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Fairs & Festivals

For the past two years or so, our calendars have been a bit bare. But things are looking up as Memphis is going full-throttle with events once again. With food, fashion, art, music, and more, it’s time to celebrate the return of the fair and festival season!

APRIL

Bluff City Blues Crawfish Festival

Where crawfish are red and the music is blues, this festival is perfect for a rendezvous. Benefiting A Betor Way, the festival will have arts and crafts vendors, food, and music by Memphissippi Sounds, Mick Kolassa and the Endless Blues Band, the Eric Hughes Band, and more.

Carolina Watershed, April 16, tinyurl.com/bluffcityblues

Farm to Tap Festival

As part of an initiative to have more Tennessee brewers use more local farm products, the festival will showcase more than 20 guild member breweries, with tickets including unlimited samples, tasting cups, and great times with farmers, food trucks, vendors, and more.

Wiseacre Brewing, April 16, farmtotap.org

Shelby Forest Spring Fest

Shelby Forest Spring Fest is going to be a hoot — at least that’s what the owl there tells me. With live music, shopping, kids zone, food trucks, and wildlife exhibits and lectures throughout the day, you won’t want to miss out.

Shelby Farms, April 16, shelbyforestspringfest.com

Africa in April

Saluting the Republic of Malawi for its 35th festival, the family-friendly Africa in April event will be filled with live performances, food and merchandise vendors, and the International Diversity Parade.

Robert R. Church Park, April 20-24, africainapril.org

Double Decker Festival Oxford

In 1994, Oxford, Mississippi, made the bold decision to import a double-decker bus from England. A momentous occasion for the history books if you ask the Double Decker Festival, which speaks to the momentous-ness, with 100+ art and 20+ local food vendors, an impressive slew of musical performances, art demonstrations, and a Best Dressed Pet Contest.

Oxford Courthouse Square, April 22-23, doubledeckerfestival.com

Sashay! Memphis Fashion Week walks the runway. (Photo: Courtesy Sierra Hotel Images)

Memphis Fashion Week

Walk, walk, fashion, baby. You’re gonna want to work Memphis Fashion Week into your schedule. The live runway show will feature emerging designers and a special headlining designer guest, Amanda Uprichard.

Arrow Creative, April 22, memphisfashionweek.org

Juke Joint Festival

The Juke Joint Festival celebrates the Delta’s past and living history. Kicking off at 10 a.m., the day will include blues music, racing pigs, arts and crafts, food, and a dozen free outdoor stages of blues and roots music.

Clarksdale, MS, April 23, jukejointfestival.com

Taste the Rarity: Invitational Beer Festival

The best and weirdest beers from breweries all over the country are coming to Memphis to celebrate the seventh Taste the Rarity with unlimited drinking, plus live music, food trucks, and other nonsense.

Wiseacre Brewing, April 23, tastetherarity.com

Rajun Cajun Crawfish Festival has crawfish galore. (Photo: Courtesy Porter-Leath)

Rajun Cajun Crawfish Festival

Too few occasions present themselves when you can bob for crawfish, race crawfish, and eat crawfish, but you’ll have the chance at Porter-Leath’s festival.

Downtown Memphis, April 24, porterleath.org/rajun-cajun-home

Art in the Loop (Photo: Courtesy Greg Belz)

Art in the Loop

Some of the region’s most talented artists will set up shop at this festival celebrating the arts, where you can also enjoy live music and food trucks.

Ridgeway Loop Road, April 29-May 1, artintheloop.org

Storyfest

Forty Memphians, ranging in ages from 9 to 93, will share their stories through live performances at the Halloran Centre. Engagement activities and community reflections will follow at the free fest.

Halloran Centre, April 29-30, orpheum-memphis.com/event/storyfest

May Day Festival and Memphis Children’s Theatre Festival

Theatre Memphis celebrates a century of entertaining with live entertainment, an array of artists’ and artisans’ booths, food trucks, and more. On the same day, Theatre Memphis will host the Children’s Theatre Festival as a pay-what-you-can event.

Theatre Memphis, April 30, theatrememphis.org

MAY

Beale Street Music Festival

Megan Thee Stallion, Weezer, Van Morrison, Lil Wayne, and many more (60+ artists) are coming for the city’s legendary springtime music festival.

Fairgrounds in Liberty Park, April 29-May 1, memphisinmay.org/BSMF

Memphis in May International Festival

For the month of May, this annual festival brings the world to Memphis and Memphis to the world, and this year, it is saluting Ghana through cultural events and performances, museum and gallery exhibits, films, luncheons, and a gala.

Various locations, May 1-31, memphisinmay.org

Bookstock: Memphis Area Authors’ Festival

You’re gonna want to book it to Memphis Public Libraries for this festival of author talks, activities for teens and children, and 60 local authors’ exhibits.

