May 11 Sunday
Beginners and 50+ Yoga ClassBeing held on Mondays and Thursday mornings
Rogue Valley Growers and Crafters Market is a richly woven tapestry of farmers, ranchers, crafters, food processors, board and staff dedicated to the land at-large and our beautiful valley community in particular.
We're dedicated to putting our utmost effort and passion into the soil and food that sustains you. Through hard work and innovative practices, we strive to provide the best. During the outdoor season, we host up to three markets a week for the best access to the incredible bounty our bioregion has to offer.
Galice Garden Faire, 9 a.m.-4 p.m. both days, Galice Community Hall, 10821 Galice Road, Galice. Vendors sell native plants, trees, deer resistant plants, herbs, perennials and vegetable starts, including heirloom tomatoes, as well as handmade garden-related crafts and garden art. There’s also a raffle and a beer garden raffle. Admission is free.
Digital Paintings by Bruce Bayard and Martin Steele at Rogue Gallery and Art Center
Exhibition Dates: Friday, April 25 - Friday, June 6Artist Talk: Saturday, April 26, 1:00 p.m. - 2:30 p.m. Opening Reception: Friday, May 16, 5:00 p.m. - 8:00 p.m.
Currently featured in the Main Gallery at Rogue Gallery and Art Center are Digital Paintings by Bruce Bayard and Martin Steele. At the intersection of digital image collage and video performance, Bruce's work is a fusion of visual elements and abstract narrative through innovative mediums. He navigates the language of symbols to convey layered meanings. Embracing randomness as a creative tool, Bruce's work invites his viewers to engage with evolving narratives shaped by chance. In this realm of digital expression, he seeks to challenge perceptions and provoke thought, inviting an exploration into the worlds of space between personal and public. Similarly, Martin has always loved the term ‘snapshot’ because it perfectly captures the idea of what happens in photographs. Sourcing imagery from his prodigious and idiosyncratic archive that contains thousands of images, Martin works in a characteristic palette of saturated hues and chromatic aberrations to invite his viewers into a composition of visual rubble and a unique version of history.
For more information, please visit www.roguegallery.org.
Step into the world of Saturday Speaker Series: Virginia Howard Mullan "Humboldt County Courts World’s Fairs Florence Harrie (1889–1981, Karuk) and experience the legacy of a master weaver. Born at Katimîin, the Karuk center of the world, Florence returned to her ancestral home after boarding school to learn the art of gathering and weaving from renowned weavers like Elizabeth Hickox. She made her living through her craft and today, her great-grandson, Bradley Marshall, has lovingly curated this exhibit to bring her story home.What makes this exhibit so special?Florence’s personal weaving chairThe last basket she ever woveA ceremonial dress made by her descendants that still dances in ceremonies todayJoin us at the Clarke Historical Museum and immerse yourself in this deeply personal tribute to a Karuk cultural icon. Don’t miss it!February 8 - May 31, 2025 at the Clarke Historical Museum
Interested in attending a "Christian Mystics' Support Group" in Ashland? These small Sunday gatherings are for those who practice or would like to learn about Christian contemplative, or mystical, spirituality. The meetings will be educational, supportive, non-dogmatic, and open to the public, but meetings have started in the Ashland Public Library's Guanajuato Room, which has limited space. The 11:30 start time is before the library opens at noon; if you arrive by 11:30, someone will unlock the door to let you in. (Disclaimer: These meetings are neither sponsored nor endorsed by the Ashland Public Library.)
May Exhibition at ART ON FIRST: Magical Northwest Landscapes - Jessica Johnson
Monday, April 28 - Monday, May 26, 12:00 p.m. - 5:00 p.m. Opening Reception: Friday, May 2, 5:00 p.m. - 8:00 p.m.
Currently featured at ART on FIRST are vibrant landscape paintings by Jessica Johnson. Jessica aims to capture and communicate the inspiring beauty of the landscapes that surround her home and permeate her adventures. Expressive brushstrokes and color depict movement intertwined with emotion in her compositions, evoking feelings of deep connection to the places that she immerses her viewers in. Jessica loves using vibrant colors and rich shadows to convey wonder, joy, playfulness, and reverence.
For more information, please visit www.artandfirstashland.com.
Medford Mother's Day PLANT SALE! Join us, Bring MOM, Sunday May 11th
Starts promptly at 2pm, hurry because these choice plants sell FAST!
Parking Lot Patio at theCongregational United Church of Christ 1825 E. Jackson St, Medford
Join the Garden-loving members of the SISKIYOU CHAPTER of the North American Rock Garden Society.
Wide Selection of rare and popular plants including: hardy Succulents, Rock Garden plants, Unique Alpines and Native Plants, Bulbs, Dish Gardens, Specialty Dwarf Iris.
Our meeting and refreshments will be held in the church's Lidgate Hall immediately after the sale. Everyone is invited to learn about our Rock Garden Society.
MOTHER’S DAY WEEKEND: All your rule-breaking wishes come true with Aladdin: The Rock Opera—Ballet Fantastique’s magical fantasy rock ballet, with live music featuring show stopping original arrangements of Queen.
BFan resident Choreographer-Producers Donna Marisa and Hannah Bontrager re-imagine Aladdin, Jasmine, and the Genie of the Lamp in a vibrant 1970s world. Rock out to irresistible versions of the classic anthems of Queen.
Bold, inimitable, raucous, defiant, lovable—Ballet Fantastique’s Aladdin: A Rock Opera Ballet is a live dance theater experience you can’t find anywhere else, handcrafted right here in Eugene.
Siskiyou Singers present their Spring 2025 concerts, “Earth Song,” featuring music celebrating nature and admonitions to protect it.
Performances will be at 3 p.m. Saturday and Sunday, May 10 and 11, at Southern Oregon University’s Music Recital Hall. General admission is $25 ($5 for students and Oregon Trail Card holders). Tickets are available now online or can be purchased from choir members or at Music Coop or Paddington Station in Ashland in late March. Tickets are also available at the door.
The program begins with “Kasar Mie la Gaji (The Earth is Tired)” by Alberto Grau and “Break, Break, Break,” a Tennyson poem about lost love and set to music by choir Director Mark Reppert. The concert then strikes a hopeful note with “The Bluebird” by Charles Villiers Stanford; “O Lovely Night” by Johannes Brahms; the Renaissance madrigal “Sweet Suffolk Owl” by Thomas Vautor; and Eric Whitacre’s “Little Birds.” The final piece of the first half is the sunny “Away From the Roll of the Sea” by Allistar MacGillvray.
The second half begins with “The Lark In the Clear Air,” an Irish folk song arranged by Andrew Carter; it is the story of a young lover who is encouraged to pursue his love by the song of the lark. Another inspiring piece is “The Prow” by the young composer Matthew Hazzard, which tells of an exhilarating day out on the wild sea. We will then travel out to the prairie with a luscious arrangement by Mark Hayes of the old, familiar “Home on the Range”.
The program ends with a warning and hope. In a clever arrangement by Matt and Adam Podd, Joni Mitchell’s “Big Yellow Taxi” tells us that “you don’t know what you’ve got ’til it’s gone.” The final piece and namesake of the concert is “Earth Song” by Frank Ticheli, who tells us, “The scorched earth cries out in vain, O war and power you blind and blur,…[but] through darkness and strife I’ll sing!”