Time |
FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 30
9:30pm
|
---|---|
Location |
The Camel
|
LIVE | NO BS! BRASS BAND! GLOBAL!!!!! |
A collection of spectacular, extraordinary and uncommon events, places and sites to experience in Richmond, Virginia.
Are you planning a trip to Richmond, VA?
We hope you enjoy our insider travel tips for Richmond. As avid travelers who base our work here we will share our expertise one of the best kept secrets in the country. Historically rich, creatively grounded, this is a city of artists, musicians, actors and innovators make things happen. Richmond is a great place to come home to. We welcome your comments and questions as we continue our journey.
Thursday, September 29, 2011
NO BS live @ The Camel
How to toast Tennessee Williams 100th Birthday in RVA...
The Richmond theater community created The Tennessee Williams Centennial Celebration to honor his legacy. If you missed the screening of “A Sreetcar named Desire” at the Byrd Theater its not too late to toast Tennesse
The Firehouse Theater presents Pulitzer Prize Winning “Cat on a Hot Tin Roof,” the story of a dysfunctional Southern family with a dying patriarch, Big Daddy. It is dark, gritty and hilarious... with a few surprises for those who are familiar with the film version.
If you missed the staged reading of “The Night of the Iguana”, one of Williams’ rarely seen works. at the Firehouse its not too late to catch the Richmond Triangle Players production of “Suddenly, Last Summer” in their dramatic Scott’s Addition Theater.
The rare and autobiographical “Vieux Carre”, can be seen on the Richmond Triangle Players stage on October 2nd while the film classic “The Glass Menagerie”, will be shown on October 4th and the 1976 screen adaptation of “The Eccentricities of a Nightingale” on October 11th; featuring Blythe Danner and Frank Langella.
Wednesday, September 28, 2011
2011 RICHMOND SOLAR HOMES TOUR
Time : Thursday, September 29 · 3:30pm - 9:00pm
Location : Greater Richmond
Organized
by: Virginia Solar Energy Association
Details: Learn About Conservation and Energy Independence at the 2011 RICHMOND SOLAR HOMES TOUR - both self-guided and guided tours of area homes and buildings with solar and sustainable features. The self-guided tour is Free, suggested donation for the guided tour on Thursday, September 29, 6:00 to 9:00 PM.
Visit: http://www.VirginiaSEA.org/
to learn more regarding locations.
Monday, September 26, 2011
7th Annual Richmond Zombie Walk October 29th
Please visit this link to learn more about the two hour rain delay for the Zombie Walk!
Date Saturday, October 29th
1:00pm - 4:00pm
Location
Pre-walk meet up at Byrd Park (Boat Lake) is at 1pm and the actual walk will begin on the sidewalk in front of Kroger on W. Cary Street in Carytown immediately after. (About 2:30p)
Queries
Richmond Zombie Walk
HOW CAN YOU PARTICIPATE?
Pre-walk meet up at Byrd Park (Boat Lake) is at 1pm and the actual walk will begin on the sidewalk in front of Kroger on W. Cary Street in Carytown immediately after . (Around 2:30pm)
MAKE UP & COSTUME WORKSHOPS
Visit the link above for date/time/locations for “How To” workshops, which are usually held locally the week before the main event.
CONTESTS
Prizes will be awarded at the pre-walk meet up!
- Most Disgusting
- Best Couple/Group Theme
- Best Pop Culture Theme (TV/Movie/Comic/Gaming)
- Best Zombie Kid
- 2011 Zombie of the Year (Best Overall)
ZOMBIE CAUSE
All 2011 activities will benefit The American Cancer Society. Again,we won’t require anyone to make a donation, but if everyone can pitch in $5 each it adds up. Zombiewalk raised almost $1000 in 2010!
ZOMBIE RULES MUST BE OBEYED IN ORDER TO PARTICIPATE.
The organizers of the Richmond Zombie Walk will not be held responsible for the actions of the event participants. By attending this event you agree to follow these rules. Your cooperation will ensure that this event continues for years to come.
1) DO NOT touch anyone/anything (especially storefront windows). NO EXCEPTIONS. Yes, this means dripping.splattering blood, too!
2) DO NOT attempt to scare anyone who is not a willing participant.
If anyone is freaking out, turn and shamble in the opposite direction.
3) NO walking out into the street or traffic
Avoid creating more zombies - prevent accidents!
Richmond zombies use crosswalks and obey the walk/don’t walk signs. it’s okay to break character to cross safely by using what little bit of brains you have left in your head, people.
4) Any weaponry should be easily discernible as fake
Keep bright obnoxious orange caps on the end of toys guns.
NO REPLICA WEAPONS, the word replica implies “like the real thing”.