Benjamin L. Hooks Central Library, May 7, memphislibrary.org/bookstock

World Championship Barbecue Cooking Contest

When May rolls in, Memphis knows that’s the cue to start getting our tummies ready for what USAToday calls the “Most Prestigious Barbecue Contest.” For four days, the best of the best barbecue buffs will compete in such categories as Ribs, Shoulder, and Whole Hog, as well as Hot Wings, Sauce, and “Anything But Pork.”

Fairgrounds in Liberty Park, May 11-14, memphisinmay.org/WCBCCtickets

Bluff City Fair

This fair isn’t bluffing when it comes to fun and excitement. You’ll be entertained with a majestic thrill show, rides galore, fair food, and an all-day petting zoo.

Liberty Bowl Stadium, May 20-30, bluffcityfair.com

DreamFest Weekend

A dream is a wish your heart makes, but this festival is doing more than just wishing for its dream of unity, collaboration, and community. For this three-day event, an impressive array of artists will come together to promote Memphis music and artist collaboration.

Overton Park Shell, May 20-22, dreamfestweekend.com

Memphis Greek Festival

Cue the groans from children as parents inevitably evoke the phrase “It’s all Greek to me” at this family-friendly festival with scrumptious Greek food, tours of the Annunciation Greek Orthodox Church, live music, artisan booths, and activities for kids.

Annunciation Greek Orthodox Church, May 20-21, memphisgreekfestival.com

Beale Street Artcrawl Festival

Before the barcrawlers creep onto the street we call Beale, artcrawlers can go amuck at this pop-up market of art and merchandise.

Beale Street, May 21, bealestreetartcrawlfestival.com

Memphis Mushroom Festival

All fungi, fungals, and funpals are invited to this five-day, four-night camping festival that celebrates the foods and fungi grown in Tennessee, Mississippi, and Arkansas. With speakers, workshops, forays through the forest, yoga, dancing, cooking classes, and tastings — let’s just say this festival covers a lot of ground.

Shelby Forest Park, May 26-30, memphismushroomfest.com

JUNE

Memphis Italian Festival

Is it sauce or gravy? Well, the folks at this fest have taken a side, seeing that the festival boasts a Spaghetti Gravy Contest. In addition to their food-related competitions, the event will have live music, along with art vendors and, of course, tons of great food.

Marquette Park, June 2-4, memphisitalianfestival.org

Memphis Pride Fest Weekend

Spanning four days, the celebration includes a Drag N Drive, dance party, parade, and full festival with two stages, more than 150 vendors, food trucks, and so much more.

Various locations, June 2-5, midsouthpride.org/pridefest

Memphis Margarita Festival

Sometimes all life gives you is limes, and all you can do is make margaritas. Thankfully, the city’s best margarita-makers are ready to inspire you at this festival where you can sample margaritas from your favorite restaurants alongside awesome entertainment.

Overton Square, June 4, memphismargaritafestival.com

Craft Food & Wine Festival

Showcasing scrumptious, locally-produced breads, cheeses, fruit preserves, cured meats, and more, this event will raise funds for Church Health.

The Columns, June 5, craftfoodandwinefest.com

MidSouth Nostalgia Festival

Veteran actors from your favorite classic movies and TV shows — from the likes of Leave It To Beaver and Laramie — are appearing in person to talk about their careers and give out autographs at this fest.

Whispering Woods Hotel and Conference Center, Olive Branch, MS, June 9-11, midsouthnostalgiafestival.com

Memphis Vegan Festival

If you’re living on the veg, you’ll want to check out this day full of vegan food, live entertainment, and a marketplace featuring local businesses, plant-based health and beauty products, and clothing.

Pipkin Building,, June 18, facebook.com/901veganfestival

Tri-State Black Pride Weekend

Tri-State Black Pride presents workshops, lectures, a drag show, stand-up comedy, and a Sunday Funday of live music.

Various locations, June 16-19, tristateblackpride.com

Bluff City Balloon Jamboree

Scheduled for Father’s Day weekend, the Bluff City Balloon Jamboree will delight its attendees with hot air balloon rides, a balloon glow event, carnival attractions, arts and crafts, and live music.

Shelby Farms Park, June 17-19, bluffcityballoonjamboree.com

Performers dance at Memphis Juneteenth Festival. (Photo: Courtesy Memphis Juneteenth Festival)

Memphis Juneteenth Festival

With Juneteenth being declared a federal holiday in the U.S. last year, the 29th Annual Memphis Juneteenth Festival promises to celebrate African-American culture, food, entertainment, and the overall significance of the holiday. Along with food, music, and entertainment, festival-goers can look forward to the annual Juneteenth Career and Health Fair Expo, the Memphis Juneteenth Lifetime Achievement Awards, the Juneteenth Ultimate Dance Showdown, Food Truck Sunday, and Praise Fest at Juneteenth.

