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- June 1, 2025
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THE SOUND OF MUSIC
June 1, 2025 2:00 pm - 4:30 pmJonesborough Repertory Theatre, 125 W Main St, Jonesborough, TN 37659, USA
The final collaboration between Rodgers & Hammerstein was destined to become the world’s most beloved musical. Featuring a trove of cherished songs, including “Climb Ev’ry Mountain,” “My Favorite Things,” “Do-Re-Mi,” “Sixteen Going on Seventeen” and the title number, The Sound of Music won the hearts of audiences worldwide, earning five Tony Awards and five Oscars. The inspirational story, based on the memoir of Maria Augusta Trapp, follows an ebullient postulate who serves as governess to the seven children of the imperious Captain von Trapp, bringing music and joy to the household. But as the forces of Nazism take hold of Austria, Maria and the entire von Trapp family must make a moral decision. (Concord Theatricals)
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City Slickers at The Jackson Theatre
June 1, 2025 3:00 pm - 5:00 pm
Jackson Theatre, 121 W Main St, Jonesborough, TN 37659, USACity Slickers (1991)
Western Series
Three New Yorkers sign up for a cattle drive on a western dude ranch in this comedic farce. Jack Palance won a Best Supporting Actor Oscar for his portrayal of a grizzled trail boss who leads the urban tenderfoots.
Rated PG13
Running Time 115 minutes
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Yoga in the Park
June 1, 2025 4:00 pm - 5:00 pmJimmy Neil Smith Park, 111 W College St, Jonesborough, TN 37659, USA
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Brews & Tunes
June 1, 2025 5:00 pm - 7:00 pm
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- June 3, 2025
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Storytelling Live - Tim Lowry
June 3, 2025 2:00 pm - 3:00 pmInternational Storytelling Center, 100 W Main St, Jonesborough, TN 37659, USA
Now in its 22nd season, the International Storytelling Center’s renowned Storytelling Live performance series features 20 nationally known storytellers in live concerts at 2 p.m., Tuesday through Saturday, from May through October. Special events are also offered throughout the season, including evening shows, virtual concerts, and holiday programs.
Tim Lowry mixes personal narratives, folk tales, and American history with a distinctively Southern flavor. His “seersucker style” earned an Oracle Award from the National Storytelling Network and Artist of the Year from Azalea Magazine. He has produced several award-winning recordings and most recently received top honors from Storytelling World for his book, Haunted by Dickens. When Tim is not on the road performing at festivals, schools, libraries, and corporate events, he enjoys spending time in his hometown of Summerville, SC with his wife and two daughters.
From the time he took to the stage, Tim Lowry claimed the full attention of his audience. They followed him wherever he was performing. They loved Tim’s style, his humor, his material, and the man himself. – Connecticut Storytelling FestivalGet tickets here: https://store.storytellingcenter.net/storytelling-live-06-03-06-07-tim-lowry-187/
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Jonesborough Storytelling Guild
June 3, 2025 7:00 pm - 8:00 pm
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- June 4, 2025
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Storytelling Live - Tim Lowry
June 4, 2025 2:00 pm - 3:00 pmInternational Storytelling Center, 100 W Main St, Jonesborough, TN 37659, USA
Now in its 22nd season, the International Storytelling Center’s renowned Storytelling Live performance series features 20 nationally known storytellers in live concerts at 2 p.m., Tuesday through Saturday, from May through October. Special events are also offered throughout the season, including evening shows, virtual concerts, and holiday programs.
Tim Lowry mixes personal narratives, folk tales, and American history with a distinctively Southern flavor. His “seersucker style” earned an Oracle Award from the National Storytelling Network and Artist of the Year from Azalea Magazine. He has produced several award-winning recordings and most recently received top honors from Storytelling World for his book, Haunted by Dickens. When Tim is not on the road performing at festivals, schools, libraries, and corporate events, he enjoys spending time in his hometown of Summerville, SC with his wife and two daughters.
From the time he took to the stage, Tim Lowry claimed the full attention of his audience. They followed him wherever he was performing. They loved Tim’s style, his humor, his material, and the man himself. – Connecticut Storytelling FestivalGet tickets here: https://store.storytellingcenter.net/storytelling-live-06-03-06-07-tim-lowry-187/
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- June 5, 2025
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Storytelling Live - Tim Lowry
June 5, 2025 2:00 pm - 3:00 pmInternational Storytelling Center, 100 W Main St, Jonesborough, TN 37659, USA
Now in its 22nd season, the International Storytelling Center’s renowned Storytelling Live performance series features 20 nationally known storytellers in live concerts at 2 p.m., Tuesday through Saturday, from May through October. Special events are also offered throughout the season, including evening shows, virtual concerts, and holiday programs.
Tim Lowry mixes personal narratives, folk tales, and American history with a distinctively Southern flavor. His “seersucker style” earned an Oracle Award from the National Storytelling Network and Artist of the Year from Azalea Magazine. He has produced several award-winning recordings and most recently received top honors from Storytelling World for his book, Haunted by Dickens. When Tim is not on the road performing at festivals, schools, libraries, and corporate events, he enjoys spending time in his hometown of Summerville, SC with his wife and two daughters.
From the time he took to the stage, Tim Lowry claimed the full attention of his audience. They followed him wherever he was performing. They loved Tim’s style, his humor, his material, and the man himself. – Connecticut Storytelling FestivalGet tickets here: https://store.storytellingcenter.net/storytelling-live-06-03-06-07-tim-lowry-187/
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Cabaret at The Jackson Theatre
June 5, 2025 7:00 pm - 9:00 pm
Jackson Theatre, 121 W Main St, Jonesborough, TN 37659, USACabaret (1972)
Berlin, 1931. As Nazism rises in Germany, flamboyantAmerican Sally Bowles (Liza Minnelli) sings in a decadent nightclub and fallsin love with a British language teacher (Michael York)--whom she shares with ahomosexual German baron. But Sally's small, carefree, tolerant and fragilecabaret world is about to be crushed under the boot of the Nazis as Berlinbecomes a trap from which Sally's German friends will not escape in thisground-breaking, blockbuster film version of the Broadway musical Cabaret. Winnerof eight Academy Awards. Based on the book Berlin Stories by ChristopherIsherwood, the Broadway play I Am a Camera based on the book and written byJohn Van Druten and on the Broadway musical written by Joe Masteroff.
Rated PG
Running Time 128 minutes
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Storytelling Live - Tim Lowry
June 5, 2025 7:30 pm - 8:30 pmInternational Storytelling Center, 100 W Main St, Jonesborough, TN 37659, USA
Now in its 22nd season, the International Storytelling Center’s renowned Storytelling Live performance series features 20 nationally known storytellers in live concerts at 2 p.m., Tuesday through Saturday, from May through October. Special events are also offered throughout the season, including evening shows, virtual concerts, and holiday programs.
Tim Lowry mixes personal narratives, folk tales, and American history with a distinctively Southern flavor. His “seersucker style” earned an Oracle Award from the National Storytelling Network and Artist of the Year from Azalea Magazine. He has produced several award-winning recordings and most recently received top honors from Storytelling World for his book, Haunted by Dickens. When Tim is not on the road performing at festivals, schools, libraries, and corporate events, he enjoys spending time in his hometown of Summerville, SC with his wife and two daughters.
From the time he took to the stage, Tim Lowry claimed the full attention of his audience. They followed him wherever he was performing. They loved Tim’s style, his humor, his material, and the man himself. – Connecticut Storytelling FestivalGet tickets here: https://store.storytellingcenter.net/storytelling-live-06-03-06-07-tim-lowry-187/
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THE SOUND OF MUSIC
June 5, 2025 7:30 pm - 10:00 pmJonesborough Repertory Theatre, 125 W Main St, Jonesborough, TN 37659, USA
The final collaboration between Rodgers & Hammerstein was destined to become the world’s most beloved musical. Featuring a trove of cherished songs, including “Climb Ev’ry Mountain,” “My Favorite Things,” “Do-Re-Mi,” “Sixteen Going on Seventeen” and the title number, The Sound of Music won the hearts of audiences worldwide, earning five Tony Awards and five Oscars. The inspirational story, based on the memoir of Maria Augusta Trapp, follows an ebullient postulate who serves as governess to the seven children of the imperious Captain von Trapp, bringing music and joy to the household. But as the forces of Nazism take hold of Austria, Maria and the entire von Trapp family must make a moral decision. (Concord Theatricals)
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- June 6, 2025
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Storytelling Live - Tim Lowry
June 6, 2025 2:00 pm - 3:00 pmInternational Storytelling Center, 100 W Main St, Jonesborough, TN 37659, USA
Now in its 22nd season, the International Storytelling Center’s renowned Storytelling Live performance series features 20 nationally known storytellers in live concerts at 2 p.m., Tuesday through Saturday, from May through October. Special events are also offered throughout the season, including evening shows, virtual concerts, and holiday programs.
Tim Lowry mixes personal narratives, folk tales, and American history with a distinctively Southern flavor. His “seersucker style” earned an Oracle Award from the National Storytelling Network and Artist of the Year from Azalea Magazine. He has produced several award-winning recordings and most recently received top honors from Storytelling World for his book, Haunted by Dickens. When Tim is not on the road performing at festivals, schools, libraries, and corporate events, he enjoys spending time in his hometown of Summerville, SC with his wife and two daughters.
From the time he took to the stage, Tim Lowry claimed the full attention of his audience. They followed him wherever he was performing. They loved Tim’s style, his humor, his material, and the man himself. – Connecticut Storytelling FestivalGet tickets here: https://store.storytellingcenter.net/storytelling-live-06-03-06-07-tim-lowry-187/
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Artists' Exhibition Featuring Stephen Simmerman & Jamey Biggs
June 6, 2025 5:00 pm - 7:00 pmMcKinney Center at Booker T. Washington School, 103 Franklin Ave, Jonesborough, TN 37659, USA
Jonesborough’s Mary B. Martin Program for the Arts
to Host Artists Jamey Biggs and Stephen Simmerman
The McKinney Centerwill be featuring sculptor Jamey Biggs and multimedia artist, Stephen Simmerman. The exhibition opening reception willtake place on Friday, June 6, 5:00 – 7:00 pm. The exhibition is free and open to the public and will be up until July4. Both Jamey Biggs and StephenSimmerman will be present at the reception to talk to visitors and answerquestions about her artwork. The artworkwill be on sale that night and throughout the duration of the exhibition.
Jamey Biggs grew up in Summersville, WestVirginia. He holds a Bachelor of Arts in Studio Art and a Bachelor of Sciencein Art education. He completed an MFA in Ceramics at Indiana State Universityin 2003. Biggs has instructed Ceramics and Sculpture for 20 years. Jamey hasdirected the construction of multiple permanent and experimental ceramic kilnswhile at Concord University.
Jamey has served as the gallery director for theArthur Butcher Art Gallery in the Alexander Fine Arts Center on the Campus ofConcord University since 2004. He has directed the visiting artist program atConcord University providing Athens, West Virginia with free demonstrations bythe nations well-known ceramic artists and creating a channel for internationalexchange.
Jamey’s artwork is primarily ceramic and drawsupon themes of Appalachian life through sculpture and utilitarian objects.
These trucks and bulldozers areconstructed in earthenware clay using various molding and hand formingtechniques. I have settled on the image of the metal toy because itis largely positive, a wide variety of folks have an existing relation to it,and it is not traditionally used as subject matter or imagery for high art. My hope is that the art works presented are truly non-verbal innature. I want to make work that will instantly draw a viewer in andhold their attention through unexpected pairings.
Images are fluid in terms of theirmeaning and significance. The material in the truck or in front ofthe dozer provides me with another possible layer of meaning and context forthe truck. I typically try to use that extra layer as an opportunity forplay and humor. The toy truck is associated with childhood and childlikeimpulses. Anything that I put in the truck instantly becomes, bydefinition, a “truckload”. That transformation is semantic (andsilly) but I want the works to have monumental qualities while being as smallas possible.
I want the loads to beoverwhelming. I want the viewer to rely on their own associations tomake sense of those materials, objects, and commodities. I think theplayfulness and general mischief will come through the work. Theworks will convey ideas of generosity, and abundance but I’m okay if a fewnotions of wastefulness get through as well.
I hope that adults who are wellversed in art theory, art history, and criticism can find interest in thesculptures. At the same time, I want the work to appeal to children.
Stephen Simmerman grew up in northeast Tennessee andlived and worked in North Carolina for over ten years. From a young age Stephenhas been interested in archaeology, and how art has informed cultures from thetranslation of the Rosetta Stone to the age of digital apps. Simmerman workedprofessionally as a graphic designer and editor for five years, before decidingto pursue graduate studies, first in English then in graphic design. He hastaught for over twenty years at several schools in the southeast region.
Among Simmerman’s influences and inspirations areHenri Toulouse-Lautrec, Norman Rockwell, and Jacob Lawrence. He admires thework of Andy Warhol and Jasper Johns and how they parlayed elements ofcommercial art into their unique works of art. Stephen’s also a huge fan ofearly magazine illustrators like N.C. Wyeth and Will Bradley, as well as theGerman poster designer Lucien Bernhard.
Simmerman’s illustrations are primarily mixed media:acrylic, watercolor, oil pastel, or ink often layered with “found” type. Muchof his creative pursuits involves the word play of advertising and its power ofpersuasion, and he enjoys creating works laced with nostalgia and mysteries ofthe passage of time. Along with completing a graphic novel in 2016, Simmermanhas illustrated two children’s books and his work has been juried into numerousregional and national exhibitions. He currently serves as Assistant Professorof Graphic Design at Concord University in West Virginia.
The exhibit is free and open to the public, Monday –Friday 8am – 5pm. For more informationyou may contact the McKinney Center, 423.753.0562.
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Music on the Square
June 6, 2025 7:00 pm - 9:00 pm -
A Streetcar Named Desire at The Jackson Theatre
June 6, 2025 7:00 pm - 9:00 pm
Jackson Theatre, 121 W Main St, Jonesborough, TN 37659, USAA Streetcar Named Desire (1951)
Golden Classics
Marlon Brando, Vivien Leigh, Kim Hunter and Karl Malden starin this film adaptation of the Tennessee Williams Pulitzer Prize-winning playset in New Orleans' French Quarter. Lonely and fragile Southern belle BlancheDuBois (Leigh), desperate to maintain her fraying sanity, suffers her brutishbrother-in-law's (Brando) relentless, badgering attempts to make her facereality--which eventually lead her to madness. Winner of four Academy Awards.
Rated PG
Running Time 128 minutes
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THE SOUND OF MUSIC
June 6, 2025 7:30 pm - 10:00 pmJonesborough Repertory Theatre, 125 W Main St, Jonesborough, TN 37659, USA
The final collaboration between Rodgers & Hammerstein was destined to become the world’s most beloved musical. Featuring a trove of cherished songs, including “Climb Ev’ry Mountain,” “My Favorite Things,” “Do-Re-Mi,” “Sixteen Going on Seventeen” and the title number, The Sound of Music won the hearts of audiences worldwide, earning five Tony Awards and five Oscars. The inspirational story, based on the memoir of Maria Augusta Trapp, follows an ebullient postulate who serves as governess to the seven children of the imperious Captain von Trapp, bringing music and joy to the household. But as the forces of Nazism take hold of Austria, Maria and the entire von Trapp family must make a moral decision. (Concord Theatricals)
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- June 7, 2025
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29th Annual Garden Tour & Tea
June 7, 2025 10:00 am - 3:00 pm -
Storytelling Live - Tim Lowry
June 7, 2025 2:00 pm - 3:00 pmInternational Storytelling Center, 100 W Main St, Jonesborough, TN 37659, USA
Now in its 22nd season, the International Storytelling Center’s renowned Storytelling Live performance series features 20 nationally known storytellers in live concerts at 2 p.m., Tuesday through Saturday, from May through October. Special events are also offered throughout the season, including evening shows, virtual concerts, and holiday programs.
