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X-WR-CALNAME:Delaware Today
X-ORIGINAL-URL:https://delawaretoday.com
X-WR-CALDESC:Events for Delaware Today
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DTSTART:20200101T000000
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20200911T170000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20210108T170000
DTSTAMP:20201218T155515
CREATED:20200804T135919Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200804T135919Z
UID:141455-1599843600-1610125200@delawaretoday.com
SUMMARY:"STEPPING OUT TO STEP IN" -Theresa Chromati Exhibition at The Delaware Contemporary
DESCRIPTION:STEPPING OUT TO STEP IN\nTheresa Chromati\nSeptember 11\, 2020 – January 8\, 2021\nOpening Reception: Friday\, September 11 | 5 – 9 PM\n6 PM | Poetry Performance by Jasmine Combs\n7 PM | Gallery Talk with artist Theresa Chromati\, Associate Professor Tiffany E. Barber*\, and exhibition curator Kristen Hileman \nStepping Out to Step In began with the debut of The Delaware Contemporary’s public art initiative on June 5th\, featuring three monumental outdoor banners by Theresa Chromati. Taken together the three banners describe\, in the artist’s words\, an “ambiguous journey” as a central figure attains “balance and then power.” Opening September 11\, 2020\, this exhibition will continue that journey as Chromati’s work “steps in” to the Carole Bieber & Marc Ham Gallery. \nIn Chromati’s layered paintings\, human forms emerge from vortices of color and texture. Although their faces\, breasts\, bellies and limbs appear otherworldly\, Chromati’s figures are engaged in the very human effort to find balance\, strength\, and empowerment in a chaotic world. These figures often share features with the artist herself\, notably a spiraling hair style\, and are depicted in relationship to “scrotum flowers\,” the artist’s symbol for power gained through harmonizing feminine and masculine energy. Disembodied eyes are another repeated motif evoking the presence of a guiding force that aids the figures along their paths toward self-realization. \nChromati speaks of “intimacy” as being instrumental to her work. She creates a sense of trust\, pleasure\, and revelation in part through extraordinary visual details and tactile mixed-media surfaces which welcome close and prolonged looking. A soundscape made in collaboration with the electronic and pop artist Pangelica accompanies Chromati’s paintings and enhances the immersive sensuality of the imagery. But above all\, Chromati’s openness to sharing an autobiographical journey of the mind and spirit\, anchored in her experience as a Black woman alive in the first decades of the 21st century\, invites an intimate engagement with viewers. \nNow based in New York City\, Chromati was born and raised in Baltimore and attended the Delaware College of Art and Design in Wilmington\, DE as well as the Pratt Institute in New York\, NY. The exterior banner portion of Stepping Out to Step In was featured in Architectural Digest\, T Magazine – The New York Times\, Bmore Art\, The Philadelphia Inquirer\, and Delaware Today. \nFrom June through November 2020\, the three exterior banners created by Theresa Chromati will be on view on The Delaware Contemporary’s façade\, accompanied by an exterior soundscape made in collaboration with Pangelica. \nCarole Bieber & Marc Ham Gallery \n*Joining us for the opening event on September 11\, 2020\, Tiffany E. Barber is an Associate Professor of Africana Studies at the University of Delaware. She is a scholar\, curator\, and critic of 20th and 21st century visual art\, new media\, and performance with a focus on artists of the black diaspora. \n
URL:https://delawaretoday.com/calendar/stepping-out-to-step-in-theresa-chromati-exhibition-at-the-delaware-contemporary/
CATEGORIES:Museums and History
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://delawaretoday.com/wp-content/uploads/sites/3/2020/07/ItsAllMe_Horizantal_72DPI.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="139239":MAILTO:tmichels@decontemporary.org
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20200911T170000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20210108T170000
