To honor her service of more than 31 years as president and a founder of The Community Foundation of Middle Tennessee, friends, family and present and past colleagues threw Ellen Lehman a retirement party, and what a party it was.
Even if it hasn’t traveled to a city near you, you’ve likely seen the Immersive Van Gogh exhibit all over Instagram and TikTok. Emily from Emily in Paris even visited the art installation in Season 1 of the Netflix series. And while seeing the paintings of Vincent Van Gogh come to life, like The Starry Night, is truly an unforgettable experience, Disney fans may prefer seeing some of their fave films with the Disney Animation: Immersive Experience.
The Frist Art Museum presents Otobong Nkanga: Gently Basking in Debris, an exhibition of paintings, tapestries, drawings, video, sculpture, and more that make metaphorical connections between the landscape and human body.
The Country Music Association shared details of its inaugural Diversity & Inclusion Fellowship, an initiative intended to help BIPOC students gain practical experience to help them successfully pursue careers in the country music industry.
In his 2009 book The Sacredness of Questioning Everything, David Dark urged his readers to “submit everything we’re up to, at work and at play, to the discipline of sacred questioning.” He’s taken that advice to heart in his subsequent books, and now he’s carried the interrogation process a step further by revisiting 2016’s Life’s Too Short to Pretend You’re Not Religious, offering a “reframed and expanded” new edition.
The festival’s headliners will be Zeds Dead and Liquid Stranger on night 1, followed by Kendrick Lamar and Odesza on night 2, and Foo Fighters closing the event on the final night.
The pandemic added layers of unpredictability to everything, including the already difficult business of booking and promoting shows as an independent in Nashville. Musicians and fans were dismayed when both the three-venue Mercy Lounge complex and the historic Exit/In — two independent spots with long track records of striking the balance between keeping the lights on and serving the music community — went dark in 2022 amid conflicts with new landlords.
Conceptualized by Emmy Award-winning Artistic Director Paul Vasterling, Anthology will highlight unexplored stories of Music City’s past.
Statistics suggest more than one-third of Americans are participating in Dry January this year. A few local restaurants, including Pinky Ring Pizza and Sean Brock’s The Continental, Audrey and June, have year-round commitments to zero-proof potions.
An artist sanctuary unlike any other could be coming to Nashville, but first, community members will have an opportunity to weigh in on the idea Thursday evening. News 2 spoke with Stacie Flood-Popp, the creative mind behind this project, ahead of the public meeting.