Tim Lowry mixes personal narratives, folk tales, and American history with a distinctively Southern flavor. His “seersucker style” earned an Oracle Award from the National Storytelling Network and Artist of the Year from Azalea Magazine. He has produced several award-winning recordings and most recently received top honors from Storytelling World for his book, Haunted by Dickens. When Tim is not on the road performing at festivals, schools, libraries, and corporate events, he enjoys spending time in his hometown of Summerville, SC with his wife and two daughters.
From the time he took to the stage, Tim Lowry claimed the full attention of his audience. They followed him wherever he was performing. They loved Tim’s style, his humor, his material, and the man himself. – Connecticut Storytelling FestivalGet tickets here: https://store.storytellingcenter.net/storytelling-live-06-03-06-07-tim-lowry-187/
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THE SOUND OF MUSIC
June 7, 2025 2:00 pm - 4:30 pmJonesborough Repertory Theatre, 125 W Main St, Jonesborough, TN 37659, USA
The final collaboration between Rodgers & Hammerstein was destined to become the world’s most beloved musical. Featuring a trove of cherished songs, including “Climb Ev’ry Mountain,” “My Favorite Things,” “Do-Re-Mi,” “Sixteen Going on Seventeen” and the title number, The Sound of Music won the hearts of audiences worldwide, earning five Tony Awards and five Oscars. The inspirational story, based on the memoir of Maria Augusta Trapp, follows an ebullient postulate who serves as governess to the seven children of the imperious Captain von Trapp, bringing music and joy to the household. But as the forces of Nazism take hold of Austria, Maria and the entire von Trapp family must make a moral decision. (Concord Theatricals)
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Fried Green Tomatoes at The Jackson Theatre
June 7, 2025 3:00 pm - 5:00 pm
Jackson Theatre, 121 W Main St, Jonesborough, TN 37659, USAFried Green Tomatoes (1991)
A neglected housewife makes an unexpected friend at anursing home, where she hears a true tale about an independent woman in 1920sAlabama, who ran the town diner, served food to people of color and protectedher sister-in-law from an abusive spouse.
Starring: Kathy Bates, Jessica Tandy, Mary Stuart Masterson,Mary-Louise Parker, Cicely Tyson
Rated PG 13
Running Time 130 minutes
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Purple Rain at The Jackson Theatre
June 7, 2025 7:00 pm - 9:00 pm
Jackson Theatre, 121 W Main St, Jonesborough, TN 37659, USAPurple Rain (1984)
80’s classics
Celebrating Prince’s Birthday!
A struggling musician deals with his family and his new loveinterest against the backdrop of Minneapolis nightclubs.
Rated R
Running Time 111 minutes
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THE SOUND OF MUSIC
June 7, 2025 7:30 pm - 10:00 pmJonesborough Repertory Theatre, 125 W Main St, Jonesborough, TN 37659, USA
The final collaboration between Rodgers & Hammerstein was destined to become the world’s most beloved musical. Featuring a trove of cherished songs, including “Climb Ev’ry Mountain,” “My Favorite Things,” “Do-Re-Mi,” “Sixteen Going on Seventeen” and the title number, The Sound of Music won the hearts of audiences worldwide, earning five Tony Awards and five Oscars. The inspirational story, based on the memoir of Maria Augusta Trapp, follows an ebullient postulate who serves as governess to the seven children of the imperious Captain von Trapp, bringing music and joy to the household. But as the forces of Nazism take hold of Austria, Maria and the entire von Trapp family must make a moral decision. (Concord Theatricals)
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- June 8, 2025
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THE SOUND OF MUSIC
June 8, 2025 2:00 pm - 4:30 pmJonesborough Repertory Theatre, 125 W Main St, Jonesborough, TN 37659, USA
The final collaboration between Rodgers & Hammerstein was destined to become the world’s most beloved musical. Featuring a trove of cherished songs, including “Climb Ev’ry Mountain,” “My Favorite Things,” “Do-Re-Mi,” “Sixteen Going on Seventeen” and the title number, The Sound of Music won the hearts of audiences worldwide, earning five Tony Awards and five Oscars. The inspirational story, based on the memoir of Maria Augusta Trapp, follows an ebullient postulate who serves as governess to the seven children of the imperious Captain von Trapp, bringing music and joy to the household. But as the forces of Nazism take hold of Austria, Maria and the entire von Trapp family must make a moral decision. (Concord Theatricals)
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The Little Mermaid at The Jackson Theatre
June 8, 2025 3:00 pm - 5:00 pm
Jackson Theatre, 121 W Main St, Jonesborough, TN 37659, USAThe Little Mermaid (1989)
Family Series
A young mermaid strikes a deal with a sea witch to becomehuman in order to land the man of her dreams, even though her father hasforbidden her to swim to the surface.
Rated G
Running Time 83 minutes
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Yoga in the Park
June 8, 2025 4:00 pm - 5:00 pmJimmy Neil Smith Park, 111 W College St, Jonesborough, TN 37659, USA
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Brews & Tunes
June 8, 2025 5:00 pm - 7:00 pm
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- June 9, 2025
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Artists Exhibition Featuring Stephen Simmerman & Jamey Biggs
June 9, 2025 8:00 am - 5:00 pmMcKinney Center at Booker T. Washington School, 103 Franklin Ave, Jonesborough, TN 37659, USA
Jonesborough’s Mary B. Martin Program for the Arts
to Host Artists Jamey Biggs and Stephen Simmerman
The McKinney Centerwill be featuring sculptor Jamey Biggs and multimedia artist, Stephen Simmerman. The exhibition opening reception willtake place on Friday, June 6, 5:00 – 7:00 pm. The exhibition is free and open to the public and will be up until July4. Both Jamey Biggs and StephenSimmerman will be present at the reception to talk to visitors and answerquestions about her artwork. The artworkwill be on sale that night and throughout the duration of the exhibition.
Jamey Biggs grew up in Summersville, WestVirginia. He holds a Bachelor of Arts in Studio Art and a Bachelor of Sciencein Art education. He completed an MFA in Ceramics at Indiana State Universityin 2003. Biggs has instructed Ceramics and Sculpture for 20 years. Jamey hasdirected the construction of multiple permanent and experimental ceramic kilnswhile at Concord University.
Jamey has served as the gallery director for theArthur Butcher Art Gallery in the Alexander Fine Arts Center on the Campus ofConcord University since 2004. He has directed the visiting artist program atConcord University providing Athens, West Virginia with free demonstrations bythe nations well-known ceramic artists and creating a channel for internationalexchange.
Jamey’s artwork is primarily ceramic and drawsupon themes of Appalachian life through sculpture and utilitarian objects.
These trucks and bulldozers areconstructed in earthenware clay using various molding and hand formingtechniques. I have settled on the image of the metal toy because itis largely positive, a wide variety of folks have an existing relation to it,and it is not traditionally used as subject matter or imagery for high art. My hope is that the art works presented are truly non-verbal innature. I want to make work that will instantly draw a viewer in andhold their attention through unexpected pairings.
Images are fluid in terms of theirmeaning and significance. The material in the truck or in front ofthe dozer provides me with another possible layer of meaning and context forthe truck. I typically try to use that extra layer as an opportunity forplay and humor. The toy truck is associated with childhood and childlikeimpulses. Anything that I put in the truck instantly becomes, bydefinition, a “truckload”. That transformation is semantic (andsilly) but I want the works to have monumental qualities while being as smallas possible.
I want the loads to beoverwhelming. I want the viewer to rely on their own associations tomake sense of those materials, objects, and commodities. I think theplayfulness and general mischief will come through the work. Theworks will convey ideas of generosity, and abundance but I’m okay if a fewnotions of wastefulness get through as well.
I hope that adults who are wellversed in art theory, art history, and criticism can find interest in thesculptures. At the same time, I want the work to appeal to children.
Stephen Simmerman grew up in northeast Tennessee andlived and worked in North Carolina for over ten years. From a young age Stephenhas been interested in archaeology, and how art has informed cultures from thetranslation of the Rosetta Stone to the age of digital apps. Simmerman workedprofessionally as a graphic designer and editor for five years, before decidingto pursue graduate studies, first in English then in graphic design. He hastaught for over twenty years at several schools in the southeast region.
Among Simmerman’s influences and inspirations areHenri Toulouse-Lautrec, Norman Rockwell, and Jacob Lawrence. He admires thework of Andy Warhol and Jasper Johns and how they parlayed elements ofcommercial art into their unique works of art. Stephen’s also a huge fan ofearly magazine illustrators like N.C. Wyeth and Will Bradley, as well as theGerman poster designer Lucien Bernhard.
Simmerman’s illustrations are primarily mixed media:acrylic, watercolor, oil pastel, or ink often layered with “found” type. Muchof his creative pursuits involves the word play of advertising and its power ofpersuasion, and he enjoys creating works laced with nostalgia and mysteries ofthe passage of time. Along with completing a graphic novel in 2016, Simmermanhas illustrated two children’s books and his work has been juried into numerousregional and national exhibitions. He currently serves as Assistant Professorof Graphic Design at Concord University in West Virginia.
The exhibit is free and open to the public, Monday –Friday 8am – 5pm. For more informationyou may contact the McKinney Center, 423.753.0562.
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Board of Mayor and Aldermen Meeting
June 9, 2025 7:00 pm - 8:00 pmJonesborough Town Administration, 123 Boone St, Jonesborough, TN 37659, USA
Meeting agenda will be available at Town Hall.
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- June 10, 2025
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Artists Exhibition Featuring Stephen Simmerman & Jamey Biggs
June 10, 2025 8:00 am - 5:00 pmMcKinney Center at Booker T. Washington School, 103 Franklin Ave, Jonesborough, TN 37659, USA
Jonesborough’s Mary B. Martin Program for the Arts
to Host Artists Jamey Biggs and Stephen Simmerman
The McKinney Centerwill be featuring sculptor Jamey Biggs and multimedia artist, Stephen Simmerman. The exhibition opening reception willtake place on Friday, June 6, 5:00 – 7:00 pm. The exhibition is free and open to the public and will be up until July4. Both Jamey Biggs and StephenSimmerman will be present at the reception to talk to visitors and answerquestions about her artwork. The artworkwill be on sale that night and throughout the duration of the exhibition.
Jamey Biggs grew up in Summersville, WestVirginia. He holds a Bachelor of Arts in Studio Art and a Bachelor of Sciencein Art education. He completed an MFA in Ceramics at Indiana State Universityin 2003. Biggs has instructed Ceramics and Sculpture for 20 years. Jamey hasdirected the construction of multiple permanent and experimental ceramic kilnswhile at Concord University.
Jamey has served as the gallery director for theArthur Butcher Art Gallery in the Alexander Fine Arts Center on the Campus ofConcord University since 2004. He has directed the visiting artist program atConcord University providing Athens, West Virginia with free demonstrations bythe nations well-known ceramic artists and creating a channel for internationalexchange.
Jamey’s artwork is primarily ceramic and drawsupon themes of Appalachian life through sculpture and utilitarian objects.
These trucks and bulldozers areconstructed in earthenware clay using various molding and hand formingtechniques. I have settled on the image of the metal toy because itis largely positive, a wide variety of folks have an existing relation to it,and it is not traditionally used as subject matter or imagery for high art. My hope is that the art works presented are truly non-verbal innature. I want to make work that will instantly draw a viewer in andhold their attention through unexpected pairings.
Images are fluid in terms of theirmeaning and significance. The material in the truck or in front ofthe dozer provides me with another possible layer of meaning and context forthe truck. I typically try to use that extra layer as an opportunity forplay and humor. The toy truck is associated with childhood and childlikeimpulses. Anything that I put in the truck instantly becomes, bydefinition, a “truckload”. That transformation is semantic (andsilly) but I want the works to have monumental qualities while being as smallas possible.
I want the loads to beoverwhelming. I want the viewer to rely on their own associations tomake sense of those materials, objects, and commodities. I think theplayfulness and general mischief will come through the work. Theworks will convey ideas of generosity, and abundance but I’m okay if a fewnotions of wastefulness get through as well.
I hope that adults who are wellversed in art theory, art history, and criticism can find interest in thesculptures. At the same time, I want the work to appeal to children.
Stephen Simmerman grew up in northeast Tennessee andlived and worked in North Carolina for over ten years. From a young age Stephenhas been interested in archaeology, and how art has informed cultures from thetranslation of the Rosetta Stone to the age of digital apps. Simmerman workedprofessionally as a graphic designer and editor for five years, before decidingto pursue graduate studies, first in English then in graphic design. He hastaught for over twenty years at several schools in the southeast region.
Among Simmerman’s influences and inspirations areHenri Toulouse-Lautrec, Norman Rockwell, and Jacob Lawrence. He admires thework of Andy Warhol and Jasper Johns and how they parlayed elements ofcommercial art into their unique works of art. Stephen’s also a huge fan ofearly magazine illustrators like N.C. Wyeth and Will Bradley, as well as theGerman poster designer Lucien Bernhard.
Simmerman’s illustrations are primarily mixed media:acrylic, watercolor, oil pastel, or ink often layered with “found” type. Muchof his creative pursuits involves the word play of advertising and its power ofpersuasion, and he enjoys creating works laced with nostalgia and mysteries ofthe passage of time. Along with completing a graphic novel in 2016, Simmermanhas illustrated two children’s books and his work has been juried into numerousregional and national exhibitions. He currently serves as Assistant Professorof Graphic Design at Concord University in West Virginia.
The exhibit is free and open to the public, Monday –Friday 8am – 5pm. For more informationyou may contact the McKinney Center, 423.753.0562.
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Storytelling Live - Connie Regan-Blake
June 10, 2025 2:00 pm - 3:00 pmInternational Storytelling Center, 100 W Main St, Jonesborough, TN 37659, USA
Now in its 22nd season, the International Storytelling Center’s renowned Storytelling Live performance series features 20 nationally known storytellers in live concerts at 2 p.m., Tuesday through Saturday, from May through October. Special events are also offered throughout the season, including evening shows, virtual concerts, and holiday programs.
One of America’s most celebrated storytellers, Connie Regan-Blake has captivated the hearts and imaginations of people with her powerful performances. Recognized in the storytelling community with the NSN ORACLE Circle of Excellence, Distinguished Service, and Lifetime Achievement awards, Regan-Blake has recently been invited by the Library of Congress to house the compilation of memorabilia from her life’s work as a storyteller, including her role in the birth and beginnings of the American Storytelling Revival.
“With artful direction she lures us into the depths of joy and terror, hilarity and grief. One minute we feel the pangs of regret, revenge, even the chill hand of death . . . in the very next story we luxuriate in the rib-bursting laughter of a mountain Jack Tale. It’s all part of the storyteller’s magic.” – School Library JournalGet tickets here: https://store.storytellingcenter.net/storytelling-live-06-10-06-14-c-regan-blake-188/
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Jonesborough Storytelling Guild
June 10, 2025 7:00 pm - 8:00 pm
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- June 11, 2025
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Artists Exhibition Featuring Stephen Simmerman & Jamey Biggs
June 11, 2025 8:00 am - 5:00 pmMcKinney Center at Booker T. Washington School, 103 Franklin Ave, Jonesborough, TN 37659, USA
Jonesborough’s Mary B. Martin Program for the Arts
to Host Artists Jamey Biggs and Stephen Simmerman
The McKinney Centerwill be featuring sculptor Jamey Biggs and multimedia artist, Stephen Simmerman. The exhibition opening reception willtake place on Friday, June 6, 5:00 – 7:00 pm. The exhibition is free and open to the public and will be up until July4. Both Jamey Biggs and StephenSimmerman will be present at the reception to talk to visitors and answerquestions about her artwork. The artworkwill be on sale that night and throughout the duration of the exhibition.