DTSTAMP:20201218T155515
CREATED:20200804T161345Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200804T161345Z
UID:140872-1599843600-1610125200@delawaretoday.com
SUMMARY:"We the People\, for Show or for Sure" by Chawky Frenn at the Delaware Contemporary
DESCRIPTION:WE THE PEOPLE\, FOR SHOW OR FOR SURE\nChawky Frenn\nSeptember 11\, 2020 – January 8\, 2021\nOPENING EVENT: Friday\, September 11 | 5 – 9 PM \nChawky Frenn’s We the People\, for Show or for Sure features forty-seven mixed media paintings executed on posters of the Constitution. These works represent Frenn’s response to the timeless manipulations of power and wealth\, and their timely manifestations in Citizens United\, the Revolving Door\, deliberate injustice\, and perpetual wars. The paintings summon the viewer to reflect on two fundamental concerns: the influence of money on politics and policy\, and the history of the struggle for human rights. Combinations of image and text provide a visual space for reflection on people\, triumphs\, challenges\, and threats to democracy as expressed in the words of presidents\, lawmakers\, justices\, economists\, historians\, writers\, and civil rights activists. \nHow are the values and ideals of the United States manifested in politics and policies? Why\, in the “Land of the Free”\, are people still fighting to attain the inalienable rights enshrined in the foundation of our democracy? Can politicians and legislators serve the two masters of the American people and wealthy election donors with integrity? In his first solo exhibition at The Delaware Contemporary\, Chawky Frenn asks us to be true to our values and protect the legacy that made the United States a beacon of democracy and human rights. Although our history is plagued with cruelty and hostility\, it is still ripe with abundant decency\, compassion\, and empathy. Frenn’s life\, teaching\, and art attests to this abundance. \nDespite the use of facsimiles of the United States Constitution as the canvas for the paintings\, and the quotes from politicians\, We the People is not only political\, it is humanistic\, civic\, social\, ethical\, moral\, and even spiritual. We the People is a tribute to Goya’s The Disasters of War\, Otto Dix’ The War\, Henry Moore’s London’s War – The Shelter Drawings\, and Käthe Kollwitz’ and Leon Golub’s oeuvre. It is an active meditation fueled by empathy for humanity\, awareness of the interconnectedness of humankind and nature\, and recognition that people share similar basic rights\, needs\, and hopes. This series aspires to promote ideals that inspire people around the world\, and seeks to stimulate a candid dialogue leading to a more just\, peaceful\, and sustainable world. \nBefore emigrating to the United States in 1981\, Frenn witnessed six years of civil war in his native Lebanon. The devastating effects of war would powerfully influence his life and work. Frenn received a BFA from Massachusetts College of Art and Design in Boston\, MA in 1985 and an MFA from Tyler School of Art at Temple University in Philadelphia\, PA in 1988. He received critical acclaim by the New York Times\, NY ARTS\, Art New England\, Boston Globe\, Connecticut Post\, Atlanta Magazine\, and Pittsburgh Post-Gazette in the United States\, and An-Nahar\, L’Orient – Le Jour\, and The Daily Starin Lebanon. In 2017\, Frenn was awarded the Fulbright-Nehru Academic and Professional Excellence Award and spent five months painting and teaching in New Delhi\, India. He is currently an Associate Professor at George Mason University in Fairfax\, VA. \nBeckler Gallery and Hennessy Project Space \n
URL:https://delawaretoday.com/calendar/we-the-people-for-show-or-for-sure-by-chawky-frenn-at-the-delaware-contemporary/
CATEGORIES:Museums and History
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://delawaretoday.com/wp-content/uploads/sites/3/2020/07/Frenn_WTP31.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="139239":MAILTO:tmichels@decontemporary.org
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20200911T170000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20210108T170000
DTSTAMP:20201218T155515
