Home Events

for Sun., May 18
  • The Juilliard String Quartet with pianist Anna Petrova

    With unparalleled artistry and enduring vigor, the Juilliard String Quartet (JSQ) continues to inspire audiences around the world. Founded in 1946 and hailed by The Boston Globe as “the most important American quartet in history,” the ensemble draws on a deep and vital engagement to the classics, while embracing the mission of championing new works, a vibrant combination of the familiar and the daring.
    Sat. May 17, 7:30pm  
    Riverbend Centre
  • Affordable Art Fair Austin

    After a hugely successful first edition, Affordable Art Fair Austin returns May 15-18, 2025 at the Palmer Events Center, showcasing thousands of original contemporary artworks ranging between $100 to $10,000. Welcoming 55 local, national and international exhibitors, the second edition will be unmissable.
    May 15-18, 2025  
    Palmer Events Center
Recommended
  • Music

    Tormentor, Necrofier, True Iron Will

    Attila Gábor Csihar could be black metal’s Ozzy Osbourne – ground zero. As high priest of Mayhem’s BM bible De Mysteriis Dom Sathanas in 1994, the Budapest-born oracle, 54, still fills venues, including Mohawk last month, where said Norwegian legacy act concluded Decibel magazine’s annual road binge. Every human in the venue bought a Mayhem tee that night. Csihar leading avant-glaciers Sunn O))) – no less sensory. Tormentor remains his first BM vehicle, born in 1985 Hungary, and 2020’s live Covid Witchfuck Tatabánya preserves the group’s lo-fi heresy, sure to blow out the gratefully undead walls of 29SBR with Houston‘s Necrofier, who pit-crushed Mohawk’s inside room in January. True Iron Will opens. – Raoul Hernandez
    Sun., May 18, 8pm  
    • Arts

      Visual Arts

      Affordable Art Fair

      Couldn’t fuel your private jet for Art Basel this year? Can’t afford even a painting of a private jet? That’s where you may be wrong, as the Affordable Art Fair may be the way to get an original work on your walls. The traveling international celebration of visual media always highlights local artists at each stop, so you have your chance to purchase paintings, prints, and more curated by Austin galleries and institutions like Art From the Streets and Canopy Collective alongside London’s Quantum Contemporary Art, Lumas from Berlin, and Paris’ Galerie Duret. – Richard Whittaker
      May 15-18
    • Film

      Special Screenings

      Cine Las Americas International Film Festival

      Newly in the news as one of many Austin arts organizations impacted by the National Endowment for the Arts’ slash-and-burn of arts funding, Cine Las Americas deserves our support now more than ever. But hey – we’re getting plenty in return: namely, a top-flight film festival celebrating Latine/x, Indigenous, and Latin American voices. But wait, there’s more! This year, Cine is launching its first-ever concurrent conference, with fireside chats, workshops, and more taking place May 16-17. See some terrific movies, learn from industry vets like Elizabeth Avellán and David Blue Garcia, and feel good about supporting a community thrown under the bus by the Trump administration. Them’s wins all around. – Kimberley Jones
      May 15 - 18
    • Arts

      Visual Arts

      Aisha Imdad: “The Allegorical Gardens”

      Gardens loom large in legend. Think the Hanging Gardens of Babylon, the Shalimar Gardens, the Garden of Eden: each bursting with symbolic beauty, dripping with promises of life and growth. Artist Aisha Imdad explores the lush intricacies of this verdant imagery. Her watercolor works delve into literary and mythological gardens, inspired by Indian, Mughal, and Persian frescos. Each invites closer introspection, a desire to immerse in the vibrant world of her works. Each intricate blossom speck, or gilded turn of a bird wing, vibrates with idealized life. Imdad’s art portrays the possibilities of paradise. – Cat McCarrey
      Through July 3
    • Arts

