AMERICUS —
Editor’s Note: Every Thursday a list of local and area upcoming entertainment and cultural events will be published on the Steppin’ Out page in the Times-Recorder. To submit information for this listing, please send to Steppin’ Out, c/o Americus Times-Recorder, P.O. Box 1247, Americus GA 31709, or fax to 928-6344 or e-mail to beth.alston@gaflnews.com
Americus
Rylander Theatre
Drive-in Creature Feature at 2, 5 and 8 p.m. Saturday at the Rylander Theatre featuring “The Creature from the Black Lagoon,” “The House on Haunted Hill” and “The Blob.” For information call the Rylander at 229-931-0001.
Chamber Concert Series
Georgia Southwestern State University (GSW) has announced its 2012-2013 Chamber Concert Series, opening with the Atlanta Guitar Trio at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday in Jackson Performance Hall. Others scheduled are Nov. 13 – Montana Skies, The Rylander Theatre; Jan. 29 – Manhattan Piano Trio; Feb. 12 – Graffe String Quartet with Michiko Otaki, piano and April 8 – Sima Trio. All performances will take place at 7:30 p.m. in GSW’s Jackson Performance Hall, unless otherwise noted. Tickets available and can be purchased at the door. For information or tickets, call 931-2204.
Montezuma
Museum Hours
The Macon County Historical Museum is open from 10 a.m.-3 p.m. Tuesday-Saturday and by appointment. Call the Montezuma Downtown Development Authority at 478-472-4777 for more information.
Buena Vista
Artists for Pasaquan: The Pasaquan Preservation Society announces Artists for Pasaquan Weekend Nov, 3 & 4. This event will include site tours, musical performances, dance demonstrations, food vendors, and an art show and sale featuring the works of many regional artists. Artists for Pasaquan allows artists and musicians to demonstrate their belief in the importance of preserving Pasaquan, while offering visitors one last chance to see this world-renowned art site before it closes for the winter. Pasaquan and its eccentric creator, Eddie Owens Martin, a.k.a. ST.EOM, have been featured in dozens of local, regional, and national publications and television shows, including the New York Times, NPR, Smithsonian Magazine, and the San Francisco Chronicle.The complex consists of six unique buildings, all interconnected by a series of painted masonry walls, colorful concrete sculptures, and an assortment of interesting landscape elements and plantings. Pasaquan is an amazing example of individual creativity and a personal vision that is virtually unmatched in its scope and concept anywhere else in the world. Cameras and picnic baskets are welcomeThe site is located near Buena Vista, Georgia. For directions and further information, visit www.pasaquan.com.
Admission to Artists for Pasaquan is $5 per person, free for kids 6 & under. Cash only, please. All proceeds go to the preservation of Pasaquan Open 10 a.m.-5 p.m. Nov. 3 and 10 a.m.-4 p.m. Nov. 4
Birmingham, Ala.
Birmingham Museum of Art
2000 Rev. Abraham Welch Woods Jr. Blvd.
Norman Rockwell's America
Through Jan. 6, 2013
FREE for members/$15 for non-members
www.artsbma.org
205-254-2565
The Birmingham Museum of Art is proud to present an exhibition of more than 370 works by America's greatest illustrator, the legendary Norman Rockwell.
Cordele
SAM Shortline Excursion Train
Located inside Georgia Veterans State Park.
2459 U.S. Highway 280 West, Cordele
229-276-0755 or 1-877-427-2457
www.SamShortline.com
Cost $17.99 child - $35.99 premium adult
• Thomas the Tank Engine
Little tykes can ride a real train pulled by beloved storybook character Thomas the Tank Engine. After the 25-minute train ride, meet Sir Topham Hatt, enjoy storytelling, listen to music and build with Mega Bloks.
Price for Thomas the Tank special: $14.98 - $19.26
Oct. 20, 21, 27, 28 10 a.m.-3 p.m.
Atlanta
The High Museum of Art
1280 Peachtree St. N.E.
Through Oct. 7
In 1998 the High commissioned Richard Misrach to create a body of work as part of the Museum’s “Picturing the South” series. Misrach chose to develop a study on the ecological degradation of a passage of the Mississippi River between Baton Rouge and New Orleans that is sometimes referred to as Cancer Alley. Like the Western landscapes for which Misrach is best known, these photographs challenge viewers with environmental and political concerns while seducing them with evocative and lyrically beautiful large-scale prints. In 2010, the High encouraged Misrach to re-engage with his commission work from the late 1990s.As a result, Misrach further developed the project and has pursued its publication through Aperture. To mark the culmination of Misrach’s work on the Mississippi River corridor, a group of 21 large-scale prints will be accessioned and installed at the High in coordination with the release of Misrach’s publication.This will be the first time that many of these important works have been shown to a broad public.
• Howard Finster: Paradise Garden
Ongoing
Although many people became familiar with the Reverend Howard Finster through his 40,000 late-20th century paintings, the centerpiece of his work was Paradise Garden. This outdoor museum was built to celebrate all the inventions of mankind, but dedicated to the glory of God. His oeuvre is best considered as an installation and performance piece, of which the paintings are the extant artifacts.