CREATED:20200804T161453Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200804T161453Z
UID:140867-1599843600-1610125200@delawaretoday.com
SUMMARY:"Farthest From the Ordinary" Friends Juried Exhibition at the Delaware Contemporary
DESCRIPTION:RIVERFRONT 20/20\nJuried Exhibition\nSeptember 11\, 2020 – January 8\, 2021\nOPENING EVENT: Friday\, September 11 | 5 – 9 PM \nOn the heels of our 20th year on the riverfront\, The Delaware Contemporary celebrates innovation and the creative spirit in our juried Riverfront 20/20 exhibition. This call for artworks sought a visual dialogue by artists of the Mid-Atlantic region examining diverse approaches to built environments\, natural terrain\, and relationships to community. \nArtists chose to respond to The Delaware Contemporary’s call inspired by riverfront sites in numerous ways\, sharing works that reflect a variety of media\, both abstract and representational imagery\, and approaches that convey beauty\, humor\, desolation\, and more. However\, the art of the sixteen selected Mid-Atlantic artists is united by a view that riverfront settings\, like that in which this museum has evolved over the past twenty years\, are a significant interface between nature and humanity; and\, an opportunity to investigate the ways people and their environment fall in and out of harmony. \nA number of works in this show draw motifs and materials from nature\, reflecting the visual and tactile experiences of being on a riverfront and interacting with water and plant life. Wood and clay\, along with drawn\, painted\, and printed forms seem to sprout\, grow\, and persevere in these pieces. Other artists are inspired by the aesthetics of the urban and industrial environments that have historically developed along rivers. These works might present the vibrancy of human activity\, warn against its excesses\, or point to the decay and strange solitude of abandoned areas. Regardless of whether the works are celebratory or cautionary in tone\, the powerful emotional and sensory impact of the riverfront experience is felt in them. \nPARTICIPATING ARTISTS:\nKen Biedler\, Ava Blitz\, Agathe Bouton\, Caroline Brown\, Susan Casey\, Andrew Chalfen\, Delna Dastur\, Phoebe Grace\, Cat Gunn\, Nanci Hersh\, Sarah Hunter\, Sandra Lee\, George Lorio\, Maeve McCool\, Kathran Siegel\, and Renqian Yang. \nDuPont I & II Galleries \n
URL:https://delawaretoday.com/calendar/farthest-from-the-ordinary-friends-juried-exhibition-at-the-delaware-contemporary/
CATEGORIES:Museums and History
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://delawaretoday.com/wp-content/uploads/sites/3/2020/07/Image-7-8-20-at-2.31-PM.jpeg
ORGANIZER;CN="139239":MAILTO:tmichels@decontemporary.org
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20200911T170000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20210108T170000
DTSTAMP:20201218T155515
CREATED:20200804T161508Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200804T161508Z
UID:140861-1599843600-1610125200@delawaretoday.com
SUMMARY:"Riverfront 20/20" Juried Exhibition at The Delaware Contemporary
DESCRIPTION:RIVERFRONT 20/20\nJuried Exhibition\nSeptember 11\, 2020 – January 8\, 2021\nOPENING EVENT: Friday\, September 11 | 5 – 9 PM \nOn the heels of our 20th year on the riverfront\, The Delaware Contemporary celebrates innovation and the creative spirit in our juried Riverfront 20/20 exhibition. This call for artworks sought a visual dialogue by artists of the Mid-Atlantic region examining diverse approaches to built environments\, natural terrain\, and relationships to community. \nArtists chose to respond to The Delaware Contemporary’s call inspired by riverfront sites in numerous ways\, sharing works that reflect a variety of media\, both abstract and representational imagery\, and approaches that convey beauty\, humor\, desolation\, and more. However\, the art of the sixteen selected Mid-Atlantic artists is united by a view that riverfront settings\, like that in which this museum has evolved over the past twenty years\, are a significant interface between nature and humanity; and\, an opportunity to investigate the ways people and their environment fall in and out of harmony. \nA number of