      Theatre

      Anklets in the Boardroom

      Ever wished you could just redo that awkward situation? Take that snappy comeback you dreamed up in the shower hours later and test it out in real life? It’s possible with forum theatre. Forum theatre isn’t just a fancy term for non-bedroom role-playing. It’s more like applied academia, performances intentionally inviting the audience to participate in examining issues and testing out solutions. That’s exactly how Leela Theatre presents Anklets in the Boardroom, a series of scenarios based on real-life workplace bias experienced by Asian women. It’s an intensely individualized experience, expanding scope depending on you – yes you, the audience – to set the course of exploration. How could things be better? What should have happened? How can we fix the future? – Cat McCarrey
      May 16-18
    • Qmmunity

      Arts & Culture

      Austin Gay Men’s Chorus Presents Shake the Rafters

      An early choral congratulations for having the taste to pick the gayest tunesters in Austin for your hearing pleasure. Bringing what they’ve called “a full-spectrum extravaganza of emotion, community, and vocal cords working overtime in the best way possible” – emojis removed to protect our Chron designers’ font sensibilities – the Austin Gay Men’s Chorus features modern songs from the likes of Harry Styles, Sam Smith, and the Beatles. (Look, at least two of them are alive so that counts as modern.) Snag your tix for Saturday or Sunday and get ready to watch those rafters, you know. Shake. – James Scott
      May 17-18
    • Community

      Events

      “Roots Unveiled: Exploring the Chinese Experience”

      Among the many anti-civil rights bills creeping their way through the Texas Legislature is Senate Bill 17, which would bar Chinese and many other Asian citizens from buying land here. Denounced by detractors as racist and reminiscent of 19th-century laws targeting Asian immigrants, its 2023 origins, along with growing anti-Asian sentiment after the pandemic, inspired Houston artist Jane Xu to found the multi-city Asian American Art & Culture Initiative and initiate this multidisciplinary exhibit. Curated by renowned international independent curator Sylvia XuHua Zhan, it brings in-depth research and archives along with work from a wide range of artists to offer a look at the rich history of Chinese Americans in Texas. Opening reception is Sunday, May 18, noon. – Kat McNevins
      Through August 31; opening reception, May 18
    • Arts

      Visual Arts

      “The Everyman”

      I’ve been having a lot of “girl who’s going to be okay” moments as I reconnect with my earnest, optimistic side, so I’m excited for “The Everyman,” a group show curated by visual artist and musician Lisa Alley that celebrates the beauty in the small things – from commonplace occurrences to the working-class heroes that give this exhibit its name. Alley – who plays in local acts the Well, Mugger, and TV’s Daniel – shows her paintings alongside a slew of familiar names, including Parquet Courts’ A. Savage, Never’s Emily No Good, and photographer Pooneh Ghana. Everyone has the ability to create something exceptional, this Bolm Arts project assures us. – Carys Anderson
      Through June 7
    • Film

      Special Screenings

      Cooley High (1975)

      Selected in 2021 to be in the National Film Registry, this 1975 classic inspired the likes of Spike Lee and was a major box-office hit upon its release. Contrary to the ubiquitous Blaxploitation of its era, it’s a coming-of-age story following two ambitious best friends in 1964 Chicago: aspiring poet Preach Jackson and basketball star Cochise Morris, who run into trouble during a day of cutting class. What starts as a series of parties, joyrides, and flirting is sadly twisted by the dangers of being Black in America. A heart-wrenching drama through and through, it’s nonetheless joyous and funny, soundtracked by well-loved Motown hits. John Singleton’s 1991 classic Boyz n the Hood is a direct homage to Cooley High, as is Boyz II Men’s 1991 debut album Cooleyhighharmony. – Lina Fisher
      May 16 - 20
    • Arts

      Dance

      DiverseSpace Youth Dance and Violet Crown Players Present Confluence

      With Confluence, Violet Crown Players and DSYDT have crafted a piece exploring “human connection.” Led by local choreographer Toni Bravo, with guest choreography by Berlin’s Ortrun Stanzel and Amsterdam’s Michael Jahoda, Confluence shows the power of dance throughout every experience. DiverseSpace Dance seeks to provide dance opportunities for all ethnic and socioeconomic backgrounds. Their multigenerational cast will show the power of that access, set to live music by Victoria Schwarz. Watch the threads of connection, woven through physical and social movements. – Cat McCarrey
      May 15-18
    • Film

