Home Events

for Thu., July 18
  • 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
  • Dripping Springs Rodeo

    Come to the 14th Annual Dripping Springs Rodeo on Memorial Day Weekend! This year they will be bringing all the rodeo style fun on Friday, Saturday and Sunday! Bring your family and friends for a weekend of mutton bustin', bull riding, vendor shopping, great food, and all things rodeo!
    May 23-25  
    Dripping Springs Ranch Park Event Center
Recommended
  • Film

    Special Screenings

    Do the Right Thing (1989)

    It’s a sweltering summer in Bed-Stuy, 1989. Black people are still the majority in the Brooklyn neighborhood, and Buggin’ Out (Giancarlo Esposito) wonders why the Italian Americans running Sal’s pizzeria don’t have any brothers on the wall. That’s the specific starting point for this Spike Lee joint, but how the “Fight the Power”-soundtracked film progresses – from a vile display of police brutality, to a subsequent riot, and an ultimate return to business as usual – could be plucked from any contemporary American city. Both heartbreaking and cathartic, Do the Right Thing remains as brutally relevant as ever. – Carys Anderson
    Thu., July 18
    • Community

      Events

      Sopranos Trivia

      Just when I thought I was out, Get It Games launched Sopranos trivia and brought me back in. As the groundbreaking HBO series continues to celebrate its 25th anniversary, head south to Vacancy Brewing and reminisce on the life of the original antihero. How much pulp can Tony Soprano tolerate? Was Christopher Moltisanti’s movie titled Axe, Hatchet, or Cleaver? Did Meadow Soprano end up choosing medicine or law? Whoever can answer these questions is destined to become a made man. Gabagool not included. – Carys Anderson
      Thu., July 18
    • Film

      Special Screenings

      CineClub México Presents Alucarda (1978)

      Cine Las Americas has summoned a true legend of Mexican horror cinema. Writer/director Juan López Moctezuma’s 1977 supernatural horror Alucarda, la hija de las tinieblas (Alucarda, the Daughter of Darkness) stands as not only a febrile addition to the deliciously sleazy subgenre of nunsploitation, but also a devious and deviant adaptation of sapphic bloodsucker Carmilla. Now star Tina Romero will talk about this disturbing, entrancing underground classic in a Q&A at this special bilingual screening event. – Richard Whittaker
      Thu., July 18
    • Community

      Events

      Hot Summer Nights

      As the dog days of summer descend, the music industry shuts down. Enter Hot Summer Nights, the Red River Cultural District’s annual music festival that forgoes cover charges in order to keep clubs open and musicians paid. This year, the event promises free performances by Alexalone, Gummy Fang, Norman Ba$e, Porcelain, MsGold, Borzoi, and more, throughout our Downtown music epicenter. Make special note of the Chronicle’s Thursday party at Empire, featuring Moody Bank$, Daniel Fears, David Shabani, and DJ Kay Cali. After all, getting sweaty is a small price to pay to #DefendRedRiver. – Carys Anderson
      July 18-20
    • Music

      Hot Summer Nights: The Austin Chronicle party w/ Moody Bank$, Daniel Fears, David Shabani, DJ Kay Cali [garage]

      Free local music festival Hot Summer Nights boasts plenty of mosh pits and dance parties, but The Austin Chronicle’s kickoff party starts things slow with a showcase of Central Texas R&B. “Hip-Soul” artist David Shabani anchors his chill rap flow with sultry guitar and melancholy piano, while Daniel Fears backs his soulful croon with classical strings (check last month’s Close to Home EP, recorded by a BIPOC orchestra at the Draylen Mason Music Studio). On latest track “Love Me,” meanwhile, Moody Bank$ trades her smoky alto for a playful Erykah Badu homage. Austin Music Awards-nominated DJ Kay Cali kicks off the show. – Carys Anderson
      Thu., July 18, 7pm. Free.
    • Film

      Special Screenings

      Jaws: The Revenge (1987)

      “I have never seen it, but by all accounts it is terrible. However, I have seen the house that it built, and it is terrific.” You can’t blame Michael Caine for not being too kind about not only the most ridiculed movie of his career, but the film for which he missed receiving his Best Supporting Actor Oscar (for Hannah and Her Sisters) in person. Join Eric Samaniego & Wright Sulek of the Trash in the Can podcast as they take a deep dive into this flopping mess that finally drowned the original sharksploitation franchise. – Richard Whittaker
      Thu., July 18, 8pm
    • Music

