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4August17–23,2022 c-ville.com facebook.com/cville.weekly August 24 www.frontporchcville.org kids 12 & underFREE Rivanna Roots a Riverfront concert series Beleza Beer,-Local-wine,Cider&FoodTrucks5 - 9 pm @RiverRivannaCo. Rocky will be at the Eternal Attic on Friday, Sept. 2nd, 10 – 4 paying you top dollar for your gold and silver and antiques. HOURS: tues - sat 9:30 - 5 • 1-800-296-8676 Antiques open at rockysgoldandsilver.com9:00 gold and silver are still up! now is the time to sell! Rocky pays more for gold, silver and many other items he can resell ROCKY BUYS: GOLD, SILVER, PLATINUM JEWELRY (EVEN BROKEN) GOLD, SILVER PLATINUM COINS, BULLION HE PAYS EXTRA FOR GEMSTONES AND DIAMONDS HE CAN RESELL ROCKY WILL PAY UP TO $3000 FOR A GOOD ONE CARAT DIAMOND SOLITAIRE STERLING FLATWARE, HOLLOWWARE ANTIQUE GUNS AND AMMUNITION, SWORDS, CIVIL WAR ITEMS POST CARDS, OLD QUILTS, OLD CLOCKS, ANTIQUE FURNITURE SOME GLASSWARE SOME COSTUME JEWELRY SOME POCKET AND WRIST WATCHES LIKE ROLEX, PATEK PHILIPPE, OMEGA, AND MORE RUNNING OR NOT SHENANDOAH VALLEY POTTERY buying gold silver antiquesanddaily jewelry repairs done on the premises often while you wait paying $2,000 - $3,000 for ladies Rolex watches and $2,500-$3,500 for men’s two-tone Rolex watches VISIT ROCKY’S EBAY SITE FOR SPECIALS ON GOLD, SILVER, ANITQUES AND COINS 10 6:30-AMPM CHECK IN SALES ITEMS Bring the items you want to sell to our Downtown (Preston Ave) location. 9 AM 5 PM SHOP THE SWAP SALE Swap opens at 9 a.m. (line forms around 8 a.m. so come early!). 125NOONPM SHOP THE SWAP SALE Still plenty of bikes, parts, accessories, and gear to shop!












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6August17–23,2022 c-ville.com facebook.com/cville.weekly P.O. Box 119 308 E. Main Charlottesville,St.Virginia 22902 Facebook:www.c-ville.comfacebook.com/cville.weekly Twitter: @cville_weekly, @cville_culture Instagram: @cvilleweekly Charlottesville’s News & Arts Weekly CIRCULATION: 20,000 WEEKLY C-VILLE is published Wednesdays. 20,000 free copies are distributed all over Charlottesville, Albemarle, and the surrounding counties. One copy per person. Additional copies may be purchased for $1.99 per Unsolicitedcopy.news articles, essays, and photography are carefully considered. Local emphasis is preferred. Although care will be taken, we assume no responsibility for submissions. First-class mail subscriptions are available for $140 annually. ©2022 C-VILLE Weekly. No part of this publication may be reproduced without the written permission of the publisher. MEMBER Virginia Press Association EDITORIAL EDITOR-IN-CHIEF Richard DiCicco richard@c-ville.com NEWS REPORTER Brielle Entzminger reporter@c-ville.com CULTURE EDITOR Tami Keaveny tami@c-ville.com COPY EDITOR Susan Sorensen EDITORIAL ASSISTANT Maeve Hayden INTERN Eshaan Sarup CONTRIBUTORS Rob Brezsny, Amelia Delphos, Matt Dhillon, Carol Diggs, Shea Gibbs, Mary Jane Gore, Will Ham, Erika Howsare, Justin Humphreys, Kristin O’Donoghue, Lisa Provence, Sarah Sargent, Jen Sorensen, Julia Stumbaugh, Courteney Stuart, Paul Ting, Sean Tubbs, David Levinson Wilk DESIGN AND PRODUCTION ART DIRECTOR Max March max@c-ville.com GRAPHIC DESIGNER Tracy Federico designer@c-ville.com ADVERTISING advertising@c-ville.com ADVERTISING DIRECTOR Gabby Kirk (434) 373-2136 gabby@c-ville.com ACCOUNT EXECUTIVE Annick Canevet annick@c-ville.com, Lisa C. Hurdle classyexec@c-ville.com, Brittany Keller brittany@c-ville.com DIRECTOR OF EVENTS & MARKETING Stephanie Vogtman REAL ESTATE WEEKLY Beth Wood (434) 373-0999 PRODUCTIONbeth@c-ville.comCOORDINATOR Faith Gibson ads@c-ville.com BUSINESS PUBLISHER Anna Harrison anna@c-ville.com CHIEF FINANCIAL OFFICER Debbie Miller debbie@c-ville.com A/R SPECIALIST Nanci Winter (434) 373-0429 CIRCULATION MANAGER Billy Dempsey circulation@c-ville.com C-VILLE HOLDINGS, LLC Bill Chapman, Blair Kelly INSIDE THIS ISSUE V.34, No. 33 NEWS 11 12 Lawsuit claims revoking expanded early sentence credits is unlawful. 13 UVA Library exhibit examines Charlottesville’s “Summer of Hate.” CULTURE 29 31 Screens: Fire of Love packs heat and heart. 33 Small Bites: Wahoo Pale Ale, Organic Krush,and more. 38 Sudoku 39 Crossword 41 Free Will Astrology CLASSIFIED 42 Real Estate Weekly Page 45 FEATURE 14 AhisLeavingmarksprawlingnew book celebrates artist Steve Keene.








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Hello, Charlottesville! Thank you for reading C-VILLE Weekly. I’m excited to introduce this unique issue of the paper, which sports three different covers for discerning collectors. Artist Steve Keene, prolific as ever, offered us eight options when we asked him to paint our cover this week, so we figured we should make an event out of it. (You can see the alternatives Keene sent on the left.) I’m looking forward to seeing which printings of the paper you readers will pick up!
8August17–23,2022 c-ville.com facebook.com/cville.weekly 8.17.22
Keene (p. 14) paints at a pace of 50 pieces a day, meaning just about everybody in town owns a part of his expansive oeuvre. I admire that kind of work ethic; I imagine that painting so quickly means Keene doesn’t get too precious about the little things. That’s why a deadline is helpful for me as a writer. If I have infinite time, I’ll tweak and rewrite and delete small passages forever—just spin my wheels, going nowhere. I suppose the only reason you’re reading this now is because it had to be taken out of my hands!—Richard DiCicco
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A FOIA lawsuit against the City of Charlottesville seeking records about police misconduct settlements is moving forward after federal Judge Norman K. Moon denied the city’s motion to dismiss the case on Monday and allowed the plaintiffs’ attorney, Jeff Fogel, time to file an amended complaint.Thesuit alleges the city is withholding information about the amount paid out in cases of police wrongdoing. Tanesha Hudson, one of three plaintiffs, alleges her First Amendment rights were violated by a nondisclosure agreement she says she was coerced to sign that prohibits her from discussing a settlement she received. A second plaintiff, Cherry Henley, is a member of the People’s Coalition, which filed a FOIA request seeking records. The city claimed it did not have any responsive records, and that settlements are handled by a third party called VRSA, which acts as an insurance pool for many of Virginia’s municipalities. The third plaintiff is local journalist David McNair. Blaire O’Brien, the city’s attorney, argued that the plaintiffs lacked standing to file the suit, since the FOIA request cited in the complaint was made by the People’s Coalition. O’Brien also said the plaintiffs had failed to show harm. “What we’re dealing with here is simply an effort to delay on the part of defendants,” argued Fogel.
Moon ruled that Fogel may amend his complaint to include subsequent FOIA requests filed on behalf of the individual plaintiffs.“Thewhole purpose of FOIA is so clear,” said Moon. “I don’t understand why the city makes these arguments that people can’t get this information. What governmental purpose could it serve to have a government not have to do this? It’s inconceivable.”
The Charlottesville Police Civilian Oversight Board has launched an online complaint portal that allows citizens to file police mis conduct complaints, request board review of the Charlottesville Police Department’s internal affairs investigations, and submit recommendations to the department. Other new initiatives include “officer interaction cards” that anyone can request from an officer, and a community perception survey gathering input on both the department and the board. The complaint portal can be accessed at charlottesvilleva.siviltech.com.
for A12
FOIA suit moves ahead
New names During its Monday night meeting, Charlottes ville City Council passed a resolution renam ing two city streets. Part of Lankford Avenue is now Dr. Alvin Edwards Drive, honoring the longtime pastor of Mount Zion First African Baptist Church. A portion of Ridge McIntire Street was also renamed Vinegar Hill Boulevard to acknowledge the thriving Black neighborhood that was razed during urban renewal in 1965.
“I firmly believe that white supremacy will be rooted out. …
F ive years after August 12, 2017, when white suprem acists clashed with counterprotesters in Charlot tesville, former vice mayor Wes Bellamy stood be fore a crowd at the Jefferson School and announced through a megaphone, “We are not only survivors, we are thrivers.” “We won,” he said. “We will continue to win.” Bellamy’s speech at the school was one stop during last Friday’s walking vigil that retraced the steps of counter protesters on August 12. It began with a service at First Baptist Church on West Main Street, and continued with participants of all ages making their way through McGuffey Park, to Congregation Beth Israel and the Downtown Mall, and finally the memorial at Heather Heyer Way, where the crowd erupted into a rendition of “This Little Light of Mine.”
11August17–23,2022 c-ville.com facebook.com/cville.weekly@cville_weekly
PHOTOSTAFF Blood, sweat, and tears PAGE 13
NEWSINBRIEF
Policing police
Don’t eat that!
Case in point: we’re here, they’re not.”
A walking vigil
— Former city councilor Wes Bellamy, speaking on the five-year anniversary of August 12, 2017
At the outset, Bellamy aimed to keep spirits high, remind ing walkers, “This is not a funeral procession. … I don’t want to see any heads bowed.” Bellamy was accompanied by religious leaders and fellow activists. Each stop hosted a new speaker, in cluding Jalane Schmidt, director of the UVA Democ racy Initiative’s Memory Project, Rev. Phil Woodson, Rev. Brenda Brown-Grooms, Rabbi Tom Gutherz, and Deacon Don Gathers. At the First United Methodist Church, Woodson asked members of the crowd to raise their hands if they had marched five years ago or if they had served as medics to the injured. Many hands went up. The vigil stirred the community on a Friday afternoon. Shopkeepers poked their heads out of doors to watch the procession pass by, sometimes cheering or joining in on “White supremacy has to go” chants. A speaker noted that state Sen. Creigh Deeds was in the crowd, and members of the B.U.C.K. Squad, including Executive Director Herb Dickerson, made the journey as well.
The University of Virginia’s Blue Ridge Poison Center has seen a sharp rise in THCrelated poison control calls among children and teens, reports the Virginia Mercury. Dr. Chris Holstege, who was assigned to a stateformed task force, attributes the spike to products containing Delta-8, which has soared in popularity since 2020. Experts blame a lack of regulation of the lab-made cannabinoid, as well as “copycat” edibles that resemble popular snacks, like Skittles and Cheetos. In June, the Virginia General Assembly passed a two-year budget banning edibles resembling protected trademarks or made in the shape of a human, animal, vehicle, or fruit.