Health Sciences Park, June 18-19, juneteenthfreedommemphis.com

Mid-South Air Show

It’s a bird. It’s a plane. No, it’s … yeah, it’s a plane. While Superman might not be in the sky for the Mid-South Airshow, the U.S. Navy Blue Angels are just as impressive, featuring military demonstrations, aerobatic performances, static display aircraft, and local emergency response helicopters.

Millington-Memphis Airport, June 18-19, midsouthairshow.com

Memphis Crafts & Drafts

Shopping is exercise. Exercise gives you endorphins. Endorphins make you happy. So if you don’t want summertime happiness to be smothered by rising temperatures, you’ll want to head over to this market of local makers and artists. It’s called the transitive property, right?

Crosstown Concourse Plaza and Atrium, June 25, memphiscraftsanddrafts.com

July

Summer Cocktail Festival

Shake it up a bit this July with this epic dance party with summer-inspired cocktails, fresh local food, photobooth ops, and fun activities.

Overton Square, July 29, memphisfestivals.com/summercocktailfestival

AUGUST

Memphis Chicken & Beer Fest

If, like the Zac Brown Band, you appreciate your chicken fried, a cold beer on a Saturday night, a pair of jeans that fit just right, and the radio up, you’ll appreciate the Memphis Chicken & Beer Fest where you can get all that — except the jeans. With live music, interactive games, a bungee run, and more, tickets include more than 90 beverage samples, and a portion will benefit the Dorothy Day House.

Liberty Bowl Memorial Stadium, August 6, memphischickenandbeer.com

Elvis Week 2022

This August marks the 45th anniversary of Elvis’ death and the 44th anniversary of the first Elvis Week. What began as a small group of fans gathering at Graceland’s gates has turned into the multi-day phenomenon we know today. Highlights from the week include personal tours of Graceland led by Priscilla Presley and Jerry Schilling, the Candlelight Vigil, the Ultimate Elvis Tribute Artist Contest, and nightly parties.

Graceland, August 9-17, graceland.com/elvis-week

SEPTEMBER

Delta Fair & Music Festival

Carnival rides, live music, attractions, livestock shows, oh boy, there’s so much going on every day at the Delta Fair.

Agricenter International, September 2-11, deltafest.com

Germantown Festival

This festival is one of the few places in town where you’re guaranteed to see a weenie and say, “Aww, look how cute.” In addition to its Running of the Weenies race, this festival of arts has children’s activities, rides and games, entertainment, a car exhibit, community displays, and more.

Germantown Civic Club Complex,
September 10-11, germantownfest.com

Cooper-Young Festival

There’s no need to stay cooped up in your house when you can join in on the fun at the Cooper-Young Festival, where art, music, and crafts come together to celebrate Memphis’ culture and heritage.

Cooper-Young, September 17, cooperyoungfestival.com

Gonerfest 19

Music enthusiasts won’t be able to resist Goner Records’ siren call, and yes, somehow, this siren call reaches all the way to Australia. Be on the lookout for the lineup.

Railgarten, September 22-25, goner-records.com/pages/gonerfest

Mid-South Fair

At this must-do event since 1856, fair-goers can enjoy more than 50 rides, an array of ground acts, and of course favorite fair fare — funnel cakes, turkey legs, candied apples; you name it, they’ve perfected it.

Landers Center, September 22-October 2, landerscenter.com/mid-south-fair

Mighty Roots Music

Whatta fest, whatta fest, whatta mighty good fest. Mhhm, this event is back for year two, taking place at the same spot the famous blues singer-songwriter Muddy Waters began his love of blues music. The lineup will be announced April 11th, so keep an eye out.

Stovall, MS, September 23-24, mightrootsmusicfestival.com

Latin Fest

We may not be talking about Bruno once September rolls around, but we should be talking about Latinx representation year-round. Though this fest takes place for just a day, it captures that spirit of appreciation with live Latin music, Latin food and drinks, crafts, and fun for everyone.

Overton Square, Saturday, September 24, overtonsquare.com

Pink Palace Crafts Fair

The Pink Palace Crafts Fair is back to celebrate its Big 5-O with 150 artists from around the country, ready for you to explore their works.

Museum of Science & History,
September 24-26, moshmemphis.com

Mempho Music Festival

Mempho never disappoints, and you know it. Three days of music’s biggest names playing amid the natural beauty of Memphis Botanic Garden. The lineup will be released next week and tickets are already selling fast.