Jamey Biggs grew up in Summersville, WestVirginia. He holds a Bachelor of Arts in Studio Art and a Bachelor of Sciencein Art education. He completed an MFA in Ceramics at Indiana State Universityin 2003. Biggs has instructed Ceramics and Sculpture for 20 years. Jamey hasdirected the construction of multiple permanent and experimental ceramic kilnswhile at Concord University.
Jamey has served as the gallery director for theArthur Butcher Art Gallery in the Alexander Fine Arts Center on the Campus ofConcord University since 2004. He has directed the visiting artist program atConcord University providing Athens, West Virginia with free demonstrations bythe nations well-known ceramic artists and creating a channel for internationalexchange.
Jamey’s artwork is primarily ceramic and drawsupon themes of Appalachian life through sculpture and utilitarian objects.
These trucks and bulldozers areconstructed in earthenware clay using various molding and hand formingtechniques. I have settled on the image of the metal toy because itis largely positive, a wide variety of folks have an existing relation to it,and it is not traditionally used as subject matter or imagery for high art. My hope is that the art works presented are truly non-verbal innature. I want to make work that will instantly draw a viewer in andhold their attention through unexpected pairings.
Images are fluid in terms of theirmeaning and significance. The material in the truck or in front ofthe dozer provides me with another possible layer of meaning and context forthe truck. I typically try to use that extra layer as an opportunity forplay and humor. The toy truck is associated with childhood and childlikeimpulses. Anything that I put in the truck instantly becomes, bydefinition, a “truckload”. That transformation is semantic (andsilly) but I want the works to have monumental qualities while being as smallas possible.
I want the loads to beoverwhelming. I want the viewer to rely on their own associations tomake sense of those materials, objects, and commodities. I think theplayfulness and general mischief will come through the work. Theworks will convey ideas of generosity, and abundance but I’m okay if a fewnotions of wastefulness get through as well.
I hope that adults who are wellversed in art theory, art history, and criticism can find interest in thesculptures. At the same time, I want the work to appeal to children.
Stephen Simmerman grew up in northeast Tennessee andlived and worked in North Carolina for over ten years. From a young age Stephenhas been interested in archaeology, and how art has informed cultures from thetranslation of the Rosetta Stone to the age of digital apps. Simmerman workedprofessionally as a graphic designer and editor for five years, before decidingto pursue graduate studies, first in English then in graphic design. He hastaught for over twenty years at several schools in the southeast region.
Among Simmerman’s influences and inspirations areHenri Toulouse-Lautrec, Norman Rockwell, and Jacob Lawrence. He admires thework of Andy Warhol and Jasper Johns and how they parlayed elements ofcommercial art into their unique works of art. Stephen’s also a huge fan ofearly magazine illustrators like N.C. Wyeth and Will Bradley, as well as theGerman poster designer Lucien Bernhard.
Simmerman’s illustrations are primarily mixed media:acrylic, watercolor, oil pastel, or ink often layered with “found” type. Muchof his creative pursuits involves the word play of advertising and its power ofpersuasion, and he enjoys creating works laced with nostalgia and mysteries ofthe passage of time. Along with completing a graphic novel in 2016, Simmermanhas illustrated two children’s books and his work has been juried into numerousregional and national exhibitions. He currently serves as Assistant Professorof Graphic Design at Concord University in West Virginia.
The exhibit is free and open to the public, Monday –Friday 8am – 5pm. For more informationyou may contact the McKinney Center, 423.753.0562.
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Storytelling Live - Connie Regan-Blake
June 11, 2025 2:00 pm - 3:00 pmInternational Storytelling Center, 100 W Main St, Jonesborough, TN 37659, USA
Now in its 22nd season, the International Storytelling Center’s renowned Storytelling Live performance series features 20 nationally known storytellers in live concerts at 2 p.m., Tuesday through Saturday, from May through October. Special events are also offered throughout the season, including evening shows, virtual concerts, and holiday programs.
One of America’s most celebrated storytellers, Connie Regan-Blake has captivated the hearts and imaginations of people with her powerful performances. Recognized in the storytelling community with the NSN ORACLE Circle of Excellence, Distinguished Service, and Lifetime Achievement awards, Regan-Blake has recently been invited by the Library of Congress to house the compilation of memorabilia from her life’s work as a storyteller, including her role in the birth and beginnings of the American Storytelling Revival.
“With artful direction she lures us into the depths of joy and terror, hilarity and grief. One minute we feel the pangs of regret, revenge, even the chill hand of death . . . in the very next story we luxuriate in the rib-bursting laughter of a mountain Jack Tale. It’s all part of the storyteller’s magic.” – School Library JournalGet tickets here: https://store.storytellingcenter.net/storytelling-live-06-10-06-14-c-regan-blake-188/
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- June 12, 2025
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Artists Exhibition Featuring Stephen Simmerman & Jamey Biggs
June 12, 2025 8:00 am - 5:00 pmMcKinney Center at Booker T. Washington School, 103 Franklin Ave, Jonesborough, TN 37659, USA
Jonesborough’s Mary B. Martin Program for the Arts
to Host Artists Jamey Biggs and Stephen Simmerman
The McKinney Centerwill be featuring sculptor Jamey Biggs and multimedia artist, Stephen Simmerman. The exhibition opening reception willtake place on Friday, June 6, 5:00 – 7:00 pm. The exhibition is free and open to the public and will be up until July4. Both Jamey Biggs and StephenSimmerman will be present at the reception to talk to visitors and answerquestions about her artwork. The artworkwill be on sale that night and throughout the duration of the exhibition.
Jamey Biggs grew up in Summersville, WestVirginia. He holds a Bachelor of Arts in Studio Art and a Bachelor of Sciencein Art education. He completed an MFA in Ceramics at Indiana State Universityin 2003. Biggs has instructed Ceramics and Sculpture for 20 years. Jamey hasdirected the construction of multiple permanent and experimental ceramic kilnswhile at Concord University.
Jamey has served as the gallery director for theArthur Butcher Art Gallery in the Alexander Fine Arts Center on the Campus ofConcord University since 2004. He has directed the visiting artist program atConcord University providing Athens, West Virginia with free demonstrations bythe nations well-known ceramic artists and creating a channel for internationalexchange.
Jamey’s artwork is primarily ceramic and drawsupon themes of Appalachian life through sculpture and utilitarian objects.
These trucks and bulldozers areconstructed in earthenware clay using various molding and hand formingtechniques. I have settled on the image of the metal toy because itis largely positive, a wide variety of folks have an existing relation to it,and it is not traditionally used as subject matter or imagery for high art. My hope is that the art works presented are truly non-verbal innature. I want to make work that will instantly draw a viewer in andhold their attention through unexpected pairings.
Images are fluid in terms of theirmeaning and significance. The material in the truck or in front ofthe dozer provides me with another possible layer of meaning and context forthe truck. I typically try to use that extra layer as an opportunity forplay and humor. The toy truck is associated with childhood and childlikeimpulses. Anything that I put in the truck instantly becomes, bydefinition, a “truckload”. That transformation is semantic (andsilly) but I want the works to have monumental qualities while being as smallas possible.
I want the loads to beoverwhelming. I want the viewer to rely on their own associations tomake sense of those materials, objects, and commodities. I think theplayfulness and general mischief will come through the work. Theworks will convey ideas of generosity, and abundance but I’m okay if a fewnotions of wastefulness get through as well.
I hope that adults who are wellversed in art theory, art history, and criticism can find interest in thesculptures. At the same time, I want the work to appeal to children.
Stephen Simmerman grew up in northeast Tennessee andlived and worked in North Carolina for over ten years. From a young age Stephenhas been interested in archaeology, and how art has informed cultures from thetranslation of the Rosetta Stone to the age of digital apps. Simmerman workedprofessionally as a graphic designer and editor for five years, before decidingto pursue graduate studies, first in English then in graphic design. He hastaught for over twenty years at several schools in the southeast region.
Among Simmerman’s influences and inspirations areHenri Toulouse-Lautrec, Norman Rockwell, and Jacob Lawrence. He admires thework of Andy Warhol and Jasper Johns and how they parlayed elements ofcommercial art into their unique works of art. Stephen’s also a huge fan ofearly magazine illustrators like N.C. Wyeth and Will Bradley, as well as theGerman poster designer Lucien Bernhard.
Simmerman’s illustrations are primarily mixed media:acrylic, watercolor, oil pastel, or ink often layered with “found” type. Muchof his creative pursuits involves the word play of advertising and its power ofpersuasion, and he enjoys creating works laced with nostalgia and mysteries ofthe passage of time. Along with completing a graphic novel in 2016, Simmermanhas illustrated two children’s books and his work has been juried into numerousregional and national exhibitions. He currently serves as Assistant Professorof Graphic Design at Concord University in West Virginia.
The exhibit is free and open to the public, Monday –Friday 8am – 5pm. For more informationyou may contact the McKinney Center, 423.753.0562.
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Storytelling Live - Connie Regan-Blake
June 12, 2025 2:00 pm - 3:00 pmInternational Storytelling Center, 100 W Main St, Jonesborough, TN 37659, USA
Now in its 22nd season, the International Storytelling Center’s renowned Storytelling Live performance series features 20 nationally known storytellers in live concerts at 2 p.m., Tuesday through Saturday, from May through October. Special events are also offered throughout the season, including evening shows, virtual concerts, and holiday programs.
One of America’s most celebrated storytellers, Connie Regan-Blake has captivated the hearts and imaginations of people with her powerful performances. Recognized in the storytelling community with the NSN ORACLE Circle of Excellence, Distinguished Service, and Lifetime Achievement awards, Regan-Blake has recently been invited by the Library of Congress to house the compilation of memorabilia from her life’s work as a storyteller, including her role in the birth and beginnings of the American Storytelling Revival.
“With artful direction she lures us into the depths of joy and terror, hilarity and grief. One minute we feel the pangs of regret, revenge, even the chill hand of death . . . in the very next story we luxuriate in the rib-bursting laughter of a mountain Jack Tale. It’s all part of the storyteller’s magic.” – School Library JournalGet tickets here: https://store.storytellingcenter.net/storytelling-live-06-10-06-14-c-regan-blake-188/
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Historic Zoning
June 12, 2025 6:00 pm - 7:00 pmJonesborough Town Administration, 123 Boone St, Jonesborough, TN 37659, USA
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Rebel Without A Cause at The Jackson Theatre
June 12, 2025 7:00 pm - 9:00 pm
Jackson Theatre, 121 W Main St, Jonesborough, TN 37659, USARebel Without A Cause (1955)
Golden Classics
James Dean stars in a movie that shocked the United Stateswith a performance that still electrifies the screen twenty-five years afterhis untimely death prior to the film's release. In this archetypal drama ofteenage angst and rebellion, three high school students who should lead idylliclives in their stable, comfortable suburban families explode with a violenceand sexuality that their parents cannot understand. This film--which ripped thefaçade from the post-war American dream to expose the rage of the country'syouth--resonates with an energy that has made it a modern classic and apowerful coming-of-age story.
Filmed in CinemaScope using Eastmancolor.
Running Time 111minutes
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THE SOUND OF MUSIC
June 12, 2025 7:30 pm - 10:00 pmJonesborough Repertory Theatre, 125 W Main St, Jonesborough, TN 37659, USA
The final collaboration between Rodgers & Hammerstein was destined to become the world’s most beloved musical. Featuring a trove of cherished songs, including “Climb Ev’ry Mountain,” “My Favorite Things,” “Do-Re-Mi,” “Sixteen Going on Seventeen” and the title number, The Sound of Music won the hearts of audiences worldwide, earning five Tony Awards and five Oscars. The inspirational story, based on the memoir of Maria Augusta Trapp, follows an ebullient postulate who serves as governess to the seven children of the imperious Captain von Trapp, bringing music and joy to the household. But as the forces of Nazism take hold of Austria, Maria and the entire von Trapp family must make a moral decision. (Concord Theatricals)
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- June 13, 2025
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Artists Exhibition Featuring Stephen Simmerman & Jamey Biggs
June 13, 2025 8:00 am - 5:00 pmMcKinney Center at Booker T. Washington School, 103 Franklin Ave, Jonesborough, TN 37659, USA
Jonesborough’s Mary B. Martin Program for the Arts
to Host Artists Jamey Biggs and Stephen Simmerman
The McKinney Centerwill be featuring sculptor Jamey Biggs and multimedia artist, Stephen Simmerman. The exhibition opening reception willtake place on Friday, June 6, 5:00 – 7:00 pm. The exhibition is free and open to the public and will be up until July4. Both Jamey Biggs and StephenSimmerman will be present at the reception to talk to visitors and answerquestions about her artwork. The artworkwill be on sale that night and throughout the duration of the exhibition.
Jamey Biggs grew up in Summersville, WestVirginia. He holds a Bachelor of Arts in Studio Art and a Bachelor of Sciencein Art education. He completed an MFA in Ceramics at Indiana State Universityin 2003. Biggs has instructed Ceramics and Sculpture for 20 years. Jamey hasdirected the construction of multiple permanent and experimental ceramic kilnswhile at Concord University.
Jamey has served as the gallery director for theArthur Butcher Art Gallery in the Alexander Fine Arts Center on the Campus ofConcord University since 2004. He has directed the visiting artist program atConcord University providing Athens, West Virginia with free demonstrations bythe nations well-known ceramic artists and creating a channel for internationalexchange.
Jamey’s artwork is primarily ceramic and drawsupon themes of Appalachian life through sculpture and utilitarian objects.
These trucks and bulldozers areconstructed in earthenware clay using various molding and hand formingtechniques. I have settled on the image of the metal toy because itis largely positive, a wide variety of folks have an existing relation to it,and it is not traditionally used as subject matter or imagery for high art. My hope is that the art works presented are truly non-verbal innature. I want to make work that will instantly draw a viewer in andhold their attention through unexpected pairings.
Images are fluid in terms of theirmeaning and significance. The material in the truck or in front ofthe dozer provides me with another possible layer of meaning and context forthe truck. I typically try to use that extra layer as an opportunity forplay and humor. The toy truck is associated with childhood and childlikeimpulses. Anything that I put in the truck instantly becomes, bydefinition, a “truckload”. That transformation is semantic (andsilly) but I want the works to have monumental qualities while being as smallas possible.
I want the loads to beoverwhelming. I want the viewer to rely on their own associations tomake sense of those materials, objects, and commodities. I think theplayfulness and general mischief will come through the work. Theworks will convey ideas of generosity, and abundance but I’m okay if a fewnotions of wastefulness get through as well.
I hope that adults who are wellversed in art theory, art history, and criticism can find interest in thesculptures. At the same time, I want the work to appeal to children.
Stephen Simmerman grew up in northeast Tennessee andlived and worked in North Carolina for over ten years. From a young age Stephenhas been interested in archaeology, and how art has informed cultures from thetranslation of the Rosetta Stone to the age of digital apps. Simmerman workedprofessionally as a graphic designer and editor for five years, before decidingto pursue graduate studies, first in English then in graphic design. He hastaught for over twenty years at several schools in the southeast region.