NEWS ‘Arbitrary’
Lawsuit says revocation of expanded early release credits violates rights By Courteney Stuart courteney@c-ville.com I n June, when the Virginia General Assembly approved Gov. Glenn Youngkin’s budget amendment re ducing the number of people eligible for early release from Virginia prisons through a new expanded earned sentence credit law, prison reform advocates cried foul. About 500 people, who’d been expecting to go home immediately after the law went into effect on July 1, suddenly learned they were no longer eligible. Now, an incarcerated man has filed suit against the head of the Virginia Department of Corrections alleg ing his continued incarceration is unlawful, and demanding his immediate release. “The impact he’s suffering is very similar to that of the stories I’ve heard now from hundreds of other inmates and their loved ones who are going through the same thing,” says attorney Elliott Harding, who is rep resenting Derrick Renaldo Edmonds in the suit filed August 9 in Richmond Circuit Court against DOC Director Harold Clarke. The expanded earned sentence credit law passed the General Assembly during a special session in November 2020. Its effective date was delayed by nearly two years to provide the DOC time to calculate new release dates and prepare for expand ed reentry services. The new law increased the amount of “good time” an incarcer ated person could earn from 15 percent up to 30 percent. The expanded earned sentence credits applied only to nonviolent offenses, but individuals who had sen tences for both nonviolent and violent offenses could earn the extra time for their nonviolent crimes. Critics of the law claimed it would result in thousands of violent criminals flooding an unprepared reentry system and putting the public at “Releasingrisk.apopulation of inmates early, 62% of whom are incarcerated for violent offenses, is not the solution to the growing crime spike across the Common wealth,” the spokesperson for Virginia Attorney General Jason Miyares wrote in an emailed statement in May.
—Damon
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A spokesperson for the Department of Corrections declined to comment on an ongoing lawsuit. A hearing has not yet been scheduled. At press time, the ACLU of Virginia filed a similar habeas petition in Albemarle Circuit Court challenging the rollback on behalf of another inmate. Courteney Stuart is the host of “Charlottesville Right Now” on WINA. You can hear her interview with attorney Elliott Harding at wina.com.
When the opponents of the enhanced earned sentence credit failed to amend the new law during regular session, Youngkin added a budget amendment making any one with a violent offense ineligible to earn expanded good time on their nonviolent charges, suddenly upending expectations and plans already made by hundreds of incarcerated people and their families. With support from several Senate Demo crats who had previously voted for the new law, and the absence of several House Democrats at the time of the vote, the bud get amendment passed. Harding says the process was not only unfair but unlawful, leaving Edmonds and hundreds of others with feelings of grief, confusion, and isolation. “That kind of goes to a fundamental aspect of this whole case … how arbitrary this was and how unplanned and how there’s no sense of clarity or certainty within the department or the General Assembly, really, as to what’s going to hap pen going forward,” says Harding, who notes that the budget amendment only prevents these people’s release under ex panded sentence credits for the two years the budget is in effect. Edmonds, who is serving a 35-year sen tence for multiple counts of robbery and attempted robbery as well as using a fire arm in the commission of a felony, had completed all the rehabilitative require ments for early release and had obtained health insurance and a DMV-issued iden tification card. As a result of the amend ment, the suit says, he has suffered “severe mental anguish.”
A new lawsuit alleges that the budget amendment revoking expanded earned sentence credits for anyone with a violent offense is unlawful.
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13August17–23,2022 c-ville.com facebook.com/cville.weekly@cville_weekly NEWS
Kendall King, a fellow UVA alumna and community organizer, first approached Russell-Hunter about creating the exhibit in 2019, but the pandemic forced them to put the project on hold until this year. In partnership with Jalane Schmidt, the UVA Democracy Initiative’s Memory Project di rector, King worked with guest alumni cura tors Russell-Hunter and Natalie Romero, as well as Memory Project postdoctoral fellow Gillet Rosenblith, to collect personal arti facts from student and community coun terprotesters, including: a shoulder bag used by an activist as a shield on August 11, a tear gas canister launched at counterprotesters during the August 12 rally, and activist Em ily Gorcenski’s dossier—which she pro vided to Charlottesville leadership before the rallies—detailing violent threats made online by Unite the Right organizers and attendees. Throughout the curation process, the alumni consulted with and gathered input from community members. Particularly moving to Russell-Hunter is a photo of student counterprotesters hold ing a banner that says “VA Students Act Against White Supremacy,” while they’re surrounded by white supremacists during the torch-lit rally. On the first anniversary of the rally, she created a collage of flowers and placed them over the white supremacists in the photo, symbolizing activists’ efforts to deplatform white supremacy. “Not only are we resisting neo-Nazis and white supremacists … [but] we’re trying to build a world where there are no neo-Nazis and white supremacists,” she says. “[And] where there is going to be no future Unite the Right rally 2.0.” Other Summer of Hate artifacts on dis play include Russell-Hunter’s original draft of UVA Students United’s demands to the university, as well as her notes from a meet ing student activists had with former UVA president Teresa Sullivan following the Unite “We’re trying to build a world where there are no neo-Nazis and white supremacists.”
Former UVA students who protested against white supremacists on August 11, 2017, have created a new exhibit sharing their personal narratives of the deadly Unite the Right rally.
the Right rally. The exhibit also features a controversial video of Sullivan claiming that no one told the university administration about the tiki torch march. (A 2017 report by former university counsel Tim Heaphy found that the university administration was warned of the impending violence, and did not properly prepare for and respond to the march.)
RUSSELL-HUNTERHANNAH
Five years later, students who took a stand against these white supremacists are sharing their personal narratives from the deadly Unite the Right rally in a new UVA library exhibit entitled “No Unity Without Justice: Student and Community Organizing Dur ing the 2017 Summer of Hate.” Last week, the 37-item exhibit opened to the public at the Albert and Shirley Small Special Collec tions Library. “It was really healing to be able to articulate a lot of things that I had been journaling about, [and] processing on my own and with fellow survivors and students over the past couple of years,” says co-curator and UVA alumna Hannah Russell-Hunter, who was a student counterprotester at the August 11 rally.
Looking back New UVA exhibit shows student resistance during Unite the Right rally
HANNAH RUSSELL-HUNTER, EXHIBIT CO-CURATOR
Since interim Charlottesville City Manager Michael Rogers announced this month that the city would not be terminating an employee who partici pated in the January 6, 2021, insur rection at the U.S. Capitol, there’s been community backlash—and the decision has stirred up concern among other city employees.
Matthew Lawless, who previously worked in the city’s Human Resourc es Department, and now serves as Scottsville’s town administrator, be lieves Rocky Mount, Virginia, handled a similar situation “really well.” Last January, former town manager James Ervin fired two insurrectionist police officers, who were charged with of fenses related to the insurrection. “[Their town manager] thought their conduct reflected very poorly on the reputation of the town, and that was all he needed,” adds Law less. Brielle Entzminger
By Brielle Entzminger reporter@c-ville.com D uring the now-infamous tiki torch rally at the University of Virginia, hundreds of white supremacists marched across Grounds on the evening of August 11, 2017. Shouting racist and antiSemitic chants like “White lives matter” and “Jews will not replace us,” the group later sur rounded and attacked student counterprotest ers at the Thomas Jefferson statue in front of the Rotunda, throwing lit torches, spraying pepper spray, and hurling threats and slurs.
City concernedemployeeaboutcity’srefusaltofireinsurrectionist
The exhibit also details the decades-long history of student activism at UVA—in cluding the fight for desegregation and coeducation—and criticizes the university, city leadership, and police for not taking action against rally organizers or preventing the violent events. To provide further his torical context and background, the ex hibit includes QR codes linking to news articles, City Council meeting minutes, the Sines v. Kessler civil lawsuit, and other im portant sources. As the fifth anniversary of the rally height ened the nationwide focus on Charlottesville, Russell-Hunter believes it’s especially critical to uplift survivor and organizer voices, and reflect on what has—and hasn’t—changed in the city since 2017. She hopes visitors will come away from the exhibit with an in creased recognition and appreciation of “the rich history of organizing” at UVA and in the community, she says. “I hope that this is a starting point for more research and curiosity about the city, the [rally], and all of the circumstances around it,” adds Russell-Hunter. “We have such a deeper history to learn from.” “No Unity Without Justice” will be on display until October 29.
One employee (who wishes to remain anonymous out of fear of retaliation) disagrees with the city’s claims that it cannot discipline the employee—IT analyst Allen Groat, who works with emergency services—because Groat has not been charged with any crimes related to the insurrection. The employee believes Groat should have been fired back in 2020, when he pleaded guilty to aggressive driving with intent to injure after pulling a gun on a woman at a red light.
The employee, who works with Groat, says the city’s refusal to discipline him for his actions has increased concern for their—and their co-workers’—safety.“It’sprettyserious what [Groat] tried to do, and it shows him to be an unstable person … especially in light of the Virginia Beach shooting,” says the employee, referring to the 2019 mass shooting during which a city employee fatally shot 12 people at the Virginia Beach Municipal Center. Groat also has access to sensitive information about city residents and employees, which the employee wor ries he could use to target minorities. “He is homophobic, anti-Semitic, [and] part of the most violent racist people in this country,” says the employee. By allowing a potentially danger ous person to remain on staff, the employee claims the city is in viola tion of the Occupational Safety and Health Act of 1970, which states that employers must provide “a place of employment [free] from recognized hazards that are causing or are likely to cause death or seri ous physical harm.”



14August17‑23,2022 c-ville.com facebook.com/cville.weekly EFRAMDANIEL


15August17‑23,2022 c-ville.com facebook.com/cville.weekly New StevethedocumentsbookprolifIcOutputofKeeneBySarAhSargent


Keene interest
Steve Keene has produced more than 300,000 paintings in his lifetime, so when we asked our readers to share images of the prolific artist’s work that they own, we were delighted by the brisk response. Here’s a look at some of the Keenes that are displayed locally.
WHITEWARWICKEDWARD WHITEWARWICKEDWARD
16August17‑23,2022 c-ville.com facebook.com/cville.weekly DEGROATDL
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HAYDENELERI KURTZJAMIE SPELLMANJUDY SPELLMANJUDY TEITELBAUMKIERSTEN DANISRICK DANISRICK DANISRICK DANISRICK DANISRICK DEIGLSARAH
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Steve Keene paints eight hours a day, five to six days each week. He goes through five gallons of latex and acrylic paint on a typical day, and produces about 50 works.
EFRAMDANIELEFRAMDANIEL
Daniel Efram spent six years gathering material from art collectors, friends, and associates of Keene’s to create The Steve Keene Art Book, a comprehensive survey of the artist’s career.
17August17‑23,2022 c-ville.com facebook.com/cville.weekly
Efram spent six years gathering material from art collectors, friends, and associates of Keene’s to create this comprehensive survey of his career. The book comprises 265 pages, over 200 of which are images of Keene’s work drawn from more than 600 submissions from around the world. Spencer Lathrop of Spencer’s 206, a funky second-hand CD purveyor and coffee shop that was situated on the ground floor of what is now Common House, was an early Keene promoter. At Lathrop’s comfy, casual, and authentically hip establishment, you could browse the selection of used CDs, or get a coffee and sit in one of the mismatched chairs by the plant-filled window. Along with the coffee and CDs, Lathrop had bins of Steve Keenes for sale. In nice weather, he’d move the bins outside with an honor system box where you’d slip in the money. The paintings, almost always on ply wood panels, cost a dollar, sometimes two. I was drawn to the unusual flickering qual ity of the paint and arresting subject matter paired with enigmatic titles. And the price was right. As I filled up my arms, shelling out the requisite bills, I didn’t think much about the work beyond its aesthetic appeal (which has held fast all these years). I was not alone. You began to see Steve Keene paintings pop ping up all over Charlottesville. To paraphrase Keene, it was bleeding into the landscape. “I was obsessed with leaving a mark, leaving a trace of me,” says the man whose goal was to be the Johnny Appleseed of art. After his wife, Star, finished architecture school, the Keenes left town and the con tinuous supply of paintings dried up. The couple had been immersed in Charlottes ville’s music scene and had UVA student friends who’d go on to form the bands Silver Jews and Pavement. In New York, they were swept up into the burgeoning indie music scene. “The music world was my world,” says Keene, 64. “That was our community, and so my art kind of mirrored that com munity.” The Steve Keene Art Book captures the era’s atmosphere with vivid descriptions of the Threadwaxing Space, an alternative art and live music venue in downtown Manhattan that “was regularly packed with Keene’s bright, inexpensive paintings, and everyone bought one—or five.” While continuing to make his art, Keene worked with musicians on album covers and merch. He also continued painting portraits of album covers, an ongoing project com menced during his days as a DJ at WTJU. As the book points out, Keene has always painted pictures of pictures, or more pre cisely, pictures of the simulated world, selecting images that were designed to be seen. Knowing this, you can see the particu lar appeal of album covers. It’s tempting to label Keene’s work as out sider art or visionary art on account of its DIY, raw, manic quality. But Keene holds an MFA from Yale (he went to VCU for his BA). Far from being a naïve artist, Keene in corporates conceptualism, installation, and performance art into his work. His low prices and enormous output is a revolutionary act, defying the established art world with its preciousness and “the ‘pickled’ coolness” of its denizens, ensuring that his art is acces sible to nearly anyone. To date, Keene has produced over 300,000 paintings. But for the artist, it’s been one big painting. “The individual plywood panels are just puzzle pieces that together make up one great mas terpiece,” he says. Keene’s Brooklyn studio is a large cage of sorts, constructed of cyclone fencing that provides 80 linear feet in which to work. He paints assembly-line fashion on plywood boards hung in multiples on the fencing, producing the same image simultaneously. He moves down the row adding the same dab of paint until he reaches the end. Going back to the beginning, he takes another color and repeats the cycle, over and over until the group is completed. Though the image is the same, the works aren’t identical; variations occur as he goes down the line. He paints eight hours a day, five to six days each week. It’s physically demanding and obsessive. On an average day, Keene runs through five gallons of latex and acrylic paint and produces about 50 works. “It’s like mak ing a hundred pizzas or a hundred birthday cakes at the same time,” he says. And when he finishes painting, the job’s not done—Keene packs and ships about 18-20 orders each week. Though he’s garnered plenty of atten tion, with museum exhibitions in Cologne, Germany, and Melbourne, Australia, as well as Los Angeles, Houston, and Santa Monica, along with appearances in Time magazine, The New York Times, The Wall Street Jour nal, and on NPR, Keene has never cashed in in the way art stars Damien Hirst and Jeff Koons did. His model of cheap multiples doesn’t support their kind of revenue. Keene is after something more endur ing than money, and he may just achieve it. Certainly, The Steve Keene Art Book goes a long way toward elevating his profile and providing context for the prolific artist. Keene considers the demand for his work an affirmation and enjoys hearing where his paintings end up, such as the late Dennis Hopper’s L.A. bathroom, and in the hands of influential New York Times art critic RobertaOriginalSmith.Steve Keenes can still be ordered from his website stevekeene.com. For $70, he’ll send you a random selection of six paintings, sometimes more. There’s a backlog of orders, but knowing Keene’s character and workman like approach, you’ll get them eventually.
f you lived in Charlottesville in the early ’90s, you’re probably familiar with Steve Keene’s art. Keene worked as a dishwasher at Monsoon Café, which opened on the Downtown Mall in 1992, and owner Lu-Mei Chang gave him free rein to paint the walls, tables, and chairs. Chang’s early efforts to promote Keene are immortalized in an essay by her daughter, Elle, which appears alongside terrific pieces by Sam Brumbaugh, Shepard Fairey, and Ryan McGinness, among others, in The Steve Keene Art Book, produced by Daniel Efram.
i