Radians Amphitheater at Memphis Botanic Garden, September 30-October 2, memphofest.com

OCTOBER

King Biscuit Blues Festival

Founded in 1986, this fest celebrates blues music with the highest regard across five stages; plus you’ll see a variety of buskers. Of course the three-day event wouldn’t be complete without the Flour Power 5K, the Tour da Delta bicycle race, and a Kansas City-sanctioned barbecue contest, all in historic Downtown Helena.

Helena, AR, October 5-8, kingbiscuitfestival.com

Memphis Bacon & Bourbon Festival

You might ask, what’s shakin’ over at this festival? Well, bacon, that’s what’s shaking — bacon and bacon-inspired dishes to sample. Oh, and bourbon, lots of bourbon.

Metal Museum, October 7, memphisbaconandbourbon.com

Edge Motorfest

Start your engines and gear up for this day of more than 150 cars, food trucks, vendor booths, and more in the Edge District. Trust us when we say, this’ll be more than a pit stop in your weekend activities.

Edge Motor Museum, October 8, edgemotormuseum.com

Soulsville USA Festival

We all know Memphis wouldn’t be Memphis without its roots in soul music, and this festival aims to remind us of that fact. In addition to educational and interactive activities, the festival will include live music, food trucks, vendors, games for kids, and free admission to the Stax Museum of American Soul Music.

Soulsville USA District, October 14-16, soulsvilleusafestival.com

Memphis Food & Wine Festival

Benefiting FedExFamilyHouse, the Memphis Food & Wine Festival, which showcases local chefs alongside acclaimed national chefs and top global vineyards, will leave your tummy so full and happy that you’ll miss the festival dearly until its return.

Memphis Botanic Garden, October 15, memphisfoodwinefestival.org

Indie Memphis Film Festival

If you’re a bit more introverted, a lot of the events on this list will probably leave you needing a day to recover from the social exhaustion. And while it’s worth it in exchange for all the fun you’ll have, what if I told you there was a festival where you can have fun while being your introverted self? Yep, at this one, you get to be a semi-couch potato and watch indie film after indie film to your heart’s content while in the company of your fellow movie-lovers. Plus, enjoy behind-the-scenes panels and discussions.

Midtown, October 19-24, indiememphis.org

World Championship Hot Wing Fest

A championship that is everything we wish it to be — dare I say, it’s the wind beneath our wings, there to bestow the glory upon the best chicken wings, content to let the winners shine and the festival-goers sample the fare, all the while supporting The Ronald McDonald House Charities of Memphis.

Liberty Bowl Memorial Stadium, October 22, worldwingfest.com

RiverArtsFest

The largest juried artist market and urban festival in the Mid-South, the RiverArtsFest brings more than 180 artists from around the country to show off and sell their fine arts. As an added bonus, the festival features artist demonstrations, hands-on art activities for all ages, and local music.

Downtown Memphis, October 22-23, riverartsmemphis.org

Dia de Los Muertos Parade and Festival celebrates the Day of the Dead. (Photo: Angel Ortez)

Dia de Los Muertos Parade and Festival

If you think Dia de Los Muertos is Mexico’s version of Halloween, you’re dead wrong. The Brooks Museum and Cazateatro Bilingual Theatre will show you what the day is all about: honoring ancestors and celebrating the cycle of life and death. A parade begins in Overton Square with floats and performers making their way to the plaza at the Brooks Museum, where you can enjoy art-making activities, face painting, music, costumed performers, and more.

Memphis Brooks Museum of Art, October 29, brooksmuseum.com

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Comedian Gianmarco Soresi’s “Looking for the Next Variant” Tour Stops in Memphis

Memphis is the next stop on comedian Gianmarco Soresi’s “Looking for the Next Variant” tour, but unlike the other cities he’s visited or will visit, this stop has a bit more stakes. “I’m there to meet my girlfriend’s parents,” he says.

Regardless of how the meeting will go, you’ll probably hear a bit about it at his show. “I really dig into my own life,” Soresi says of his style of comedy. “I find that when you’re really honest about yourself, you connect to other people’s truths because we all are very similar in the ways we can be selfish, the ways we can be fools.”

Before he started doing stand-up, Soresi was a theater kid. “I was planning on being a song-and-dance man,” he says, having gone to college for musical theater. “I was doing all the acting, the singing, and the dancing in New York City and booked some stuff here and there. I was the spokesman for General Electric and Baby Bottle Pop — I used to get recognized on the playground when I was out jogging.”

These days, Soresi’s work is less likely to get recognized on the playground. “I can be loud and singy-songy, but I have a dark edge, so if you want some dark humor, some jokes you probably can’t repeat to your parents or grandparents, I’m your guy,” he says. “My favorite comics are Anthony Jeselnik and John Mulaney. If you like either, I think you’ll enjoy me and find me much more affordable. Even if you hate comedy, just come, help a guy out. My girlfriend’s family is going to be there, and I’d really like to impress them by selling this out.”