Among Simmerman’s influences and inspirations areHenri Toulouse-Lautrec, Norman Rockwell, and Jacob Lawrence. He admires thework of Andy Warhol and Jasper Johns and how they parlayed elements ofcommercial art into their unique works of art. Stephen’s also a huge fan ofearly magazine illustrators like N.C. Wyeth and Will Bradley, as well as theGerman poster designer Lucien Bernhard.
Simmerman’s illustrations are primarily mixed media:acrylic, watercolor, oil pastel, or ink often layered with “found” type. Muchof his creative pursuits involves the word play of advertising and its power ofpersuasion, and he enjoys creating works laced with nostalgia and mysteries ofthe passage of time. Along with completing a graphic novel in 2016, Simmermanhas illustrated two children’s books and his work has been juried into numerousregional and national exhibitions. He currently serves as Assistant Professorof Graphic Design at Concord University in West Virginia.
The exhibit is free and open to the public, Monday –Friday 8am – 5pm. For more informationyou may contact the McKinney Center, 423.753.0562.
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Storytelling Live - Connie Regan-Blake
June 13, 2025 2:00 pm - 3:00 pmInternational Storytelling Center, 100 W Main St, Jonesborough, TN 37659, USA
Now in its 22nd season, the International Storytelling Center’s renowned Storytelling Live performance series features 20 nationally known storytellers in live concerts at 2 p.m., Tuesday through Saturday, from May through October. Special events are also offered throughout the season, including evening shows, virtual concerts, and holiday programs.
One of America’s most celebrated storytellers, Connie Regan-Blake has captivated the hearts and imaginations of people with her powerful performances. Recognized in the storytelling community with the NSN ORACLE Circle of Excellence, Distinguished Service, and Lifetime Achievement awards, Regan-Blake has recently been invited by the Library of Congress to house the compilation of memorabilia from her life’s work as a storyteller, including her role in the birth and beginnings of the American Storytelling Revival.
“With artful direction she lures us into the depths of joy and terror, hilarity and grief. One minute we feel the pangs of regret, revenge, even the chill hand of death . . . in the very next story we luxuriate in the rib-bursting laughter of a mountain Jack Tale. It’s all part of the storyteller’s magic.” – School Library JournalGet tickets here: https://store.storytellingcenter.net/storytelling-live-06-10-06-14-c-regan-blake-188/
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Music on the Square
June 13, 2025 7:00 pm - 9:00 pm -
Friday the 13th at The Jackson Theatre
June 13, 2025 7:00 pm - 9:00 pm
Jackson Theatre, 121 W Main St, Jonesborough, TN 37659, USAFriday the 13th (1980)
Monthly Horror
The classic slasher film that started the franchise.
A children's summer camp, closed for two years because ofgruesome murders, is reopened; but it is clear that the killing spree is notover.
Rated R
Running Time 95 minutes
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THE SOUND OF MUSIC
June 13, 2025 7:30 pm - 10:00 pmJonesborough Repertory Theatre, 125 W Main St, Jonesborough, TN 37659, USA
The final collaboration between Rodgers & Hammerstein was destined to become the world’s most beloved musical. Featuring a trove of cherished songs, including “Climb Ev’ry Mountain,” “My Favorite Things,” “Do-Re-Mi,” “Sixteen Going on Seventeen” and the title number, The Sound of Music won the hearts of audiences worldwide, earning five Tony Awards and five Oscars. The inspirational story, based on the memoir of Maria Augusta Trapp, follows an ebullient postulate who serves as governess to the seven children of the imperious Captain von Trapp, bringing music and joy to the household. But as the forces of Nazism take hold of Austria, Maria and the entire von Trapp family must make a moral decision. (Concord Theatricals)
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- June 14, 2025
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Storytelling Live Workshop - Connie Regan-Blake
June 14, 2025 10:00 am - 11:00 amInternational Storytelling Center, 100 W Main St, Jonesborough, TN 37659, USA
Now in its 22nd season, the International Storytelling Center’s renowned Storytelling Live performance series features 20 nationally known storytellers in live concerts at 2 p.m., Tuesday through Saturday, from May through October. Special events are also offered throughout the season, including evening shows, virtual concerts, and holiday programs.
One of America’s most celebrated storytellers, Connie Regan-Blake has captivated the hearts and imaginations of people with her powerful performances. Recognized in the storytelling community with the NSN ORACLE Circle of Excellence, Distinguished Service, and Lifetime Achievement awards, Regan-Blake has recently been invited by the Library of Congress to house the compilation of memorabilia from her life’s work as a storyteller, including her role in the birth and beginnings of the American Storytelling Revival.
“With artful direction she lures us into the depths of joy and terror, hilarity and grief. One minute we feel the pangs of regret, revenge, even the chill hand of death . . . in the very next story we luxuriate in the rib-bursting laughter of a mountain Jack Tale. It’s all part of the storyteller’s magic.” – School Library JournalMini Masterclass: Finding the Storyteller in You with Connie Regan-BlakeExplore the legacy of “memory” as you gain confidence in finding your voice and connecting with listeners through creating and sharing stories. All are welcome to his shorter version of Connie’s daylong retreat – teachers, ministers, writers, grandparents, and those curious about telling stories.
Get tickets here: https://store.storytellingcenter.net/storytelling-live-06-10-06-14-c-regan-blake-188/
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Storytelling Live - Connie Regan-Blake
June 14, 2025 2:00 pm - 3:00 pmInternational Storytelling Center, 100 W Main St, Jonesborough, TN 37659, USA
Now in its 22nd season, the International Storytelling Center’s renowned Storytelling Live performance series features 20 nationally known storytellers in live concerts at 2 p.m., Tuesday through Saturday, from May through October. Special events are also offered throughout the season, including evening shows, virtual concerts, and holiday programs.
One of America’s most celebrated storytellers, Connie Regan-Blake has captivated the hearts and imaginations of people with her powerful performances. Recognized in the storytelling community with the NSN ORACLE Circle of Excellence, Distinguished Service, and Lifetime Achievement awards, Regan-Blake has recently been invited by the Library of Congress to house the compilation of memorabilia from her life’s work as a storyteller, including her role in the birth and beginnings of the American Storytelling Revival.
“With artful direction she lures us into the depths of joy and terror, hilarity and grief. One minute we feel the pangs of regret, revenge, even the chill hand of death . . . in the very next story we luxuriate in the rib-bursting laughter of a mountain Jack Tale. It’s all part of the storyteller’s magic.” – School Library JournalGet tickets here: https://store.storytellingcenter.net/storytelling-live-06-10-06-14-c-regan-blake-188/
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THE SOUND OF MUSIC
June 14, 2025 2:00 pm - 4:30 pmJonesborough Repertory Theatre, 125 W Main St, Jonesborough, TN 37659, USA
The final collaboration between Rodgers & Hammerstein was destined to become the world’s most beloved musical. Featuring a trove of cherished songs, including “Climb Ev’ry Mountain,” “My Favorite Things,” “Do-Re-Mi,” “Sixteen Going on Seventeen” and the title number, The Sound of Music won the hearts of audiences worldwide, earning five Tony Awards and five Oscars. The inspirational story, based on the memoir of Maria Augusta Trapp, follows an ebullient postulate who serves as governess to the seven children of the imperious Captain von Trapp, bringing music and joy to the household. But as the forces of Nazism take hold of Austria, Maria and the entire von Trapp family must make a moral decision. (Concord Theatricals)
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THE SOUND OF MUSIC
June 14, 2025 7:30 pm - 10:00 pmJonesborough Repertory Theatre, 125 W Main St, Jonesborough, TN 37659, USA
The final collaboration between Rodgers & Hammerstein was destined to become the world’s most beloved musical. Featuring a trove of cherished songs, including “Climb Ev’ry Mountain,” “My Favorite Things,” “Do-Re-Mi,” “Sixteen Going on Seventeen” and the title number, The Sound of Music won the hearts of audiences worldwide, earning five Tony Awards and five Oscars. The inspirational story, based on the memoir of Maria Augusta Trapp, follows an ebullient postulate who serves as governess to the seven children of the imperious Captain von Trapp, bringing music and joy to the household. But as the forces of Nazism take hold of Austria, Maria and the entire von Trapp family must make a moral decision. (Concord Theatricals)
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Dom Flemons at The Jackson Theatre
June 14, 2025 8:00 pm - 10:00 pm
Jackson Theatre, 121 W Main St, Jonesborough, TN 37659, USADom Flemons is known as “The American Songster®" since his repertoire covers over one hundred years of American roots music. Flemons is a folk musician, black country artist, songwriter, multi-instrumentalist, music scholar, historian, actor, slam poet, record collector, curator, podcaster, cultural commentator, influencer, and the creator, host, and producer of the American Songster Radio Show on WSM in Nashville, TN. He is the Co-Founder and original member of the groundbreaking Carolina Chocolate Drops, the first ever black string band to win a GRAMMY Award. Over the past 25 years, he has received major awards, gained world-wide media recognition and has become one of the most influential and highly decorated voices in American roots music.
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- June 15, 2025
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THE SOUND OF MUSIC
June 15, 2025 2:00 pm - 4:30 pmJonesborough Repertory Theatre, 125 W Main St, Jonesborough, TN 37659, USA
The final collaboration between Rodgers & Hammerstein was destined to become the world’s most beloved musical. Featuring a trove of cherished songs, including “Climb Ev’ry Mountain,” “My Favorite Things,” “Do-Re-Mi,” “Sixteen Going on Seventeen” and the title number, The Sound of Music won the hearts of audiences worldwide, earning five Tony Awards and five Oscars. The inspirational story, based on the memoir of Maria Augusta Trapp, follows an ebullient postulate who serves as governess to the seven children of the imperious Captain von Trapp, bringing music and joy to the household. But as the forces of Nazism take hold of Austria, Maria and the entire von Trapp family must make a moral decision. (Concord Theatricals)
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Meet the Parents at The Jackson Theatre
June 15, 2025 3:00 pm - 5:00 pm
Jackson Theatre, 121 W Main St, Jonesborough, TN 37659, USAMeet the Parents (2000)
Celebrating Father’s Day
A man tries to impress his girlfriend's family, but isintimidated by her stern father, an ex-CIA agent.
Starring: Robert De Niro, Ben Stiller, Teri Polo, BlytheDanner, Owen Wilson
Rated PG 13
Running Time 108 minutes
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Yoga in the Park
June 15, 2025 4:00 pm - 5:00 pmJimmy Neil Smith Park, 111 W College St, Jonesborough, TN 37659, USA
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Brews & Tunes
June 15, 2025 5:00 pm - 7:00 pm
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- June 16, 2025
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Artists Exhibition Featuring Stephen Simmerman & Jamey Biggs
June 16, 2025 8:00 am - 5:00 pmMcKinney Center at Booker T. Washington School, 103 Franklin Ave, Jonesborough, TN 37659, USA
Jonesborough’s Mary B. Martin Program for the Arts
to Host Artists Jamey Biggs and Stephen Simmerman
The McKinney Centerwill be featuring sculptor Jamey Biggs and multimedia artist, Stephen Simmerman. The exhibition opening reception willtake place on Friday, June 6, 5:00 – 7:00 pm. The exhibition is free and open to the public and will be up until July4. Both Jamey Biggs and StephenSimmerman will be present at the reception to talk to visitors and answerquestions about her artwork. The artworkwill be on sale that night and throughout the duration of the exhibition.
Jamey Biggs grew up in Summersville, WestVirginia. He holds a Bachelor of Arts in Studio Art and a Bachelor of Sciencein Art education. He completed an MFA in Ceramics at Indiana State Universityin 2003. Biggs has instructed Ceramics and Sculpture for 20 years. Jamey hasdirected the construction of multiple permanent and experimental ceramic kilnswhile at Concord University.
Jamey has served as the gallery director for theArthur Butcher Art Gallery in the Alexander Fine Arts Center on the Campus ofConcord University since 2004. He has directed the visiting artist program atConcord University providing Athens, West Virginia with free demonstrations bythe nations well-known ceramic artists and creating a channel for internationalexchange.
Jamey’s artwork is primarily ceramic and drawsupon themes of Appalachian life through sculpture and utilitarian objects.
These trucks and bulldozers areconstructed in earthenware clay using various molding and hand formingtechniques. I have settled on the image of the metal toy because itis largely positive, a wide variety of folks have an existing relation to it,and it is not traditionally used as subject matter or imagery for high art. My hope is that the art works presented are truly non-verbal innature. I want to make work that will instantly draw a viewer in andhold their attention through unexpected pairings.
Images are fluid in terms of theirmeaning and significance. The material in the truck or in front ofthe dozer provides me with another possible layer of meaning and context forthe truck. I typically try to use that extra layer as an opportunity forplay and humor. The toy truck is associated with childhood and childlikeimpulses. Anything that I put in the truck instantly becomes, bydefinition, a “truckload”. That transformation is semantic (andsilly) but I want the works to have monumental qualities while being as smallas possible.
I want the loads to beoverwhelming. I want the viewer to rely on their own associations tomake sense of those materials, objects, and commodities. I think theplayfulness and general mischief will come through the work. Theworks will convey ideas of generosity, and abundance but I’m okay if a fewnotions of wastefulness get through as well.
I hope that adults who are wellversed in art theory, art history, and criticism can find interest in thesculptures. At the same time, I want the work to appeal to children.
Stephen Simmerman grew up in northeast Tennessee andlived and worked in North Carolina for over ten years. From a young age Stephenhas been interested in archaeology, and how art has informed cultures from thetranslation of the Rosetta Stone to the age of digital apps. Simmerman workedprofessionally as a graphic designer and editor for five years, before decidingto pursue graduate studies, first in English then in graphic design. He hastaught for over twenty years at several schools in the southeast region.
Among Simmerman’s influences and inspirations areHenri Toulouse-Lautrec, Norman Rockwell, and Jacob Lawrence. He admires thework of Andy Warhol and Jasper Johns and how they parlayed elements ofcommercial art into their unique works of art. Stephen’s also a huge fan ofearly magazine illustrators like N.C. Wyeth and Will Bradley, as well as theGerman poster designer Lucien Bernhard.
Simmerman’s illustrations are primarily mixed media:acrylic, watercolor, oil pastel, or ink often layered with “found” type. Muchof his creative pursuits involves the word play of advertising and its power ofpersuasion, and he enjoys creating works laced with nostalgia and mysteries ofthe passage of time. Along with completing a graphic novel in 2016, Simmermanhas illustrated two children’s books and his work has been juried into numerousregional and national exhibitions. He currently serves as Assistant Professorof Graphic Design at Concord University in West Virginia.
The exhibit is free and open to the public, Monday –Friday 8am – 5pm. For more informationyou may contact the McKinney Center, 423.753.0562.
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- June 17, 2025
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Artists Exhibition Featuring Stephen Simmerman & Jamey Biggs
June 17, 2025 8:00 am - 5:00 pmMcKinney Center at Booker T. Washington School, 103 Franklin Ave, Jonesborough, TN 37659, USA
Jonesborough’s Mary B. Martin Program for the Arts
to Host Artists Jamey Biggs and Stephen Simmerman
The McKinney Centerwill be featuring sculptor Jamey Biggs and multimedia artist, Stephen Simmerman. The exhibition opening reception willtake place on Friday, June 6, 5:00 – 7:00 pm. The exhibition is free and open to the public and will be up until July4. Both Jamey Biggs and StephenSimmerman will be present at the reception to talk to visitors and answerquestions about her artwork. The artworkwill be on sale that night and throughout the duration of the exhibition.