18 August 17th is National Nonprofit Day! Support our local nonprofits by volunteering, donating or attending fundraisers. Visit reimaginecva.org to find ways to help. Let’s ReImagine Central Virginia!



17August19–23,2022 c-ville.com facebook.com/cville.weekly@cville_culture



20August17–23,2022 c-ville.com facebook.com/cville.weekly@cville_culture Friends of JMRL BOOK SALE SAVEDATES!THE Saturday, October 15 to Sunday, October 23 10am-7pm each day Member’s Pre-Sale Friday, October 14 - 5-7pm 300 Albemarle Square Shopping Center Supporting our JMRL system for over 50 years! Join us! April10am-7pm2nd-10theachday 1/2 price days: April 9th & 10th 300 Albemarle Square Shopping Center, Charlottesville (at the old Northside Library location) (434) 977-8467 info@jmrlfriends.org Fiction Mystery SciFi History Cooking Military Children’s Young Adult Poetry Religion Science Virginiana Art Rare Books LPs/CDs/DVDsArchitecture Thanks for your support! Masks Recommended Friends of JMRL BOOK SALE ...and much, much more! The Friends thank Albemarle Square for their continued support. jmrlfriends.org (434) 977-8467









17August21–23,THE CHARLOTTESVILLE-ALBEMARLE SPCA Placing HEALTHY animals homes. Check out our website! 3355 BERKMAR DRIVE | CHARLOTTESVILLE, VA 22901 | 434-973-5959 | WWW.CASPCA.ORG




STAUNTON
facebook.com/cville.weekly@cville_culture AUGUSTA CENTER THE
55TH ANNUAL
ReImagineCVA is a dynamic partnership between The Center for Nonprofit Excellence and The United Way, The Equity Center at the University of Virginia, and Thriving Cities Group. Seeking to understand and meet the needs of the community, ReImagineCVA was born amid the pandemic to aid and strengthen the outpouring of support to organizations and individuals in Central ReImagineCVA’sVirginia.directory has nearly 300 nonprofits across 13 different sectors, including health, educa tion, social justice, and equity. This unique directory helps community members find a place to volunteer and get connected with the resources organizations have to offer. Organizations can add themselves to the directory by creating a profile, which both shares their needs and furthers their reach and engagement with the Central Virginia community. This collaboration also highlights BIPOC-led or found ed organizations, which is central to the mission: to think critically about the network of resources to combat the social inequities and institutional racism throughout the country. It can level the playing field, so no matter the size of your nonprofit, people can connect to its mission and pour their resources into it.
There are currently over 200 “Ways to Help” listed, and the site is constantly changing to include new op portunities to address the needs of our community. The site is both responsive and dynamic, and it allows people to look only at virtual ways to volunteer or find opportunities based on expertise or the time of day they’re available. Amid busy schedules—family, work, and other community obligations—many have found the ReImagineCVA website to be a valuable tool that helps them match their resources to a local nonprofit in need. There are currently 20 organizations seeking assistance. Visit www.ReImagineCVA.org to get connected with local nonprofits that need YOUR help!
FESTIVALS!
PRESENTS
10 AM - 5 PM SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 4 12 NOON - 5 PM Gypsy Hill Park Bandstand 600 Churchville Avenue, Staunton VA, 24401 saartcenter.org ONE OF VIRGINIA’S LONGEST RUNNING ART
22August17–23,2022 c-ville.com
STAUNTON AUGUSTA ART CENTER THE 55TH ANNUAL
ART
SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 3
PRESENTS
SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 3 | 10 AM - 5 PM SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 4 | 12 NOON - 5 PM Gypsy Hill Park Bandstand 600 Churchville Avenue, Staunton VA, 24401 saartcenter.org










































































































































23 c-ville.com facebook.com/cville.weekly@cville_culture A local concertsconnectingdedicatednonprofittoeveryonethroughmusicclassesoutreachasafespaceForjoyfullearningtheplaceforoneofakindmusicalexperiencesbringingmusicwhereit'sneededmostconnectw/usDIYwithCTLDiscoverCharlottesville’stoollendinglibraryHundredsoftoolsreadytoloanforhomeandcreativeprojectsBecomeamembertoday!Joinourvolunteerteam Charlottesville’s1740cvilletoollibrary.comBroadwayStreetDiscovertoollendinglibrary DIYwithCTL Hundreds of tools ready to loan for home and creative projects Become a member today! Join our volunteer team Inclusiveness | Empowerment | SustainabilityInclusiveness | Empowerment | Sustainability 1740cvilletoollibrary.comBroadwayStreet (in the Visible Records Charlottesville’sDiscoverwarehouse)toollendinglibrary DIYwithCTL Hundreds of tools ready to loan for home and creative projects Become a member today! Join our volunteer team Inclusiveness | Empowerment | Sustainability 1740cvilletoollibrary.comBroadwayStreet (in the Visible Records warehouse)









24August17–23,2022 c-ville.com facebook.com/cville.weekly@cville_culture A special event facility with a contemporary, professional atmosphere. The 3,500 square feet of column-free space accommodates business seminars, board meetings, department training and workshops, luncheons, receptions, graduations, weddings, and more. 550 Hillsdale Drive, Charlottesville, VA 22901 (434) www.hillsdaleconferencecenter.com817-9333 yourhelpinghome-boundNEIGHBORS caringgreeting,Feeding,for and More than just a meal. 704 Rose Hill Charlottesville,DriveVA22903 434-293-4364 For just $125, you can feed a homebound neighbor for a month. For $750, you can ensure that our most vulnerable citizens get a daily check-in 5 days a week for 6 months. For $1500, you can help a client stay in their home and live with dignity and independence for an entire year. Residents served in Charlottesville and Albemarle county, including routes in Scottsville, Crozet, North Garden and Keswick285 Volunteer Hours*9,000 Extra services provided to clients include bookmobile, birthday presents, pet food, bonus pantry packs and holiday gifts.Miles Driven By Volunteers*75,000 Meals Served* (Over 1.5 million meals since 1977)65,000 Wecollectanddeliver pet foodtoourclients. Volunteer. Give. Learn. www.cvillemeals.org Ask Us How! *annually







Us!
With www.ammdpinegroveproject.comammdpinegroveproject@gmail.com1.202.643.AMMD(2663)28332lHenrico,VA23228
JOIN US AS WE GROW
In partnership with the UVA genealogist, the Descendants of Enslaved Communities at the University of Virginia is seeking descendants of enslaved and free Black laborers who worked at the University of Virginia between 1817-1865. Our mission is to research and reclaim the narrative, to honor the legacies of enslaved and free Black communities and their descendants, and to achieve restorative justice for communities rooted at the University of Virginia and surrounding regions. Please visit our website for more info www.descendantsuva.org. Email: InstagramFacebook.com/descendantsuvainfo@descendantsuva.organdTwitter:@descendantsuva
DEC-UVA is an independent 501(c)3 non-profit organization. All donations are tax deductible. Are you a descendant?
17August25–23,2022 c-ville.com facebook.com/cville.weekly@cville_culture
Facebook: AMMD Pine Grove Project Instagram: @projectpinegrove CONTACT US AMMD Pine Grove Project is a grassroots historic preservation and environmental justice non-profit organization. AMMD Pine Grove Project is engaged in ongoing efforts to protect and preserve the Freedmen Built Pine Grove Community and the Historic Tuskegee-Rosenwald Pine Grove School, which served the community from 1917-1964. Our philosophy embraces the concept of community education and self-help espoused by Dr. Booker T. Washington. Our organizational mission is based on four pillars: historic preservation, education, community engagement, and environmental justice.
AMMD Pine Grove Project is a grassroots historic preservation and environmental justice non-profit organization. AMMD Pine Grove Project is engaged in ongoing efforts to protect and preserve the Freedmen Built Grove Community and the Historic Tuskegee-Rosenwald Pine Grove School, which served the community from 1917-1964. philosophy embraces the concept of community education and espoused by Dr. Booker T. Washington. Our organizational mission based on four pillars: historic preservation, education, community engagement, and environmental justice. "preserving history, expanding community"
Facebook: AMMD Pine Grove Project Instagram: @projectpinegrove CONTACT US JOIN US AS WE GROW Web: Mail:Phone:Email:www.ammdpinegroveproject.comammdpinegroveproject@gmail.com1.202.643.AMMD(2663)P.O.Box28332lHenrico,VA23228
AMMD Pine Grove Project is a grassroots historic preservation and environmental justice non-profit organization. AMMD Pine Grove Project is engaged in ongoing efforts to protect and preserve the Freedmen Built Pine Grove Community and the Historic Tuskegee-Rosenwald Pine Grove School, which served the community from 1917-1964. Our philosophy embraces the concept of community education and self-help espoused by Dr. Booker T. Washington. Our organizational mission is based on four pillars: historic preservation, education, community engagement, and environmental justice. "preserving history, expanding community"







26August17 DonateChapterCharlottesvilleoftheCysticFibrosisFoundationviatheQRCodetoday!




