Join Detective Kevin Getz, ISPD; Cyndi Johnson, Family Voices; and Emily Perry, Susie’s Place as they discuss how we can better protect children in our community. Topics include parenting children with disabilities, protecting children from predators and internet safety
Featuring: Gary Applegate, Suzette Weakley, and Rusty Bladen
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Bring your wildflower guides and binoculars to take in the sights and sounds among beautiful terrain and rock outcrops.
Join us as Jean Capler, MSW, LCSW, Rehab Hospital of Indiana, discusses emotions and stroke recovery. This group meets the first Thursday of each month.
First Thursdays is a monthly series featuring extended evening hours on the first Thursday of every month, with activities for everyone. Our May First Thursday will be the last major event at the art museum before it closes for renovations.
37TH Annual Gene Flander Golf Outing in support of the Miles Kanne Harmony School Scholarship Fund
Step back in time to learn about the history of our 200 year old gristmill!
- 11am: Leather Crafting – Stop by the leather shop and make your own leather craft to understand the importance of leather in the history of Spring Mill.
- 11:30am: Sawmill Demonstration – Learn how lumber was produced!
- 12:30pm: Hike to the Cave – The water from the spring is the reason the mill was built here 200 years ago! Meet Wyatt at the mill steps.
- 1:30pm: Blacksmithing – Learn how a blacksmith made the necessary tools in the Blacksmith Shop.
- 3:30pm: Make a Rag Doll – Children’s toys were handmade 200 years ago! Make your own rag doll at the Weaver’s Cabin.
- 4pm: Last Grind of the Day – Watch the gristmill grind corn into cornmeal. Mill closes at 4:30, buildings close at 5.
The Friends of the Library Bookstore is holding a special store-wide half-price sale, Sunday, May 7, from noon to 5:00 Many bargains for children, teens and adults. Green tags, new merchandise, and some specialty items not included.
Explore a cave, protect your spaceship from attack, or visit the opera—all through the magic of virtual reality with HTC Vive and Oculus Rift.
The Dance Center presents its 47th Spring Recital! The recital features dancers, age four through high school, performing a variety of tap, and jazz pieces.
No tickets needed. Doors will open 30 minutes prior to show time. Each show will run 1 hour and 15 minutes.
The Zookeeper’s Wife tells the account of keepers of the Warsaw Zoo, Antonina and Jan Zabinski, who helped save hundreds of people and animals during the German invasion.
Stars: Jessica Chastain, Johan Heldenbergh, Daniel Bruhl and Timothey Radford. Rate PG-13
A Truly Moving Picture Award | Heartland Film
Mrs. Handsome https://www.facebook.com/missushandsome
John the Silent An ongoing musical exploration of Indiana-based singer, songwriter, priest (http://johnthesilent.com)
Nick Jeffries https://thehighplains.bandcamp.com
After their old flat becomes damaged, Emad (Shahab Hosseini) and Rana (Taraneh Alidoosti), a young couple living in Tehran, are forced to move into a new apartment. However, once relocated, a sudden eruption of violence linked to the previous tenant of their new home dramatically changes the couple’s life, creating a simmering tension between husband and wife. The Salesman won the 2017 Academy Award® for Best Foreign Language Film. This is the fourth film of Asghar Farhadi’s to screen in IU Cinema, with the others being The Past, About Elly, and A Separation. In Persian with English subtitles. (2K DCP Presentation)
IU Cinema is screening The Salesman as part of The Seventh Art Stand, a coalition of cinemas, community centers, and museums across the United States programming a nationwide series of film screenings and discussions from the countries affected by the Muslim Ban. An act of cinematic solidarity against Islamophobia, the Stand spans 53 screenings in 26 states, with supporters like Ramin Bahrani, Wajahat Ali, Laurie Anderson, Woody Harrelson, John Turturro, Steve Buscemi, Debra Winger, Iqbal Theba and Mary Harron.
Whitney make casually melancholic music that combines the wounded drawl of Townes Van Zandt, the rambunctious energy of Jim Ford, the stoned affability of Bobby Charles, the American otherworldliness of The Band, and the slack groove of early Pavement. Their debut, Light Upon the Lake, is due in June on Secretly Canadian, and it marks the culmination of a short, but incredibly intense, creative period for the band. To say that Whitney is more than the sum of its parts would be a criminal understatement. Formed from the core of guitarist Max Kakacek and singing drummer Julien Ehrlich, the band itself is something bigger, something visionary, something neither of them could have accomplished alone. The band itself is something bigger, something visionary, something neither of them could have accomplished alone.
Any one of us may be, may become, or may know someone who is in need of critical medical services they cannot afford. At Bloomington’s Volunteers in Medicine, access to healthcare is embraced as a fundamental right and a building block for all facets of life. VIM is the only comprehensive health care clinic offering free medical services to low‐income medically undeserved residents of Monroe and Owen counties.
