelback Studio Tour and Art Sale

Nov 2-4
Scottsdale

Visit artists’ studios, see artists at work, and purchase art. Free admission.

 

Tucson Comic-Con

Nov 2-4
Tucson Convention Center, Downtown Tucson

Community-based pop culture convention with a mission statement of “Pop Culture For All!” Full weekend passes $45.

 

Pineapple Triangle

Nov 3, 10am-4pm
DeSoto Central Market, Phoenix
Event with Arizona-based artisans, food trucks, and live music. ​20% of event proceeds benefit local non-profits. Admission: $10 /adults, free for kids (12 + under).

 

Shemer Arizona Arts Festival

Shemer Art Center, Phoenix
Nov 3-4, 10am–4pm
Two-day holiday shopping event to benefit the non-profit Shemer Art Center. One-of-a-kind works and demonstrations from 40 Arizona artists, as well as live music, food and beverage vendors, a silent auction, and opportunities to create your own glass, blacksmith, or ceramic gifts. Free festival admission / $5 Kids Zone.

 

Pie Social

Nov 4, 2–5pm
Hance Park (west lawn), Phoenix
The 9th annual Pie Social will feature pies baked by professional Arizona chefs competing for your vote, live music, art, and storytelling. Benefits Roosevelt Row CDC, Hance Park Conservancy, Arizona School for the Arts, and BioScience High School. Free admission. Pie tasting: $15 for 5 tickets.

  • Storytelling presentation of Shoo Flies (sister version of Bar Flies).
  • Community pie art installation created by Phoenix Union Bioscience High School

 

Chef’s Wine Dinner Series

October – April
Garden at Bar Bianco, Phoenix

Monthly four-course meal with local and seasonal ingredients hosted by Bar Bianco. Each dinner will be paired with wines from a different winery. Reception starts at 6:30pm with dinner to follow. Tickets $150-250.

Featured wineries:

  • Nov 9: Matthiasson Wines
  • Dec 1: Failla 
  • Jan 24: Vineyard Brands
  • Feb 26: Field Recordings 
  • Mar 23: POE
  • Apr 25: TBA

 

From Fleece To Fiber

November 10, 3pm
The Bungalow @ Heritage Square, Phoenix
Learn the art of spinning from shepherdess Celia Petersen, starting with a fleece fresh from the sheep. She will take you through the process of cleaning, carding, turning it into fiber, and building your own drop spindle. No experience is necessary. All materials are included. Class fee $15-16.

 

Workshops at The Farm

The Farm at South Mountain, Phoenix

  • Nov 10, 10am: Fall Flowers Aplenty! Flower arranging class by a Certified Master Florist. There will also be information about flower care and floral design. Flowers and all supplies provided. No refunds. Tickets $69.
  • Dec 2, 10am: Poinsettia Felt Wreaths Workshop. Learn how to make a felt holiday wreath. No refunds. Class Fee $40.
  • Dec 9, 11am: Farm-to-Table Plant-Based Dessert Cooking Class for the Holidays. Cookbook Author Melanie Albert teaches how to prepare 3 different, plant-based, gluten-free, and dairy-free holiday desserts, featuring chocolate, berries, nuts and seeds, and superfoods. No refunds. Tickets $55.

The Farm at South Mountain

 

Grand Avenue Festival (10th Annual)

Nov 10, 11am – 8pm
Historic Grand Avenue
Art-centric, non-traditional walking festival that highlights arts, small businesses, adaptive re-use, recycling, and the unique history of Grand Avenue. It includes local music, outdoor art installations, free historic building tours, mural projects, pop-up galleries, kid’s activities, artist-designed “selfie stands,” wandering performers (stilt walkers, poets, dancers, balloon twisters, clowns, face painters), arts/craft vendors and food trucks. There are also hands-on, make-and-take arts and crafts booths by art teachers, artists, and makers.

  • 3-4pm: Trashy Hat Promenade and Untrashed Recycled Fashion Show. Participants make and model clothing from recycled materials. Make your own trashy hat at the festival. Free (supplies provided).
  • 8-10pm: After Hours.

 

Quilt, Craft + Sewing Festival

Nov 15-17
Tucson Expo Center, Tucson
Expo with sewing, quilting, needlework, and craft supply vendors (both local and national), as well as workshops and presentations. Admission $10 or free with online coupon (PDF).