works in this show draw motifs and materials from nature\, reflecting the visual and tactile experiences of being on a riverfront and interacting with water and plant life. Wood and clay\, along with drawn\, painted\, and printed forms seem to sprout\, grow\, and persevere in these pieces. Other artists are inspired by the aesthetics of the urban and industrial environments that have historically developed along rivers. These works might present the vibrancy of human activity\, warn against its excesses\, or point to the decay and strange solitude of abandoned areas. Regardless of whether the works are celebratory or cautionary in tone\, the powerful emotional and sensory impact of the riverfront experience is felt in them. \nPARTICIPATING ARTISTS:\nKen Biedler\, Ava Blitz\, Agathe Bouton\, Caroline Brown\, Susan Casey\, Andrew Chalfen\, Delna Dastur\, Phoebe Grace\, Cat Gunn\, Nanci Hersh\, Sarah Hunter\, Sandra Lee\, George Lorio\, Maeve McCool\, Kathran Siegel\, and Renqian Yang. \nDuPont I & II Galleries \n
URL:https://delawaretoday.com/calendar/riverfront-20-20-juried-exhibition-at-the-delaware-contemporary/
CATEGORIES:Museums and History
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://delawaretoday.com/wp-content/uploads/sites/3/2020/07/SeaRise_GeorgeLorio_72DPI.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="139239":MAILTO:tmichels@decontemporary.org
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20200926T100000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20210131T160000
DTSTAMP:20201218T155515
CREATED:20200805T192130Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200805T192130Z
UID:135691-1601114400-1612108800@delawaretoday.com
SUMMARY:Fantasy and the Medieval Past Exhibition at Delaware Art Museum
DESCRIPTION:September 26\, 2020 – January 31\, 2021 \nFor the past 150 years\, Americans have been fascinated by the medieval past. Drawing from the work of contemporary illustrators Tony DiTerlizzi\, Leo and Diane Dillon\, and Ian Schoenherr\, as well as historical works from the Museum’s Howard Pyle collection\, this exhibition takes a look at the fantasy medieval realms of some of our beloved young adult reads. From magical creatures\, castle complexes\, and images of knighthood\, prepare to be transported into re-imaginations of the medieval world that reflect contemporary America’s changing understanding of gender equality\, cultural identity\, disability\, and difference.\nStories and Lies\, 2012. Illustration for Bitterblue\, Graceling Realm Book 3\, by Kristin Cashore\, (Dial Books for Young Readers\, 2012). Ian Schoenherr (born 1966) Ink on Scratchboard 8 3/4 x 11 1/2 inches. Courtesy of the artist. © Ian Schoenherr.\nCredits:\nFantasy and the Medieval Past was organized by the Delaware Art Museum and Emily Shartrand through the support of the University of Delaware’s Lynn Herrick Sharp Curatorial Fellowship. This exhibition is made possible by the Edgar A. Thronson Foundation Illustration Exhibition Fund. Additional support is provided\, in part\, by a grant from the Delaware Division of the Arts\, a state agency\, in partnership with the National Endowment for the Arts. The Division promotes Delaware arts events on www.DelawareScene.com. \n
URL:https://delawaretoday.com/calendar/fantasy-and-the-medieval-past-exhibition-at-delaware-art-museum/
LOCATION:Delaware Art Museum\, 2301 Kentmere Parkwat\, Wilmington\, DE
CATEGORIES:Art,Museums and History
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://delawaretoday.com/wp-content/uploads/sites/3/2020/03/Fantasy-and-the-Medieval-Past.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="Delaware%20Art%20Museum":MAILTO:ckearns@delart.org
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20201017T100000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20210110T160000
DTSTAMP:20201218T155515
CREATED:20200804T185237Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200804T185237Z
UID:135789-1602928800-1610294400@delawaretoday.com
SUMMARY:Louis Comfort Tiffany: Treasures from the Driehaus Collection at the Delaware Art Museum