Jamey Biggs grew up in Summersville, WestVirginia. He holds a Bachelor of Arts in Studio Art and a Bachelor of Sciencein Art education. He completed an MFA in Ceramics at Indiana State Universityin 2003. Biggs has instructed Ceramics and Sculpture for 20 years. Jamey hasdirected the construction of multiple permanent and experimental ceramic kilnswhile at Concord University.
Jamey has served as the gallery director for theArthur Butcher Art Gallery in the Alexander Fine Arts Center on the Campus ofConcord University since 2004. He has directed the visiting artist program atConcord University providing Athens, West Virginia with free demonstrations bythe nations well-known ceramic artists and creating a channel for internationalexchange.
Jamey’s artwork is primarily ceramic and drawsupon themes of Appalachian life through sculpture and utilitarian objects.
These trucks and bulldozers areconstructed in earthenware clay using various molding and hand formingtechniques. I have settled on the image of the metal toy because itis largely positive, a wide variety of folks have an existing relation to it,and it is not traditionally used as subject matter or imagery for high art. My hope is that the art works presented are truly non-verbal innature. I want to make work that will instantly draw a viewer in andhold their attention through unexpected pairings.
Images are fluid in terms of theirmeaning and significance. The material in the truck or in front ofthe dozer provides me with another possible layer of meaning and context forthe truck. I typically try to use that extra layer as an opportunity forplay and humor. The toy truck is associated with childhood and childlikeimpulses. Anything that I put in the truck instantly becomes, bydefinition, a “truckload”. That transformation is semantic (andsilly) but I want the works to have monumental qualities while being as smallas possible.
I want the loads to beoverwhelming. I want the viewer to rely on their own associations tomake sense of those materials, objects, and commodities. I think theplayfulness and general mischief will come through the work. Theworks will convey ideas of generosity, and abundance but I’m okay if a fewnotions of wastefulness get through as well.
I hope that adults who are wellversed in art theory, art history, and criticism can find interest in thesculptures. At the same time, I want the work to appeal to children.
Stephen Simmerman grew up in northeast Tennessee andlived and worked in North Carolina for over ten years. From a young age Stephenhas been interested in archaeology, and how art has informed cultures from thetranslation of the Rosetta Stone to the age of digital apps. Simmerman workedprofessionally as a graphic designer and editor for five years, before decidingto pursue graduate studies, first in English then in graphic design. He hastaught for over twenty years at several schools in the southeast region.
Among Simmerman’s influences and inspirations areHenri Toulouse-Lautrec, Norman Rockwell, and Jacob Lawrence. He admires thework of Andy Warhol and Jasper Johns and how they parlayed elements ofcommercial art into their unique works of art. Stephen’s also a huge fan ofearly magazine illustrators like N.C. Wyeth and Will Bradley, as well as theGerman poster designer Lucien Bernhard.
Simmerman’s illustrations are primarily mixed media:acrylic, watercolor, oil pastel, or ink often layered with “found” type. Muchof his creative pursuits involves the word play of advertising and its power ofpersuasion, and he enjoys creating works laced with nostalgia and mysteries ofthe passage of time. Along with completing a graphic novel in 2016, Simmermanhas illustrated two children’s books and his work has been juried into numerousregional and national exhibitions. He currently serves as Assistant Professorof Graphic Design at Concord University in West Virginia.
The exhibit is free and open to the public, Monday –Friday 8am – 5pm. For more informationyou may contact the McKinney Center, 423.753.0562.
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Storytelling Live - Bobby Norfolk
June 17, 2025 2:00 pm - 3:00 pmInternational Storytelling Center, 100 W Main St, Jonesborough, TN 37659, USA
Now in its 22nd season, the International Storytelling Center’s renowned Storytelling Live performance series features 20 nationally known storytellers in live concerts at 2 p.m., Tuesday through Saturday, from May through October. Special events are also offered throughout the season, including evening shows, virtual concerts, and holiday programs.
An internationally-known story performer and teaching artist, Emmy award winner Bobby Norfolk began his career as a stand-up comedian and actor who honed his storytelling skills as a National Park Service ranger and in later years, as host of a televised children’s show, “Gator Tales” on CBS. A recipient of the NSN ORACLE Circle of Excellence, Bobby’s high-energy performances combine facial animation, unique sound effects, and laugh-out-loud humor to engage, entertain, and educate audiences of all ages.
Like an adventure story come to life! – St. Louis Post DispatchGet tickets here: https://store.storytellingcenter.net/storytelling-live-06-17-06-21-bobby-norfolk-189/
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Jonesborough Regional Planning Commission
June 17, 2025 6:00 pm - 7:00 pmJonesborough Town Hall
The Planning Commission meets regularly the third Tuesday of each month, and reviews and approves commercial site plans, subdivision plans, signage, re-zoning and variance requests. All Planning Commission meetings are open to the public.
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Jonesborough Storytelling Guild
June 17, 2025 7:00 pm - 8:00 pm
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- June 18, 2025
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Artists Exhibition Featuring Stephen Simmerman & Jamey Biggs
June 18, 2025 8:00 am - 5:00 pmMcKinney Center at Booker T. Washington School, 103 Franklin Ave, Jonesborough, TN 37659, USA
Jonesborough’s Mary B. Martin Program for the Arts
to Host Artists Jamey Biggs and Stephen Simmerman
The McKinney Centerwill be featuring sculptor Jamey Biggs and multimedia artist, Stephen Simmerman. The exhibition opening reception willtake place on Friday, June 6, 5:00 – 7:00 pm. The exhibition is free and open to the public and will be up until July4. Both Jamey Biggs and StephenSimmerman will be present at the reception to talk to visitors and answerquestions about her artwork. The artworkwill be on sale that night and throughout the duration of the exhibition.
Jamey Biggs grew up in Summersville, WestVirginia. He holds a Bachelor of Arts in Studio Art and a Bachelor of Sciencein Art education. He completed an MFA in Ceramics at Indiana State Universityin 2003. Biggs has instructed Ceramics and Sculpture for 20 years. Jamey hasdirected the construction of multiple permanent and experimental ceramic kilnswhile at Concord University.
Jamey has served as the gallery director for theArthur Butcher Art Gallery in the Alexander Fine Arts Center on the Campus ofConcord University since 2004. He has directed the visiting artist program atConcord University providing Athens, West Virginia with free demonstrations bythe nations well-known ceramic artists and creating a channel for internationalexchange.
Jamey’s artwork is primarily ceramic and drawsupon themes of Appalachian life through sculpture and utilitarian objects.
These trucks and bulldozers areconstructed in earthenware clay using various molding and hand formingtechniques. I have settled on the image of the metal toy because itis largely positive, a wide variety of folks have an existing relation to it,and it is not traditionally used as subject matter or imagery for high art. My hope is that the art works presented are truly non-verbal innature. I want to make work that will instantly draw a viewer in andhold their attention through unexpected pairings.
Images are fluid in terms of theirmeaning and significance. The material in the truck or in front ofthe dozer provides me with another possible layer of meaning and context forthe truck. I typically try to use that extra layer as an opportunity forplay and humor. The toy truck is associated with childhood and childlikeimpulses. Anything that I put in the truck instantly becomes, bydefinition, a “truckload”. That transformation is semantic (andsilly) but I want the works to have monumental qualities while being as smallas possible.
I want the loads to beoverwhelming. I want the viewer to rely on their own associations tomake sense of those materials, objects, and commodities. I think theplayfulness and general mischief will come through the work. Theworks will convey ideas of generosity, and abundance but I’m okay if a fewnotions of wastefulness get through as well.
I hope that adults who are wellversed in art theory, art history, and criticism can find interest in thesculptures. At the same time, I want the work to appeal to children.
Stephen Simmerman grew up in northeast Tennessee andlived and worked in North Carolina for over ten years. From a young age Stephenhas been interested in archaeology, and how art has informed cultures from thetranslation of the Rosetta Stone to the age of digital apps. Simmerman workedprofessionally as a graphic designer and editor for five years, before decidingto pursue graduate studies, first in English then in graphic design. He hastaught for over twenty years at several schools in the southeast region.
Among Simmerman’s influences and inspirations areHenri Toulouse-Lautrec, Norman Rockwell, and Jacob Lawrence. He admires thework of Andy Warhol and Jasper Johns and how they parlayed elements ofcommercial art into their unique works of art. Stephen’s also a huge fan ofearly magazine illustrators like N.C. Wyeth and Will Bradley, as well as theGerman poster designer Lucien Bernhard.
Simmerman’s illustrations are primarily mixed media:acrylic, watercolor, oil pastel, or ink often layered with “found” type. Muchof his creative pursuits involves the word play of advertising and its power ofpersuasion, and he enjoys creating works laced with nostalgia and mysteries ofthe passage of time. Along with completing a graphic novel in 2016, Simmermanhas illustrated two children’s books and his work has been juried into numerousregional and national exhibitions. He currently serves as Assistant Professorof Graphic Design at Concord University in West Virginia.
The exhibit is free and open to the public, Monday –Friday 8am – 5pm. For more informationyou may contact the McKinney Center, 423.753.0562.
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Storytelling Live - Bobby Norfolk
June 18, 2025 2:00 pm - 3:00 pmInternational Storytelling Center, 100 W Main St, Jonesborough, TN 37659, USA
Now in its 22nd season, the International Storytelling Center’s renowned Storytelling Live performance series features 20 nationally known storytellers in live concerts at 2 p.m., Tuesday through Saturday, from May through October. Special events are also offered throughout the season, including evening shows, virtual concerts, and holiday programs.
An internationally-known story performer and teaching artist, Emmy award winner Bobby Norfolk began his career as a stand-up comedian and actor who honed his storytelling skills as a National Park Service ranger and in later years, as host of a televised children’s show, “Gator Tales” on CBS. A recipient of the NSN ORACLE Circle of Excellence, Bobby’s high-energy performances combine facial animation, unique sound effects, and laugh-out-loud humor to engage, entertain, and educate audiences of all ages.
Like an adventure story come to life! – St. Louis Post DispatchGet tickets here: https://store.storytellingcenter.net/storytelling-live-06-17-06-21-bobby-norfolk-189/
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- June 19, 2025
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Artists Exhibition Featuring Stephen Simmerman & Jamey Biggs
June 19, 2025 8:00 am - 5:00 pmMcKinney Center at Booker T. Washington School, 103 Franklin Ave, Jonesborough, TN 37659, USA
Jonesborough’s Mary B. Martin Program for the Arts
to Host Artists Jamey Biggs and Stephen Simmerman
The McKinney Centerwill be featuring sculptor Jamey Biggs and multimedia artist, Stephen Simmerman. The exhibition opening reception willtake place on Friday, June 6, 5:00 – 7:00 pm. The exhibition is free and open to the public and will be up until July4. Both Jamey Biggs and StephenSimmerman will be present at the reception to talk to visitors and answerquestions about her artwork. The artworkwill be on sale that night and throughout the duration of the exhibition.
Jamey Biggs grew up in Summersville, WestVirginia. He holds a Bachelor of Arts in Studio Art and a Bachelor of Sciencein Art education. He completed an MFA in Ceramics at Indiana State Universityin 2003. Biggs has instructed Ceramics and Sculpture for 20 years. Jamey hasdirected the construction of multiple permanent and experimental ceramic kilnswhile at Concord University.
Jamey has served as the gallery director for theArthur Butcher Art Gallery in the Alexander Fine Arts Center on the Campus ofConcord University since 2004. He has directed the visiting artist program atConcord University providing Athens, West Virginia with free demonstrations bythe nations well-known ceramic artists and creating a channel for internationalexchange.
Jamey’s artwork is primarily ceramic and drawsupon themes of Appalachian life through sculpture and utilitarian objects.
These trucks and bulldozers areconstructed in earthenware clay using various molding and hand formingtechniques. I have settled on the image of the metal toy because itis largely positive, a wide variety of folks have an existing relation to it,and it is not traditionally used as subject matter or imagery for high art. My hope is that the art works presented are truly non-verbal innature. I want to make work that will instantly draw a viewer in andhold their attention through unexpected pairings.
Images are fluid in terms of theirmeaning and significance. The material in the truck or in front ofthe dozer provides me with another possible layer of meaning and context forthe truck. I typically try to use that extra layer as an opportunity forplay and humor. The toy truck is associated with childhood and childlikeimpulses. Anything that I put in the truck instantly becomes, bydefinition, a “truckload”. That transformation is semantic (andsilly) but I want the works to have monumental qualities while being as smallas possible.
I want the loads to beoverwhelming. I want the viewer to rely on their own associations tomake sense of those materials, objects, and commodities. I think theplayfulness and general mischief will come through the work. Theworks will convey ideas of generosity, and abundance but I’m okay if a fewnotions of wastefulness get through as well.
I hope that adults who are wellversed in art theory, art history, and criticism can find interest in thesculptures. At the same time, I want the work to appeal to children.
Stephen Simmerman grew up in northeast Tennessee andlived and worked in North Carolina for over ten years. From a young age Stephenhas been interested in archaeology, and how art has informed cultures from thetranslation of the Rosetta Stone to the age of digital apps. Simmerman workedprofessionally as a graphic designer and editor for five years, before decidingto pursue graduate studies, first in English then in graphic design. He hastaught for over twenty years at several schools in the southeast region.
Among Simmerman’s influences and inspirations areHenri Toulouse-Lautrec, Norman Rockwell, and Jacob Lawrence. He admires thework of Andy Warhol and Jasper Johns and how they parlayed elements ofcommercial art into their unique works of art. Stephen’s also a huge fan ofearly magazine illustrators like N.C. Wyeth and Will Bradley, as well as theGerman poster designer Lucien Bernhard.
Simmerman’s illustrations are primarily mixed media:acrylic, watercolor, oil pastel, or ink often layered with “found” type. Muchof his creative pursuits involves the word play of advertising and its power ofpersuasion, and he enjoys creating works laced with nostalgia and mysteries ofthe passage of time. Along with completing a graphic novel in 2016, Simmermanhas illustrated two children’s books and his work has been juried into numerousregional and national exhibitions. He currently serves as Assistant Professorof Graphic Design at Concord University in West Virginia.
The exhibit is free and open to the public, Monday –Friday 8am – 5pm. For more informationyou may contact the McKinney Center, 423.753.0562.
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Storytelling Live - Bobby Norfolk
June 19, 2025 2:00 pm - 3:00 pmInternational Storytelling Center, 100 W Main St, Jonesborough, TN 37659, USA
Now in its 22nd season, the International Storytelling Center’s renowned Storytelling Live performance series features 20 nationally known storytellers in live concerts at 2 p.m., Tuesday through Saturday, from May through October. Special events are also offered throughout the season, including evening shows, virtual concerts, and holiday programs.
An internationally-known story performer and teaching artist, Emmy award winner Bobby Norfolk began his career as a stand-up comedian and actor who honed his storytelling skills as a National Park Service ranger and in later years, as host of a televised children’s show, “Gator Tales” on CBS. A recipient of the NSN ORACLE Circle of Excellence, Bobby’s high-energy performances combine facial animation, unique sound effects, and laugh-out-loud humor to engage, entertain, and educate audiences of all ages.
Like an adventure story come to life! – St. Louis Post DispatchGet tickets here: https://store.storytellingcenter.net/storytelling-live-06-17-06-21-bobby-norfolk-189/
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McKinney Center Advisory Committee Meeting
June 19, 2025 3:30 pm - 4:30 pmMcKinney Center at Booker T. Washington School, 103 Franklin Ave, Jonesborough, TN 37659, USA
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Black Panther at The Jackson Theatre
June 19, 2025 7:00 pm - 9:00 pm
Jackson Theatre, 121 W Main St, Jonesborough, TN 37659, USABlack Panther (2018)
A superhero known as Black Panther defends Wakanda, atechnologically advanced country in Africa that has hidden itself away from therest of the world. Now, he must face a dissident who wants to sell thecountry's natural resources to fund an uprising.