      Missy Elliott, Busta Rhymes, Ciara, Timbaland

      It’s like the universe just wants me to be broke this summer! Truth be told, when Missy “Misdemeanor” Elliott made this ostentatious announcement last year alongside Ciara and Busta Rhymes I already knew I wasn’t gonna survive! Missy Elliott has taken her visual experience on her first headlining tour. She’s been doing big numbers as a special guest and opening act for the likes of Michael and Janet Jackson, Madonna, and Lil’ Kim, has even done major festivals such as the original Lilith Fair Tour (1998) and Verizon Ladies First Tour (2004). A bona fide headliner, it’s about damn time this hip-hop legend put her name on a tour! For her Austin stop, she shares the spotlight with longtime collaborator and legendary producer Timbaland. My childhood all on one stage! – Cy White
      Thu., July 18, 7pm  
    • Film

      Special Screenings

      Saturday Night Fever (1977)

      So you think it’s just John Travolta in that white suit throwing wild shapes on the dance floor? Think again. Misguided double bills with Grease only lead to confused audiences, because this is as perfect a slice of New York sleaze as anything Abel Ferrara pulled out of the sewer. Adapting Nik Cohn’s 1976 New Yorker article “Tribal Rites of the New Saturday Night,” director John Badham took a dive into the testosterone-fueled lives of twentysomethings in late-Seventies Brooklyn – all desperate to get laid, get in a fight, get noticed, get out. The Grammy-winning soundtrack may have made the Bee Gees the biggest band in the world, but Tony Manero (a deservedly Oscar-nominated Travolta) is more like a Bruce Springsteen antihero. – Richard Whittaker
      Thu., July 18, 6pm
    • Community

      Events

      Third Thursday: Adult Summer Camp

      For adults, summer camp often just means a week without the kids. This summer camp lets grownups get in on the fun too! Relive some of the best things about camp and create new memories with this after-hours event at Bullock, featuring tie-dye, friendship bracelets, relay races, a scavenger hunt, music, and s’mores cocktails, along with nostalgic tunes from EPIC Entertainment. If it’s anything like real summer camp, you’ll leave with a sunburn and three new best friends. – Kat McNevins
      Thu., July 18
    • Community

      Events

      Tiny Art

      Everything is cuter when it’s small. Cutest animal? A baby one. Cutest coin? Dime. Ever seen one of those microscopic things they call “water bears” or “moss piglets,” aka tardigrades? Bizarro little indestructible creatures with robot-looking mouths, but so cute! Now make your own adorable tiny art on a 3-by-3-inch canvas with other grownups who like to keep it small. All skill levels are welcome, and materials are provided, so just bring yourself and a “little” inspiration. – Kat McNevins
      Thu., July 18
    All Events
    • Music

      Allisen & the Wy's Guys

      Thu., July 18, 6:30pm. No cover (21+).
    • Community

      Events

      Austin Public Pools Opening

      Hoo-wee! Does anything feel better than a dip in the pool during a hot Texas summer? While some among us may be privileged to own private watering holes, most of us get to enjoy the great Austin PARD’s work at the 44 public aquatic facilities to choose from this summer. You’ve got regional, neighborhood, and community pools; a wading pool; splash pads; and the crown jewel: Barton Springs. Check austintexas.gov/pools-splashpads for up-to-date info on which pools are open, what their entry fee is, and whether you have what it takes to be a public pool lifeguard. Now, outta the way if you don’t wanna get wet: I’m gonna do a cannonball! – James Scott
      Through August 18
      Multiple locations
    • Arts

      Visual Arts

      “BUMUO: Rebuilding the Filipino Body”

      Regine Malibiran is a woman of passion. She pours her soul into every project she undertakes – creative and entrepreneur, activist and advocate. Now as the founder of forth space productions, she has taken all of her passion and experience to forge a path for artists to express their truths fearlessly and with the support of forth space, whose mission and name derive from the “sociological concept of the fourth space as a realm where meaning is made and all the potential that lies between here and forward.” “BUMUO,” from the Tagalog for “whole,” is an exhibition that centers the strength and artistic brilliance of the Filipino community. Six artists tell the connective story of the Philippines, reclaiming their history, rejecting the manipulation of the colonizers who inhabited their home for four centuries, and building a future of healing and empowerment. On view through July 27. – Cy White
      Through July 27
    • Arts

      Visual Arts

      “Carros y Cultura: Lowriding Legacies in Texas”

      Thanks to Seventies funk band War, the word “lowrider” often calls to mind the unforgettable sax riff of the band’s 1975 No. 1 single. But lowrider can mean a snazzy customized car with hydraulics or a person who works on such a vehicle, and the culture around these cars has strengthened Mexican American communities in the Southwest since the Forties. Learn more about them at this exhibit featuring an interactive touchscreen mural, cars and bikes on display, and stories about the people who make lowriding a community. A member reception takes place May 18. – Kat McNevins
      Through Sept. 2
    • Arts