Gianmarco Soresi, Chuckles Comedy House, Saturday, April 9th, 5 p.m., $12.50 | Lamplighter Lounge, Sunday, April 10th, 8 p.m., $10.

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Iris Orchestra and Collage Dance Collective Partner to Present “Brazil by Night”

You don’t need to grab your passport for this night in Brazil, presented by Iris Orchestra and Collage Dance Collective. “It’s really like a street party indoors in Memphis,” says Rebecca Arendt, director of community initiatives and artist fellows coordinator with Iris.

The night of entertainment will consist of bossa nova melodies with “Memphis-soul seasoning” by the Deborah Swiney Quartet, a Brazilian feast by Carson Rodizio with caipirinha specialty cocktails, and a dance performance, scored by Iris musicians and artist fellows, under the artistic leadership of Iris’ Pedro Maia and Collage’s Fabio Mariano. The night will close with a samba party where guests can dance to DJ Alpha Whiskey.

The two organizations have been in conversation about this event since August 2020. “We knew we wanted to partner between the Iris Artist Fellowship Program and the Collage Dance Company,” Arendt says. They didn’t have a set plan of what that collaboration would look like at first, but when they looked around the Zoom room, they noticed that a few of the dancers with Collage and Pedro Maia, one of the two Iris fellows, were from Brazil. “As we were talking about what really spoke to us artistically, that really kept rising to the surface — wanting to celebrate the mutual connection the two organizations have to that culture,” Arendt says. “We felt that was really the best choice.”

The night promises to be a festive one, Arendt says. “From my perspective, it’s music that’s hard to sit still when you listen to it.”

“Brazil by Night: Where Art and Culture Collide,” Collage Dance Center, Saturday, April 9th, 7 p.m., $75.

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Graceland Exhibition Center Hosts “Beyond Van Gogh: The Immersive Experience”

If Vincent van Gogh were on a panel of artists introducing themselves with a fun fact, you might expect him to mention the whole “I cut off my own ear” thing. But who can really say? After all, as art historian Fanny Curtat says, “There’s so much more to him than that. He was much more than this dramatic one-time episode in his life.”

“We tend to remember him for the darkness in his life,” Curtat adds. “For sure, he struggled, for sure. But when you read his letters, he’s very lucid.” When you look at his paintings, especially the later paintings, Curtat says, you don’t see that darkness; you see color and bright beauty. “[Painting] was his way to communicate with the world and really have his message go through. He was trying to communicate and bring joy and help the people around him.”

This story of an artist seeking to sow joy, rather than sulk in tragedy, is the narrative Curtat and her peers sought to showcase in creating “Beyond Van Gogh,” which immerses viewers in more than 300 of van Gogh’s paintings, beginning with his earlier darker work and ending with the bright and colorful paintings we’ve come to expect. “You feel an explosion of color as he gets to the end of his life,” Curtat says.

The traveling exhibition, now on display at the Graceland Exhibition Center, reintroduces the artist and his story to the public consciousness by relating his work to today. “It’s really about showcasing the timelessness, and it really, really helps you connect with the work differently,” Curtat says. Music fills this space as cutting-edge technology projects and animates van Gogh’s work onto the walls and floors of the gallery. “The audience can literally step foot in [the paintings] and really be a part of his vision of the world, feel its movement, light, color.”

The show is family-friendly. Visits take around an hour. For more information or to purchase tickets, visit vangoghmemphis.com.

“Beyond Van Gogh: The Immersive Experience,” Graceland Exhibition Center, On display through June 5, $36.99+.

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Pickleball Party at Memphis Hunt & Polo Club

If someone were to ask you what’s the fastest-growing sport in America, what would your answer be? If you answered pickleball, congratulations, you must be a blast at trivia night. And if you think that pickleball involves throwing a pickle across the kitchen table, then you must be a different kind of blast at trivia night.

In all seriousness, if you haven’t heard of the game played with paddles and a perforated ball, you aren’t alone. When Taylor Taylor, founder of PickleMania, first heard of the game, she says, “I laughed. I thought it was the weirdest sounding thing.” Taylor played tennis professionally for 20 years until, after a few knee surgeries, her doctor told her to stop. “I was sort of freaking out. Like, oh gosh, what am I gonna do now? I’ve been doing this since I was 10 years old.”

Fortunately, a friend pushed her to start playing pickleball. Though she was hesitant at first, Taylor says, “I was just hooked from the first day. … Then I started thinking about what I wanted to do for the second half of my life. I have a master’s in clinical social work. I had written my thesis … about teaching life lessons through sport.