 

Hidden In The Hills Studio Tour and Sale

Nov 16-18, 23-25
Cave Creek, Arizona

Self-guided tour of open artist studios in the Cave Creek and Scottsdale area with demonstrations and art for sale. Free admission.

 

Hidden in the Hills Art Show Returns

 

Dogs’ Day in the Garden

Nov 17, 8am-2pm
Desert Botanical Garden, Phoenix

This is the day your dog can join you at the DBG! You and your pup can walk the garden trails, take a family photo, meet other dog lovers, try Doga (dog yoga), learn about local dog-related nonprofits, and shop vendors with Fido-friendly samples. Included with garden admission (humans) + $4 admission per dog. Proceeds benefit the Arizona Humane Society.

 

Phoenix Pizza Festival

Nov 17, 11am-5pm
Margaret T. Hance Park, Phoenix

Festival of top pizza makers, featuring live music, lawn games, local vendors, and craft beer and wine bars. Food and beverages (including $2-4 slices) available for purchase. Proceeds benefit Downtown Phoenix Inc. Tickets: $10 advance / $12 at the gate / free for kids under 5.

Phoenix Pizza Festival

Lace Day

Nov 17, 10am-4pm
Beatitudes Life Center, Phoenix
27th annual event with lace making, exhibits, vendors, and lessons. Presented by the Lacey Ladies of Arizona.

 

Merry Main Street

Merry Main Street

Nov 23 – Jan 4, 2019
Downtown Mesa
Mesa’s holiday celebration with the City’s official Christmas tree, outdoor ice skating rink, Christmas Market with hand-crafted gifts, visits from Santa, food trucks, and Polar Express light rail car.

  • Free parking in all open lots and on-street parking areas in Downtown Mesa.
  • Nov 23 – Dec 29: Free light rail rides between Country Club and Mesa Dr. on Fridays and Saturdays, 5-10pm. Excludes Polar Express.
  • Mesa Christmas Market (Fridays and Saturdays): local vendors pop-up shops with food and handcrafted items, festive lights, and live performances.
  • Winter Wonderland Ice Rink on the east side of Mesa City Plaza, Monday – Friday 5–10pm, Saturday + Sunday 12 – 10 pm. $10 per person, including skates, for 1 hour.
  • Jack Frost’s Food Truck Forest at Pioneer Park. Saturdays + Sundays 5:30- 9pm

Merry Main Kick-off! Nov 23, 4-10pm

  • 4pm: Ice show with AZ ICE at the Winter Wonderland Ice Rink
  • 5pm: Holiday music followed by tree lighting
  • 6pm: Merry Main Street, Winter Wonderland Ice Rink, and Mesa Christmas Market open.

 

Scottsdazzle

Old Town Scottsdale
A month of celebratory festivities leading up to the December holidays.

  • Nov 24, 7-9pm: Holiday Tree Lighting and Sing-Along at the Scottsdale Waterfront’s Soleri Bridge, featuring orchestra MusicaNova with over 50 musicians/instruments.
  • Dec 1, 8, 15, + 22, 7-8:30pm: Canal Concert Series at Soleri Bridge Plaza. Free holiday concerts by local talent, such as the Phoenix Boys Choir, Campanillas del Sol Handbell Ensemble, and MusicaNova Brass Quintet.
  • Dec 8, 3-7pm: Sugar Plum Avenue on 5th Avenue. Fairytale village with aerial performances, carriage rides, candy land bounce houses, Nutcracker ballet performances each hour, and a tea party in the street.
  • Dec 13, 6:30-9pm: Gold Palette Artwalk in the Old Town Arts District. Meet local artists in their own studios and at local galleries, while enjoying strolling carolers and refreshments.
  • Dec 22, 8-11am: Java Jingle Crawl. Featuring free tastings and experiences at local coffee shops.

 

2018 Fall Tempe Festival of the Arts (50th Annual)

Nov 30 – Dec 2, 10am-5:30pm
Downtown Tempe
More than 300 artist booths line Mill Avenue and the surrounding streets presenting handmade artwork, including woodwork, photography, ceramics, and wearable art. There are also live entertainment stages, street performers, and entertainment booths. A portion of the proceeds raised at the Festival benefits local charities.