On Tuesday, May 9th, beginning at 5:30p.m., The Venue Fine Art & Gifts will host a presentation by Nancy Richmond, the Executive Director of Volunteers in Medicine (VMI), which will address your questions about VIM; who they are, how they are funded, what services they provide, and to whom. With this vital information, you will learn where to go, and where to send others who are in need.
We at The Venue believe you will find VMI to be a source of inspiration. People, Professionals, and Businesses coming together to help those in need. You will also learn how you can contribute. This is what makes Bloomington Bloomington.
Join friends and community members who are working for a national health plan, Medicare for all.
Hoosiers for a Commonsense Health plan is sponsoring the Midwest premiere of a new documentary film, BIG PHARMA, MARKET FAILURE. The film reveals the truth about the high cost of drugs and what we can do about it.
Emerging from underground venues in Chicago’s Northwest side, NE-HI made its name on both its live energy and cleverly wrought guitar anthems. On its second album Offers (Grand Jury), the band takes those basement-forged instincts and refines them, lets its guitars explore new angles, and focuses its songwriting. The result shows there are a wide range of post-punk possibilities yet to be explored.
After their old flat becomes damaged, Emad (Shahab Hosseini) and Rana (Taraneh Alidoosti), a young couple living in Tehran, are forced to move into a new apartment. However, once relocated, a sudden eruption of violence linked to the previous tenant of their new home dramatically changes the couple’s life, creating a simmering tension between husband and wife. The Salesman won the 2017 Academy Award® for Best Foreign Language Film. This is the fourth film of Asghar Farhadi’s to screen in IU Cinema, with the others being The Past, About Elly, and A Separation. In Persian with English subtitles. (2K DCP Presentation)
IU Cinema is screening The Salesman as part of The Seventh Art Stand, a coalition of cinemas, community centers, and museums across the United States programming a nationwide series of film screenings and discussions from the countries affected by the Muslim Ban. An act of cinematic solidarity against Islamophobia, the Stand spans 53 screenings in 26 states, with supporters like Ramin Bahrani, Wajahat Ali, Laurie Anderson, Woody Harrelson, John Turturro, Steve Buscemi, Debra Winger, Iqbal Theba and Mary Harron.
An hour of quiet reflection for all.
You are invited to make change through your presence in silence with others. Our silence together will be interspersed with the calming sounds of crystal bowls by Janiece Jaffe. Bring a cushion, yoga mat, prayer rug or simply take a seat. This is a safe place for all people to come together in self-reflection, prayer, or meditation.
You can sign up for e-mail updates at [email protected].
Doors will open 30 minutes before start time.
STATIONTOSTATION features fresh work by new and visiting faculty in the Studio Art Department, in the School of Art and Design who are transitioning to or from life at Indiana University. Works in the show represent a wide range of schemes and methods in media including film, kinetic installation, painting,
printmaking, design, and sculpture.
STATIONTOSTATION’s title is borrowed from the 1976 album by music icon, David Bowie. The album marked a major shift in musical style, mood, and persona for Bowie, a musician already known to be chameleonic. In this album, Bowie experimented with different kinds of atmospheric instrumentation and sound in a way that bridged his seemingly disparate work pre-dating and following the release of this record. This exhibition is not a thematic show, but STATIONTOSTATION provides a logic of organization, loosely tying together works of very different artists and designers. Coinciding with their change of venue, the artists in this show are undertaking shifts in their work, experimenting with materials, perspectives, ideas and modes of production. The title of the exhibit evokes each individual artist’s act of traversing a new environment and describes the experience of moving through the gallery to discover commonalities between the works. Some pieces in the show describe transformation overtly and explicitly. In others, mutation becomes part of a narrative or plays out in the way work is made or conceived.
STATIONTOSTATION examines the idea of creative flux as a marker in the artists’ practice to celebrate distillation and experimentation in preparation for what comes next.
Exhibiting Artists: Justin Bailey, Melanie Cooper Pennington, E. E. Ikeler, Dakota Konicek, Sarah Lasley, Amanda Lechner, Julie Rooney, Sarah Tortora
W. Tylbor-Kubrakiewicz, and David Wolske
STATIONTOSTATION features fresh work by new and visiting faculty in the Studio Art Department, in the School of Art and Design who are transitioning to or from life at Indiana University. Works in the show represent a wide range of schemes and methods in media including film, kinetic installation, painting,
printmaking, design, and sculpture.
