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for Sun., April 21
  • Music

  • Arts

    Visual Arts

    Umlauf Sculpture Garden: With Out, With In

    If you're standing at the crossroads of wood and sculpture, one of the talented giants you'll see landmarking that intersection is James Surls. If you're at the Umlauf Sculpture Garden and Museum for this new show, you'll be amazed by more than 30 of that maestro's works – his iconic, surrealistic wooden creations as well as a few of his giant steel and bronze structures. Note: This is, surprisingly, Surls' first solo exhibition of sculptures in Austin.
    Through Aug. 18
  • Community

    Events

    Uranium Savages Easter Resurrection Bash

    Uranium Savages, "Austin's longest-running musical parody," is helping SouthPop celebrate Easter with their second annual Easter hat parade, plus an Easter egg hunt for kiddos ages 12 and under.
    Sun., April 21, 2:30pm. Members, free; nonmembers, $5.  
  • Music

  • Community

    Kids

    Wake Up, Brother Bear!

    Watch Brother Bear and Sister Bear experience a full year of glorious seasons: see a waterfall melt, meet a butterfly, chase an elusive fish, and skate on an icy pond. Children are invited to join the action to help create magical moments.
    March 24-April 21. Sundays, 2pm. $12.
  • Community

    Out of Town

    Wildflower Celebration

    The fields will be ablaze in color as the wildflowers bloom and the farm sponsors special activities.
    Sat.-Sun., April 6-21, 9:30am-6pm. Free.
    Wildseed Farms, Fredericksburg
  • Music

    Willie Pipkin & Friends

    Sundays, 10:30pm, Sundays, 10:30pm, Sundays, 10:30pm, Sun., Sept. 22, 10:30pm and Sundays, 10:30pm
  • Qmmunity

    Arts & Culture

    Wonders of Wax: All Vinyl Easter Edition

    Conscious Ravings with a plethora of “wowza!” DJs, including Daddie Dearest and Evan Balbona as the Floorplay DJs.
    Sun., April 21, 4-10pm. Free.  
  • Arts

    Visual Arts

    Words/Matter: Latin American Art and Language

    Drawn primarily from the Blanton’s extensive collection of Latin American art, this exhibition offers an innovative perspective on how artists of the region have explored the links between visual art and written language since the early decades of the twentieth century, with examples ranging from Alejandro Xul Solar and Joaquín Torres-García’s creation of alphabets and metaphysical signs, to the visual experiments of Brazilian concrete poets in the 1960s, and the political codification of language by conceptualists since the 1970s.
    Through May 26

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