NO PAINTBALL OR AIRSOFT GUNS. Not only are they dangerous, they are illegal to use in public areas. These are projectile weapons capable of inflicting serious injury. DO NOT BRING THEM.
Police officers will be present. You have been warned.
5) As fun as it would be, no part of your costume should squirt or project any liquid or objects
6) No profanities
We will most likely walk by many innocent children during the walk, no need to warp their minds any further than seeing the walking dead already will.
Keep it in character, i’ve never heard a zombie drop the F-bomb.
7) Ham it up!
You’re wearing fake blood and ripped up clothes and walking around moaning in public, doing that louder will not be any more embarrassing.
8) Walk like a zombie
This is not a speed-walking event, zombies lurch, crawl, limp, slither, etc.
Think more Romero zombie, not “run” zombie except for avoiding traffic. see #2.
9 ) Stay in character
Zombies do not truly have the motor or cognitive abilities to operate a camera or cell phone. We have plenty of people who will be documenting the event, so please try to refrain from taking pictures during the actual walk. There will be time before the walk to take photos and/or vids. also, zombies don’t have conversations or text their friends. They’re dead, they’re all messed up.
10) Stay on public property
DO NOT go into stores or other private properties. stick to the sidewalk.
11) Have fun
Come up with a theme and stay in character as much as possible. it’s a celebration of a great time of year, moan like you mean it!
Visit http://richmondzombiewalk.com for all the gory details..
Date Saturday, October 29th
1:00pm - 4:00pm
Location
Pre-walk meet up at Byrd Park (Boat Lake) is at 1pm and the actual walk will begin on the sidewalk in front of Kroger on W. Cary Street in Carytown immediately after. (About 2:30p)
Queries
Richmond Zombie Walk
HOW CAN YOU PARTICIPATE?
Pre-walk meet up at Byrd Park (Boat Lake) is at 1pm and the actual walk will begin on the sidewalk in front of Kroger on W. Cary Street in Carytown immediately after . (Around 2:30pm)
MAKE UP & COSTUME WORKSHOPS
Visit the link above for date/time/locations for “How To” workshops, which are usually held locally the week before the main event.
CONTESTS
Prizes will be awarded at the pre-walk meet up!
- Most Disgusting
- Best Couple/Group Theme
- Best Pop Culture Theme (TV/Movie/Comic/Gaming)
- Best Zombie Kid
- 2011 Zombie of the Year (Best Overall)
ZOMBIE CAUSE
All 2011 activities will benefit The American Cancer Society. Again,we won’t require anyone to make a donation, but if everyone can pitch in $5 each it adds up. Zombiewalk raised almost $1000 in 2010!
ZOMBIE RULES MUST BE OBEYED IN ORDER TO PARTICIPATE.
The organizers of the Richmond Zombie Walk will not be held responsible for the actions of the event participants. By attending this event you agree to follow these rules. Your cooperation will ensure that this event continues for years to come.
1) DO NOT touch anyone/anything (especially storefront windows). NO EXCEPTIONS. Yes, this means dripping.splattering blood, too!
2) DO NOT attempt to scare anyone who is not a willing participant.
If anyone is freaking out, turn and shamble in the opposite direction.
3) NO walking out into the street or traffic
Avoid creating more zombies - prevent accidents!
Richmond zombies use crosswalks and obey the walk/don’t walk signs. it’s okay to break character to cross safely by using what little bit of brains you have left in your head, people.
4) Any weaponry should be easily discernible as fake
Keep bright obnoxious orange caps on the end of toys guns.
NO REPLICA WEAPONS, the word replica implies “like the real thing”.
NO PAINTBALL OR AIRSOFT GUNS. Not only are they dangerous, they are illegal to use in public areas. These are projectile weapons capable of inflicting serious injury. DO NOT BRING THEM.
Police officers will be present. You have been warned.
5) As fun as it would be, no part of your costume should squirt or project any liquid or objects
6) No profanities
We will most likely walk by many innocent children during the walk, no need to warp their minds any further than seeing the walking dead already will.
Keep it in character, i’ve never heard a zombie drop the F-bomb.
7) Ham it up!
You’re wearing fake blood and ripped up clothes and walking around moaning in public, doing that louder will not be any more embarrassing.
8) Walk like a zombie
This is not a speed-walking event, zombies lurch, crawl, limp, slither, etc.
Think more Romero zombie, not “run” zombie except for avoiding traffic. see #2.
9 ) Stay in character
Zombies do not truly have the motor or cognitive abilities to operate a camera or cell phone. We have plenty of people who will be documenting the event, so please try to refrain from taking pictures during the actual walk. There will be time before the walk to take photos and/or vids. also, zombies don’t have conversations or text their friends. They’re dead, they’re all messed up.
10) Stay on public property
DO NOT go into stores or other private properties. stick to the sidewalk.