“I woke up in the middle of the night thinking, oh my gosh, pickleball is the perfect sport because it’s so easy. The learning curve is very small compared to something like tennis. … I always say, nothing is sore in my body when I play pickleball except for my face because I’ve been smiling the entire time, even when I’m getting my booty kicked.”

Out of this idea came the nonprofit PickleMania, which teaches pickleball to under-resourced kids while implementing a curriculum of social-emotional learning, based on adverse-childhood-experience research. So far, the program has been implemented in three Universal Parenting Places. And, since the pandemic, the organization has painted more than 30 pickleball courts in driveways, and it hopes to work in charter schools during this summer for kids in summer school. The organization also offers pickleball lessons outside of its nonprofit efforts. Basically, “The people who can pay for lessons pay for the people who can’t.”

To raise more money, PickleMania is hosting a pickleball tournament in a round-robin style in partnership with Church Health on March 26th. That Friday, there will be an exhibition and pro-am featuring professional player Kyle Yates. Tickets for one or both of the days can be purchased at picklemania.org/events.

Pickle & Party, Memphis Hunt & Polo Club, 650 S. Shady Grove, Friday, March 25, 5-8 p.m. | Saturday, March 26, 9 a.m.-2 p.m.

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Art Art Feature

Waiting by the Window: “Memphis Quarantine” at Crosstown Arts

On March 13, 2020, Jamie Harmon took a photo of his friends Ryan Azada and Maria Applegate peering from behind a screen door. When he posted the photo to Instagram, he asked if others would be interested in participating in this new project of documenting families inside their homes from the outside looking in. It was the beginning of the lockdown period of the pandemic, when naiveté told us that this coronavirus would pass soon enough, that a new hobby, project, or binge-watch would keep us sane in the meantime.

“I was thinking it was only going to be a two-week project,” Harmon says. “Over that two weeks, I had over a hundred people texting me and messaging me [to sign up].” Soon enough, word of the project spread in newspapers and even on CBS Sunday Morning. “I started getting more diverse kinds of people and locations once it left social media.”

Barbara Schroeder poses as a T-rex. (Credit: Jamie Harmon)

Over the two-and-a-half-month course of this project, Harmon photographed more than 1,200 residents at over 800 homes across the Greater Memphis area, as far out as Millington, Mumford, and even Hernando. Each participant received a weblink with edited photos that they could download, free of charge.

“This was just something we were doing because we had nothing else to do and it felt like something good to do,” Harmon says. “A lot of people were dealing with stuff, and I had one singular focus and that made it easier for me because I was doing what I loved to do anyway.”

Self portrait of the artist (Credit: Jamie Harmon)

Each shoot took around 15 minutes, so Harmon could visit as many homes as possible in a day. During the sessions, Harmon, geared with only one light and one camera, shot three locations at every house, letting the family pick one of the spots while he chose the others. With the photographer outside and his subjects inside their homes, the two parties communicated via phone. “Everything’s a collaboration,” Harmon says. “I wanted the families to be involved; I wanted the kids to have ideas. … A lot of the times the parents were like, ‘I don’t have a creative bone in my body; I’ll just do whatever you want,’ and then you start telling them what to do and then they start having ideas and they chime in.

“Everybody was excited that something was happening,” Harmon continues. “It was something to break up the day.” Despite this excitement spurred in these 15 minutes, Harmon would make sure to have his subjects try on a stoic face for at least a few of the photos — the photos that would later make up his current exhibition.

“It’s almost a joke because when somebody tells you to have no expression, generally you start laughing,” Harmon says. “So even though it looks pretty somber, it’s a very different experience.” Yet these opposing emotions that wavered between concern and relief, boredom and excitement, reflected the rollercoaster of quarantine, for even on days when we celebrated birthdays or cheered on virtual graduation ceremonies, Harmon says, “Definitely in the middle of the night, I think we all felt a little panicked.”

But as much as this project was a comfort for Harmon, the project was also a comfort to its participants, who felt like they were a part of something larger than themselves, a part of a bigger picture. Harmon says, “I think a lot of the people who signed up saw it as something I didn’t notice at the time, which is two years later there’s an exhibit up.”

The exhibit will remain on display at Crosstown Arts until April 10th, with a closing reception on April 10th at 3-5 p.m. A book of the photos seen in the exhibition is available for pre-order at memphisquarantine.com.

“Memphis Quarantine” is on view at Crosstown Arts. (Credit: Jamie Harmon)
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True Crimes of Bygone Times Tour at Elmwood Cemetery

“I’ve always loved cemeteries,” Sheena Barnett says. “I’ve just always been that weirdo.” So, true to her character, Barnett began volunteering at Elmwood Cemetery a few years ago, but it wasn’t until May of 2020 that she began cleaning gravestones.