DESCRIPTION:A celebration of beauty\, Louis Comfort Tiffany: Treasures from the Driehaus Collection features more than 60 objects\, spanning over 30 years of Tiffany’s prolific career. The exhibition showcases Tiffany’s innovative work in leaded and blown glass\, including stellar examples of his famous windows\, lamps\, and vases. One of America’s most renowned artists\, Louis Comfort Tiffany worked in nearly all of the media available to artists and designers in the late 19th and early 20th centuries—glass\, ceramic\, metalwork\, jewelry\, and painting. His love of the natural world inspired floral-themed vases and lamps\, delicate vegetal candlesticks\, and dramatic landscape windows. Tiffany earned international acclaim\, receiving prestigious awards in exhibitions across Europe and the United States\, and his busy studios produced a range of objects\, from common household items to one-of-a-kind masterpieces. His work was enthusiastically collected by art museums and private collectors throughout his lifetime and continues to be highly sought after today. This exhibition revels in the artistry and craftsmanship of the Tiffany artworks from Chicago’s distinguished Richard H. Driehaus Collection\, highlighting masterworks in a comprehensive exhibition curated by David A. Hanks.\nCredits:\nLouis Comfort Tiffany: Treasures from the Driehaus Collection was organized by the Richard H. Driehaus Museum and is toured by International Arts & Artists\, Washington\, DC. This exhibition is made possible in Delaware by the Hallie Tybout Exhibition Fund for American Art and the Johannes R. and Betty P. Krahmer American Art Exhibition Fund. Additional support is provided\, in part\, by a grant from the Delaware Division of the Arts\, a state agency\, in partnership with the National Endowment for the Arts. The Division promotes Delaware arts events on www.DelawareScene.com.\nImage: Tiffany Studios\, Group of lamps (birds-eye detail). Photograph by John Faier. © 2013 The Richard H. Driehaus Museum. \n
URL:https://delawaretoday.com/calendar/louis-comfort-tiffany-treasures-from-the-driehaus-collection-at-the-delaware-art-museum/
LOCATION:Delaware Art Museum\, 2301 Kentmere Parkwat\, Wilmington\, DE
CATEGORIES:Art,Museums and History
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://delawaretoday.com/wp-content/uploads/sites/3/2020/03/Tiffany-.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="Delaware%20Art%20Museum":MAILTO:ckearns@delart.org
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20201106
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20210109
DTSTAMP:20201218T155515
CREATED:20201103T194624Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20201103T194624Z
UID:145349-1604620800-1610150399@delawaretoday.com
SUMMARY:Pours: Feelings of an Almost Human Nature by Kim Klabe at the Mezzanine Gallery
DESCRIPTION:Pours: Feelings of an Almost Human Nature\, an exhibition of works on paper by Kim Klabe\, will be on view in the Mezzanine Gallery from November 6\, 2020 through January 8\, 2021. A free opening reception will be held on Friday\, November 6\, 2020 from 5-7 p.m. \nAfter years of painting traditional representational scenes in acrylic and watercolor\, Klabe turned to beer and wine to create spontaneous artwork she calls “pours.” The artist pours wine or dark beer onto thick watercolor paper and manipulates the paper to move the liquid. After the liquid dries\, Klabe finds shapes in the dried stain like one might identify shapes in the clouds. She then defines those shapes and completes the images with markers and colored pencil. This technique leads to images that invite viewers to look closer\, reflect\, and often laugh. \nKlabe explains\, “I love the way the wine and beer move across the textured paper – their color\, the way they puddle and leave shimmery sugars behind. I love how wine and beer can bring people together for laughs and conversation. This medium is unique and unusual and has helped me connect with my true love for art and expression.” \nThis show features “pours” that are inspired by music that has meant something to Klabe over the years. Her musical inspirations range from her first two albums (Goodbye Yellow Brick Road by Elton John and Young Americans by David Bowie) played on a turntable to the music that guided her through high school\, college\, divorce\, and other impactful times in her life. She names the pours to reflect either the title of a song or album or selected lyrics. Artwork inspired by music from The Police\, Counting Crows\, and Pink Floyd will be on view. \nThe Mezzanine Gallery\, open weekdays from 8:00 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.