In the early 1960s, Finster bought a parcel of swampy land, which he cleared and drained by hand. For the enjoyment of visitors, he planted edible and ornamental plants and began to construct concrete walkways, walls, and miniature mountains encrusted with thousands of found objects–everything from glass marbles to a jar containing a neighbor's tonsils.
Beside the walkways, he modeled figurative concrete sculptures; over the years, he built many structures, including a tall tower of bicycle parts and a chapel, the World's Folk Art Church. Through the 1980s, Paradise Garden flourished, bringing visitors from around the world to Pennville, Georgia, and international fame to its creator, who would preach to visitors and perform his own songs, accompanying himself on his banjo.
Today the High Museum owns the largest public collection of objects from Paradise Garden, many of which remain on permanent display in the Folk Art galleries. Among them are sidewalk slabs; concrete sculptures, including The Calf and the Young Lion and The Weaned Child on the Cockatrice's Den; Finster's Gospel Bike; and many signs and paintings that once adorned the garden.
• Civil Rights Photography, 1956-1968
Ongoing
The High Museum of Art holds one of the most significant collections of photographs of the civil rights movement. The works on display are a small selection of the collection, which numbers more than 250 photographs that document the social protest movement, from Rosa Parks’s arrest to the Freedom Rides to the march on Washington, D.C. The city of Atlanta—the birthplace of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.—was a hub of civil rights activism and figures prominently in the collection. Visionary leaders such as Dr. King, Congressman John Lewis, and former mayor Ambassador Andrew Young are featured alongside countless unsung heroes.
The photographs in this collection capture the courage and perseverance of individuals who challenged the status quo, armed only with the philosophy of nonviolence and the strength of their convictions. The images were made by committed artists, activists, and journalists, who risked injury, arrest, and even death to document this critical moment of growth in our nation. The tenacity of these dedicated and gifted people — on both sides of the camera — continues to inspire social justice advocates today.
Civil Rights Photography 1956-1968 is an ongoing installation, and the photographs will be rotated every six months.
• Nellie Mae Rowe: At Night Things Come to Me
Ongoing
At Night Things Come to Me has been installed in the Nellie Mae Rowe Room. Rowe often portrayed beings that seem to come from another plane of existence. Some take the form of hybrid creatures, combining features of different animals. Rowe simply called them "varmints" or said they were "something that ain't been born yet." Others, which take humanoid shape, she identified as "haints" or spirits.
In one vivid drawing, whose title gives this exhibition its name, she portrayed herself lying in bed being visited by otherworldly creatures of her imagination. You can visit them, too, in At Night Things Come to Me.
• American Encounters: Thomas Cole and the Narrative Landscape
Through Jan. 6, 2013
American Encounters is a result of a four-year collaboration among the High Museum of Art, the musée du Louvre, Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art, and the Terra Foundation for American Art. The collaboration focuses on installations of American and European art.
The exhibition explores the birth of American landscape painting through the works of Thomas Cole and Asher B. Durand. In addition, the installation includes an earlier painting by Pierre-Antoine Patel the Younger that inspired Cole’s work after Cole saw in Paris.
• Choose Me: Arthur Grace’s Portraits of a Presidential Race
Through Jan. 6, 2013
Arthur Grace (American, born 1947) is an award-winning photojournalist and documentary photographer who has covered stories for some of the most reputable news sources of our time. This installation highlights selections from a project Grace undertook for Newsweek magazine, which culminated in his book Choose Me: Portraits of a Presidential Race, featuring the candidates of the 1988 campaign, including George H. W. Bush, Bob Dole, Jesse Jackson, Al Gore, and Michael Dukakis.
Grace traveled with the candidates for months, and the resulting work reflects a remarkable unguarded access that is virtually impossible to achieve today. His photographs are not the typical press shots of presidential hopefuls; made with a Rolleiflex square-format camera, these pictures portray the personalities of each candidate in a candid, intimate fashion outside of the public eye. The images highlight the strange but familiar activities that candidates repeat year after year, from adopting rallying postures at podiums to posing with wildlife. The work affords a look back at the 1988 election, focusing not on the political agendas of the day, but instead on the timeless theatrics of politics and the personalities at their center.
* Fast Forward: Modern Moments 1913-2013
Through Jan. 20
Experience 100 years of radical artistic developments reflected by artworks drawn from the extraordinary collections of MoMA. The exhibition includes more than 130 works of painting, sculpture, graphic design, film and video and installation art by such luminaries as Matisse, Dali, O’Keeffe, and Koons. Fast Forward also presents work by three contemporary artists – Sarah Sze, Aaron Curry and Katharina Grosse.
• Susan Cofer: Draw Near
Oct. 27, 2012 - Jan. 27, 2013
This exhibition presents the first career survey of drawings by Atlanta-based artist Susan Cofer. For more than three decades, Cofer has been recognized in the Southeast for her painstakingly delicate, abstract drawings.