“I call this my sob story,” she says. “[In May 2020] my dad died of Covid, and a week later I was laid off. And it was these two back-to-back blows where I was just like, What do I with myself and my life?” So she went to Elmwood, where she was suggested to take up headstone cleaning. “I just fell in love with it. I was out there, not everyday but close to it, for about a month or so. And then I finally found a job again, and so now I clean about once a week. I’ve cleaned over 300 stones so far, and it’s really helped me with my grief. … It’s so peaceful.”

Research was another source of therapy in this endeavor, Barnett says. “Every time, I cleaned a stone I would research that person.” And her interest in true crime compelled her toward the stories of those who were murdered or were murderers. One of Barnett’s favorite stories involves Prohibition, tamales, and a one-armed broom-peddler. Barnett offers the gist: “Someone took time out of beating this couple to death to eat tamales,” but for the full story, you’ll have to head over to Elmwood Cemetery for Barnett’s True Crimes of Bygone Times tour.

“It’s 100 percent my baby,” Barnett says of the walking tour, in which guests will learn about, among other stories, a woman accused of lacing cookies with arsenic and another married seven times and accused of offing at least three of her spouses. The stories range from the mid-19th century through the 1940s. “We wanted to focus on telling older stories, nothing new, nothing fresh.”

Barnett led her first tour back in June, and it sold out. The subsequent tours in the fall followed suit in popularity. As such, this spring, Elmwood is offering two walking tours, one on March 19th and the other on March 26th, as well as an indoor, seated presentation based on the tour on March 26th at 11 a.m. Register at elmwoodcemetery.org.

True Crimes of Bygone Times: A Walking Tour of Elmwood Cemetery, Saturday, March 19, 2-3:30 p.m., $22.

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Stax Museum Hosts “Love in the Club” Photography Exhibit

A new nightclub is about to hit Memphis. Well, it’s more of a photography exhibition than a nightclub. “[‘Love in the Club’] is unlike any exhibit we’ve ever done,” explains Jeff Kollath, executive director of the Stax Museum of American Soul Music. “We’re doing some aesthetic work in our gallery to make it feel like a Chicago nightclub.”

The exhibit contains 30 or so black-and-white photos by Michael Abramson. Between 1974 and 1977, Abramson, then a student at Chicago’s IIT Institute of Design, photographed the nightlife at Chicago’s legendary clubs. “He was white, and the patrons of the nightclubs were predominantly African-American,” Kollath says. “People were really excited to have their picture taken, but also he provided photos to them. … He documented the Black working class in Chicago in their best clothes on Friday, Saturday night with live music, dancing, DJs. It’s just a really great snapshot of a scene that’s not documented that much.

“The nightclub is an expression of oneself, an expression of individuality and style,” Kollath continues, “and you bring in the idea of love in the club and human relationships, whether it’s for one night or for a lifetime. Those are some of the most formative memories that not just folks in Chicago but any of us can have.”

Accompanying the photos in the exhibit are Patricia Smith’s poems. Smith is a Chicago native, who, having grown up not far from the clubs that Abramson photographed, published a collection of poems about her connection to the photos in her book Gotta Go Gotta Flow. “Her poetry is way better than any caption or cutlines that I could ever write,” Kollath adds.

At the opening reception for this exhibit, DJ Bizzle Bluebland will spin records, bringing the gallery/nightclub to life and encouraging guests to dance as the photos’ subjects once did. Food and beer by Soul & Spirits Brewery will be available.

“Love in the Club” will be on view through September 4th. To find out about other upcoming events at the Stax, visit the Stax’s website or socials.

“Love in the Club” Opening Reception, Stax Museum of American Soul Music, 926 E. McLemore, Friday, March 11, 6-8 p.m., free.

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Behold the Man: Rahn Marion’s “Ecce Homo” on View at TONE

When Pontius Pilate presented Jesus to the riotous crowd before his crucifixion, he uttered the phrase, “Ecce homo,” Latin for “Behold the man.” “He’s all battered and bruised,” artist Rahn Marion says of the Biblical scene. “It’s kind of a gross phrase.” Yet this phrase is the title of Marion’s latest show at TONE.

To many, religion in the Christian context is laced with guilt and shame, especially for those whom the mainstream Christian, Eurocentric rhetoric disenfranchises. The “gross” parts of religion. But Marion, in his show, is reclaiming those parts. “It’s a celebration of man and all these stories of where we’ve come from and where we’re going,” says Marion, the art director at the First Congregational Church. “A lot of these things that I’m interested in [are] Eurocentric, and I think it’s interesting to put it in a Black queer experience. And I feel like a lot of the martyrs and stuff like that is so blatant that it can be translated into the Black experience or a person of color.”