 

Crafeteria Indie Craft Fair

Dec 7, 6-10pm
Medlock Plaza parking lot
(behind Frances/Stinkweeds/Golden Rule Tattoo), Phoenix
Annual arts and crafts festival with local handmade original work, (jewelry, toys, knitwear, beauty products, holiday decor, etc.), as well as live music and food trucks. Free.

 

Brunch Bash

Jan 26, 2019,  10am – 4pm
Cityscape, Phoenix
Festival of brunch with food and cocktail samples, live music, and beach games. A portion of the proceeds go to One N Ten. General Admisison $8 online / $10 at the door / free for kids (ages 12 and under). Additional food and beverage items available for purchase ($2-$15).

 

pond at Mission San Juan Capistrano

+California

Origami in the Garden²

Now – Apr 14, 2019
Rancho Santa Ana Botanic Garden, Claremont
Outdoor sculpture exhibition of larger-than-life origami creations by Jennifer and Kevin Box.

 

Blue Boy Restoration Project

Now – Jan 2019 (estimated)
Huntington Art Gallery, San Marino (Pasadena)
Watch the process of conservation work on the iconic painting The Blue Boy each Thursday and Friday, 10am – noon + 2-4pm and 2-4pm on the first Sunday of the month. This is one segment of Project Blue Boy, which is ongoing from September 22, 2018 to September 30, 2019.

Jungle Garden

 

PostSecret

Now – 2020
Museum of Man, San Diego
A collection of the handmade postcards submitted to the PostSecret community art project from millions of people from all over the world anonymously sharing their secrets. Included with admission ($13).

  • You can submit a postcard of your own or share you secret by leaving a voicemail at 619-269-3894.

 

Museum of Latin American Art Exhibits

Long Beach

  • Now – Jan 21: Ink. Photography exhibit exploring the histories of Long Beach, the US Navy, and LA Chicano culture through tattoo art and the personal stories of 6 community members. Ink looks at the importance of the tattoo art form in Southern California and throughout the world.
  • Now – Nov 12: DÍa de los Muertos Altar Display and Art Exhibition. Juried display of art and altars by Southern California artists.

 

Patchwork Show

Modern Makers Festival featuring local craft and food makers, live music, and community.

  • Nov 3, 11am-5pm: Jack London Square, Oakland. Featuring a location on the water, several restaurants, and a modern hotel with live jazz on the weekends.
  • Nov 18, 11am-5pm: Marine Stadium, Long Beach. The largest Patchwork event, is pet- and cyclist friendly with 200+ vendors, multiple music stages, and bike valet.
  • Nov 25, 11am-5pm: Downtown Santa Ana (2nd at Sycamore). Historical setting  incorporating local shops, museums and a handful of restaurants and bars.

 

Jackalope Indie Artisan Fair: Fall Fair

Nov 17-18, 10am – 4pm
Central Park, Pasadena
Shop handcrafted goods from over 200 local artisans. All ages. Free admission.

  • Donations accepted for Brighter Future Charity.
  • Leashed pets are welcome.

 

Bedford Gallery Exhibits

Walnut Creek
Gallery dedicated to allowing the public access to learn about the visual arts, including the work of historic, modern, and contemporary artists. Admission $5.

  • Nov 17 at 11am: Public Art Walking Tour. One-hour docent-led walking tour of Walnut Creek’s downtown public art collection. $5 fee includes Bedford Gallery admission.

 

Christmas at Capistrano

Mission San Juan Capistrano, downtown San Juan Capistrano

  • Nov 19 – Dec 19, 9am-5pm: Serra’s Pantry Food Drive. Drop off a donation of food or hygiene items (toothpaste, soap, etc.), to the Mission Gate House.
  • Dec 1, 5:30-8pm: Christmas at the Mission. Tree lighting program, reading of “The First Christmas,” holiday carols, live performances, and cookie decorating with Mrs. Claus. Tamales, hot cocoa, and sweet treats will be available for purchase. Included with Mission admission.
  • Dec 2 – Jan 6, 2019, 5pm: Capistrano Lights 2018. Nightly tree lighting and music program.
  • Holiday celebration in San Juan Capistrano’s historic downtown district. After the Mission closes, there are a variety of free activities for families in the downtown walking area (PDF map). Many restaurants and shops are open late and offer special discounts or entertainment. Free shuttle around the downtown area 3:30-11pm.