Rated PG 13
Running Time 135 minutes
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- June 20, 2025
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Artists Exhibition Featuring Stephen Simmerman & Jamey Biggs
June 20, 2025 8:00 am - 5:00 pmMcKinney Center at Booker T. Washington School, 103 Franklin Ave, Jonesborough, TN 37659, USA
Jonesborough’s Mary B. Martin Program for the Arts
to Host Artists Jamey Biggs and Stephen Simmerman
The McKinney Centerwill be featuring sculptor Jamey Biggs and multimedia artist, Stephen Simmerman. The exhibition opening reception willtake place on Friday, June 6, 5:00 – 7:00 pm. The exhibition is free and open to the public and will be up until July4. Both Jamey Biggs and StephenSimmerman will be present at the reception to talk to visitors and answerquestions about her artwork. The artworkwill be on sale that night and throughout the duration of the exhibition.
Jamey Biggs grew up in Summersville, WestVirginia. He holds a Bachelor of Arts in Studio Art and a Bachelor of Sciencein Art education. He completed an MFA in Ceramics at Indiana State Universityin 2003. Biggs has instructed Ceramics and Sculpture for 20 years. Jamey hasdirected the construction of multiple permanent and experimental ceramic kilnswhile at Concord University.
Jamey has served as the gallery director for theArthur Butcher Art Gallery in the Alexander Fine Arts Center on the Campus ofConcord University since 2004. He has directed the visiting artist program atConcord University providing Athens, West Virginia with free demonstrations bythe nations well-known ceramic artists and creating a channel for internationalexchange.
Jamey’s artwork is primarily ceramic and drawsupon themes of Appalachian life through sculpture and utilitarian objects.
These trucks and bulldozers areconstructed in earthenware clay using various molding and hand formingtechniques. I have settled on the image of the metal toy because itis largely positive, a wide variety of folks have an existing relation to it,and it is not traditionally used as subject matter or imagery for high art. My hope is that the art works presented are truly non-verbal innature. I want to make work that will instantly draw a viewer in andhold their attention through unexpected pairings.
Images are fluid in terms of theirmeaning and significance. The material in the truck or in front ofthe dozer provides me with another possible layer of meaning and context forthe truck. I typically try to use that extra layer as an opportunity forplay and humor. The toy truck is associated with childhood and childlikeimpulses. Anything that I put in the truck instantly becomes, bydefinition, a “truckload”. That transformation is semantic (andsilly) but I want the works to have monumental qualities while being as smallas possible.
I want the loads to beoverwhelming. I want the viewer to rely on their own associations tomake sense of those materials, objects, and commodities. I think theplayfulness and general mischief will come through the work. Theworks will convey ideas of generosity, and abundance but I’m okay if a fewnotions of wastefulness get through as well.
I hope that adults who are wellversed in art theory, art history, and criticism can find interest in thesculptures. At the same time, I want the work to appeal to children.
Stephen Simmerman grew up in northeast Tennessee andlived and worked in North Carolina for over ten years. From a young age Stephenhas been interested in archaeology, and how art has informed cultures from thetranslation of the Rosetta Stone to the age of digital apps. Simmerman workedprofessionally as a graphic designer and editor for five years, before decidingto pursue graduate studies, first in English then in graphic design. He hastaught for over twenty years at several schools in the southeast region.
Among Simmerman’s influences and inspirations areHenri Toulouse-Lautrec, Norman Rockwell, and Jacob Lawrence. He admires thework of Andy Warhol and Jasper Johns and how they parlayed elements ofcommercial art into their unique works of art. Stephen’s also a huge fan ofearly magazine illustrators like N.C. Wyeth and Will Bradley, as well as theGerman poster designer Lucien Bernhard.
Simmerman’s illustrations are primarily mixed media:acrylic, watercolor, oil pastel, or ink often layered with “found” type. Muchof his creative pursuits involves the word play of advertising and its power ofpersuasion, and he enjoys creating works laced with nostalgia and mysteries ofthe passage of time. Along with completing a graphic novel in 2016, Simmermanhas illustrated two children’s books and his work has been juried into numerousregional and national exhibitions. He currently serves as Assistant Professorof Graphic Design at Concord University in West Virginia.
The exhibit is free and open to the public, Monday –Friday 8am – 5pm. For more informationyou may contact the McKinney Center, 423.753.0562.
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Storytelling Live - Bobby Norfolk
June 20, 2025 2:00 pm - 3:00 pmInternational Storytelling Center, 100 W Main St, Jonesborough, TN 37659, USA
Now in its 22nd season, the International Storytelling Center’s renowned Storytelling Live performance series features 20 nationally known storytellers in live concerts at 2 p.m., Tuesday through Saturday, from May through October. Special events are also offered throughout the season, including evening shows, virtual concerts, and holiday programs.
An internationally-known story performer and teaching artist, Emmy award winner Bobby Norfolk began his career as a stand-up comedian and actor who honed his storytelling skills as a National Park Service ranger and in later years, as host of a televised children’s show, “Gator Tales” on CBS. A recipient of the NSN ORACLE Circle of Excellence, Bobby’s high-energy performances combine facial animation, unique sound effects, and laugh-out-loud humor to engage, entertain, and educate audiences of all ages.
Like an adventure story come to life! – St. Louis Post DispatchGet tickets here: https://store.storytellingcenter.net/storytelling-live-06-17-06-21-bobby-norfolk-189/
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Music on the Square
June 20, 2025 7:00 pm - 9:00 pm -
I Know What You Did Last Summer at The Jackson Theatre
June 20, 2025 7:00 pm - 9:00 pm
Jackson Theatre, 121 W Main St, Jonesborough, TN 37659, USAI Know What You Did Last Summer (1997)
Monthly Horror
Four teens are stalked by an unseen killer afteraccidentally hitting a man with a car and disposing of his body.
Running Time 101minutes
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- June 21, 2025
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Storytelling Live - Bobby Norfolk
June 21, 2025 2:00 pm - 3:00 pmInternational Storytelling Center, 100 W Main St, Jonesborough, TN 37659, USA
Now in its 22nd season, the International Storytelling Center’s renowned Storytelling Live performance series features 20 nationally known storytellers in live concerts at 2 p.m., Tuesday through Saturday, from May through October. Special events are also offered throughout the season, including evening shows, virtual concerts, and holiday programs.
An internationally-known story performer and teaching artist, Emmy award winner Bobby Norfolk began his career as a stand-up comedian and actor who honed his storytelling skills as a National Park Service ranger and in later years, as host of a televised children’s show, “Gator Tales” on CBS. A recipient of the NSN ORACLE Circle of Excellence, Bobby’s high-energy performances combine facial animation, unique sound effects, and laugh-out-loud humor to engage, entertain, and educate audiences of all ages.
Like an adventure story come to life! – St. Louis Post DispatchGet tickets here: https://store.storytellingcenter.net/storytelling-live-06-17-06-21-bobby-norfolk-189/
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Colby T. Helms & The Virginia Creepers at The Jackson Theatre
June 21, 2025 8:00 pm - 10:00 pm
Jackson Theatre, 121 W Main St, Jonesborough, TN 37659, USAThe Blue Ridge Mountains wind through eight states over a stretch of 615 miles. In Virginia, they overlook Franklin County south of Roanoke. Back in the day, bootleggers would refer to the area as “The Moonshine Capital of the World” due to its perfect placement to export contraband. These days, the textile mills of Rocky Mount and other once cozy-towns have shut down, leaving minimal opportunity and a lot of hopelessness. At the bottom of the Southwest Virginia foothills half-a-mile from the nearest neighbor, Colby Helms resides in an “underground house” built by his late father. He hunts and takes care of his mom. He also pens the kind of raw and real country music that cuts to the bone. After signing to Photo Finish Records, he introduces himself with a series of 2023 singles and his forthcoming debut album.
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- June 22, 2025
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FernGully: The Last Rainforest at The Jackson Theatre
June 22, 2025 3:00 pm - 5:00 pm
Jackson Theatre, 121 W Main St, Jonesborough, TN 37659, USAFernGully: The Last Rainforest (1992)
Family Series
PWYC
Animated tale of sylvan sprites imperiled when humans invadetheir forest and threaten to unleash an evil spirit. Voices...Batty Koda: RobinWilliams. Hexxus: Tim Curry. Crysta: Samantha Mathis. Pips: Christian Slater.Zak: Jonathan Ward. Magi Lune: Grace Zabriskie. Ralph: Geoffrey Blake. Tony:Robert Pastorelli. Directed by Bill Kroyer.
Rated G
Running Time 75 minutes
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Yoga in the Park
June 22, 2025 4:00 pm - 5:00 pmJimmy Neil Smith Park, 111 W College St, Jonesborough, TN 37659, USA
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Brews & Tunes
June 22, 2025 5:00 pm - 7:00 pm
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- June 23, 2025
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Artists Exhibition Featuring Stephen Simmerman & Jamey Biggs
June 23, 2025 8:00 am - 5:00 pmMcKinney Center at Booker T. Washington School, 103 Franklin Ave, Jonesborough, TN 37659, USA
Jonesborough’s Mary B. Martin Program for the Arts
to Host Artists Jamey Biggs and Stephen Simmerman
The McKinney Centerwill be featuring sculptor Jamey Biggs and multimedia artist, Stephen Simmerman. The exhibition opening reception willtake place on Friday, June 6, 5:00 – 7:00 pm. The exhibition is free and open to the public and will be up until July4. Both Jamey Biggs and StephenSimmerman will be present at the reception to talk to visitors and answerquestions about her artwork. The artworkwill be on sale that night and throughout the duration of the exhibition.
Jamey Biggs grew up in Summersville, WestVirginia. He holds a Bachelor of Arts in Studio Art and a Bachelor of Sciencein Art education. He completed an MFA in Ceramics at Indiana State Universityin 2003. Biggs has instructed Ceramics and Sculpture for 20 years. Jamey hasdirected the construction of multiple permanent and experimental ceramic kilnswhile at Concord University.
Jamey has served as the gallery director for theArthur Butcher Art Gallery in the Alexander Fine Arts Center on the Campus ofConcord University since 2004. He has directed the visiting artist program atConcord University providing Athens, West Virginia with free demonstrations bythe nations well-known ceramic artists and creating a channel for internationalexchange.
Jamey’s artwork is primarily ceramic and drawsupon themes of Appalachian life through sculpture and utilitarian objects.
These trucks and bulldozers areconstructed in earthenware clay using various molding and hand formingtechniques. I have settled on the image of the metal toy because itis largely positive, a wide variety of folks have an existing relation to it,and it is not traditionally used as subject matter or imagery for high art. My hope is that the art works presented are truly non-verbal innature. I want to make work that will instantly draw a viewer in andhold their attention through unexpected pairings.
Images are fluid in terms of theirmeaning and significance. The material in the truck or in front ofthe dozer provides me with another possible layer of meaning and context forthe truck. I typically try to use that extra layer as an opportunity forplay and humor. The toy truck is associated with childhood and childlikeimpulses. Anything that I put in the truck instantly becomes, bydefinition, a “truckload”. That transformation is semantic (andsilly) but I want the works to have monumental qualities while being as smallas possible.
I want the loads to beoverwhelming. I want the viewer to rely on their own associations tomake sense of those materials, objects, and commodities. I think theplayfulness and general mischief will come through the work. Theworks will convey ideas of generosity, and abundance but I’m okay if a fewnotions of wastefulness get through as well.
I hope that adults who are wellversed in art theory, art history, and criticism can find interest in thesculptures. At the same time, I want the work to appeal to children.
Stephen Simmerman grew up in northeast Tennessee andlived and worked in North Carolina for over ten years. From a young age Stephenhas been interested in archaeology, and how art has informed cultures from thetranslation of the Rosetta Stone to the age of digital apps. Simmerman workedprofessionally as a graphic designer and editor for five years, before decidingto pursue graduate studies, first in English then in graphic design. He hastaught for over twenty years at several schools in the southeast region.
Among Simmerman’s influences and inspirations areHenri Toulouse-Lautrec, Norman Rockwell, and Jacob Lawrence. He admires thework of Andy Warhol and Jasper Johns and how they parlayed elements ofcommercial art into their unique works of art. Stephen’s also a huge fan ofearly magazine illustrators like N.C. Wyeth and Will Bradley, as well as theGerman poster designer Lucien Bernhard.
Simmerman’s illustrations are primarily mixed media:acrylic, watercolor, oil pastel, or ink often layered with “found” type. Muchof his creative pursuits involves the word play of advertising and its power ofpersuasion, and he enjoys creating works laced with nostalgia and mysteries ofthe passage of time. Along with completing a graphic novel in 2016, Simmermanhas illustrated two children’s books and his work has been juried into numerousregional and national exhibitions. He currently serves as Assistant Professorof Graphic Design at Concord University in West Virginia.
The exhibit is free and open to the public, Monday –Friday 8am – 5pm. For more informationyou may contact the McKinney Center, 423.753.0562.
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StoryTown Radio Show: How Did You Get Here
June 23, 2025 7:00 pm - 8:00 pmMcKinney Center at Booker T. Washington School, 103 Franklin Ave, Jonesborough, TN 37659, USA
“How Did You Get Here?” The StoryTown Radio Show will besharing tales about immigration and interstate travel on June 23rd atthe McKinney Center. Featured in this live production will be a harrowing storyof one man’s escape from Ukraine during WWII and his journey to get to theUnited States, we’ll also have the story of the Migrant March that took placein town in 2004, the history of the Immigrant Trail DAR marker, as well as storiesfrom newcomers who just moved to the area. Joining the cast will be storytellerPippa White. Catch her before she starts her weeklong residency at theInternational Storytelling Center.
The music guest for this production is the local Celtic bandJenny & the Weazles. “The band enjoys bringing Scottish and Irish fiddletunes and songs to” venues and events throughout the region. “How Did You GetHere? Tales of Immigrant & Interstate Travel” takes place at 7PM on June 23rdat the McKinney Center. Tickets are $10 and are available online atJonesborough.com/tickets or by calling the Historic Jonesborough VisitorsCenter at 423-753-1010. The shows have been selling out, so make sure you getyour tickets today. Half season passes are still available at https://townofjonesborough.thundertix.com/packages/6099/summaryfor only $45.00. This guarantees you a seat for the remaining five shows of theseason.
The Radio Show is also recorded for broadcast on local NPRstation WETS 89.5 out of Johnson City, which can be heard the last Wednesday ofthe month at 8PM. StoryTown is sponsored by the Tennessee Arts Commission, Garyand Sandee Degner, Terry and Sandy Countermine, Trivia with Budds, McLeodOrganics, the Wild Women of Jonesborough, and Wolfe Development.
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- June 24, 2025
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Artists Exhibition Featuring Stephen Simmerman & Jamey Biggs
June 24, 2025 8:00 am - 5:00 pmMcKinney Center at Booker T. Washington School, 103 Franklin Ave, Jonesborough, TN 37659, USA
Jonesborough’s Mary B. Martin Program for the Arts
to Host Artists Jamey Biggs and Stephen Simmerman
The McKinney Centerwill be featuring sculptor Jamey Biggs and multimedia artist, Stephen Simmerman. The exhibition opening reception willtake place on Friday, June 6, 5:00 – 7:00 pm. The exhibition is free and open to the public and will be up until July4. Both Jamey Biggs and StephenSimmerman will be present at the reception to talk to visitors and answerquestions about her artwork. The artworkwill be on sale that night and throughout the duration of the exhibition.