      Visual Arts

      “Sonder”: 2024 Summer Group Show Reception

      A lucky few may have already seen the “Sonder” show at Davis, but if you haven’t, please rush to the reception this Saturday. It’s a perfect time to bask in a wealth of styles and mediums. Dissect the surreal landscapes of Garrett Middaugh and Isabel Stensland. Lose yourself in the hypnotic shapes of Lisa Beaman and Joseph Hammer. Marvel at the intricate details in sculptures by Dana Younger and John Sagar. Sigh at Denise M. Fulton’s brightly impressionist nature paintings. And those are just small portions of artists represented! There’s something for every artistic taste, so gorge yourself on Davis’ impeccable buffet of beauty. – Cat McCarrey
      Through July 20
    • Arts

      Visual Arts

      “Temperate Grasslands”

      We’re in that liminal space of summer, where life is lush and blooming, right before it succumbs to death by heat. Big Medium’s curator Coka Treviño has collected an exhibit full of garden scenes representing that magical explosion of garden growth. In her own words, it’s a way “to forget how heavy it feels to be a human.” There’s constant discovery in the wide variety of works, from dozens of artists like the established Dawn Okoro and up-and-comers MuthaGoose. Join the opening reception this Friday to view interpretations of glorious greenery. – Cat McCarrey
      Through August 4
    • Music

      Barbara Nesbitt & Friends

      Thursdays, 8:30pm, Thu., July 11, 8:30pm, Thu., July 18, 8:30pm and Thu., July 25, 8:30pm
    • Music

      Barfield the Tyrant

      Thu., July 18, 10:30pm. $10 cover (21+).
    • Arts

      Visual Arts

      Bending Light

      Taylor Davis might have the coolest job description I’ve ever heard. She’s an independent curator (dream) and a landscape designer. So basically, she finds beauty in everything she touches. For “Bending Light,” Davis has accumulated work by four BIPOC artists, multidisciplinary masters “illuminating the nuanced experiences and collective memories of queerness and femininity in Black cultural production,” to quote the exhibit description. A weighty task, but one the artists – Kaima Marie Akarue, Ciara Elle Bryant, Catherine Martinez, and Chandrika Metivier – pull off with fascinating aplomb. Through mediums including but not limited to sculpture, video, collage, and photos, the viewer glimpses unique experiences. It’s a fresh reflection of this world. – Cat McCarrey
      Thursdays-Saturdays. Through Aug. 22
    • Arts

      Comedy

      Cap City Comedy Club

      That's right: Cap City Comedy Club, the longtime cornerstone of Austin's comedy scene for nearly four decades is at a new venue in the Domain. And here's Valerie Lopez with a closer look at what's in store for the scene via the venue. Click for details!
    • Music

    • Music

      Colton Lane Mormon

      Thu., July 18, 7pm
    • Music

      Cosmic Convoy

      Thu., July 18, 8:30pm. Free.
    • Arts

      Visual Arts

      Creating Encuentros: Changarrito 2012–2024

      Traveling in Mexico, you frequently encounter changarritos – portable food carts or tienditas run by hardworking entrepreneurs. The carts usually operate outside of any formal regulation and, in that way, mirror the resilience and creativity of Mexican culture. In 2005, artist Máximo González appropriated the concept of the changarrito as a way for artists to take their work directly to the people. The idea came to Austin’s venerable Mexic-Arte Museum in 2012, with dozens of artists displaying art and interacting with the public outside the Downtown gallery. The concept is back and will run through August. – Brant Bingamon
      Through August 25
    • Music

    • Music

      Da' Homies

      Thursdays, 10:30pm, Thursdays, 10:30pm, Thu., Dec. 5, 10:30pm, Thu., Dec. 12, 10:30pm and Thu., Dec. 19, 10:30pm. $10 cover (21+).
    • Music

    • Arts

      Visual Arts

      Deanna Miesch: “Flatland Revisited”

      Art and … math? Not as improbable as it may seem, especially when seen through the veil of fantasy. And that’s exactly what artist/gallerist/therapist Deanna Miesch does. Compiling works inspired by 1800s mathematician Edwin A. Abbott’s imaginary world of Flatland (with touches of fellow mathematician Lewis Carroll’s Wonderland, of course), Miesch presents reality with a fanciful twist. Her visuals show our world, blurred or tilted a little askew. It’s easy to see portals to another world in every line and angle. What dimensions will you discover? – Cat McCarrey
      May 31-Aug. 11  
    • Music

    • Music

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