11) Have fun
Come up with a theme and stay in character as much as possible. it’s a celebration of a great time of year, moan like you mean it!
Visit http://richmondzombiewalk.com for all the gory details..
Wednesday, September 21, 2011
Hotel X celebrates 19 years at the Crossroads!
Location | |||
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| |||
Hotel X turns 19 this month. Still not old enough to drink, but able to serve our country... and all the countries/cultures/peoples |
Sunday, September 18, 2011
OUR YASU / installation and collaborative works by Jiha Moon and Rachel Hayes @ ADA Gallery
OUR YASU
installation & collaborative works by
Rachel Hayes & Jiha Moon
September 17 - October 29, 2011
wednesday - saturday noon - 5pm.
ADA gallery is pleased to announce new collaborative works by installation artist Rachel Hayes and painter Jiha Moon. Jiha's gestural marks and seductive imagery are painted on, and embedded in, Rachel's sculptural panels that are sewn from fabric and Korean mulberry paper. Rachel's use of shiny swatches of colorful fabric contrast nicely with Jiha's soft fuzzy brush strokes as they attempt to tame the wild beast they envision their collaboration to be. Yasu means "Beast" in Korean, therefore "Our Yasu" is a tribute to their team effort.
With separate studios in Kansas City, Brooklyn, and Atlanta, there is a great deal of negotiation and compromise necessary as they construct and deconstruct work before meeting face to face onsite to create their installations. Hayes and Moon have been working together since meeting in 2007 at the Art Omi residency in New York. Their first collaborative effort, "Outflow" was featured in the group exhibition "More Mergers & Acquisitions" curated by Stuart Horodner at The Atlanta Contemporary Art Center, 2009. They followed this with a large work entitled "Chutes and Tears" at The Lab Gallery in New York last April, a grand landscape of fabric and paint which unfolded and revealed itself as one walked past the corner window gallery. This work featured the use of recycled blue jeans, which were collected, shredded, often bleached, and reassembled into curtain-like forms creating cascades and shelters. For their exhibition at ADA gallery, the team will site specifically re-install "Chutes and Tears".
Jiha has finished her recent project with The Fabric workshop and Museum and was in four person show at The Fabric workshop and museum in Philladelphia this past spring 2011. Rachel had her fellowship exhibition at Saint-Gaudens national historic site in Cornish, NH in 201o and is getting ready for her one year residency at Mary Walsh Sharpe foundtion in Brooklyn this September, 2011.
This is Jiha and Rachel's third collaborative exhibition and debut exhibition at ADA gallery as a team.
for more information and images contact
john pollard at info@adagallery.com
ADA gallery
228 W. Broad St., Richmond, Va 23220
804.644.0100
www.adagallery.com
Friday, September 16, 2011
TONITE: Steve Earle @ The National
Time | Friday, September 16 · 8:00pm - 11:00pm |
---|---|
Tickets | Ticketmaster outlets, nattickets.com, and The National box office |
Location | |
More Info | Steve Earle's 2004 album, The Revolution Starts Now, which features several songs relating to the Iraq War, was deliberately released to coincide with the run-up to the 2004 US presidential election, with the aim of encouraging votes for John Kerry.[18] The song "The Revolution Starts Now" was used in the promotion of Michael Moore's anti-war documentary film Fahrenheit 9/11 and appears on the album Songs and Artists That Inspired Fahrenheit 9/11, the songs for which were selected by Moore. The song also opened Earle's weekly Sunday-night show on Air America Radio. |
VCU DANCE Presents BALLET HISPANICO
Time | Friday, September 23 Saturday, September 24 8:00pm |
---|---|
Location | The Grace Street Theater 934 W. Grace St. Richmond, Virginia |
Tickets | $20/$10 students and may be reserved at www.showclix.com. More information at 804-828-2020. |
More Info | BALLET HISPANICO is a New York-based company that explores, preserves, and celebrates Latino cultures through dance, Ballet Hispanico will perform a new work by renowned choreographer Ronald K. Brown, which will explore the intersection of the African and Latino Diasporas in the Caribbean and Latin America. VCU Dance will also offer a community master class with Ballet Hispanico on Saturday morning, September 24, 2011, hosted by the Richmond Ballet. Reserve tickets online at http://www.showclix.com/ or Call 804-828-2020 for details. 934 West Grace Street Richmond, Virginia Phone: 804-828-2020 Fax: 804-827-0154 Email: jbware@vcu.edu The presenting program of VCU Dance is committed to building and engaging dance audiences in the University and Richmond community while providing opportunities for artists to present and create work. Funding for the 2011-2012 season is graciously provided in part by the E. Rhodes and Leona B. Carpenter Foundation; the Virginia Commission for the Arts; and the New England Foundation for the Arts' National Dance Project. |