 

Brass in the Park

Veterans Museum at Balboa Park, San Diego
Interactive concert series by professional ensemble Westwind Brass.

  • Dec 10, 7pm: Holiday Lights.

 

+Colorado

Candlelight Walk

Nov 30, 6pm
Foothills Art Center, Golden
Community caroling walk from Foothills Art Center to the Golden Visitors Center. Hot beverages, cookies, and entertainment will be provided at several businesses and cultural facilities. Free to join the walk. Candles and glow sticks available for purchase for $1 each.

  • 6pm: Pre-walk caroling and music.
  • 6:30pm: Walking and holiday song sing along.
  • After the walk: Annual Christmas showcase, lighting of the tree and holiday lights, a look at this year’s special holiday ornament, hot cider, and a visit from Santa and his reindeer at the Visitors Center.
  • Brief fireworks show above the Golden Hotel.
  • Trail of holiday lights and roasted chestnuts in Golden History Park.

 

Jackalope Denver

Dec 8-9, 10am – 5pm
McNichols Building, Denver

Shop handcrafted goods from local artisans. All ages. Free admission.

  • Donations accepted for Golden Retriever Rescue of the Rockies.
  • No pets.

 

Snowcats Cat Convention

Dec 8-9, 11am-5pm
EXDO Event Center, Denver
Cat-lovers’ convention in the Denver RiNo arts district that will raise funds for over 50 non-profits. There will be art, music, presentations by vets and other speakers, kitty yoga, and a cat cafe and lounge with adoptable cats. General admission tickets: humans $15 / cats $5.

  • Dec 8: Moshow the Cat Rapper concert
  • Dec 9: Cat Film Festival
  • Dec 8, 11am + Dec 9, 5pm: Kitten Lady Meet + Greets

Moxie Craft Fest

+Georgia

Moxie Craft Fest

Old City Hall, Brunswick
Nov 10, 10am-5pm

Handmade Holiday Market by a group of 40+ modern, eclectic makers.

 

Salem house by Jess Tennant

+Massachusetts

Salem Arts Association – Holiday Art Market

Nov 24-25
Old Town Hall, Salem
Festive market of handmade treasures with live music and a seasonal theme.

 

+Michigan

Detroit Institute of Arts (DIA) Exhibits

Detroit

  • Now – Feb 17, 2019: Lost + Found. Exhibition showcasing the “accidental” art form of vernacular photography, featuring salvaged snapshots by amateur photographers, including over 500 of 1970s Detroit.

 

Barrick museum Burtynsky exhibition

+Nevada

VESSEL: Ceramics of Ancient West Mexico

Now – Aug 17, 2019
Marjorie Barrick Museum of Art, Las Vegas
Exhibition exploring form and function through ceramic vessels from West Mexico. Suggested voluntary contribution: $5

7 Vegas Things to Do Off the Strip

 

New York airport

+New York

Judson Dance Theater: The Work Is Never Done

Now – Feb 3, 2019
The Museum of Modern Art, Floor 2, Marron Atrium

Gallery exhibition, print publication, and performance program that celebrates the Judson Dance Theater, a group of choreographers, visual artists, composers, and filmmakers in the 1960s who would go on to profoundly shape all fields of art in the second half of the 20th century and expand dance in ways that reconsidered its place in the world.

 

Latke Festival

Dec 3, 6-8:30pm
Brooklyn Museum
10th annual potato pancake tasting event to benefit The Sylvia Center, a nonprofit dedicated to teaching healthy eating habits to children and their families. $75 admission ticket includes unlimited latke tastings, beer, wine, and nonalcoholic beverages.

 

+North Carolina

A Festival of Fabulous Mums

Nov 4-6
Sarah P. Duke Gardens, Durham
3-day event that includes a dazzling floral display of show mums grown by members of the Central Carolina Chrysanthemum Society, cultural and historical information, arts and crafts, and gardening tips. All ages. Free.