17August27–23,2022 c-ville.com facebook.com/cville.weekly@cville_cultureTo Benefit Women’s Health andBreast Cancer Prevention In Our Community at Sentara Martha Jefferson Hospital Save the Date! Saturday, October 15 Downtownmjhfoundation.orgIXArtPark—Mall



DON'T MISS WINE eastwoodfarmandwinery.comWEDNESDAYS10% OFF BOTTLES EVERY WEDNESDAY AT THE WINERY ONLY 5 MILES FROM DOWNTOWN CHARLOTTESVILLE WITH A GREAT FOOD MENU


The power of verse steals the show at POETRY LIVE!, the third installment of Live Arts’ poetry showcase. Six local poets, including Audrey Parks, Sara Robinson, and Dr. Lesley Wheeler, will read work inspired by the theme “transformations,” a reference to Live Arts’ 2022-23 season. Poems explore the nature of change, the mutable qualities of experience, and more. James Cole hosts this provocative and intriguing showcase, perfect for newcomers and stanza-lovers alike. Pay what you can, 7pm. Vault Virginia, 300 E. Main St., Downtown Mall. livearts.org
SUNDAY 8/21 CAN YOU DIG IT?
TUESDAY 8/23
GOLDEN VOICES Singer-songwriters Emmylou Harris and Mary Chapin Carpenter are two of the most prolific women in music. A 14-time Grammy winner and Billboard Century Award recipient, Harris’ eloquently straightforward songwriting and expressive voice share the hard-earned wisdom that comes with experience. Experience is also the muse for Chapin Carpenter on her most recent record, The Dirt And The Stars. She says the songs on the 2020 album “arrived from looking outward as much as inward, speaking to life changes, growing older.” $40-99, 7pm. Ting Pavilion, 700 E. Main St., Downtown Mall. tingpavilion.com
SUNDAY 8/21
The party never stops for Magic City Hippies (above), the Miamibased alt-pop group composed of Robby Hunter, Pat Howard, and John Coughlin. The trio embraces everything from AM radio rock and poolside pop to nimble raps and salsa—all layered over a current of psychedelic funk. Quarantine didn’t stop the boys from making bangers meant to be played from sundown to sunup, and the resulting Water Your Garden is a thesoutherncville.com&$20-25,thatsynth-filled,falsetto-spiked,vintage-tintedalbumkeepsthepartygoing.8pm.TheSouthernCaféMusicHall,103FirstSt.S.
17August29–23,2022 c-ville.com facebook.com/cville.weekly@cville_culture69 REASONS TO STEP OUT THIS WEEK PAGE 31 CULTURE (Nice!)
WORDS MATTER
PHOTOPUBLICITY PHOTOPUBLICITY




30August17–23,2022 c-ville.com facebook.com/cville.weekly@cville_culture Find gifts with Meaning... Mineral: A naturally occurring inorganic chemical compound with a given composition, crystal form, and physical properties. Mystic: A spiritual seeker looking for ways to expand their knowledge while connecting to the divine and exploring their own intuition. Gift: A token given freely to another with affection and Facebook.com/MineralsMysticswww.mineralsandmystics.comthoughtfulness.345HillsdaleDrive • Charlottesville VA 22901 434-284-7709








In hot pursuit Fire of Love documents the extreme lives of volcano-exploring couple
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By Justin Humphreys arts@c-ville.com
SCREENS
Greensky Bluegrass. With The Wood Broth ers. $47, 7pm. Ting Pavilion, 700 E. Main St., Downtown Mall. tingpavilion.com
Wednesday Night Karaoke. Jen DeVille hosts this weekly song party. Free, 9pm. Rapture, 303 E. Main St., Downtown Mall. rapturerestaurant.com
N ational Geographic’s documenta ry Fire of Love is easily one of this year’s most engaging films. Its larger-than-life subjects are the late Maurice and Katia Krafft, the world’s only well-known volcanologist couple. Devoted to studying volcanoes closely, the Kraffts shot astonishing footage under extremely dangerous condi tions. The intensity of the film relies on the couple’s fascinating archives, but an unfor tunate series of precious animated vignettes and pretentious narration partly undercut the story’s extraordinary power. From the 1960s until their death in July 1991 on Japan’s Mount Unzen, the Kraffts led globetrotting lives, exploring volcanoes as intimately as humanly possible. Throughout the film, we see them venture into risky situ ations that most people would avoid at all costs. Maurice Krafft aptly refers to their lives as “a kamikaze existence lived in the beauty of volcanic things.” In contemporary inter views, the pair come off as personable and warm, making light of the life-threatening circumstances their métier took them to. The Kraffts were daredevils, but with a quiet cour age and cheerfulness that makes them all the moreWhatappealing.theKraffts recorded isn’t dry science, but a sweeping visual feast. Countless hours of film are distilled into mesmerizing mon tages of volcanic power, alternating between epic eruptions and smaller, specific details of their aftermath. The scenes of devastation volcanoes leave in their wake are chilling. The tight shots of glowing molten lava, pyroclas tic flows, and other volcanic phenomena become almost abstract. The volcanoes are the true stars of Fire of Love, and in what is likely a cinematic first, they get screen credits. The Kraffts were fully aware of how puny human beings appear alongside their sub jects’ primeval fury, and their footage con tinually bears this out. The film also explores the pair’s daily life and work between mis sions. Occasionally, they take even wilder risks, like when Maurice goes rafting on a lake that’s mostly sulfuric acid. Where the flow ebbs in Fire of Love is in its narration, delivered in a pretentious deadpan by actress Miranda July. The text is largely well-written, but her delivery is tonally completely wrong for this epic tale. Aside from this misjudged artistic choice, a string of interstitial animated inserts is also jarring and unwelcome. Done in a simplis tic style, they come off as twee and out of place. Like the narration, their calculated clumsiness (à la Wes Anderson) clashes with the Kraffts’ films’ majesty.
GEOGRAPHICNATIONAL
classes Brown Bag Webinar: Tree of Heaven & the Spotted Lanternfly. Learn about the relationship between tree of heaven (Ailan thus altissima) and the spotted lanternfly, and how best to control each of these in vasive species in late summer. Free, noon. Online. blueridgeprism.org
outside Farmers in the Park. Local farmers with seasonal produce and meats, cut and potted flowers, baked goods, hot meals, value-add ed products, prepared food, and crafts. Free, 3pm. Farmers in the Park, 300 Meade Ave. charlottesville.gov
CULTURE
17August31–23,20222 c-ville.com facebook.com/cville.weekly@cville_culture
dance Dance with SwingCville. Learn vintage swing dance. Free, 7pm. The Front Porch, 221 E. Water St. swingcville.org
Wednesday 8/17 music
Wavelength trio. A midweek music boost. Free, 6:30pm. The Whiskey Jar, 227 W. Main St., Downtown Mall. thewhiskeyjarcville.com
Thursday 8/18 music Berto & Vincent. Wild gypsy rumba and Latin guitar night. Free, 7pm. The Bebedero, 225 W. Main St., Downtown Mall. the bebedero.com Cougar Beatrice, Orange Culture, and The Flops. Rock the night away with tunes from three bands. $7-10, 8pm. The Southern Café & Music Hall, 103 S. First St. thesouthern cville.com Wavelength trio. Vintage rock and jazzy bluesy vibrations. Free, 6pm. Pro Re Nata, 6135 Rock fish Gap Tpke., Crozet. prnbrewery.com
Vincent Zorn. Performing live on the patio. Free, 6:30pm. Red Pump Kitchen, 401 E. Main St., Downtown Mall. redpumpkitchen.com
Berto and Matt. Brazilian and Latin guitar night. Free, 7pm. The Bebedero, 225 W. Main St., Downtown Mall. thebebedero.com
Wine Down Wednesday. Live music, award-winning wines, delicious eats, and sunsets over the vineyard. Free, 5:30pm. Keswick Vineyards, 1575 Keswick Winery Dr., Keswick. keswickvineyards.com etc. Family Film Series: The Wiz Perennial fa vorites alongside modern classics. Free, 11am. Violet Crown Cinema, 200 W. Main St., Downtown Mall. violetcrown.com Trivia in the Orchard. Hosted by Katalin Mag yar, who tests your knowledge of history, pop culture, holidays past, and, of course, cider. Free, 6:30pm. Albemarle CiderWorks, 2545 Rural Ridge Ln., North Garden. albemarle ciderworks.com
Wind Down Wednesday. Acoustic music, food trucks, and a stunning Charlottesville sunset. $5, 6pm. Carter Mountain Orchard, 1435 Carters Mountain Trl. chilesfamily orchards.com
For almost 30 years, Maurice and Katia Krafft lived life on the edge, traveling the world to film closeups of volcanic activity. Fire of Love PG, 93 minutes Violet Crown Cinema It’s rare to see a documentary that is so extraordinarily strong in certain respects and so weak in others, but Fire of Love has so much in its favor that it’s worthwhile viewing. The film clocks in at 93 minutes (a miracle in these days of ridiculously over long movies), proving that economy is an artistic virtue. Fire of Love is a vivid reminder that all it takes to make exciting spectacles beyond mainstream Hollywood’s explosive CGI ex cess is two intrepid souls with vision, brav ery, and a camera.
What the Kraffts recorded isn’t dry science, but a sweeping visual feast.



Thursday 8/18 Ix Flix Free Summer Film Series: Back to the Future 8/19 | Ix Art Park PICTURESUNIVERSAL is the 434, and we’re all about town.
ON STANDS NOW!
outside Summer Sundowns. Watch the summer sun descend behind the Blue Ridge Moun tains with acoustic music from local perform ers. Free, 5pm. Chiswell Farm & Winery, 430 Greenwood Rd., Greenwood. chiles familyorchards.com Sunset Soirée. Featuring Chickenhead Blues and Raclette Man food truck. Free, 6pm. Chisholm Vineyards, 1135 Clan Chisholm Ln., Earlysville. chisholmvineyards.com etc. Ix Flix Free Summer Film Series: Back to the Future. Artmaking, family-friendly ac tivities, food trucks, cold drinks, and a sun set movie screening. Free, 6pm. Ix Art Park, 522 Second St. SE. ixartpark.org Magic: The Gathering. A casual format with multiple formats, including draft, modern, legacy, and pioneer, and prizes for partici pants. $5, 6pm. The End Games, 374 Hills dale Dr. theendgames.co Paramount at the Movies Presents: Back to the Future From Academy Award-win ning filmmakers Steven Spielberg and Rob ert Zemeckis, Back to the Future is an un rivaled adventure that—35 years later—stands the cinematic test of time. $5-8, 7:30pm. The Paramount Theater, 215 E. Main St., Downtown Mall. theparamount.net Saturday 8/20 music 21st Century Limited. An eclectic set of original roots rock and cover tunes. $5, 5pm. The Batesville Market, 6624 Plank Rd. batesvillemarket.com
All about town. SUMMER 2022 A BOUQUET A WEEK | IX'S NEW IT MAN | BETTERING BLACK BUSINESS
Tailgate Thursdays with Monica Worth and the Note. Enjoy a laid-back evening in the vineyard with live music, wine, oysters from Salty Bottom Blue Oysters, and BYO lawn games, picnic blankets, and food to grill. Free, 6pm. Stinson Vineyards, 4744 Sugar Hollow Rd., Crozet. stinsonvineyards.com
SCHOOLING THE
Local Vocals. An eclectic acoustic trio fea turing the stylings of Cindy Perfater. Free, 6pm. Glass House Winery, 5898 Free Union Rd., Free Union. glasshousewinery.com
Fridays After Five: The BLNDRS. With WKN DR. Free, 5:30pm. Ting Pavilion, 700 E. Main St., Downtown Mall. tingpavilion.com
The shoes wore when sharing medicine at Mass. General Hospital. Wearing them, feel playful, brave, and daring. This shirt makes me feel bold, flowy, and free. was originally worn by my uncle, then my dad, then passed down me. This green wrap dress symbolizes love, calm, and feeling soothed. was gift from my husband, and reminds me how well he knows me. EMOTIONS WHY SHOULD WE CARE ABOUT WHAT WE WEAR?
CULTURE THIS WEEK
Sunset Thursday. Live music and drinks on the outdoor terrace bar. Free, 5pm. East wood Farm and Winery, 2531 Scottsville Rd. eastwoodfarmandwinery.com
This
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32August17–23,2022 c-ville.com
Thursday Evening Sunset Series. Live music, food trucks, Carter Mountain wine, Bold Rock hard cider, and a beautiful view of the sunset. $10, 6pm. Carter Mountain Orchard, 1435 Carters Mountain Trl. chiles familysorchards.com etc. Arts From Underground. Artmaking, drinks, and karaoke inside The Looking Glass. Free, 7pm. Ix Art Park, 522 Second St. SE. ixartpark.org
Live Music at the Winery. Performing at the outdoor terrace bar. Free, 5pm. East wood Farm and Winery, 2531 Scottsville Rd. eastwoodfarmandwinery.com
Lucia Stavros. Harp, acoustic, and folk. Free, 7pm. The Garage, 250 N. First St. thegaragecville.com Matthew O’Donnell. Traditional Irish tunes. Free, 6pm. Starr Hill Brewery, Dairy Market. dairymarketcville.com Town Mountain. Raw and soulful bluegrass spiced with country, old-school rock ‘n’ roll, and boogie-woogie. $15-20, 8pm. The Southern Café & Music Hall, 103 S. First St. thesoutherncville.com dance Kizomba Fridays. A bi-monthly dance so cial. Free, 8pm. Ashtanga Yoga of Charlot tesville, 906 Monticello Rd. @core4kizomba words CreativeMornings. A breakfast lecture for the creative community. Free, 8:30am. On line. creativemornings.com
Make Your Own Impact Meet Up. Learn what steps you can take to reduce your carbon im print and enjoy complimentary appetizers. Free, 5pm. James River Brewery, 561 Valley St., Scottsville. theclimatecollaborative.org Music Bingo. Win fun prizes and enjoy $10 select cider carafes. Free, 6:30pm. Potter’s Craft Cider, 1350 Arrowhead Valley Rd. potters craftcider.com
Friday 8/19 music
outside Sunset Market. Explore local vendors’ fresh produce, grab dinner from a food truck, enjoy artisan goods, make art at the outdoor art room, relax with a craft cocktail in The Looking Glass, and more. Free, 4:30pm. Ix Art Park, 522 Second St. SE. ixartpark.org






