VISUALâARTS
Exhibits
Events
⢠June 11, 6 p.m. â A performance of âWomen Speak.â Copies of the anthology are available in The Dairy Barn Art Center Gallery Shop.
The gallery is at 8000 Dairy Lane, Athens. Hours are Wednesday through Sunday, noon to  5 p.m. Admission is $5; free for members.
Reservations to view the exhibition can be made at www.dairybarn.org. To learn more about WOAP visit womenofappalachia.com
GRAYSON GALLERY
AND ARTâCENTER
⢠April 17 and 19, 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. â Dropoff for Celebrate the Earth art show and sale.
⢠April 17 â Grant workshop with Doris Fields of Beckley and artist Rebecca Hall demonstrating.
Untangling Queer Countryâs Many Connections to Country Music Talking with artists Mercy Bell, Melissa Carper and Brennen Leigh, Country Queer founder Dale Henry Geist and many more Tweet
Mercy BellPhoto: Chad Cochran
At first glance, you might get the impression that the genre called queer country is a kind of country music that exists in its own zone, apart from any concerns about commerciality. Without a doubt, queer country â because of its range of sensibilities and its variety of musical approaches â sounds familiar to fans of Americana, itself another capacious genre that seems to connect only fitfully with country music.Â
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50 Arkansas artists who made good noise in 2020
50 Arkansas artists who made good noise in 2020
December 29, 20207:43 pm (top left to top right) Bazi Owenz, Bailey Bigger, Joshua Asante, (bottom left to bottom right) The Eulogy Brothers, Elise Davis, DOT
Creators are going to create, and whether the upheaval of a year like 2020 stifles or fuels that process probably depends on the artist, and on the day. Many, undoubtedly, made music in 2020 at their own expense, investing time, money or both into projects they couldn’t support or promote with live performance, at least not for the foreseeable future. A good number of them, especially those who make music for a living, have spent the year devoted to an industry and to a live music landscape that may well emerge from Post-Pandemic Times looking very different than it did in 2019. But I’m willing to bet that by the time some of this quarantine-crafted music reaches the stage, congregants’ ears