 

 

Virginia

+Virginia

Artisans Studio Tour

Nov 10-11, 10am-5pm
Albemarle, Greene, Madison, and Nelson Counties
Self-guided tour of 28 studios showing the work of 49 artisans in Central Virginia. Each studio on the Tour provides locally-sourced refreshments, and many provide demonstrations. Free.

 

Craft + Design 2018

Nov 16-18
Main Street Station, Richmond
Museum-quality show that aims to showcase the finest in contemporary craft. See work in the categories of ceramics, precious metals, glass, wood and recycled materials, contemporary design, innovative use of traditional craft materials, and fiber from over 150 artists from across the country.  The event will take place at Main Street Station’s newly renovated train shed. $10 general admission / $80 weekend pass

 

Smithsonian Native American Museum

+Washington D.C.

National Museum of Women in the Arts

Current exhibitions included with admission ($10):

  • Now – Nov 25: Bound to Amaze: Inside a Book-Collecting Career. Exhibition celebrating curator emerita Krystyna Wasserman, who assembled NMWA’s collection of more than 1,000 artists’ books over a thirty-year period.
  • Now – Nov 30: Full Bleed: A Decade of Photobooks and Photo Zines by Women. A selection of photobooks and photo zines, created by an international group of women artists in the last ten years. These deliberate, ordered, and sometimes narrative arrangement of photographic images bound in a book with little or no text encompass photographs of American locations, digital photos snapped through a car window, and prints resulting from experiments with expired photo paper.

 

No Spectators: The Art of Burning Man

Now – Jan 21, 2019
Renwick Gallery

Large-scale, participatory artwork from Burning Man will take over the entire Renwick Gallery building, as well as extending into the surrounding neighborhood. The in-gallery exhibiton will include immersive room-sized installations, costumes, jewelry, and ephemera, along with photographs and archival materials from the Nevada Museum of Art. Free.

 

Make a Plan to See Smithsonian Museums in D.C.

Día de los Muertos / Day of the Dead (Smithsonian)

American Indian Museum, National Mall
Oct 27, 10am–5pm + Oct 28, 10am–3pm
This year, the museum celebrates monarch butterflies through the creation of an interactive mural, butterfly luminaria, and butterfly masks. Butterflies will also appear in both contemporary and traditional ofrendas. Grupo los Tecuanes (Mixtec) shares cultural performances of Danza de los Tecuanes (Dance of the Jaguar) and Danza de los Viejitos (Dance of the Old Men). Free.

  • Oct 26, 6:30-9:30pm: Día de los Muertos After Hours. Extended hours for a free, family-friendly evening with performances by Mariachis Los Amigos and Mexican folk dance group Bailes de Mi Tierra. Help create an interactive mural, learn to make paper marigolds, and visit the galleries. Enjoy food and drinks—including tacos, tamales, mescal cocktails, desserts, and aguas frescas—from the museum’s Mitsitam Café and local vendors. No charge to attend. Food and beverage tickets will be available for purchase onsite.
  • Oct 28, 3-4pm: Afternoon Concert with Pasatono, an indigenous music ensemble of musician-ethnomusicologists, who are dedicated to celebrating, reinterpreting, and sustaining Native Oaxacan and Mixtec musical traditions.

 

 

Wintergreen Craft Market - Fiber art by Cindy Hoppe

INTERNATIONAL

+Australia

Yankalilla Community Carols

Dec 9, 5:30pm pre-program + 7pm carols
Yankalilla Show Hall, Yankalilla, SA
Pre-program activities include free jumpy castle, free face painting, and sausage sizzle. At 7pm, there will be a selection of traditional carols, guest artists, and nativity play.

+Canada

WinterGreen Fine Craft Market

Nov 16-18
Conexus Arts Centre, Regina, Saskatchewan
Thousands of skillfully hand-crafted works by new and returning local artists. Saskatchewan-made food products available for purchase.

  • Shopping Spree Giveaway: Nov 16, 1-9pm + 17, 10am-2pm. Enter to win a $300 gift certificate, which can be spent at any booth at WinterGreen 2018.
  • Cash bar: Nov 16, 4-9pm.
  • Live music: Nov 16, 5:30-8pm (Latin guitar) + Nov 17, 1-2:30pm (Regina Symphony Orchestra strings) + Nov 18, 12-1pm (bluegrass).