Tunesday Tuesdays with Josh Mayo and The House Sauce. Featuring different acts every other Tuesday. Free, 9pm. Rapture, 303 E. Main St., Downtown Mall. rapturerestaurant.com
Starr Hill Brewery has partnered with UVA to release Wahoo Pale Ale. The fruity, hop-forward ale, available throughout the commonwealth, is an homage to UVA and a rumor that the university’s students are called Wahoos for a type of fish that can drink twice its own body weight. There’s little evidence that this is where the name actually comes from, but hoo needs proof to enjoy a refreshing beverage?
Vincent Zorn. Enjoy brunch and live Latin tunes. Free, 11am. South and Central Latin Grill, Dairy Market. southandcentralgrill.com Wavelength. Enjoy brunch on the green with live tunes. Free, 1pm. The Grill at Meadowcreek, 1400 Pen Park Rd. thegrill atmeadowcreek.com
Trail rides in Virginia just got juicier. The American Cider Association has launched the Digital Virginia Cider Trail as a way of celebrating the many great orchards and cideries throughout the state, including Charlottesville’s own Potter’s Craft Cider. The program is free, and offers deals for those par taking at any of the 29 participating cideries. With each location visited from now until the end of June 2023, guests can get a digital passport stamp (ciderculture.com), which enters them into the Cider Trail Raffle. Meanwhile, the eastern area of Central Virginia has developed its own trail of quaffable goodness. Route 231’s winer ies, breweries, meaderies, cideries, and distilleries became an official tourist attraction when Governor Glenn Youn gkin stopped at Keswick Vineyards in June to snip the ribbon and let the bev vies flow along the 50-mile state highway.
PHOTOSUPPLIED
Mustard,Colonel in the lounge Want to dress up and dine in elegant Southern comfort? Look no further than the newly reopened (under new owner ship) Bobboo at the Quirk Charlottes ville. This intimate, lavishly decorated bar gives off a mansion drawing room vibe that may cause you to wonder who murdered the butler. Bobboo has a small, seasonal menu that includes some Quirk classics as well as a curated selection of whiskeys from Virginia and beyond. Will Ham Benefit for The Haven. With The Stemms and Boxed Lunch. $20, 8pm. The Southern Café & Music Hall, 103 S. First St. thesouthern cville.com
Magic City Hippies. With Willis. $20-25, 8pm. The Southern Café & Music Hall, 103 S. First St. thesoutherncville.com Tara Mills Band. A blend of folk, bluegrass, and Americana. Free, 2pm. Glass House Winery, 5898 Free Union Rd., Free Union. glasshousewinery.com
Tuesday 8/23 music Emmylou Harris & Mary Chapin Carpenter. The country music stars perform live. $40100, 7pm. Ting Pavilion, 700 E. Main St., Downtown Mall. tingpavilion.com
words POETRY LIVE! A poetry showcase inspired by the theme “transformations.” $5, 7pm. Vault Virgina, 300 E. Main St., Downtown Mall. livearts.org outside Sundays at the Winery. Mimosas, award-winning wine, cider, beer, food, and live music. Free, noon. Eastwood Farm and Winery, 2531 Scottsville Rd. eastwoodfarm andwinery.com
Sundays on the Yard. A community cookout with food from Pearl Island Catering, music from Hurt City’s DJs, dancing, and fellowship. Free, 1pm. The Jefferson School African American Heritage Center, 233 Fourth St. NW. jeffschoolheritagecenter.com etc. Dungeons and Dragons. Start a group, or join an existing one, no materials or experi ence required. $5, 4pm. The End Games, 374 Hillsdale Dr. theendgames.co Paramount at the Movies Presents: Pirates of the Caribbean: The Curse of the Black Pearl In honor of its 90th anniversary, The Paramount Theater is presenting films from its nine decades of history. 25 cents, 2pm. The Paramount Theater, 215 E. Main St., Downtown Mall. theparamount.net Monday 8/22 music Baby Jo’s. Tunes from the seven-piece New Orleans-inspired boogie and blues band. Free, 6:30pm. The Whiskey Jar, 227 W. Main St., Downtown Mall. thewhiskeyjarcville.com Berto & Vincent. Rumba rumba. Free, 7pm. South and Central Latin Grill, Dairy Market. southandcentralgrill.com
Vincent Zorn. Solo wild gypsy rumba. Free, 7pm. The Bebedero, 225 W. Main St., Down town Mall. thebebedero.com etc. Family Game Night. Enjoy dinner, refreshing cocktails, mocktails, and beers, and play a variety of games for all ages, including corn hole, jumbo Jenga, cards, and more. Free, 5pm. Dairy Market, 946 Grady Ave. dairy marketcville.com
Bob Keel. Enjoy live tunes, light bites, and hard cider. Free, 2:30pm. Albemarle Cider Works, 2545 Rural Ridge Ln., North Garden. albemarleciderworks.com
Charlottesville City Market. Fresh pro duce, handmade gifts, homemade baked goods, and more. Free, 8am. Charlottesville City Market, 100 Water St. E. charlottes ville.gov Farmers Market at Ix. Over 60 local vendors with produce, prepared foods, artisan goods, and more. Free, 8am. Ix Art Park, 522 Second St. SE. ixartpark.org etc. Summer Story Saturdays. True stories in spired by the theme “for the ages.” Free, 6pm. Cardinal Point Winery, 9423 Batesville Rd., Afton. bigbluedoor.org
Gin & Jazz. Brian Caputo Trio performs in the hotel lobby bar. Free, 5:30pm. Oakhurst Hall, 122 Oakhurst Cir. oakhurstinn.com outside Summer Celebration Series: Music Mon days. Live music from Matt Johnson, and complimentary access to the one-acre putting course. Free, 6pm. Birdwood Bar & Grill, 410 Golf Course Dr. boarsheadresort.com
Geeks Who Drink Trivia Night. Useless knowledge means everything at this authen tic homegrown trivia quiz. Free, 8pm. Firefly, 1304 E. Market St. fireflycville.com
CULTURE SMALL BITES NUTTY EATS, HOOS BREW, AND A CELEBRITY CHEF ON A ROLL
Pack your bowl with clean greens, grains, and proteins at the new Organic Krush Lifestyle Eatery.
Sunday 8/21 music
Cody Purvis. Country music. $10, 8pm. The Jefferson Theater, 110 E. Main St., Downtown Mall. jeffersontheater.com
Hard Swimmin’ Fish Trio. Celebrating 20 years of entertaining audiences in the mid-At lantic region. Free, 5pm. Glass House Winery, 5898 Free Union Rd., Free Union. glass housewinery.com
Berto’s Brunch. Brunch with wild gypsy rum ba and Latin guitar. Free, 11am. Tavern & Gro cery, 333 W. Main St. tavernandgrocery.com
Wherehouse presents HEYZ. Blissful beats from DJs, drinks from The Bebedero’s pop-up bar, and access to The Looking Glass. Free, 6pm. Ix Art Park, 522 Second St SE. ixartpark.org outside Back to School Bash. Gather on the yard for Black business vendors, food, games, music, and community. Free, noon. The Jef ferson School African American Heritage Center, 233 Fourth St. NW. jeffschool heritagecenter.com
Newly planted We have a new crush—it’s free of GMOs, pesticides, and hormones, and full of flavor. The Shops at Stonefield welcomed Organic Krush Lifestyle Eatery in July to the delight of Charlottesville health nuts (and nut nuts). OK is all in on its mission to make delicious, healthy food available in a fast-casual setting, and the small, independent chain is as intent on being good for our commu nity as it is on being good for our health. Through September, Organic Krush will donate $1 from every sale of their Krush Classic Entrées to the Blue Ridge Area Food Bank, so you will feel extra good when you treat yourself to a helping of gluten-free, dairy-free Spicy Korean BBQ, complete with mush rooms, zucchini, and spicy kimchi. How them’boutapples?
Portion control Hot woks coming through! The newest addition to 5th Street Station is Pei Wei Asian Kitchen, a fast-casual take on clas sic Asian street food developed by celeb rity chef Jet Tila, who’s known for setting records with large portions. Tila made the world’s largest stir fry (4,010 pounds) and the world’s longest California roll, which measured 440 feet long. However, it’s go ing to take more than a Food Network star connection to compete with the muchloved, well-established Chimm, serving from-scratch Thai and Southeast Asian street food just a few steps away.
John Kelly. The singer-songwriter is known for his soulful voice and insightful original songs. Free, 2:30pm. Albemarle CiderWorks, 2545 Rural Ridge Ln., North Garden. albemarle ciderworks.com Live Music at the Winery. Enjoy wine and live tunes. Free, 2pm. Eastwood Farm and Winery, 2531 Scottsville Rd. eastwoodfarm andwinery.com Roughshod, 7th Grade Girl Fight, and Uga Buga. Richmond’s Roughshod returns. Free, 8pm. Dürty Nelly’s, 2200 Jefferson Park Ave. durtynellyscharlottesville.com
Tour The Paramount Theater. Dig into the historic theater’s history on a back stage tour. Free, 11am. The Paramount Theater, 215 E. Main St., Downtown Mall. theparamount.net
17August33–23,2022 c-ville.com facebook.com/cville.weekly@cville_culture
Madeline Holly-Sales. Bossa nova, samba, and soul. Free, 7pm. South and Central Latin Grill, Dairy Market. southandcentralgrill.com
theBeyondpale



34August17–23,2022 c-ville.com facebook.com/cville.weekly@cville_culture BEAM ME UP! 21+ EVENT NO DOGS ALLOWED THANK YOU to our stellar SPONSORS and PARTNERS! Friday, August 26, 6-10 PM Blast off with C-VILLE Weekly for an out-of-this-world celebration of the best people, places, and things in our immediate orbit...and beyond! Gravitate toward the music from DJ DoubleU and DJ Flatline, then float over to the marvelous selection of beverages and small bites from local food trucks. Futuristic space attire encouraged! This is a private event— no tickets will be sold in advance or at the gate. You must have an Eventbrite boarding pass with a unique QR code to enter! It is not too late to sponsor! Email anna@c-ville.com for details.












































































