      Special Screenings

      Dog Day Afternoon (1975)

      In 1973, director Sidney Lumet tapped Al Pacino to play an NYPD detective in Serpico. Two years later he cast Pacino on the other end of the law in Dog Day Afternoon. Groundbreaking in its time – how many Hollywood stars were playing a real-life guy who knocked over a bank in order to pay for his lover’s gender-affirming surgery? – Dog Day is a quintessential zeitgeist movie, expertly capturing the working-class agitation and angst of the 1970s. It’s also funny, thrilling, so very sweaty, and totally tragic. It paired Pacino with John Cazale again – Michael and Fredo reunited, a year after The Godfather Part II forcibly separated them – in Cazale’s next to last film role. They’re both dynamite in one of Lumet’s best. – Kimberley Jones
      May 16 - 21
    • Arts

      Visual Arts

      Margie Criner: “Sound & Vision”

      Hailing from Chicago, artist Margie Criner works in sculpture and miniatures. How so? Her unique sculptural works – themselves impressive patchworks of materials from wool to actual hornets’ nests – feature peepholes through which viewers may glance tiny tableaux. These miniature worlds all center music, such as her pinky-finger-sized record store, Needle on the Records, with vintage posters plastered across its small interior walls. “The music theme isn’t always literal,” explains Criner, “but background sounds within the space, specific to what I’m processing. Kind of like how there’s music playing at the grocery store, that music is everywhere.” – James Scott
      Through June 14
    • Film

      Special Screenings

      Mermaids (1990)

      Cher’s Eighties-Nineties film catalog is unmatched, with Moonstruck, The Witches of Eastwick, and, of course, Mermaids. Her brilliance as a free-spirited young mom is grounded by Winona Ryder as her plucky daughter, a Catholicism-obsessed little freak who’s fed up with her mother’s manic pixie philandering ways that land them in a new tiny East Coast town every time she breaks up with someone. Christina Ricci makes her film debut as the youngest daughter, a foil to Ryder’s coming-of-age misadventures who clashes with her family. It’s as heartwarming and zany as other cozy classics of the era like Practical Magic, but comparatively and criminally underseen. With its neurotically sex-obsessed camp, and of course, Cher, it’s ripe for some queer theorizing. [Editor’s Note: This screening’s a Queer Film Theory 101 presentation – but not THAT one. The other one.] – Lina Fisher
      May 18-19, 21
    • Film

      Special Screenings

      Shinjuku Boys (1995)

      WLV’s monthly queer movie meetup SunGays celebrates AANHPI Heritage Month with this Japanese doc about three trans-masculine hosts at Tokyo’s New Marilyn Club. Released in the mid-Nineties to posi reception – including an Outstanding Documentary win from the San Francisco Gay and Lesbian Film Festival – the film focuses on the self-referenced “onabe” and their experience with romantic and familial relationships and gender presentation. A good watch for the Ouran High School Host Club fan who wants to understand real queered host club dynamics – or anyone who enjoys hot trans guys. Guilty! – James Scott
      Sun., May 18
    All Events
    • Music

    • Music

    • Music

      Ange K Band

      Sun., May 18, 6pm
    • Music

      Anthropos All-Stars

      Sun., May 18, 4pm. Free (all ages).
    • Music

    • Arts

      Theatre

      Austin Shakespeare presents Julius Caesar

      Friends, Texans, Austinites, lend your ears and eyes to Shakespeare’s classic coup, as tortured and brutal as tactical Brutus can offer. Or shall I say bodacious Brutus, since Austin Shakespeare’s production of Julius Caesar offers a tantalizing twist – Caesar’s inner circle is mostly women, adding what might be seen as righteous rage to raw revolution. This Caesar’s served with a cunning corporate aesthetic. No need to clutch your pearls though. There’s still the mired malaise of what best serves the collective good. Grab your friends and family, and “get-tu” Zilker for this free show. – Cat McCarrey
      Through May 25
    • Music

    • Arts

      Visual Arts

      “HOT: The Exhibit”

