08/22/2010 - 08/28/2010  |
Ongoing: Vieux Carré Matinées December 22, 2009 - December 31, 2010 |
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Times: 11:30am-1:30pm http://www.hnoc.org/?p=1434 Location: LePetit Theatre, 616 St. Peter Street Phone: (504) 523-4662 Admission: free The Historic New Orleans Collection and Le Petit Théâtre du Vieux Carré are proud to present Vieux Carré Matinées, a series of free films and tours celebrating Louisiana’s rich history and culture. Vieux Carré Matinées are now showing every Tuesday–Saturday from 11:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. The program opens with a brief tour of Le Petit Theatre, the nation’s oldest continuously operated little community theatre. Following the tour, patrons will have an opportunity to view one of 10 films, many of which were produced in part by The Collection. Each film addresses a different aspect of the region, including the Battle of New Orleans, Creole cooking, and visual artists of New Orleans. Both the tour and the films are free and open to the public.
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Arts Market of New Orleans January 30, 2010 - November 27, 2010 |
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Times: 10:00 am - 4:00 pm Location: Palmer Park (at the corner of S. Claiborne Ave. and S. Carrollton Ave. Phone: (504) 523-1465 Presented by the Arts Council of New Orleans, the Arts Market is a monthly arts market held the LAST Saturday of every month. Located at Palmer Park in the lovely Carrollton Section of Uptown New Orleans (At the corner of two well trafficked streets, S. Claiborne Ave and S. Carrollton Ave,) the Arts Market has no admission charge. The Arts Market features handmade, affordable art from local and regional artists and artisans. Styles of art include Painting, Photography, Ceramics, Glass, Jewelry, Wood, and Printmaking, plus handmade clothing, soap, candles, and other delights. Between 50 and 100 artists display and sell their wares each month. The Arts Market also features live entertainment, food and beverage booths, and a children's activities area.
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Thursdays at Twilight Garden Concerts March 11, 2010 - October 7, 2010 |
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Times: 5:00 pm - 8:00 pm Location: Pavilion of the Two Sisters, City Park Botanical Garden Phone: (504) 483-9386 | | Stroll through the New Orleans Botanical Garden at twilight, settle in with a mint julep and enjoy the finest musicians New Orleans has to offer. This popular music series, offers jazz, classical, and Latin American music. | | Mint juleps, wine, beer, soft drinks, water, and food available for purchase, no outside food and drink or pets allowed. Admission is not included in Friends of City Park membership. | | |
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Women Artists in Louisiana, 1965–2010 March 17, 2010 - September 12, 2010 |
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Times: Wednesday, 12–8 p.m., and Thursday–Sunday, 10 a.m.–5 p.m. http://www.noma.org Location: New Orleans Museum of Art Phone: (504) 523-4662 or (504) 658-4100 Admission: call for prices Women Artists in Louisiana, 1965–2010 marks the seventh collaborative exhibition between The Historic New Orleans Collection and the New Orleans Museum of Art. Opening Wednesday, March 17, at NOMA in City Park, the exhibition draws from the holdings of both museums and features roughly 40 works by more than 35 women artists who visited or resided in New Orleans from the cusp of postmodernism through today. Among the artists represented are Lynda Benglis, Ida Kohlmeyer, Mignon Faget, Angela Gregory, Jacqueline Humphries, Lin Emery and Eugenie “Ersy” Schwartz. Artworks include paintings, sculpture, and decorative arts.
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Sistah's Making a Change March 29, 2010 - December 30, 2010 |
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Times: Mondays and Thursdays 6:00 pm – 8:00 pm Location: Ashé Cultural Arts Center, 1712 Oretha Castle Haley Blvd. Phone: (504) 569-9070 Get fit with the “sistahs” as you exercise and dance your way to wellness. Classes are taught by professional dancer and choreographer Giselle Nakhid and other guest dancers. The program is directed by Jamilah Muhammad, a registered nurse and professional dancer, who handles all other aspects of programming, such as educational films, nutrition, and health and wellness. A nutritious meal is served after each class. Admission is free and open to the public. No dance experience required.
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Katrina + 5: Documenting Disaster May 12, 2010 - September 12, 2010 |
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Times: 9:30 am - 4:30 pm www.hnoc.org Location: Williams Gallery, 533 Royal Street Phone: 504 523-4662 Admission: free As the fifth anniversary of Hurricane Katrina draws near, The Historic New Orleans Collection will present a new exhibition charting the institution’s efforts to document the storm, its aftermath and the region’s recovery. Faced with the work of chronicling both unprecedented devastation and the city’s recovery, The Collection implemented two long-term institutional initiatives in early October 2005: an extensive oral history program focused on recording the experiences of first responders and a photography project intended to document the scale of the chaos throughout the city left in Katrina’s wake. Selections from these projects form the core of Katrina + 5: Documenting Disaster. Other items on exhibit include historical maps and materials exploring the history of tidal flooding and storm surge in New Orleans over the course of the past two centuries and a multimedia station featuring an interactive timeline and related resources. Katrina + 5 serves as a reminder of the history made since August 29, 2005, and The Collection’s ongoing efforts to record it.
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Brown Improv Comedy May 22, 2010 - December 18, 2010 |
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Times: 10:00 pm Location: Zeitgeist Multi-disciplinary Arts Center, 1618 Oretha Castle Haley Blvd. New Orleans, LA Phone: (504) 592-3220 Join us for a Standup Comedy Show featuring Gant Laborde, Bob Murrell, Jonathan Christensen, and Ken LaFrance.