17August35–23,2022 c-ville.com facebook.com/cville.weekly@cville_culture -
53RD WINERY AND VINEYARD 2021 Vidal Blanc We’ve just released our 2021 Vidal Blanc, and it’s perfect for the late summer season! With a nose of fresh peaches and pineapple, this wine is very well balanced with the perfect amount of acidity and freshness to cool you off from the heat. Lychee fruit and honeydew dominate the palate, and should be enjoyed with curries, fruit salads, or around the pool! We are open 7 days a week, 11am to 5pm offering our 100% Virginia wine by the bottle, glass and tasting flights. Enjoy your visit at our intimate, meadow-like setting in rural Louisa County. we offer well-spaced indoor and outside seating and customers are welcome to bring their own picnic baskets, chairs and blankets. Children and pets are welcome, but pets must always remain outside of buildings and on a leash. Quality wine, friendly staff at a great escape! Visit our website, www.53rdwinery.com. Aug. 19th- Sunset in the Vines with Scuffletown (5-8 pm) and food by Blue Ridge Pizza Aug. 20th- Live music by Luke Bobbitt (12:30-4:30) and food by Hibachi mobile Aug. 28th -Taste the Future Barrel Room tasting with Owner Dave Drillock Open 7 days a week, 11 am – 5 pm 13372 Shannon Hill Rd • Louisa, VA 23093 (540) 894-5474 • 53rdwinery.com
434.252.2947 • www.chilesfamilyorchards.com/chiswell SPECIAL ADVERTORIAL SECTION 81 64 64 29 29 15 340 33 33 GORDONSVILLEORANGE LOUISA CROSSROADSZION AFTON STANARDSVILLE MADISON CROZET 29 CHARLOTTESVILLE 15 53RD WINERY & VINEYARDFARMEASTWOOD&WINERYDUCARDVINEYARDHARRISONBURG WINERY Guide Map REVALATIONVINEYARDS PIPPIN HILL FARM & VINEYARDS HORTON VINEYARDS REYNARD FLORENCEVINEYARD HARK VINEYARD CHISWELLWINERYFARM CUNNINGHAM CREEK
430 Greenwood Rd,
WHAT’S DELISH AT LOCAL WINERIES?
VINEYARDSDUCARD
Fridays - Summer Sundown Series with live music until sunset! Enjoy wine, or our new spritzes featuring fruit from our own farm. - Brunch featuring mimosas with juices from our fruit. Greenwood, VA 22943
THE WINEDOWNCHISWELLFARMWINERY
2020 Gibson Hollow White Crisp, “off dry” white wine with classic Traminette notes of ripe lychee on the nose and hints of tropical fruit in the background. Enjoy on the porch after a day in the pool, or enjoy with spicy curry, smoked BBQ ribs, or a fresh strawberry shortcake! Our uncrowded rural Madison County area has mountains, streams and plenty of beautiful views along scenic back roads. The tasting room is near hiking and biking trails along the Shenandoah National Forest and is a perfect respite after your day out! Enjoy some peace and quiet relaxation in this challenging environment. Sit on our lawns and sip or pick up a bottle or three of our awardwinning wines to take home. Reservations available and recommended (especially for Saturdays). No reservation fee or minimum purchase. Walk-ups accommodated on a spaceavailable basis. To order wine for local delivery or UPS shipping, visit our website! Open daily – Mon-Thurs. 12-5 pm Fri. 12-9 pm, Sat/Sun. 12-6 pm Fridays- Friday Night Out (5:308:30) Kick off the weekend with live music! Check our website for details on artists and dates. Saturdays - Music on the Patio (2:30 – 5:30 pm) enjoy a wide variety of artists each Saturday August 28th- Farm to Table Harvest Dinner (6:30-9:30 pm) advance ticket purchase required 40 Gibson Hollow Ln • Etlan, VA 22719 (540) www.ducardvineyards.com923-4206 EASTWOOD FARM AND WINERY 2021 Chardonnay We are thrilled to announce that our 2021 Chardonnay is here!
2021 Sparkling Chardonnay Bright and effervescent, our sparkling chardonnay is perfect to enjoy with these hot summer days! With light notes of granny smith apples, clementine, and jasmine, this bottle of bubbly will pair with just about every dish. Try it with our new cheese and charcuterie boards, a bright summer salad, or as a toast while watching the sunset from our porch! With a glass in hand, enjoy the beautiful scenery from our lawn, or a cozy chair inside, where you’ll discover a variety of inviting spaces. While indoor seating is limited, there are many options for outdoor seating, including rocking chairs on the covered porch and dining tables on the lawn for small groups. You’re also welcome to bring your own folding chairs and blankets to sit further out on the hill. All seating is first-come, first-served. Ages 21+, no dogs or other pets permitted on the property. For a family-friendly experience, visit our wine shops at Chiles Peach Orchard or Carter Mountain Orchard. Wine is currently available by the glass, flight, or bottle. We also offer a curated selection of snacks, boards, and sandwiches that pair well with any of our wines (outside food is not permitted). Wine sales stop 30 minutes prior to closing.
Sundays
farm-grown














Made entirely in stainless steel, it is deliciously dry and crisp with notes of green apple and grapefruit. Pour a glass at your next backyard BBQ, the lake, beach, or anywhere you enjoy a chilled glass of white wine. Currently available for sale online & in the tasting room. Visit the winery on Wednesdays for 10% off all bottles, on Thursdays for live music and the sunset, on Fridays for oysters and live music, or stop by over the weekend for live music and special events. The full events calendar can be found on our website. Join us for award-winning wines, great ciders, beers, and delicious food along with yoga, paint & sip classes, events for families and kids, and more throughout the month of WineAugust.Club Members: The August allocation will be shipped and available for pickup beginning on Wednesday, August 10th. We look forward to welcoming members on Thursday, August 11th for a special tasting. The Eastwood team will guide participants through a tasting of the August wines and Emily Harpster of SugarBear will discuss all-things-ice-cream while guests enjoy a tasting of her delicious ice creams using fruits & more harvested from the Eastwood farm. Ticket Information: Wine Club Members & Guests $15 / Non-Members $30 - If you are interested in joining the wine club or participating in this event, sign up on our website, send an email willcom,megan@eastwoodfarmandwinery.toorcall(434)264-6727andwebehappytoassistyou.
SPECIAL ADVERTORIAL SECTION
HARK VINEYARDS 2021 Albariño Bright and refreshing, our Albariño is a brand-new addition to our white wine lineup! With classic lime and citrus flavors, enjoy this with a variety of seafood, roasted veggies, or a rich apple pie. August is for Albariño! And that’s in addition to our popular Pinot Gris and all the other varietals of summer on our August tasting menu. Every Saturday evening in August, join us for a perfect pairing of local music, local food, and local wine! And mark your calendars now for Saturday October 1, when Hark Vineyards kicks off Virginia Wine Month with an all-day party of oysters, live music, and wine. There’s no better place to start the best month of the year, than on the beautiful grounds of our vineyard as it moves from harvest into the cooler Fall months. Visiting Hark: Hark Vineyards is a family-owned winery focused on the belief that beautiful views and delicious wine can bring people together. We offer two tasting menus, poured as flights for you to take back to your picnic area. Each feature five wines, and provides experience with both the Hark and Jake Busching Wines brands. Our wines are also available by the bottle or glass. We welcome — and encourage — you to bring a picnic and enjoy the experience our estate offers. Some picnic foods such as cheese, charcuterie, jams, crackers, and chocolate are available for purchase in our tasting room.
36August17–23,2022 c-ville.com
facebook.com/cville.weekly@cville_culture
Upcoming events: Aug. 20th – Live Music by Scuffletown + Sweet Jane’s Kitchen Food Truck Aug. 27th - Robert Jospe Jazz Trio + Firefly Food Truck Hours: 12pm-6pm on Friday/ Sunday and 12pm-8pm Saturdays 434-964-9463 (WINE) 1465 Davis Shop Rd, Earlysville, VA 22936 www.harkvineyards.com
Winery Hours: Wednesdays-Saturdays (12-8 PM), Sundays (12-6 PM) 2531 Scottsville Rd. (5 mi from Downtown Charlottesville) Charlottesville, VA 22902 (434) www.eastwoodfarmandwinery.com264-6727
VINEYARDSHORTON Charity Concert for Women of the Vine and Spirits Foundation! The Women of the Vine & Spirits Foundation is the charitable arm of Women of the Vine & Spirits. The Foundation provides scholarships for the purpose of helping women advance their careers in the food, wine, spirits, beer, and hospitality industries through education, leadership, and professional development. We will be hosting a charity concert for the foundation on September 17th and 18th! Tickets are available on Eventbrite. Sept 17th – (4-6pm) We are pleased to have the Terri Allard Trio! American/Country Folk style music from a group of local artists. Awardwinning singer-songwriter Terri Allard combines sultry sweetness and grit with an intimately personal writing style, lending a strong, authentic voice to the Americana music scene. On each of Allard’s five notable recordings, her original material chronicles the highs and lows of living day-to-day. Come and be enchanted by the Sweetheart of Barboursville! Food Truck: Just a Bite Sept 18th – (2-4pm) There’s a lot of excitement to be had listening to the original sound of Emma G! A favorite musician of the Washington Post, Washingtonian Magazine and Thrive Global: the New Zealand-born singer/songwriter has expanded her mission of saving the world one song at a time to incorporate her history as an awardwinning youth-worker, launching YES Youth Coaching. Youth Empowerment through Songwriting coaching is a completely new approach to youth work: combining Emma G’s history as a teacher, lecturer, YMCA youth coordinator and – of course – an award-winning musician. Food Truck: Catch the TicketChef holders are encouraged to come early, bring your lawn chairs and set up prior to the concert. Grounds will close to the general public at 3:30 pm on Sept 17th and 2:30 pm on Sept. 18th. Tickets are nonrefundable.6399SpotswoodTrail, Gordonsville, Virginia (540) www.hortonwine.com832-7440




yet dynamic
17August37–23,2022 c-ville.com facebook.com/cville.weekly@cville_culture
scampi or a front porch and rocking chair. This
has a beautiful, light cranberry color and will be available beginning 8/21 and there is limited stock (only 25 cases produced). Hours: Thrus/Fri 12-5pm; Sat/Sun 11am – 5pm Open Holiday Mondays, as well as by appointment or chance! Don’t hesitate to give us a call! 16109 Burnley Rd.; Barboursville, VA 22923 540.832.3895 / www.reynardflourence.com434.962.1849 SPECIAL ADVERTORIAL SECTION
VINEYARDSFLORENCEREYNARD 2021 Grenache Estate Reserve Reynard Florence Vineyard This delicate wine turkey shrimp wine
Hours: Tuesday – Thursday: 11 am – 5 pm; Friday – Sunday: 11am to 4:30pm Sundays- Live music on the hill! Each Sunday from 1-4 PM, Pippin Hill welcomes local musicians to perform on our Veranda. Check our website for varying artists. 5022 Plank Rd., North Garden, VA 22959 www.pippinhillfarm.com(434).202.8063
is excited to be releasing its 2021 Grenache, Estate Reserve this month! We have several rows of Grenache fruit that grow onsite. This delicious varietal is special as it does not usually grow in this region, and this is the first Grenache harvest we’ve had since 2017. A truly special, Virginia treat! This vintage is a crisp, light red wine and can enjoyed slightly chilled. This is a fun wine just in time for the dog days of summer and is bursting with candied fruit notes and raspberry flavors.
VINEYARDSREVALATION
pairs beautifully with a
Hours: May 1 – October 31, Friday 12pm – sunset, Saturday 12pm –6pm and Sunday/Monday 12pm - 5pm. Mondays 10% off bottle purchases for seniors 65+ with a valid I.D. Fridays pen late to enjoy the sunset. Aug. 19th- Jackleg Roaming Kitchen (3pm to sunset) Aug. 20th & 21st- Pop-Up @ The Vineyard with Pop Art by Elena Aug. 25TH - Sip & Script with Shannon Smith 2710 Hebron Valley Road, Madison, VA 22727 540-407-1236www.revalationvineyards.com
sandwich, roasted chicken and vegetables, a light pasta dish such as
Cherry Rosé Sangria Enjoy the hot days of summer with a refreshing sangria made with our own 2020 Rosé and house-made cherry puree featuring fruit from Jenkins Orchards. Served with lemonade ice cubes, our summer sangria is only available by the glass at the tasting room for a limited Harvesttime. time is almost here, and we are looking for volunteers to pick the grapes. If interested, email your name, phone number and email address to info@revalationvineyards. com. We are looking for people who are available to work a few early mornings starting August 15th through October 1st. Volunteers must be at least 14 years old.
PIPPIN HILL FARM & VINEYARDS 2021 Viogneir The Viognier grape was almost extinct in the 1960’s, with only 35 acres growing in France, but Virginia has played a big role in its dynamic comeback. While the color and aroma may suggest a sweet wine, Viogniers are predominantly dry and are known for producing heavy aromatics with low acidity. Our 2021 vintage is fruit forward with a creamy feel and light acidity, making it delightful to sip or pair with food. **Sip, Stroll, Sample, Savor**: Join us on the Hill for our newest Estate tour and wine tasting experience! Join us for a unique, in-depth exploration of our wines, vines, and land. The experience starts with a glass of awardwinning bubbly and a guided tour of our Estate vines. The tour is followed by an intimate tasting featuring a selection of six exclusive Reserve and Library wines and concludes with our culinary favorites such as our cheese & charcuterie board and seasonal burrata. Make your reservation on our Website! Plan to visit: Pippin Hill is a culinary vineyard in the heart of Virginia’s wine country. There are two types of standard reservations available: Indoor Table or Covered Veranda for table service. Walk-ins are welcome for lawn seating. Reservations via Resy are recommended for Indoor and Veranda seating.







