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for Thu., Aug. 3
  • The Elgin Music Festival

    Join the Elgin Arts Association for the 1st Annual Elgin Music Festival! Featuring 4 days of music across 12+ venues, over 50 bands, vendor markets, food, drinks, and more! All events are free and open to the public.
    May 9-12  
    Downtown Elgin
  • Affordable Art Fair Austin

    Affordable Art Fair Austin will launch in May 2024, showcasing original contemporary artworks ranging between $100 to $10,000. Welcoming a whole host of local, national and international exhibitors, their spectacular first edition is set to be unmissable!
    May 16-19  
    Palmer Events Center
Recommended
  • Arts

    Visual Arts

    Bolm Arts: But Wait, There’s More

    Tim Kerr, Lisa Alley, and Jamie Morrison's group show unpacks music and the visual arts from their separate boxes to present this wild and colorful salon exhibition in which lines get blurred between all categories of creation.
    Closing reception: Thu., Aug. 3, 6-9pm. Free.
    5305 Bolm #9
  • Arts

    Theatre

    Malum Malus Burlesque: Lammas

    The Wheel of the Year inspires Austin's most provocative performance art ensemble to offer this occult burlesque chantry of witches, a sexy af prelude to the rituals for Samhain this fall. Created by Blaise Ricin, presented by the Vortex.
    Thu.-Sat., Aug. 3-5, 8pm. $15-37.  
  • Arts

    Theatre

    Small Steps

    Shrewd Productions presents the first world premiere of local playwright Briandaniel Oglesby. This "hilarious and campy, but heartfelt" play deals with the very real themes of isolation and loneliness, and the bravery involved in searching for real connection in our disconnected world. Directed by Braxton Rae, starring Dane Parker, Jen Brown, Trey Deason, Shannon Grounds, and Andy Shaw.
    Through Aug. 12. Thu.-Sat., 8pm; Sun., 5pm
  • Arts

    Theatre

    Split Britches: Last Gasp

    Equipped with a bulletproof vest, some know-how, and a touch of irony, two icons of lesbian-feminist theatre use spoken word and movement as a call and response to urgent global predicaments. Peggy Shaw’s poetic musings are interspersed with Lois Weaver’s dance essays in which she wryly upends "how-to mania," with the duo hitting upon survival strategies for a world collapsing around them.
    Thu.-Sun., Aug 3-6, 8pm. $15-50.  
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