• Katharina Grosse
Through Feb. 10, 2013
The internationally acclaimed artist, Katharina Grosse creates work that challenges conventional notions of what a painting can be and, literally, the shape it might take. She has three pieces on view on the skyway level of Wieland Pavilion.
• Hard Truths: The Art of Thornton Dial
Nov. 3, 2012 – March 3, 2013
Organized by the Indianapolis Museum of Art, this exhibition highlights Thornton Dial's significant contribution to the field of American art and shows how his work speaks to the most pressing issues of our time – including the war in Iraq, 9/11, and social issues like racism and homelessness. The exhibition presents 59 of Dial's large-scale paintings, drawings and found-object sculptures, including 25 works on view for the first time. Spanning twenty years of his work as an artist, it is the most extensive showing of his art ever mounted.
Thornton Dial was born in rural Alabama in 1928 and spent most of his adult life laboring in the region's heavy industry, including work as a welder for the railway car-maker Pullman Standard Company. Throughout his life, Dial also made "things," and gradually became adept in the media of painting, drawing, sculpture and watercolor. Dial first gained recognition as a major artist in the late 1980s, with the growing interest in so-called "folk" or "outsider" art. Despite being self-taught and choosing to remain outside of the formalized art world, his work has continued to earn critical praise for its deft fusion of painting and sculpture, its emotional power, its wide-reaching social commentary, and its unique expression of a contemporary vision of the African American experience in the South. Dial's works are included in the collections of a number of major museums, including the Smithsonian American Art Museum, the Hirshhorn Museum, The Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, the Philadelphia Museum of Art, the High Museum of Art in Atlanta, the IMA, and the Milwaukee Museum of Art.
• Aaron Curry
Through June 16, 2013
Contemporary artist Aaron Curry is noted for the improbable combinations of art historical references in his sculpture, including the distorted planes of Cubism, the bright colors and flat surfaces of Pop, and the sometimes disconcerting biomorphism of Surrealism.
Curry has two installations on display at the High: a trio of brightly painted sculptures on the lawn and a dynamic installation in the Anne Cox Chambers Wing.
Night Life:
Americus
American Legion Post 558
Ga. Highway 30 West
Open 6-10 p.m. Monday-Thursday
7 p.m. Tuesday is Bingo Night
Wednesday is Games Night
Open 6 p.m.-2:30 a.m. weekends
Friday is Grown Folks Night Out, featuring dance party, karaoke, music video and disco lights show from 9 p.m.-2:30 a.m. Presented by Monster Screen Projections
Saturday is Oldies Goldies Night
Sunday is Members/Guests Night
Astro’s “The Dance Clubb”
153 Sunset Park Road
Entertainment for 21 and over
11 p.m.-until
Thursday: College and Ladies Night
Friday: Midnight Special
Saturday: Dress to Impress Live
I.D. required
Valid college student ID exempt
Floyd's Pub at BEST WESTERN PLUS Windsor Hotel
125 W. Lamar St.
Ladies Night: Tuesdays beginning at 5 p.m. Ladies only enjoy specials on
drinks.
Live Music:
Fridays beginning at 10 p.m. No cover, must be 21 and older with valid ID.
Oct. 19 — Tony Elmore
Oct. 26 — Marty Evans
Nov. 2 — Cole Taylor
Nov. 9 — Matthew Williams and Cowtown String Band
For more information, call 924-1555. Look for us on Facebook!
G.W.F. Phillips Lodge
The Lodge is open every Friday night with oldies from the ‘70s and ‘80s with Master TJ and Bronco Bill at the Elks Lodge. No teens allowed.
Pat’s Place
1526 S. Lee St. 924-0033
11 a.m.-11 p.m. Monday-Saturday
• Wednesdays, fresh oysters and shrimp October-April
Quality Inn Lounge (Hillside Cafe)
1205 Martin Luther King Jr. Blvd.
Back by popular demand, South Georgia’s iconic MC/DJ Backdoor Man
Karaoke with dancing 9-11:30 p.m.
Non-stop dance music 11:30 a.m.-2 a.m.
Also featuring Vickie Craig on selected dates
Low drink prices and specials
Lake Blackshear
Booger Bottom
3077 Lamar Road
Cypress Grill at Lake Blackshear Resort and Golf Club
2459-H U.S. Highway 280 East
www.cypress-grill.com
South Georgia’s entertainment capital, combining the best in live music, unique casual dining and lakeside relaxation with the atmosphere of an upscale resort. Set in a natural environment on the shores of Lake Blackshear, the Cypress Grill is the perfect backdrop for outdoor dining on the patio, cocktails with friends or dancing the night away enjoying live music from well-known bands. Cordelia’s Restaurant and 88'S Lounge are open, as well, for great food, fun and live entertainment Friday and Saturday nights.
Steppin’ Out
October 17, 2012
Steppin' Out: October 18, 2012
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- Steppin' Out: May 22, 2013
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