38 202223,–17August c-ville.com facebook.com/cville.weekly CULTURE PUZZLES SUDOKU Complete the grid so that every row, column, and 3x3 box contains every digit from 1 to 9 inclusively. #1 #4#1solution #2 solution #3 #5#2solution #4 solution









39 17August–23,2022 c-ville.com facebook.com/cville.weekly 33. Authors Ephron and Roberts 34. “That dog’s all bark ____ bite” 36. Cleanup hitter’s stat 37. 1970s-’80s Big Apple mayor 38. Ellington’s “Take ____ Train” 43. Become less full, as the moon 44. Myriad 49. “Looks ____ everything” 50. W inter falls 51. Indefatigable 52. Mucky substances 53. Pres. Jefferson 54. Host Kotb of morning TV 55. Fusses 56. Febreze target 57. Ten-time NBA All-Star Anthony, to fans 58. Cit y just north of Des Moines 59. Some holiday concoc tions 60. Michele of “Glee” ACROSS 1. Actress Krakowski of “30 Rock” 5. “It’s 100 degrees out here!” 10. They might be put on 14. Dodgers pitching great Hershiser 15. Logical beginning? 16. Bust 17. Novak Djokovic, for one 18. Studied carefully, with “over” 19. Wayside accommoda tions 20. Accomplished getting more than tipsy 23. Helpful connections 24. Sufix with legal or jour nal 25. Elizabeth of “WandaVision” 29. Coin opening 32. Ancestr y.com sample 35. Annual race that st arts in Staten Island and ends in Central Park 39. Frozen drink brand 40. Mike supports 41. Difficult 42. Actor who lends his name to Howard Uni versity’s College of Fine Arts 45. “To the max” suffix 46. He was named 1992’s Sportsman of the Year, despite retiring from tennis 12 years earlier 47. Coach in an Apple TV+ series 48. Forbid 50. ____/her pronouns 52. 1977 Bee Gees hit ... or what is represented by this puzzle’s circled letters 60. Fancy-y-y 61. “Game of Thrones” character who only says his own name 62. Showroom sample 63. Idyllic garden 64. “Bridesmaids” co-st ar Chris 65. Cassini of fashion 66. No. 2 67. Quick with a clapback 68. “Friends” character with a Ph.D. DOWN 1. Kid 2. Carpet layer’s calculation 3. Fluent speaker of Elvish, say 4. Idris of “Luther” 5. How some solve cross words 6. Cat calls? 7. Wounded 8. “Twist, Lick, Dunk” cookie 9. Chore list heading 10. Opera highlights 11. Spam relatives 12. Microscopic, maybe 13. ‘60s activist grp. 21. Dr y Spanish sherry 22. Intro to physics? 25. Held for future consideration 26. Poland’s Walesa and others 27. Uncomfortably tight spots, informally 28. Sized up 29. Sign of engine trouble 30. Symbol of gentleness 31. “Ish” More than a woman BY DAVID LEVINSON WILK WILKLEVINSONDAVID2022© CROSSWORD ANSWERS 8/10/22 Inside voice #5 #6#3solution #6 solution 12345678910111213 141516 171819 202122 252627282324 35293031323334 39363738 424041 454344 48494647525051 6053545556575859 636162 666465 6768 WEBCAMPCTSSRS AMOEBAERASHUH VIRTUALTOURAPE ERSEMIENSSKEE TRAGRUSPURS GREATWHITENORTH MOILATSILK CONMENGHETTO CATECEOEAR AMBASSADORSHIPS SCOTTSODTAX ACLSEELEDLEIF NATINSIDEVOICE TIELYINPEERAT ENDLANGPEDANT





40 202216,–10August c-ville.com facebook.com/cville.weekly 22901VACharlottesville,Dr,Berkmar3046 @greenerthingscbd



Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): “One is always at home in one’s past,” wrote author Vladimir Nabokov. But I encourage you to rebel against that theory, Libra. For now, find a way to not feel at home in your past. Ques tion it, be curious about it, re-evaluate it. My hope is that you will then be motivated to change how your history lives in you. Now is an excellent time to reconfigure your life story, to develop a revised relationship with its plot twists and evolution. Revisit and update some of your memories. Re-evaluate the meanings of key events. Enchanting healings will materialize if you do.
Additional Dialogue by Michael
pm AUG 31
Aries (March 21-April 19): Aries filmmaker Andrei Tarkovsky wrote, “All my life, I’ve been go ing around waiting for something—as if I were waiting in a railway station. And I’ve always felt as if the living I’ve done so far hasn’t actually been real life but a long wait for it—a long wait for something real.” If I could speak with Tarkovsky right now, I would cheerfully tell him that his wait will soon be over. I’d say that in the coming months, Aries people who have been post poning and postponing, who have been standing by and holding on and biding time, will have an excellent chance to begin in habiting their full, rich destiny. I invite you to imagine what that will feel like.
Additional Music and Lyrics by
4
SOLDIERS’ CHORUS from the US
7 pm |
Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20): Sometimes, you may feel you’re under the influence of a debili tating spell or hindered by a murky curse. Pisceans are prone to such worries. But here’s a secret. More than any other zodiac sign, you have the power to escape from spells. Even if you have never studied the occult or read a witch’s grimoire, you pos sess a natural facility for the natural magic that disperses curses. From the depths of your psyche, you can summon the spiritual force necessary to cleanse the gunk and free yourself. Now is a perfect time to prove to yourself that what I’ve said here is true.
Expanded weekly audio horoscopes and daily text message horoscopes: RealAstrology.com, (877) 873-4888
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41 17August–23,2022 c-ville.com facebook.com/cville.weekly
Leo By Rob Brezsny Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): In his poem “The Pupil,” Virgo-born Donald Justice speaks of how he spent “a whole week practicing for that mo ment on the threshold.” I advise you to do the same, Virgo. The goal is to be as prepared as you can be for the upcoming rite of transi tion—without, of course, being neurotically over-prepared. It’s fine and natural to honor the tension of anticipation, using it as moti vation to do your best. One other thing: As you get ready, please have as much fun as possible. Visualize the sense of accomplish ment you’ll feel when you’ve reached the oth er side of the test.
Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Be extra expressive with the people and animals you care about. Be even more amusing and generous than usu al. Dare to be abundantly entertaining and engaging and empathetic. Make it your goal to draw out your allies’ dormant potentials and inspire them to love themselves even more than they already do. I’ll tell you about the endearing terms that author Vladimir Nabokov called his wife. Consider using them with your dear ones: “My sun, my soul, my song, my bird, my pink sky, my sunny rainbow, my little music, my inexpressible delight, my tenderness, my lightness, my dear life, my dear eyes, kittykin, poochums, goosikins, sparrowling, bird of paradise.”
Taurus (April 20-May 20): Taurus poet Sherko Bekas wrote, “Each joy I wear, its sleeves are either too short or too long, too loose or too tight on me. And each sorrow I wear fits as if it were made for me wherever I am.” With this as our starting point, Taurus, I’m pleased to report some good news. In the next three weeks, you will have zero sorrows to try on and wear like a garment. And there will be at least three joys that fit just right. The sleeves will be the correct length, and the form will be neither too loose nor too tight. Gemini (May 21-June 20): Tips on how to get the most out of the coming weeks: 1. Create a big spacious realization by weaving together several small hunches. 2. Keep a little angel on your right shoulder and a little devil on your left shoulder. Enjoy listening to them argue, and don’t get attached to anything they say. 3. Do the unexpected until it be comes expected. Then abandon it and try a new, unexpected experiment. 4. Meditate expansively on the question, How many ca reers can I have in one lifetime? 5. Enhance your home so it feels even more comfortable. Cancer (June 21-July 22): Be fluid and flexible while still being rooted and sturdy. Be soft and sen sitive even as you are also firm and resolute. Be mostly modest and adaptable, but become assertive and outspoken as necessary. Be cau tious about inviting and seeking out challeng es, but be bold and brash when a golden chal lenge arrives. Be your naturally generous self most of the time, but avoid giving too much. Got all that, Cancerian? Carrying out the mul tifaceted assignments I just described might be nearly impossible for most of the other signs of the zodiac, but they are in your wheelhouse. You are a specialist in fertile complexity.
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Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): “Unless we are creators, we are not fully alive,” wrote Sagittarian author Madeleine L’Engle. She was referring to everyone, not just people in the arts. She believed that to be soulful humans, we must always make new things, generate fresh pos sibilities, and explore novel approaches. The restless urge to transform what already ex ists can be expressed in how we do our jobs, our parenting, our intimate relationships, and every other activity. You are now enter ing a phase, Sagittarius, when this initiato ry energy will be especially available, need ed, and valuable. Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): In her poem “Valentine,” Capricorn poet Carol Ann Duffy tells a lover she won’t give her a “red rose or a satin heart.” Instead, her token of affection is an onion, a symbol of multi-layered complexity. “Its fierce kiss will stay on your lips,” Duffy writes, “pos sessive and faithful as we are, for as long as we are.” She adds that the onion will “blind you with tears like a lover.” Okay. I understand the tough attitude expressed by Duffy. Ro mance isn’t a relentlessly sweet, sentimental romp through paradise. But I don’t recom mend that you imitate her approach to your love life in the coming weeks and months. Appreciate the sometimes shadowy and lab yrinthine convolutions, yes, but don’t make them more important than beauty and joy and love. How about invoking the symbol of a pomegranate? It represents fertility and rebirth out of the darkness.
Scorpio (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Of all the signs in the zodi ac, you Scorpios are most likely to regard that old pop tune by the Animals as your theme song. “I’m just a soul whose intentions are good,” croons lead singer Eric Burdon, “Oh, Lord, please don’t let me be misunderstood.” But you may have less motivation to express that sentiment in the coming weeks, dear Scor pio. I suspect you will experience record-break ing levels of being seen and appreciated for who you are. For best results, do this: 1. Inform your deep psyche that you have no attachment to being misunderstood. 2. Tell your deep psyche that you would very much like to be well understood.
(July 23-Aug. 22): “I’ve swung from ancient vines in the caves of Jamaica,” exults Hoodoo priestess Luisah Teish. “I’ve danced with delight around totem poles and pressed foreheads with Maori warriors. I’ve joked with the pale fox in the crossroads, then wrestled with the jaguar and won. I have embraced great trees between my thighs and spoken words of love to thunder while riding lightning bolts.” I offer Teish’s cele bratory brag to inspire you as you formulate plans for the coming weeks and months. What exhilarating adventures will you give yourself? What expansive encounters will you learn from? What travels outside of your comfort zone will you dare? The time is right for upsurges and upturns and upgrades.
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45 2022,2317AUGUST WEEKLYESTATEREALTHE3133ISSUE WWW.C-VILLE.COM Heartwood Books on Elliewood Avenue VOL. 31 NO. 33 n AUGUST 17 - 23, 2022 WWW.C-VILLE.COM CHARLOTTESVILLE ALBEMARLE, FLUVANNA, GREENE, LOUISA, MADISON, NELSON, ORANGE, AUGUSTA30 OFYEARS ESTATEREAL Uncommon Bookstores Serve Charlottesville’s Community of Readers BY KEN WILSON