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Old New Orleans Rum Distillery Tour June 18, 2010 - December 31, 2010 |
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Times: Monday - Thursday 2:00 pm; Friday and Saturday 2:00 pm, and 4:00 pm Location: Old New Orleans Rum, 2815 Frenchmen Street Phone: (504) 945-9400 Admission: $10.00 Celebration Distillation offers tours and tastings at the distillery. Our tours offer a intimate and detailed look at the distillation process from beginning to end. All of our tours conclude with a visit to our tasting room. Become a connoisseur as you experience the subtle flavors of our distinctive rums. On occasion the distillers will offer samples of rums we have yet to bring to market to get your thoughts on the directions they are going.
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New Orleans Museum of Art Presents - Ancestors and Descendants July 28, 2010 - October 24, 2010 |
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Times: Wednesday, 12–8 pm, and Thursday–Sunday, 10 am–5 pm Location: New Orleans Museum of Art, 1 Collins Diboll Cir., City Park Phone: (504) 658-4100 Admission: Wednesdays free ;LA resident with valid ID Adult $8. Sr (65 and up) $7.00; Child 3-17 $4; Child under 3 Free; Out of st visitors Adult $10;Sr (65 and up) $9.00; Child 3-17 $5.00; child under 3 free A little known American Indian archive will be unveiled at the New Orleans Museum of Art (NOMA) from July 24 until October 24, 2010. Ancestors and Descendants: Ancient Southwestern America at the Dawn of the Twentieth Century will be the first comprehensive exhibition of nineteenth century photography, Southwestern artifacts and archival research from the George Hubbard Pepper Native American Archive at Tulane University.
In collaboration with Tulane's Middle American Research Institute (MARI) and Latin American Library (LAL), the exhibition offers a special glimpse of the Tulane archive featuring 150 objects from Pepper's personal Native American art collection as well as 140 photographic images. Pepper, a museum ethnologist and scholar, used textiles, pottery, baskets, and other Pueblo and Navajo paraphernalia as visual complements to his lectures. Many of the images and the objects in Ancestors and Descendants have never been published or seen by the general public since 1924.
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Gallery Bienvenu Presents "The Wrench Series" August 3, 2010 - September 25, 2010 |
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Times: Tuesday - Saturday 10:00 am - 5:00 pm Location: Gallery Bienvenu, 518 Julia Street Phone: (504) 525-0518 Several years ago in the foothills of the Smoky Mountains, artist Mitchell Lonas laid eyes on something of such uncanny beauty, he has never forgotten it: a trio of swallows’ nests, which the birds had fashioned solely from horse-tail hairs. The nests, each a different color, were so improbable in their architectural intricacy and gossamer sheen, they filled Lonas with the inspiration to transmute common natural phenomena such as nests, feathers, and trees into items of aesthetic rapture. These motifs are central to The Wrench Series, the artist’s debut exhibition at Gallery Bienvenu. To create the works, he employs a unique process to apply paint to steel and aluminum panels. Then, working from sketches, he uses customized cutting tools to incise the picture planes with iconic imagery, the beveled lines glinting as viewers behold the pieces from different vantages.
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Tai Chi/Chi Kung in the Art Galleries of the New Orleans Museum of Art August 4, 2010 - December 29, 2010 |
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Times: 6:00 pm Location: New Orleans Museum of Art, Art Galleries Phone: (504) 456-5000 Admission: $5.00/class for Non-Members ; Free for NOMA & Wellness Center Members Join East Jefferson Hospital’s Terry Rappold for an evening of relaxation and rejuvenation conducting Tai Chi in NOMA’s art galleries. All participants must pre-register by calling EJGH Health Finder. Please bring a mat.
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Early Louisiana-made furniture from the collection of Magnolia Mound Plantation, Baton Rouge August 10, 2010 - December 11, 2010 |
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Times: Tuesday–Saturday 9:30 am - 4:30 pm http://www.hnoc.org Location: Williams Research Center, 410 Chartres Street, in the French Quarter Phone: (504) 523-4662 Admission: Free and open to the public Now through December 11, more than 20 examples of Louisiana-made furniture from the 18th and early 19th centuries are on display at The Historic New Orleans Collection’s Williams Research Center, 410 Chartres Street in the French Quarter. The pieces are on loan from Magnolia Mound Plantation in Baton Rouge, Louisiana. Today Magnolia Mound is surrounded by an urban setting, but the plantation was once the center of a 900-acre sugar and cotton operation with frontage on the Mississippi River. The main house was built ca. 1791 as a small settler’s house. In the early 1800s, Armand Allard Duplantier, a prominent planter who had served in the American Revolution as General Lafayette’s aide-de-camp, enlarged and renovated the original structure. Currently, the 16-acre site is operated as a museum by the Baton Rouge Recreation and Parks Commission. While the facility is closed for improvements, furniture from Magnolia Mound will be available to audiences in the New Orleans area. Examples on display include elegant armoires, Campeche chairs, children’s furniture, and a rare writing table. Accompanying the furniture are several photographs of furnished rooms at Magnolia Mound by Steve Gross and Sue Daley from their publication Creole Houses: Traditional Homes of Old Louisiana (Abrams, 2007), illustrating how the structure and its contents are usually displayed. The exhibition is free and open to the public and is presented in anticipation of The Collection’s forthcoming book Furnishing Louisiana: Creole and Acadian Furniture, 1735–1835 (Winter 2010).
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