Saint George, oil on canvas, 2020-2021 (Photo: Rahn Marion)

Marion began the 12 paintings of the show in the depths of lockdown and the social and political unrest that followed, when sacrifice and martyrdom were at the forefront. “Every time people really get together and create change, there’s always a sacrifice that happens and that really gets people’s attention, and these people don’t want to be martyrs,” he says. At times like these, people look to religion for comfort or to confront. With this in mind, incorporating and reinterpreting religious iconography and themes was a natural step for Marion, and considering that he has lived in and worked with First Congo since he graduated college and even began his relationship with art by drawing on bulletins during sermons at Boulevard Disciples of Christ, Marion is well-equipped to take on such a challenge.

One of Marion’s paintings reflects on the martyrdom of St. Sebastian. “He’s seen more as a queer icon,” Marion explains, because religious images often depict the saint in the nude. “It was like a way people could see a nude male body and not be freaked out by it.”

Marion does not shy away from nudity in this show as he infuses homoeroticism with religious imagery and themes, but given his religious background, he admits, “It took me a while to feel comfortable painting nude men.” Eventually, Marion confided to his pastor at First Congo about his worries, and she pointed out the prevalence of nudity in Greek and Roman sculpture and throughout art history. “I think it was mostly that I’ve never seen Black men in that way, in the way of Greek sculptures and stuff.”

Though Marion uses oils as his preferred medium for their “delicious and tactile” qualities, the paintings themselves take on that powerful sculptural element. The artist constructs his paintings around symmetry, bringing his figures to the forefront with bodies formed by striking geometric shapes with deep shadows and intense highlights. “I wanted to blend muted tones of the medieval kind of look with more contemporary bold colors,” Marion says, “so there’s a nice play between those two things that kind of puts you in an in-between of historical eras.” By playing with these different artistic eras, Marion captures the timelessness purported of Eurocentric narratives, all the while subverting it by centering the Black queer experience within his pieces.

“I’ve heard people call my work kind of outsider,” Marion says. “And I think that’s just because I stay true to what I like.”

Ecce Homo” is on view at TONE through March 19th.

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Dixon and Theatre Memphis Host Women in the Arts

With March as Women’s History Month, The Dixon Gallery & Gardens and Theatre Memphis are bringing together dynamic Memphis women in the arts for a day of performances, demonstrations, and discussions. 

“The Dixon and Theatre Memphis are two very established organizations,” says Claire Rutkauskas, Theatre Memphis’ director of outreach and engagement. “We have access to a lot. Part of our mission with this is to make sure we are reaching artists who are trying to get started and provide them with a network and a way to celebrate their work and to be seen and be heard.”

This will be the second time the two organizations have hosted this event, called Women in the Arts, with the first time being in March of 2020 right before lockdown. “Our objective is to have it every first weekend in March moving forward,” Rutkauskas says. Unlike its inaugural year, which, due to renovations at Theatre Memphis, was hosted solely at the Dixon, this year Women in the Arts will be celebrated at both campuses. Admission to the family-friendly event is free, and shuttles will be available to travel to and from the locations.

At Theatre Memphis, guests can view a costume design exhibit; sample lunch and treats from Good Groceries Mobile Dining, Dim Sum Mem, Cousins Maine Lobster, El Mero Taco, and MemPops; and shop from local artists and makers at the artist market (the list of vendor booths can be found here). At 11:30 a.m., Marianne Bell from the Hot Foot Honeys will lead an all-levels tap class (no tap shoes required), and throughout the day, local women filmmakers will screen shorts, with most presenting a Q&A following their film. (A schedule for film screenings can be found here.) Plus, the members of the technical team at Theatre Memphis will have a half-hour panel discussion about the intersection between technical theater and gender. “Most of our technical team is women and that’s not usual for theater,” Rutkauskas explains.

Meanwhile, throughout the day, the Dixon will have pop-up performances throughout its galleries and artist demonstrations in its education building, and guests can get a little creative, too, at the Make and Take Art station. At 10:30 a.m., Mia Henley, the executive director of Creative Aging, will moderate a panel discussion celebrating women in the arts, during which Amanda Willoughby from Indie Memphis, Bethania Baray from Opera Memphis, sculptor Brittney Boyd Bullock, and artist/actor/dancer/youth Harper Steinmetz will speak about the tools they’ve used to navigate the arts world in Memphis.

“We just wanted to make sure we were providing a visible platform for women in the arts,” Rutkauskas says. “A lot of what we believe in is collaboration. We’re definitely stronger in numbers.”

A full schedule of Women in the Arts can be found here

Women in the Arts, Saturday, March 5th, 10 a.m.-2 p.m., free. The Dixon Gallery & Gardens, 4339 Park Avenue | Theatre Memphis, 630 Perkins Extd.