National Endowment for the Arts
News Room

Share
What's this?

""

National Endowment for the Arts Celebrates National Arts
and Humanities Month!

Check out these arts events taking place across the country during
National Arts and Humanities Month.

  • At Maine's Abbe Museum, Twisted Path: Contemporary Native Artists Walking in Two Worlds features artwork that reflects personal stories about tribal identity.
  • Join one of America's finest professional male vocal ensembles, Cantus, for a night of both song and discussion. Presented by the Anchorage Concert Association.
  • Join tens of thousands of blues fans in Helena for three days and three stages of stirring and uplifting performances at the Arkansas Blues & Heritage Festival.
  • At the Asheville Art Museum, Ruth Asawa: Drawing in Space explores the artist's connection to western North Carolina and Black Mountain College.
  • Expect freestyle clogging, flatfooting, and plenty of fiddling at the Old-Time Fiddlers Reunion hosted by West Virginia's Augusta Heritage Center of Davis & Elkins College.
  • Ballet West presents The Dream, a ballet by Sir Frederick Ashton based on Shakespeare's mischievous masterpiece A Midsummer Night's Dream.
  • A modern-day Our Town comes to Idaho in Boise Contemporary Theater's production of Craig Wright's The Pavilion.
  • On view at the Caribbean Museum Center for the Arts the exhibition Daily Strife features photographs, digital images, and installations by artists from the U.S. Virgin Islands and Puerto Rico
  • Atlanta's Center for Puppetry Arts creates a musical journey through the Mesozoic Era in Dinosaurs.
  • The Chicago Architecture Foundation exhibit Chicago Model City explores the city's growth through architectural models and digital media.
  • Philadelphia's Clay Studio presents there and not there, a collection of deceivingly simple sculptures by John Utgaard.
  • Experience the captivating story of one man's fight with windmills and quest for the perfect woman at Colorado Ballet Company's Don Quixote.
  • Join the world renowned lantern spectacle in Baltimore’s Patterson Park for Creative Alliance's annual Great Halloween Lantern Parade.
  • Legendary saxophonist Charles Lloyd and his New Quartet take the stage to kick off Da Camera of Houston's jazz series.
  • Join the Delaware Symphony Orchestra in Dover for "Written on the Winds," celebrating the beauty of woodwinds and brass.
  • Seattle swings with more than 50 unique concerts and events in venues throughout the city during the 21st annual Earshot Jazz Festival.
  • Indianapolis's Eiteljorg Museum showcases one of the greatest Western artists in Moments and Monuments: The Plein Air and Studio Paintings of Curt Walters.
  • The FirstWorks Festival in Providence looks forward and back, celebrating the country's master musicians and filmmakers as well as cutting-edge digital artists.
  • Dynamic percussionist Dafnis Prieto brings his distinctive sabor to Latin jazz at Burlington's Flynn Center for the Performing Arts.
  • With oral histories, film, and artifacts, the Historical Museum of Southern Florida explores the political, economic, and cultural contributions of diverse black communities in Miami.
  • Don Byron's New Gospel Quintet pays homage to gospel great Thomas A. Dorsey at New Hampshire's Hopkins Center for the Arts.
  • The Hunter Museum of American Art presents Jellies: Living Art, an exhibition of contemporary studio glass curated to complement the jellyfish exhibit at the neighboring Tennessee Aquarium.
  • The Houston Ballet opens the New Orleans Ballet Association's 40th-anniversary season with works by four of the world’s preeminent choreographers.
  • See real-life Colorado citizens from the 1880s come to life on the stage at the Intermountain Opera Association.
  • Visit Kentucky's International Bluegrass Music Museum and walk down the Bluegrass Hall of Fame, the music industry's tribute to the pioneers of bluegrass.
  • Traditional music from Ireland makes its way to Hawaii's Big Island as the renowned Irish band Dervish performs at the Kahilu Theatre.
  • Watch the San Francisco Symphony explore the music and stories of Hector Berlioz, Charles Ives, and Dmitri Shostakovich on PBS's Keeping Score Season 2.
  • The Lied Center of Kansas hosts the Trey McIntyre Project and the Midwest premiere of their multimedia work The Sun Road.
  • The longest running Off-Broadway musical in history comes to New Haven in Long Wharf Theatre's production of The Fantasticks.
  • The Milwaukee Public Library hosts a reading with writers from Woodland Pattern Book Center's Creativity and Aging writing workshop.
  • Explore works by Paul Cézanne and the artists he influenced in Montclair Art Museum's traveling exhibit Cézanne and American Modernism.
  • Visit the Montgomery Museum of Fine Arts to see Patrick Dougherty's site-specific outdoor sculptures, made from saplings.
  • See a collection of challenging, thought-provoking, and bold performances at Mosaic Youth Theatre of Detroit's annual theatrical festival of one-act plays.
  • Nebraska Arts Council's Fred Simon Gallery presents work by Nebraska artists Jess Benjamin, Richard L. Austin, and Kimberly Thomas.
  • At the Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art in Kansas City, artists stop the flow of time in Nature Morte/Still Life, an exhibition of 19th and 20th century prints and drawings.
  • The 7th annual openhousenewyork Weekend explores art and architecture in all five New York City boroughs through tours, workshops, and more.
  • Starring Ewa Podles in her Boston stage debut, Opera Boston brings to life Rossini's epic drama Tancredi.
  • Puerto Rico's Arts Council presents its 45th annual international theater festival, which celebrates veteran actor and playwright Walter Rodríguez.
  • The Reno Chamber Orchestra and pianist Pavel Kaspar present Beethoven's Piano Concerto No. 4.
  • Celebrate American culture through music, dance traditional crafts, storytelling and food at the Richmond Folk Festival.
  • Iowa City's Riverside Theatre brings the unforgettable story of Anne Frank's candor, wit, and courage to the stage in The Diary of Anne Frank.
  • Painter and author Rackstraw Downes talks about confronting the familiar in his work as part of Santa Fe Arts Institute's yearlong lecture series.
  • The South Dakota Symphony goes ghoulish with a Halloween concert featuring Paul Dukas's Sorcerer's Apprentice, Camille Saint-Saëns's Dance Macabre, and other witchy works.
  • Taos Center for the Arts is the first stage on Lula Washington Dance Theatre's 17-stop 30th-anniversary tour.
  • The Arts Center in Jamestown, North Dakota, showcases artists Kay Ornberg and Mary Pfeifer in Two Artists, Two Women, Two Friends . . . A Lifetime of Seeing.
  • The Thelonius Monk Institute celebrates all that's jazz with its 22nd annual international competition and an all-star gala concert.
  • Tulsa Ballet presents a spectacularly theatrical retelling of the classic Dracula tale.
  • The University of Arizona Poetry Center hosts poet Sandra Alcosser for a reading and discussion about the effects of placing poems in zoos.
  • As part of The Big Read, the University of South Carolina Arts Institute presents a reading by five South Carolina poets of original poems based on the works of Edgar Allan Poe.
  • Join one of the book discussions on A Wizard of Earthsea taking place at local library branches as part of the University of Southern Mississippi's The Big Read.
  • Presented by Oregon's White Bird, the Hofesh Shechter Company performs the energetic all-men's piece Uprising and the deeply personal and provocative In your rooms.
  • Ohio's Wick Poetry Center waxes poetic with an evening of readings by award-winning poets Stephen Dunn and Edward Micus.


Return to News Index


Arts and Humanities Month logo

 

 
 

 

 

Webcasts