Free Film Screenings at The Visual Arts Center of Richmond
When | Thursday, September 22 at 7:30 pm |
---|---|
Location | 1812 West Main Street, Richmond, VA 23220 (804) 353-0094 | |
Film | FREE SCREENING |
More Info | It all began in a one-bedroom apartment in Manhattan. Herb and Dorothy presents the extraordinary story of Herbert Vogel, a postal clerk, and Dorothy Vogel, a librarian, who managed to build one of the most important contemporary art collections in the world with very modest means. In the early 1980s, Herb and Dorothy Vogel purchased over 40 works by Martin Johnson, a Richmond-based artist whose exhibition, Martin Johnson: FORward, is now on view in the True F. Luck Gallery of the Visual Arts Center (visarts.org/exhibitions). |
Thursday, September 15, 2011
Gallery A: The A Team in a new fall show opening September 29th

Marty Johnson "Mona Lisa"
from a series of 21 Big Box Paintings
from a series of 21 Big Box Paintings
Opening Reception
Thursday, September 29th
5 to 8pm
Gallery A
114-A Virginia St,
Richmond, VA 23219
Featuring:
Painting and Sculpture by John Antone
Photographs by Lee Brauer
Paintings by Al Calderaro
Sculpture by Tom Chenoweth
Photographs by Al Davis
Sculptures by Myron Helfgott
Paintings and Sculpture by Marty Johnson
"Andy Warhol, Campbell's Soup, Minestrone, 1962", by Richard Pettibone
"Tree Trunk" drawings by Jim Sullivan
(804) 771-5454
info@gallerya.biz
www.gallerya.biz
Celebrate the 20th Anniversary of the 43rd Street Festival of the Arts
Saturday, September 17th 43rd Street, Forest Hill Neighborhood Seventy selected regional artists and craftsmen will show and sell their work accompanied by live music, locally grown food, and special activities for children. Proceeds from the festival will benefit Freedom House, a philanthropy that provides shelter for the homeless. The festival features long time exhibitors Cris Pool, Lee Hazelgrove, Steven Glass, Foust, and Robin Cage. New artists provide variety and fine craftsmanship in the following media: paintings, prints, pottery, sculpture, jewelry, glasswork, and more. Music: 10 am Rachel Leyco 11:30 am Susan Greenbaum 1:00 pm Blue Line Highway 2:30 pm Bluz Catz 4 pm OminOtago |
The Happy Lucky Combo performs at Crossroads
Wednesday, September 14, 2011
The Waybacks with Jim Lauderdale perform @ the LGBG on 10/6
Music for Massey featuring The Waybacks and Jim Lauderdale
Thursday, Oct. 6, 2011
@ The Lewis Ginter Botanical Garden
Gates open 5:30 pm; music begins 7 pm
This is a rain or shine event.
Food and beverages available for purchase. (No coolers or outside food allowed.)
This is an all ages, family friendly show!
Lewis Ginter Botanical Garden is the host for the seventh annual Music For Masseybenefit concert featuring The Waybacks with special guest Jim Lauderdale.
This is a rain or shine event.
Food and beverages available for purchase. (No coolers or outside food allowed.)
This is an all ages, family friendly show!
Lewis Ginter Botanical Garden is the host for the seventh annual Music For Masseybenefit concert featuring The Waybacks with special guest Jim Lauderdale.
The concert is presented by Dominion Virginia Power and all proceeds go to VCU Massey Cancer Center for Pediatric Cancer Research.
Tickets: $15 in advance, $20 at the gate; children 12 & under free when accompanied by an adult.
Tuesday, September 13, 2011
One Hundred Thousand Poets For Change & Chalking Poetry
Time | Saturday, September 24 · 12:00pm - 3:00pm |
---|---|
Location | Cafe Ole 2901 W. Cary Street Richmond, Virginia |
Event Details | Want to be part of a historic, global poetry event? To date, 650 events in 450 cities and 95 countries will take place on September 24 to promote environmental, social, and political change through poetry. Poets, writers, artists will create, perform and demonstrate in their communities with a focus on peace and environmental sustainability. Poet and founder Michael Rothenberg started 100 Thousand Poets for Change to direct attention to dialog and away from violence. Richmond poets and readers of poetry -- teachers, students, and all poetic word lovers -- should find a poem or create one of their own. Choose a poem that celebrates positive living and a sustainable vision for the future. Meet at Cafe Ole in Carytown and chalk your poem in the parking lot or along the sidewalk. Get a friend or stranger to join in. Start a conversation. Share your love for poetic expression and your hopes for the planet. If you can't make it to Cafe Ole, write the poem on a wall, playground, or any other welcome public space. Take a picture and include it in the official website. (Scroll down on the right to find Richmond VA.) All material is being cataloged at Stanford University. http://www.bigbridge.org/1 |
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