\, is located on the second floor of the Carvel State Office Building\, 820 N. French Street\, Wilmington. Visitors must wear face coverings and maintain 6 feet distance from other individuals not in their household. \nImage: All Revved Up with No Place to Go\, 2020\, Gnarly Head Black wine pour\, 22 x 30 inches \n
URL:https://delawaretoday.com/calendar/pours-feelings-of-an-almost-human-nature-by-kim-klabe-at-the-mezzanine-gallery/
LOCATION:d\, 820 N. French St\, Carvel state office building\, 2nd floor\, Wilmington\, DE\, 19801
CATEGORIES:Galleries
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://delawaretoday.com/wp-content/uploads/sites/3/2020/10/AllRevvedUp-scaled.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="135528":MAILTO:roxanne.stanulis@delaware.gov
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20201120T100000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20201219T170000
DTSTAMP:20201218T155515
CREATED:20201217T163635Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20201217T163635Z
UID:145937-1605866400-1608397200@delawaretoday.com
SUMMARY:Sarah McRae Morton: A Solo Exhibition of Paintings
DESCRIPTION:Sarah McRae Morton will be showing new works in a solo exhibition at the Somerville Manning Gallery from November 20 – December 19\, 2020. \nSarah McRae Morton’s paintings are invented portraits of her ancestors and historical figures – people from her own life\, from books and paintings\, and from her travels and stories learned. The events and people illustrated are not bound by time or fact but are immersed with ghosts and artifacts from cross sections of history. Sarah’s work is wildly romantic\, with an earthly palette and energetic movement. \nSarah McRae Morton grew up in rural Lancaster\, Pennsylvania\, where she still keeps a hayloft studio above the horse stalls in her family’s barn. Sarah attended the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts and the University of Pennsylvania. She has studied chemical compositions of paintings in Rome as well as studied with the esteemed figurative painter\, Odd Nerdum in Norway. Sarah received a Matisse Foundation fellowship for her work on the local history of West Virginia and attended the Skowhegan School of Painting and Sculpture. Her works have been exhibited around the world\, including Washington\, Pennsylvania\, Delaware\, Maine\, Switzerland\, France\, and Germany. \n
URL:https://delawaretoday.com/calendar/sarah-mcrae-morton-a-solo-exhibition-of-paintings/
LOCATION:12610\, 101 Stone Block Row\, Breck's Mill\, 2nd Floor\, Greenville\, DE\, 19807\, United States
CATEGORIES:Galleries
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://delawaretoday.com/wp-content/uploads/sites/3/2020/11/Mending-the-Nets-60-x-72_-2020.JPG-scaled.jpg
ORGANIZER;CN="Somerville%20Manning%20Gallery":MAILTO:info@somervillemanning.com
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20201124T120000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20210102T160000
DTSTAMP:20201218T155515
CREATED:20201217T164506Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20201217T164506Z
UID:146325-1606219200-1609603200@delawaretoday.com
SUMMARY:Holiday Art Market
DESCRIPTION:Fine Art and Craft show featuring 13 local artists selling jewelry\, ceramics\, paintings\, prints\, cards\, mosaics\, wearables and ornaments. This six-week show offers lots of shopping opportunity for those seeking unusual\, hard to find gifts. 20% of all sales benefit the Newark Arts Alliance. Admission and parking are free. Artists featured this year are: Val Walton\, Eleanor Fink\, Sarah Dressler\, Terry Foreman\, Carole Fox\, Suzanne Gaadt\, Karen Hornor\, Wendi Jacobs\, Gilda Jennings\, Kelly Martin\, Stephanie Przybylek\, Annie Sinton\, and Mary Jane Tyrie. Hours include: Tues.\, Wed.\, Sun.\, 12-4pm\, Thurs.\, Fri. Sat. 12-7pm. Event runs from Nov. 24\, 2020 to Jan. 2\, 2021. Admission and parking is free. Guests must wear a mask and maintain social distancing. \n