 

Fall for Local Holiday Market

Dec 8-9, 11am-5pm
The Pipe Shop Building, North Vancouver, British Columbia
Over 95 independent local vendors, free do-it-yourself workshops, and food trucks. Tickets: $3 until Dec 7 / $5 at the door / free for kids (12 and under)

  • The first 50 guests each day will receive a free canvas tote bag filled with local goodies.
  • 2 hours free parking at the Lonsdale Quay Market parkade or ICBC parkade.

 

+Italy

Antica Fiera di San Martino

Nov 10-12
Inveruno, Milan
Regional fair of Lombardy in its 411th year. It includes an agri-food exhibition, agricultural equipment,  seminars on sustainable agriculture, equestrian shows, and local food.

 

World’s Largest Christmas Tree

Dec 7 – Jan 7
Gubbio, Umbria
Every year, a group of volunteers arrange lamps on a hillside at the base of Mount Ingino to create what is known as the “Largest Christmas Tree of the World”. More than 300 green lights outline the shape of a 650-meter-high Christmas tree with over 400 multi-colored lights filling the center, and it becomes a backdrop to the medieval town of Gubbio.

  • Dec 7: Tree lighting ceremony in Piazza 40 Martiri, Gubbio.

 

native new zealand parrot

+New Zealand

Kai Niue Food and Wine Festival

Nov 2-5
Scenic Matavai Resort, Niue Island
Festival showcasing the local produce and Polynesian flavors of Niue, paired with New Zealand wines, as well as chef cooking demonstrations, classes, and dinners. 3-night package $599 / 7-night package $1099

 

 

Weaving Women's Stories via Being Human Festival

+UK

Edward Burtynsky: The Human Signature

Flowers Gallery, London (Cork Street)
Now – Nov 24
Exhibition of new work by Edward Burtynsky in collaboration with Jennifer Baichwal and Nicholas de Pencier, stem from the artist’s ongoing Anthropocene Project, a multidisciplinary investigation into human impact on the planet. The Anthropocene Project debuts this fall with simultaneous museum exhibitions at the Art Gallery of Ontario and the National Gallery of Canada, a feature-length documentary film, and a book.

 

Northlight Studio Workshops

Northlight Studios, Hebden Bridge
Autumn Term Workshops offer the chance to work with practicing artists. Basic materials are included in the price. Day workshops run from 10:30am-4:30pm.

  • Nov 11: Clay Sculpture from the Life model. £75
  • Nov 18: 3D Textiles – Insect Sculpture. £60
  • Nov 24: Winter Watercolor workshop. £60
  • Dec 8: Printmaking Card workshop.
  • Dec 15: Leather Belt Workshop. £75

 

Being Human

Nov 15-24
Universities Around the UK (Dundee, Exeter, Newcastle, Nottingham, Queen Mary London, and Swansea)
Festival of the humanities, which aims to make research in the humanities accessible to non-specialist audiences. The 2018 theme is ‘Origins and Endings’.

 

Jane Lightfoot Designs Sewing Workshops

Hoveringham Village Centre, Hoveringham
One-day workshops in Jane Lightfoot’s home studio. Includes instruction and a homemade lunch. Workshop fee: £55 + materials.

  • Nov 16, 9:45am-4pm: Red-work Christmas Decorations. Embroider or free-machine heirloom redwork decorations.
  • Dec 7, 9:45am-4pm: A Christmas Wreath. Create a Christmas wreath decorated with wool felt flowers.

 

Shrewsbury United Reformed Church via Being Human Festival




This is my handpicked Happenings List! No one has paid to be on it. I’ve scoured the internet to find events of interest for you, standardize the format, and edit down the descriptions to be more clear and concise. As much as I try to make everything accurate, there could be errors or changes. So let me know if you notice something off. 

Have fun!

-S


Alaska photo via Anchorage Museum.

Georgia image via Moxie Craft Fest.

Massachusetts photo by Jess Tennant.

International photo via Wintergreen Craft Market / Cindy Hoppe.

Italy photo via Albero di Natale.

New Zealand image via WellingtonNZ.com.

UK photos via Being Human Festival.