STATIONTOSTATION’s title is borrowed from the 1976 album by music icon, David Bowie. The album marked a major shift in musical style, mood, and persona for Bowie, a musician already known to be chameleonic. In this album, Bowie experimented with different kinds of atmospheric instrumentation and sound in a way that bridged his seemingly disparate work pre-dating and following the release of this record. This exhibition is not a thematic show, but STATIONTOSTATION provides a logic of organization, loosely tying together works of very different artists and designers. Coinciding with their change of venue, the artists in this show are undertaking shifts in their work, experimenting with materials, perspectives, ideas and modes of production. The title of the exhibit evokes each individual artist’s act of traversing a new environment and describes the experience of moving through the gallery to discover commonalities between the works. Some pieces in the show describe transformation overtly and explicitly. In others, mutation becomes part of a narrative or plays out in the way work is made or conceived.
STATIONTOSTATION examines the idea of creative flux as a marker in the artists’ practice to celebrate distillation and experimentation in preparation for what comes next.
Exhibiting Artists: Justin Bailey, Melanie Cooper Pennington, E. E. Ikeler, Dakota Konicek, Sarah Lasley, Amanda Lechner, Julie Rooney, Sarah Tortora, W. Tylbor-Kubrakiewicz, and David Wolske
Hit musical, performed by Playhouse Community Theater, begins when Little Sisters of Hoboken discovering that their cook, Sister Julia, has accidentally poisoned 52 sisters, and they are in dire need of funds for the burials. The sisters decide that the best way to raise the money is to put on a variety show, so they take over the school auditorium. All ages show.
The Buskirk-Chumley Theater is proud to screen Jafar Panahi’s Taxi Tehran.
This film is part of The Seventh Art Stand, nation-wide series of screenings and discussions featuring films from Islamic counties. This series will take place in May as an act of cinematic solidarity against Islamophobia.
Jafar Panahi has directed 15 short, documentary, and feature films and has won awards at film festivals across the globe. According to The Guardian, after making several dramas about the challenges of everyday life in his country, Panahi was threatened with imprisonment by the Iranian government, which prevented him from travelling and banned him from making films for 20 years. He has protested by working under the wire to make contraband film, including Taxi Tehran. This features the filmmaker posing as a taxi driver and talking to his passengers about the social challenges they face in Iran.
Taxi Tehran won the Golden Berlin Bear and the FIPRESCI Prize at the 2015 Berlin International Film Festival. It’s also received five other awards and six additional nominations at festivals in the US and across the globe.
This screening of Taxi Tehran is supported by the Center for the Study of the Middle East and the Inner Asian and Uralic National Resource Center.
To open this event we will be screening a collection of local, short films made through The Instant Gratification Movie Challenge. The movie challenge happens every month in Bloomington, and it is open to all, people are invited to create a short film inspired by the month’s theme. To tie in with The Seventh Art Stand and our screening here at the Theater, this month’s theme is “Arrivals/Departures”. If you would like to find out more please visit their website: http://monthlymoviechallenge.com
Doors will open at 7pm.
Language: Persian with English subtitles
Runtime: 82 minutes
MPAA rating: Not available
Screening format: DCP
The public is invited to a League of Women Voters Legislative Update on Saturday, February 4, from 9:30 to 11 a.m., in the Bloomington City Council Chambers. State legislators representing Monroe County will discuss developments in the Indiana General Assembly and will respond to audience questions and concerns.
This is the second of five planned Legislative Updates sponsored by the League of Women Voters of Bloomington-Monroe County. All updates will be held in the Bloomington City Council Chambers, Showers Building, 401 N. Morton St. and are free and open to the public. They will be taped by Cable Access Television Services through the Monroe County Public Library and will be replayed by CATS throughout the current legislative session.
Subsequent Legislative Updates are scheduled for March 4, April 8, and May 13.
Hit musical, performed by Playhouse Community Theater, begins when Little Sisters of Hoboken discovering that their cook, Sister Julia, has accidentally poisoned 52 sisters, and they are in dire need of funds for the burials. The sisters decide that the best way to raise the money is to put on a variety show, so they take over the school auditorium. All ages show.
The BCT is thrilled to bring Béla Fleck & Abigail Washburn to the stage this May. A banjo duo might seem like a musical concept beset by limitations. But when the banjo players cast in those roles are Béla Fleck & Abigail Washburn – she with the earthy sophistication of a postmodern, old-time singer-songwriter, he with the virtuosic, jazz-to-classical ingenuity of an iconic instrumentalist and composer with bluegrass roots- it’s a different matter entirely. There’s no denying that theirs is a one-of-a-kind pairing, with one-of-a-kind possibilities.
Join Béla Fleck & Abigail Washburn at the Buskirk-Chumley Theater to witness a picking partnership unlike any other on the planet.
We will explore the pond and puddles for animals that live in and around water, like pollywogs and dragonflies.
Mother’s Day live tango music by Tamango. Beginner class by Thuy Bogart from 3:00-3:30 PM. Come to dance, watch, listen, and enjoy.