Jamey Biggs grew up in Summersville, WestVirginia. He holds a Bachelor of Arts in Studio Art and a Bachelor of Sciencein Art education. He completed an MFA in Ceramics at Indiana State Universityin 2003. Biggs has instructed Ceramics and Sculpture for 20 years. Jamey hasdirected the construction of multiple permanent and experimental ceramic kilnswhile at Concord University.
Jamey has served as the gallery director for theArthur Butcher Art Gallery in the Alexander Fine Arts Center on the Campus ofConcord University since 2004. He has directed the visiting artist program atConcord University providing Athens, West Virginia with free demonstrations bythe nations well-known ceramic artists and creating a channel for internationalexchange.
Jamey’s artwork is primarily ceramic and drawsupon themes of Appalachian life through sculpture and utilitarian objects.
These trucks and bulldozers areconstructed in earthenware clay using various molding and hand formingtechniques. I have settled on the image of the metal toy because itis largely positive, a wide variety of folks have an existing relation to it,and it is not traditionally used as subject matter or imagery for high art. My hope is that the art works presented are truly non-verbal innature. I want to make work that will instantly draw a viewer in andhold their attention through unexpected pairings.
Images are fluid in terms of theirmeaning and significance. The material in the truck or in front ofthe dozer provides me with another possible layer of meaning and context forthe truck. I typically try to use that extra layer as an opportunity forplay and humor. The toy truck is associated with childhood and childlikeimpulses. Anything that I put in the truck instantly becomes, bydefinition, a “truckload”. That transformation is semantic (andsilly) but I want the works to have monumental qualities while being as smallas possible.
I want the loads to beoverwhelming. I want the viewer to rely on their own associations tomake sense of those materials, objects, and commodities. I think theplayfulness and general mischief will come through the work. Theworks will convey ideas of generosity, and abundance but I’m okay if a fewnotions of wastefulness get through as well.
I hope that adults who are wellversed in art theory, art history, and criticism can find interest in thesculptures. At the same time, I want the work to appeal to children.
Stephen Simmerman grew up in northeast Tennessee andlived and worked in North Carolina for over ten years. From a young age Stephenhas been interested in archaeology, and how art has informed cultures from thetranslation of the Rosetta Stone to the age of digital apps. Simmerman workedprofessionally as a graphic designer and editor for five years, before decidingto pursue graduate studies, first in English then in graphic design. He hastaught for over twenty years at several schools in the southeast region.
Among Simmerman’s influences and inspirations areHenri Toulouse-Lautrec, Norman Rockwell, and Jacob Lawrence. He admires thework of Andy Warhol and Jasper Johns and how they parlayed elements ofcommercial art into their unique works of art. Stephen’s also a huge fan ofearly magazine illustrators like N.C. Wyeth and Will Bradley, as well as theGerman poster designer Lucien Bernhard.
Simmerman’s illustrations are primarily mixed media:acrylic, watercolor, oil pastel, or ink often layered with “found” type. Muchof his creative pursuits involves the word play of advertising and its power ofpersuasion, and he enjoys creating works laced with nostalgia and mysteries ofthe passage of time. Along with completing a graphic novel in 2016, Simmermanhas illustrated two children’s books and his work has been juried into numerousregional and national exhibitions. He currently serves as Assistant Professorof Graphic Design at Concord University in West Virginia.
The exhibit is free and open to the public, Monday –Friday 8am – 5pm. For more informationyou may contact the McKinney Center, 423.753.0562.
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Storytelling Live - Pippa White
June 24, 2025 2:00 pm - 3:00 pmInternational Storytelling Center, 100 W Main St, Jonesborough, TN 37659, USA
Now in its 22nd season, the International Storytelling Center’s renowned Storytelling Live performance series features 20 nationally known storytellers in live concerts at 2 p.m., Tuesday through Saturday, from May through October. Special events are also offered throughout the season, including evening shows, virtual concerts, and holiday programs.
Pippa White turned to solo performing in 1994. Prior to that, she had an extensive career in theatre and television on the West Coast. She calls her One’s Company Productions “part theatre, part storytelling, part history.” Audiences call them unique, captivating, and touching. She has crisscrossed the country many times touring 32 states, including three times at the United Solo Theatre Festival in New York City, which garnered a review that called her work “riveting, heartbreaking, and suspenseful.” She has been a teaching artist with the Nebraska Arts Council for many years and has received several awards in recognition of her work, including two Individual Artist Fellowship awards from the Nebraska Arts Council.
"Ms. White thoroughly entranced us, literally wearing different hats to bring characters to life, with stories that are riveting and suspenseful." – Hi! Drama, New York, NYGet tickets here: https://store.storytellingcenter.net/storytelling-live-06-24-06-28-pippa-white-190/
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Jonesborough Storytelling Guild
June 24, 2025 7:00 pm - 8:00 pm
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- June 25, 2025
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Artists Exhibition Featuring Stephen Simmerman & Jamey Biggs
June 25, 2025 8:00 am - 5:00 pmMcKinney Center at Booker T. Washington School, 103 Franklin Ave, Jonesborough, TN 37659, USA
Jonesborough’s Mary B. Martin Program for the Arts
to Host Artists Jamey Biggs and Stephen Simmerman
The McKinney Centerwill be featuring sculptor Jamey Biggs and multimedia artist, Stephen Simmerman. The exhibition opening reception willtake place on Friday, June 6, 5:00 – 7:00 pm. The exhibition is free and open to the public and will be up until July4. Both Jamey Biggs and StephenSimmerman will be present at the reception to talk to visitors and answerquestions about her artwork. The artworkwill be on sale that night and throughout the duration of the exhibition.
Jamey Biggs grew up in Summersville, WestVirginia. He holds a Bachelor of Arts in Studio Art and a Bachelor of Sciencein Art education. He completed an MFA in Ceramics at Indiana State Universityin 2003. Biggs has instructed Ceramics and Sculpture for 20 years. Jamey hasdirected the construction of multiple permanent and experimental ceramic kilnswhile at Concord University.
Jamey has served as the gallery director for theArthur Butcher Art Gallery in the Alexander Fine Arts Center on the Campus ofConcord University since 2004. He has directed the visiting artist program atConcord University providing Athens, West Virginia with free demonstrations bythe nations well-known ceramic artists and creating a channel for internationalexchange.
Jamey’s artwork is primarily ceramic and drawsupon themes of Appalachian life through sculpture and utilitarian objects.
These trucks and bulldozers areconstructed in earthenware clay using various molding and hand formingtechniques. I have settled on the image of the metal toy because itis largely positive, a wide variety of folks have an existing relation to it,and it is not traditionally used as subject matter or imagery for high art. My hope is that the art works presented are truly non-verbal innature. I want to make work that will instantly draw a viewer in andhold their attention through unexpected pairings.
Images are fluid in terms of theirmeaning and significance. The material in the truck or in front ofthe dozer provides me with another possible layer of meaning and context forthe truck. I typically try to use that extra layer as an opportunity forplay and humor. The toy truck is associated with childhood and childlikeimpulses. Anything that I put in the truck instantly becomes, bydefinition, a “truckload”. That transformation is semantic (andsilly) but I want the works to have monumental qualities while being as smallas possible.
I want the loads to beoverwhelming. I want the viewer to rely on their own associations tomake sense of those materials, objects, and commodities. I think theplayfulness and general mischief will come through the work. Theworks will convey ideas of generosity, and abundance but I’m okay if a fewnotions of wastefulness get through as well.
I hope that adults who are wellversed in art theory, art history, and criticism can find interest in thesculptures. At the same time, I want the work to appeal to children.
Stephen Simmerman grew up in northeast Tennessee andlived and worked in North Carolina for over ten years. From a young age Stephenhas been interested in archaeology, and how art has informed cultures from thetranslation of the Rosetta Stone to the age of digital apps. Simmerman workedprofessionally as a graphic designer and editor for five years, before decidingto pursue graduate studies, first in English then in graphic design. He hastaught for over twenty years at several schools in the southeast region.
Among Simmerman’s influences and inspirations areHenri Toulouse-Lautrec, Norman Rockwell, and Jacob Lawrence. He admires thework of Andy Warhol and Jasper Johns and how they parlayed elements ofcommercial art into their unique works of art. Stephen’s also a huge fan ofearly magazine illustrators like N.C. Wyeth and Will Bradley, as well as theGerman poster designer Lucien Bernhard.
Simmerman’s illustrations are primarily mixed media:acrylic, watercolor, oil pastel, or ink often layered with “found” type. Muchof his creative pursuits involves the word play of advertising and its power ofpersuasion, and he enjoys creating works laced with nostalgia and mysteries ofthe passage of time. Along with completing a graphic novel in 2016, Simmermanhas illustrated two children’s books and his work has been juried into numerousregional and national exhibitions. He currently serves as Assistant Professorof Graphic Design at Concord University in West Virginia.
The exhibit is free and open to the public, Monday –Friday 8am – 5pm. For more informationyou may contact the McKinney Center, 423.753.0562.
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Storytelling Live - Pippa White
June 25, 2025 2:00 pm - 3:00 pmInternational Storytelling Center, 100 W Main St, Jonesborough, TN 37659, USA
Now in its 22nd season, the International Storytelling Center’s renowned Storytelling Live performance series features 20 nationally known storytellers in live concerts at 2 p.m., Tuesday through Saturday, from May through October. Special events are also offered throughout the season, including evening shows, virtual concerts, and holiday programs.
Pippa White turned to solo performing in 1994. Prior to that, she had an extensive career in theatre and television on the West Coast. She calls her One’s Company Productions “part theatre, part storytelling, part history.” Audiences call them unique, captivating, and touching. She has crisscrossed the country many times touring 32 states, including three times at the United Solo Theatre Festival in New York City, which garnered a review that called her work “riveting, heartbreaking, and suspenseful.” She has been a teaching artist with the Nebraska Arts Council for many years and has received several awards in recognition of her work, including two Individual Artist Fellowship awards from the Nebraska Arts Council.
"Ms. White thoroughly entranced us, literally wearing different hats to bring characters to life, with stories that are riveting and suspenseful." – Hi! Drama, New York, NYGet tickets here: https://store.storytellingcenter.net/storytelling-live-06-24-06-28-pippa-white-190/
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- June 26, 2025
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Artists Exhibition Featuring Stephen Simmerman & Jamey Biggs
June 26, 2025 8:00 am - 5:00 pmMcKinney Center at Booker T. Washington School, 103 Franklin Ave, Jonesborough, TN 37659, USA
Jonesborough’s Mary B. Martin Program for the Arts
to Host Artists Jamey Biggs and Stephen Simmerman
The McKinney Centerwill be featuring sculptor Jamey Biggs and multimedia artist, Stephen Simmerman. The exhibition opening reception willtake place on Friday, June 6, 5:00 – 7:00 pm. The exhibition is free and open to the public and will be up until July4. Both Jamey Biggs and StephenSimmerman will be present at the reception to talk to visitors and answerquestions about her artwork. The artworkwill be on sale that night and throughout the duration of the exhibition.
Jamey Biggs grew up in Summersville, WestVirginia. He holds a Bachelor of Arts in Studio Art and a Bachelor of Sciencein Art education. He completed an MFA in Ceramics at Indiana State Universityin 2003. Biggs has instructed Ceramics and Sculpture for 20 years. Jamey hasdirected the construction of multiple permanent and experimental ceramic kilnswhile at Concord University.
Jamey has served as the gallery director for theArthur Butcher Art Gallery in the Alexander Fine Arts Center on the Campus ofConcord University since 2004. He has directed the visiting artist program atConcord University providing Athens, West Virginia with free demonstrations bythe nations well-known ceramic artists and creating a channel for internationalexchange.
Jamey’s artwork is primarily ceramic and drawsupon themes of Appalachian life through sculpture and utilitarian objects.
These trucks and bulldozers areconstructed in earthenware clay using various molding and hand formingtechniques. I have settled on the image of the metal toy because itis largely positive, a wide variety of folks have an existing relation to it,and it is not traditionally used as subject matter or imagery for high art. My hope is that the art works presented are truly non-verbal innature. I want to make work that will instantly draw a viewer in andhold their attention through unexpected pairings.
Images are fluid in terms of theirmeaning and significance. The material in the truck or in front ofthe dozer provides me with another possible layer of meaning and context forthe truck. I typically try to use that extra layer as an opportunity forplay and humor. The toy truck is associated with childhood and childlikeimpulses. Anything that I put in the truck instantly becomes, bydefinition, a “truckload”. That transformation is semantic (andsilly) but I want the works to have monumental qualities while being as smallas possible.
I want the loads to beoverwhelming. I want the viewer to rely on their own associations tomake sense of those materials, objects, and commodities. I think theplayfulness and general mischief will come through the work. Theworks will convey ideas of generosity, and abundance but I’m okay if a fewnotions of wastefulness get through as well.
I hope that adults who are wellversed in art theory, art history, and criticism can find interest in thesculptures. At the same time, I want the work to appeal to children.
Stephen Simmerman grew up in northeast Tennessee andlived and worked in North Carolina for over ten years. From a young age Stephenhas been interested in archaeology, and how art has informed cultures from thetranslation of the Rosetta Stone to the age of digital apps. Simmerman workedprofessionally as a graphic designer and editor for five years, before decidingto pursue graduate studies, first in English then in graphic design. He hastaught for over twenty years at several schools in the southeast region.
Among Simmerman’s influences and inspirations areHenri Toulouse-Lautrec, Norman Rockwell, and Jacob Lawrence. He admires thework of Andy Warhol and Jasper Johns and how they parlayed elements ofcommercial art into their unique works of art. Stephen’s also a huge fan ofearly magazine illustrators like N.C. Wyeth and Will Bradley, as well as theGerman poster designer Lucien Bernhard.
Simmerman’s illustrations are primarily mixed media:acrylic, watercolor, oil pastel, or ink often layered with “found” type. Muchof his creative pursuits involves the word play of advertising and its power ofpersuasion, and he enjoys creating works laced with nostalgia and mysteries ofthe passage of time. Along with completing a graphic novel in 2016, Simmermanhas illustrated two children’s books and his work has been juried into numerousregional and national exhibitions. He currently serves as Assistant Professorof Graphic Design at Concord University in West Virginia.
The exhibit is free and open to the public, Monday –Friday 8am – 5pm. For more informationyou may contact the McKinney Center, 423.753.0562.
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Storytelling Live - Pippa White
June 26, 2025 2:00 pm - 3:00 pmInternational Storytelling Center, 100 W Main St, Jonesborough, TN 37659, USA
Now in its 22nd season, the International Storytelling Center’s renowned Storytelling Live performance series features 20 nationally known storytellers in live concerts at 2 p.m., Tuesday through Saturday, from May through October. Special events are also offered throughout the season, including evening shows, virtual concerts, and holiday programs.
Pippa White turned to solo performing in 1994. Prior to that, she had an extensive career in theatre and television on the West Coast. She calls her One’s Company Productions “part theatre, part storytelling, part history.” Audiences call them unique, captivating, and touching. She has crisscrossed the country many times touring 32 states, including three times at the United Solo Theatre Festival in New York City, which garnered a review that called her work “riveting, heartbreaking, and suspenseful.” She has been a teaching artist with the Nebraska Arts Council for many years and has received several awards in recognition of her work, including two Individual Artist Fellowship awards from the Nebraska Arts Council.