      Over a million American women go through the change every year. Why do we still talk about it in such hushed tones? Andee Kinzy and Melissa Knight hope to eliminate the stigma around menopause with “HOT,” a multimedia exhibit that hosts an art show, a play, and several workshops and panels throughout the month of May. The gallery opens May 4, and Jennifer Connell Davis’ I Wanna Be a F*cking Princess premieres four days later. In between and beyond, catch medical experts dispel menopause misinformation and try your hand at consciousness raising at community storytelling events. Find the whole schedule at improvedarts.org/hot-the-exhibit. – Carys Anderson
      Fridays-Sundays. Through May 25
    • Arts

      Visual Arts

      “Meeting at the Edges: Testing Physical, Emotional, and Spiritual Boundaries”

      Why are the edges always the most difficult? Almost all textile arts suffer in relation to cleaning up those untidy ends. This month, Link & Pin Art Space invites viewers to embrace the unruly threads of life. To shamelessly pull from artist Sam Elkins’ Instagram post (@samelkinstextiles), join Saturday’s artist reception for some “edgy” conversation with the creators involved. Elkins’ weaving work will rest alongside the fibrous textures of Gary Anderson’s art and Diane Sandlin’s mixed media marvels. Ponder, and maybe even come to terms with, life’s bumps and whorls through these artists’ explored space. – Cat McCarrey
      Through June 8
    • Arts

      Visual Arts

      “Personal Records”

      One part of a greater track-and-field trio of shows, GLHF presents art from Brian Dulaney, Drake Konow, Gerardo Cisneros, Justin Leal, Tim McCool, Kevin Muñoz, Marissa Dunagan, Phillip Niemeyer, and Preetal Shah. All these pieces speak to their experiences while analog traveling – you know, using their legs rather than a car or skateboard. This show organizes under the banner of Artist Run Club, coordinated by Northern-Southern and focused on the quick-paced art intelligentsia of Texas.: – James Scott
      May 3 - June 1
    • Food

      Food Events

      Barks for Beers 2025

      Arf, arf: This is my impression of your dog when you tell them about this furry fundraising effort from Divine Canines. Tell their placid doggy faces about how 30 CTX craft breweries are participating, like Celis Brewery and Independence Brewing. Pet their ears and inform your pooch how buying a $30 Pawsport as well as a 2025 pint glass entitles you to a pour at each brewery. At this point, the canine mind might think: Okay, but what do I get out of all this? “Don’t worry,” you say. “Every brewery has promised to be dog-friendly, so we can go together.” Your dog’s response, probably: Woof! – James Scott
      May 1 - 31
      Multiple locations
    • Community

      Events

      Barton Creek Farmers Market

      A great selection of local farmers bringing fabulous pastured meats, eggs, dairy, vegetables, and fruits, plus prepared-food vendors, artisans, bakers, and of course, live music.
      Sundays, 9am-1pm. Free.  
      4805 Hwy. 290 W., Sunset Valley (Kohl's parking lot)
    • Qmmunity

      Nightlife & Parties

      Bear Beer Bust

      Iron Bear's beer bust brings all the boys to the bar. Specials on select pints and pitchers.
      Sundays, 2-9pm  
    • Community

      Events

      Blue Genie Art Bazaar's May Market

      The Blue Genie Art Bazaar is an essential stop on your Christmas shopping list, but – lucky you – you don’t have to wait till Xmas to make your way back to the BG’s jam-packed aisles. Every weekend for the whole month of May, from 10am-8pm, you can peruse more than 100 regional artists and artisans. Entry is free, the vibe is family-friendly, and the thrill at finding the perfect Mother’s Day gift or primo piece of art to make your house a home – well, that’s priceless. More of a web browser? There are plenty of handmade goodies to tempt you at the Blue Genie online storefront: bluegenieartbazaar.shop.
      Friday, May 2 - Sunday, May 4; Friday, May 9 - Sunday, May 11; Friday, May 15 - Sunday, May 18; Friday, May 23 - Monday, May 26; Friday, May 30 - Sunday, June 1. free.
    • Music

    • Music

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