URL:https://delawaretoday.com/calendar/holiday-art-market-4/
LOCATION:12236\, 276 E. Main St. Ste. 102\, Newark\, DE\, 19711\, United States
CATEGORIES:Shopping
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://delawaretoday.com/wp-content/uploads/sites/3/2020/11/HAM-DE-Event-Image-SQUARE-1.png
ORGANIZER;CN="139056":MAILTO:info@newarkartsalliance.org
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20201127T170000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20210103T213000
DTSTAMP:20201218T155515
CREATED:20201113T144355Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20201113T180700Z
UID:146032-1606496400-1609709400@delawaretoday.com
SUMMARY:The Grand Presents Winter in Wilmington Drive-Thru Holiday Light Show
DESCRIPTION:What started as drive-in concerts\, progressed to fall drive-in movies\, and now The Grand is thrilled to turn on the lights around town with a new holiday activity sure to be enjoyed by generations of your family. The Winter in Wilmington Drive-Thru Holiday Light Show opens Black Friday\, November 27 and runs through Sunday\, January 3\, 2021 on Wilmington’s Riverfront. \nThe holiday season comes to life as you drive your car through the Winter in Wilmington Light Show on Wilmington’s Riverfront. Thousands of lights make up this dazzling show. Dash through this electric trail in your one-horse open sleigh as there is so much to see! Your family will love the animated installations\, interactive music\, and holiday cheer. Create a new family tradition this year with The Grand’s Winter in Wilmington Light Show! \n“The lights have to be out in our three theaters for the time being as we continue to weather the challenges of the coronavirus. We see this light show as a way that The Grand can still be a bright light for the entire community\,” says Executive Director Mark Fields. \n“When we made the difficult decision to postpone the Riverfront ice rink for the 2020 season\, it was important for us to bring in another family-friendly holiday activity that was safe for all” said RDC Executive Director Megan McGlinchey. “That’s why we are thrilled to partner with The Grand on this exciting project. The Winter in Wilmington Light Show will provide area families with a fun holiday activity that brings many to the Riverfront while ensuring the safety of our guests!” \n“My family and I are really looking forward to a holiday light show on the Christina Riverfront and I am sure families throughout region will thoroughly enjoy this new entertainment for the winter season\,” said Wilmington Mayor Mike Purzycki. “I invite families all throughout Wilmington to join us for another creative way to celebrate the holidays during these unconventional times. Once again\, Mark Fields and his team at The Grand\, Megan McGlinchey and her colleagues at the Riverfront Development Corporation\, and Scott Humphries and the staff at Light Action have come together to create what promises to be a beautiful and colorful light and sound show.” \nTickets go on sale Monday\, October 26 at 10:00am and are $25 per car. They are available online only at www.TheGrandWilmington.org. To help make the event enjoyable for everyone\, advanced online reservations/pre-purchased admission is required. The Grand is not accepting any in-person purchases at our box offices due to the COVID-19 outbreak. \nIF YOU GO: \nWhat: The Grand’s Winter in Wilmington Drive-Thru Light Show \nWhen: Every Thursday-Sunday starting Black Friday November 27\, 2020 through January 3\, 2021\, excluding Christmas Even/Day and New Year’s Eve/Day. Gates are open from 5pm-9:30pm. \nWhere: The outfield parking lots of Frawley Stadium \nHow much: $25 per car \nHow to buy tickets: Online at www.TheGrandWilmington.org \n
URL:https://delawaretoday.com/calendar/the-grand-announces-winter-in-wilmington-drive-thru-holiday-light-show/
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://delawaretoday.com/wp-content/uploads/sites/3/2020/11/1.jpg
END:VEVENT
END:VCALENDAR