"Ms. White thoroughly entranced us, literally wearing different hats to bring characters to life, with stories that are riveting and suspenseful." – Hi! Drama, New York, NYGet tickets here: https://store.storytellingcenter.net/storytelling-live-06-24-06-28-pippa-white-190/
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Historic Zoning
June 26, 2025 6:00 pm - 7:00 pmJonesborough Town Administration, 123 Boone St, Jonesborough, TN 37659, USA
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Hud at The Jackson Theatre
June 26, 2025 7:00 pm - 9:00 pm
Jackson Theatre, 121 W Main St, Jonesborough, TN 37659, USAHud (1963)
Western Series
Uncompromising portrait of a despicable heel (Best Actornominee Paul Newman), a callous, greedy, selfish and cynical son of a highlyprincipled cattle rancher in contemporary Texas. Oscars went to Patricia Nealas the family housekeeper and Melvyn Douglas as the patriarch, and to cameramanJames Wong Howe. Adapted from the Larry McMurtry novel "Horseman, PassBy."
Cinematography is breathtaking!
Rated TV-PG
Running Time 112 minutes
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Storytelling Live - Pippa White
June 26, 2025 7:30 pm - 8:30 pmInternational Storytelling Center, 100 W Main St, Jonesborough, TN 37659, USA
Now in its 22nd season, the International Storytelling Center’s renowned Storytelling Live performance series features 20 nationally known storytellers in live concerts at 2 p.m., Tuesday through Saturday, from May through October. Special events are also offered throughout the season, including evening shows, virtual concerts, and holiday programs.
Pippa White turned to solo performing in 1994. Prior to that, she had an extensive career in theatre and television on the West Coast. She calls her One’s Company Productions “part theatre, part storytelling, part history.” Audiences call them unique, captivating, and touching. She has crisscrossed the country many times touring 32 states, including three times at the United Solo Theatre Festival in New York City, which garnered a review that called her work “riveting, heartbreaking, and suspenseful.” She has been a teaching artist with the Nebraska Arts Council for many years and has received several awards in recognition of her work, including two Individual Artist Fellowship awards from the Nebraska Arts Council.
"Ms. White thoroughly entranced us, literally wearing different hats to bring characters to life, with stories that are riveting and suspenseful." – Hi! Drama, New York, NYGet tickets here: https://store.storytellingcenter.net/storytelling-live-06-24-06-28-pippa-white-190/
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- June 27, 2025
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Artists Exhibition Featuring Stephen Simmerman & Jamey Biggs
June 27, 2025 8:00 am - 5:00 pmMcKinney Center at Booker T. Washington School, 103 Franklin Ave, Jonesborough, TN 37659, USA
Jonesborough’s Mary B. Martin Program for the Arts
to Host Artists Jamey Biggs and Stephen Simmerman
The McKinney Centerwill be featuring sculptor Jamey Biggs and multimedia artist, Stephen Simmerman. The exhibition opening reception willtake place on Friday, June 6, 5:00 – 7:00 pm. The exhibition is free and open to the public and will be up until July4. Both Jamey Biggs and StephenSimmerman will be present at the reception to talk to visitors and answerquestions about her artwork. The artworkwill be on sale that night and throughout the duration of the exhibition.
Jamey Biggs grew up in Summersville, WestVirginia. He holds a Bachelor of Arts in Studio Art and a Bachelor of Sciencein Art education. He completed an MFA in Ceramics at Indiana State Universityin 2003. Biggs has instructed Ceramics and Sculpture for 20 years. Jamey hasdirected the construction of multiple permanent and experimental ceramic kilnswhile at Concord University.
Jamey has served as the gallery director for theArthur Butcher Art Gallery in the Alexander Fine Arts Center on the Campus ofConcord University since 2004. He has directed the visiting artist program atConcord University providing Athens, West Virginia with free demonstrations bythe nations well-known ceramic artists and creating a channel for internationalexchange.
Jamey’s artwork is primarily ceramic and drawsupon themes of Appalachian life through sculpture and utilitarian objects.
These trucks and bulldozers areconstructed in earthenware clay using various molding and hand formingtechniques. I have settled on the image of the metal toy because itis largely positive, a wide variety of folks have an existing relation to it,and it is not traditionally used as subject matter or imagery for high art. My hope is that the art works presented are truly non-verbal innature. I want to make work that will instantly draw a viewer in andhold their attention through unexpected pairings.
Images are fluid in terms of theirmeaning and significance. The material in the truck or in front ofthe dozer provides me with another possible layer of meaning and context forthe truck. I typically try to use that extra layer as an opportunity forplay and humor. The toy truck is associated with childhood and childlikeimpulses. Anything that I put in the truck instantly becomes, bydefinition, a “truckload”. That transformation is semantic (andsilly) but I want the works to have monumental qualities while being as smallas possible.
I want the loads to beoverwhelming. I want the viewer to rely on their own associations tomake sense of those materials, objects, and commodities. I think theplayfulness and general mischief will come through the work. Theworks will convey ideas of generosity, and abundance but I’m okay if a fewnotions of wastefulness get through as well.
I hope that adults who are wellversed in art theory, art history, and criticism can find interest in thesculptures. At the same time, I want the work to appeal to children.
Stephen Simmerman grew up in northeast Tennessee andlived and worked in North Carolina for over ten years. From a young age Stephenhas been interested in archaeology, and how art has informed cultures from thetranslation of the Rosetta Stone to the age of digital apps. Simmerman workedprofessionally as a graphic designer and editor for five years, before decidingto pursue graduate studies, first in English then in graphic design. He hastaught for over twenty years at several schools in the southeast region.
Among Simmerman’s influences and inspirations areHenri Toulouse-Lautrec, Norman Rockwell, and Jacob Lawrence. He admires thework of Andy Warhol and Jasper Johns and how they parlayed elements ofcommercial art into their unique works of art. Stephen’s also a huge fan ofearly magazine illustrators like N.C. Wyeth and Will Bradley, as well as theGerman poster designer Lucien Bernhard.
Simmerman’s illustrations are primarily mixed media:acrylic, watercolor, oil pastel, or ink often layered with “found” type. Muchof his creative pursuits involves the word play of advertising and its power ofpersuasion, and he enjoys creating works laced with nostalgia and mysteries ofthe passage of time. Along with completing a graphic novel in 2016, Simmermanhas illustrated two children’s books and his work has been juried into numerousregional and national exhibitions. He currently serves as Assistant Professorof Graphic Design at Concord University in West Virginia.
The exhibit is free and open to the public, Monday –Friday 8am – 5pm. For more informationyou may contact the McKinney Center, 423.753.0562.
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Storytelling Live - Pippa White
June 27, 2025 2:00 pm - 3:00 pmInternational Storytelling Center, 100 W Main St, Jonesborough, TN 37659, USA
Now in its 22nd season, the International Storytelling Center’s renowned Storytelling Live performance series features 20 nationally known storytellers in live concerts at 2 p.m., Tuesday through Saturday, from May through October. Special events are also offered throughout the season, including evening shows, virtual concerts, and holiday programs.
Pippa White turned to solo performing in 1994. Prior to that, she had an extensive career in theatre and television on the West Coast. She calls her One’s Company Productions “part theatre, part storytelling, part history.” Audiences call them unique, captivating, and touching. She has crisscrossed the country many times touring 32 states, including three times at the United Solo Theatre Festival in New York City, which garnered a review that called her work “riveting, heartbreaking, and suspenseful.” She has been a teaching artist with the Nebraska Arts Council for many years and has received several awards in recognition of her work, including two Individual Artist Fellowship awards from the Nebraska Arts Council.
"Ms. White thoroughly entranced us, literally wearing different hats to bring characters to life, with stories that are riveting and suspenseful." – Hi! Drama, New York, NYGet tickets here: https://store.storytellingcenter.net/storytelling-live-06-24-06-28-pippa-white-190/
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National Food Truck Night at Wetlands
June 27, 2025 6:00 pm - 9:00 pm -
Music on the Square
June 27, 2025 7:00 pm - 9:00 pm -
Raiders of the Lost Ark at The Jackson Theatre
June 27, 2025 7:00 pm - 9:00 pm
Jackson Theatre, 121 W Main St, Jonesborough, TN 37659, USARaiders of the Lost Ark (1981)
80’s Classics
Megahit about intrepid archaeologist Indiana Jones, who in1936 is sent on a mission to locate the elusive Ark of the Covenant. Thestoried treasure is said to make those who possess it invincible, and the U.S.Government wants Jones to find it before the Nazis do.
Rated PG
Running Time 115 minutes
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- June 28, 2025
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Storytelling Live - Pippa White
June 28, 2025 2:00 pm - 3:00 pmInternational Storytelling Center, 100 W Main St, Jonesborough, TN 37659, USA
Now in its 22nd season, the International Storytelling Center’s renowned Storytelling Live performance series features 20 nationally known storytellers in live concerts at 2 p.m., Tuesday through Saturday, from May through October. Special events are also offered throughout the season, including evening shows, virtual concerts, and holiday programs.
Pippa White turned to solo performing in 1994. Prior to that, she had an extensive career in theatre and television on the West Coast. She calls her One’s Company Productions “part theatre, part storytelling, part history.” Audiences call them unique, captivating, and touching. She has crisscrossed the country many times touring 32 states, including three times at the United Solo Theatre Festival in New York City, which garnered a review that called her work “riveting, heartbreaking, and suspenseful.” She has been a teaching artist with the Nebraska Arts Council for many years and has received several awards in recognition of her work, including two Individual Artist Fellowship awards from the Nebraska Arts Council.
"Ms. White thoroughly entranced us, literally wearing different hats to bring characters to life, with stories that are riveting and suspenseful." – Hi! Drama, New York, NYGet tickets here: https://store.storytellingcenter.net/storytelling-live-06-24-06-28-pippa-white-190/
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The Goonies at The Jackson Theatre
June 28, 2025 3:00 pm - 5:00 pm
Jackson Theatre, 121 W Main St, Jonesborough, TN 37659, USAThe Goonies (1985)
80’s Classics
PWYC
A group of teenagers finds a map leading to a hiddentreasure. They must overcome booby traps, natural obstructions, and a gang ofdesperate thieves in their race for the loot.
Rated PG
Running Time 114 minutes
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Dazed and Confused at The Jackson Theatre
June 28, 2025 7:00 pm - 9:00 pm
Jackson Theatre, 121 W Main St, Jonesborough, TN 37659, USADazed and Confused (1993)
A group of friends and their siblings each have different experiences on the last day of school in 1976, all culminating in a party in the woods.Rated R
Running Time 102 minutes
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- June 29, 2025
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Up at The Jackson Theatre
June 29, 2025 3:00 pm - 3:30 pm
Jackson Theatre, 121 W Main St, Jonesborough, TN 37659, USAUp (2009)
Family Series
A feisty septuagenarian reluctantly teams up with a youngexplorer in this Oscar-winning Best Animated Feature Film by Pixar. CarlFredricksen is a 78-year-old balloon salesman who dreams of seeing the wilds ofSouth America, and it looks like he may get there after tying enough heliumballoons to his house to take flight. The only kink in his plan is the8-year-old stowaway on his front porch.
Rated PG
Running Time 96 minutes
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Yoga in the Park
June 29, 2025 4:00 pm - 5:00 pmJimmy Neil Smith Park, 111 W College St, Jonesborough, TN 37659, USA
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Brews & Tunes
June 29, 2025 5:00 pm - 7:00 pm
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- June 30, 2025
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Artists Exhibition Featuring Stephen Simmerman & Jamey Biggs
June 30, 2025 8:00 am - 5:00 pmMcKinney Center at Booker T. Washington School, 103 Franklin Ave, Jonesborough, TN 37659, USA
Jonesborough’s Mary B. Martin Program for the Arts
to Host Artists Jamey Biggs and Stephen Simmerman
The McKinney Centerwill be featuring sculptor Jamey Biggs and multimedia artist, Stephen Simmerman. The exhibition opening reception willtake place on Friday, June 6, 5:00 – 7:00 pm. The exhibition is free and open to the public and will be up until July4. Both Jamey Biggs and StephenSimmerman will be present at the reception to talk to visitors and answerquestions about her artwork. The artworkwill be on sale that night and throughout the duration of the exhibition.
Jamey Biggs grew up in Summersville, WestVirginia. He holds a Bachelor of Arts in Studio Art and a Bachelor of Sciencein Art education. He completed an MFA in Ceramics at Indiana State Universityin 2003. Biggs has instructed Ceramics and Sculpture for 20 years. Jamey hasdirected the construction of multiple permanent and experimental ceramic kilnswhile at Concord University.
Jamey has served as the gallery director for theArthur Butcher Art Gallery in the Alexander Fine Arts Center on the Campus ofConcord University since 2004. He has directed the visiting artist program atConcord University providing Athens, West Virginia with free demonstrations bythe nations well-known ceramic artists and creating a channel for internationalexchange.
Jamey’s artwork is primarily ceramic and drawsupon themes of Appalachian life through sculpture and utilitarian objects.
These trucks and bulldozers areconstructed in earthenware clay using various molding and hand formingtechniques. I have settled on the image of the metal toy because itis largely positive, a wide variety of folks have an existing relation to it,and it is not traditionally used as subject matter or imagery for high art. My hope is that the art works presented are truly non-verbal innature. I want to make work that will instantly draw a viewer in andhold their attention through unexpected pairings.
Images are fluid in terms of theirmeaning and significance. The material in the truck or in front ofthe dozer provides me with another possible layer of meaning and context forthe truck. I typically try to use that extra layer as an opportunity forplay and humor. The toy truck is associated with childhood and childlikeimpulses. Anything that I put in the truck instantly becomes, bydefinition, a “truckload”. That transformation is semantic (andsilly) but I want the works to have monumental qualities while being as smallas possible.
I want the loads to beoverwhelming. I want the viewer to rely on their own associations tomake sense of those materials, objects, and commodities. I think theplayfulness and general mischief will come through the work. Theworks will convey ideas of generosity, and abundance but I’m okay if a fewnotions of wastefulness get through as well.
I hope that adults who are wellversed in art theory, art history, and criticism can find interest in thesculptures. At the same time, I want the work to appeal to children.
Stephen Simmerman grew up in northeast Tennessee andlived and worked in North Carolina for over ten years. From a young age Stephenhas been interested in archaeology, and how art has informed cultures from thetranslation of the Rosetta Stone to the age of digital apps. Simmerman workedprofessionally as a graphic designer and editor for five years, before decidingto pursue graduate studies, first in English then in graphic design. He hastaught for over twenty years at several schools in the southeast region.
Among Simmerman’s influences and inspirations areHenri Toulouse-Lautrec, Norman Rockwell, and Jacob Lawrence. He admires thework of Andy Warhol and Jasper Johns and how they parlayed elements ofcommercial art into their unique works of art. Stephen’s also a huge fan ofearly magazine illustrators like N.C. Wyeth and Will Bradley, as well as theGerman poster designer Lucien Bernhard.
Simmerman’s illustrations are primarily mixed media:acrylic, watercolor, oil pastel, or ink often layered with “found” type. Muchof his creative pursuits involves the word play of advertising and its power ofpersuasion, and he enjoys creating works laced with nostalgia and mysteries ofthe passage of time. Along with completing a graphic novel in 2016, Simmermanhas illustrated two children’s books and his work has been juried into numerousregional and national exhibitions. He currently serves as Assistant Professorof Graphic Design at Concord University in West Virginia.
The exhibit is free and open to the public, Monday –Friday 8am – 5pm. For more informationyou may contact the McKinney Center, 423.753.0562.
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