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By last count .
Uncommon Bookstores WILSON
Daedalus Bookshop Bookish types know Stephen Dedalus of James Joyce’s A Portrait of the Artist As a Young Man and Ulysses. They also know the original Daedalus (with an “a” before the “e”), the mythological Cretan inventor who designed the labyrinth to contain the Minotaur (and later the wings with which his son Icarus flew too close to the sun, which melted them and plunged him to a watery death).
Blue Whale Books
Owner Sandy McAdams meant to name his new used bookshop on 4th Street NE after Joyce’s first anti-hero when he painted the lovely tile sign flank ing the door of the business back 1976 or so. But he accidentally spelled it like the hapless father. When he realized his mistake, he decided it was too much trouble to Exploringfix.Daedalus and perhaps lay ing yourself a trail of intended purchases, the better to find your way out after wan dering its three floors with their 100,000 books, you might say his memory slip was fitting. “We’ve got a map, or you can look around,” newcomers might be told. Daedalus is a well-stuffed labyrinth that bibliophiles get happily lost in. McAdams, who co-opened Charlot tesville’s venerable C & O Restaurant as well, may not be in the shop much anymore, but “his eclectic thumbprint” is all through it, the shop’s Seth Millner says. “A lot of this was a passion project for him over the years. It’s really just a mountain of books. He runs it almost like an adoption center, and it’s a place to treasure hunt more than anything else.” Look for the poetry and literary magazines upstairs.
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“People are just so complimentary all the time,” he says enthusiastically, “People who haven’t visited for a long time are always so happy that we’re still here. They’ll say ‘Half of my library came from you.’ It’s a wonderful experience; people feel such loyalty to us, from all over the country and even the world.”
A blue whale head sits on top of the signboard advertising rare and out of print books, original prints, and anti quarian maps outside of Blue Whale Books on the west end of the Downtown Mall. Owner Scott Fennessey was think ing of naming his place the Leviathan when he opened it in 1994, but decided a less dark and heavy name was called for. Everyone loves blue whales, don’t
Serve Charlottesville’s Community of Readers BY KEN
WEEKLYESTATEREALTHE 202223,-17AUGUSTWWW.C-VILLE.COM 483133ISSUEFEATURE
Area literary buffs, devotees of the printed page in a state with the beautiful Blue Ridge Mountains and a city with a great university: What’s cooler than a pop-up bookstore in a vintage camper? Stumped? Here’s an easier one: How many book stores are there in and around Charlot tesville’s Downtown Mall? At the time of this writing, four. How many local au thors are nationally read and celebrated?
You get the picture; pick a font and write the caption. You can’t plop down a book in a coffee shop around here with out heads turning to see the title. You can’t open a Word file without folks presuming it’s a manuscript. And they may be right. Here in Charlottesville especially, but all around the area, we love our authors and we cherish our books: We read ‘em, we write ‘em and we donate ‘em to the library book sale to make room on our shelves for more. We have the annual Virginia Festival of the Book, five days of readings, talks, panel discussions, and school visits by popular and prominent authors, plus workshops for writers. We have excellent privately owned shops carrying books from roughly the time when writing was invented to this past Tuesday, and we have used bookshops where the vintage of the volume and its unknown history connect us to a previous reader we can only imagine. Heartwood It’s only natural that a town with a school like UVA should have a great used bookstore practically across the street. And it does. Heartwood Books on El liewood Avenue (on “the Corner”), which owner Paul Collinge opened in 1975, is one of the oldest bookstores in town, and one of the most delightfully jam-packed. Walk up the three outside steps, open the door, inhale the paper smell, and enter: the aisles are narrow, the shelves and tables are overflowing. It’s an at mosphere that gives serious readers a good“Thefeeling.history of literature is sort of our main thing,” says Art Collier, the man most likely to be seen behind the Heartwood desk, talking books and mak ing recommendations. “We’re especially interested in good fiction, some literary criticism, and books about Thomas Jef ferson.” Excellent sections of volumes on the classics, the arts and performing arts, Virginia history, philosophy, and pretty much everything else the general reader loves are to be found here—and to be savored slowly. “The fine art of browsing is being lost,” Collier laments. But not at Heart wood.This may be the digital age, but “the people who come in to the shop love to browse, love to hold their books.” They value that “tactile connection to reading.


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One great place to find popular fiction is just out of town in Crozet at Blue bird Bookstop. Flannery Buchanan, a mother of four avid readers, established it to provide a community hub for eager bibliophiles in her area. Buchanan began in April 2021 with a piece of vintage vacation equipment more associated with public parks than private libraries: a 1966 Banner custom camper she filled with books and took around to wineries, breweries, craft festivals and the like.
they? And they love the store’s sole feline employee,NowadaysGizmo.some customers head straight to the back of the shop, to the full room’s worth of art books and bios. Others are drawn by the antiquarian books or the thousands of original prints from the 18th, 19th and 20th centuries, as well as original maps from as early as the 1500s. Recently added are five whole shelves’ worth of Medieval stud ies volumes. Shelves of newly acquired volumes flank the doorway. “We focus on books that are in excel lent condition,” says manager Andrew Hniat, the main buyer and cataloger of the shop’s inventory. “Sometimes people don’t realize that it’s a used bookstore. They comment on the selection, and they love how organized it is; they can find what they want.”
A gentleman named C.C.—for Chris topher Columbus—Wells bought it in 1926, and ran it in several downtown locations until 1987, when it was pur chased by one of his employees, Carol Troxell, who made the store a center for Charlottesville literary life with regular readings and signings by both local and nationally known authors. Julia Kudravetz, co-founder of the monthly Charlottesville Reading Series featuring poetry and prose, purchased New Dominion, now Charlottesville’s only independent new bookshop, in Oc tober of 2017 after Troxell’s untimely death, and has carried on the shop’s much valued traditions, including what she calls “old-fashioned touch things.”
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Things like helping customers eager for recommendations, something members of the staff, several of whom are writers or have graduate degrees in the humani ties to their names, are well-qualified for. There is a lot to choose from. “We try to carry all kinds of writing,” Kudravetz says, and that includes volumes on every thing from gardening, art, and interior design, to history, philosophy, biography and memoir, plus no small amount of se rious fiction and poetry—“literary things you wouldn’t find,” she notes at a chain store. Not to forget the kids either: “I love having the kids section,” Kudravetz says. “I love it that we’re not a separate children’s and adult store. Adults like to read Calvin and Hobbes sometimes.”
Crozet’s Bluebird Bookstop
More than that, New Dominion is more of a community hub than ever. Its book club, with an average attendance of about 25 people, meets once a month, up the flight of stairs at the back of the store, or in the lovely mature rose garden just out the window. The UVA Creative Writ ing Department holds readings Thursday evenings. More open-to-the-public read ings and book talks take place Friday and Saturday evenings. “We are lucky that John Grisham has had a wonderful relationship with the Bookshop for many, many years,” says Kudravetz. “He comes and he signs in scriptions for people.” Other authors who maintain similar ties to the shop include fantasy writer Alex Harrow, and Jocelyn Nicole Johnson, whose collection of short stories, My Monticello, garnered much critical acclaim.
“People would come to the trailer wherever I was and they’d have a drink and we’d all sit around talking,” Buchan an says. That led to Bluebird’s “bookish meet-ups”—“friends hanging out” talking about whatever they’re currently reading.
2nd Act Books Just across the Mall from the Para mount Theater is a spot that’s been full of books for a quarter of a century or more—or so estimates Daphne Spain, owner of 2nd Act Books, its current in carnation. Spain has been running the shop that used to be Read It Again, Sam since 2019. “I had been a volunteer there when I was teaching at UVA,” she remembers. “I would go in every week”—and as her web site has it, “she wielded a fierce feather duster.”Today, like all of Charlottesville’s pri vately owned booksellers, 2nd Act has character, a comfortable lived in—read in—feel to it. When she reopened the store under its new name, Spain says, “I knew I needed a different niche. “The kids is what I focused on—and outreach to the African-American com munity.” Look around and you’ll note her children’s section with its train set, its puzzle on the table, and its space to read. Of 2nd Act’s 15,000 books—nonfiction, fiction, sci-fi, mysteries, history including Black history, science, and much else—a couple of thousand are for kids. New Dominion Bookshop New Dominion Bookshop on the Mall opened way back in 1924, making it the oldest bookstore in the Commonwealth.
In the meantime, Buchanan found a spot in Crozet on Three Notch’d Road, opened a regular terra firma bookstore, and stocked it with “new and notable” volumes including young adult and graphic novels, and kids’ books. Today along with meet-ups there are frequent events including author’s read ings, a new mom’s group and, yes, a book club. Once a month or so, the bookmo bile still goes someplace fun.
A Community of Readers “People come in and say, ‘Oh my gosh, you’ve got four bookstores right here on the Mall,’ Daphne Spain says. Spain made a business card size map with all four of them on it for her em ployees to give to customers who can’t find what they want at 2nd Act. She even took them around to the other three bookstores. “I think it makes us more of a bookstore community,” she says. “There is this whole community of book readers out there.” Art Collier agrees. “No matter what country you come from, no matter how old or how young you are, when you come into our shop,” he says—and he might as well be speaking for them all—“you are part of thatIndeed.community.”




12570 Chicken Mountain Rd Orange , VA Home built in 2000 from reclaimed materials - 100 acres is enhanced by being in the middle of a couple of thousand acres Jane Porter Fogleman (434) 242-8355 511 Shelton Mill Rd Charlottesville , VA Fox Haven offers private retreat & convenient location. Minutes to shopping & amenities including Harris Teeter Grocery, UVA Healthcare. Duke & Sharon Merrick (434) 242-8355
12570 Chicken Mountain Rd Orange , VA Home built in 2000 from reclaimed materials - 100 acres is enhanced by being in the middle of a couple of thousand acres Jane Porter Fogleman (434) 242-8355
12570 Chicken Mountain Rd Orange , VA Home built in 2000 middle thousand Jane Porter Fogleman (434) 242-8355 Chicken Mountain Rd Orange , VA Home built in 2000 from reclaimed materials - 100 acres being in the middle of a couple of thousand acres Jane Porter Fogleman (434) 242-8355 Shelton Mill Rd Charlottesville , VA Fox Haven Harris Teeter Grocery, UVA Duke & Sharon Merrick (434) 242-8355 Gordonsville
12570 Chicken Mountain Rd Orange , VA Home built in 2000 from reclaimed materials - 100 acres is enhanced by being in the middle of a couple of thousand acres Jane Porter Fogleman (434) 242-8355
12570 Chicken Mountain Rd Orange , VA Home built in 2000 from reclaimed materials - 100 acres is enhanced by being in the middle of a couple of thousand acres Jane Porter Fogleman (434) 242-8355
from reclaimed materials - 100 acres is enhanced by being in the
6057 Gordonsville Rd Keswick , VA Brook Hollow - Comfortable and manageable Keswick estate of 38 acres. Spectacular setting, opposite Castle Hill and adjoining Keswick Vineyards. ROY WHEELER REALTY REAL ESTATE SERVICES
of a couple of
6057
6057 Gordonsville Rd Keswick , VA Brook Hollow - Comfortable and manageable Keswick estate of 38 acres. Spectacular setting, opposite Castle Hill and adjoining Keswick Vineyards. Steve White (434) 989-4415
acres
12570 Chicken Mountain Rd Orange , VA Home built in 2000 from reclaimed materials - 100 acres is enhanced by being in the middle of a couple of thousand acres Jane Porter Fogleman (434) 242-8355 Shelton Mill Rd Charlottesville , VA Fox Haven offers private retreat & convenient location. Minutes to shopping & amenities including Harris Teeter Grocery, UVA Healthcare. Duke & Sharon Merrick (434) 242-8355
51 2022,2317AUGUST WEEKLYESTATEREALTHE3133ISSUE WWW.C-VILLE.COM FEATURE
12570
Rd Keswick , VA Brook Hollow - Comfortable and manageable Keswick estate of 38 acres. Spectacular setting, opposite Castle Hill and adjoining Keswick Vineyards. Steve White (434) 989-4415 511 Shelton Mill Rd Charlottesville , VA Fox Haven offers private retreat & convenient location. Minutes to shopping & amenities including Harris Teeter Grocery, UVA Healthcare. Duke & Sharon Merrick (434) 242-8355 WWW.HOWARDHANNA.COM What's your home really worth? Scan to get THREE estimates instantly 774+ ACRE RECREATIONAL PARADISE 4303 James River Road Pristine 50+/- acre lake $4,400,000 mls 623894 Steve White, 434-242-8355 WELL-LOVED ONE-LEVEL HOME 308 Lake Forest Lane 3 BR, 2 BA, 1520 SQ FT $395,000 mls 632989 Karen S. Dowell, 434-531-6948 COUNTRY RETREAT 230 Workman Court 2 BR, 1 BA, 1374 SQ FT $449,900 mls 632112 Steve White, 434-242-8355 STUNNING ESTATE PARCEL Dick Woods Road 24.64 acres on Ivy Creek $995,000 mls 623527 Jane Porter Fogleman, 434-981-1274 BEAUTIFUL WOODED PARCEL Wesley Chapel Road 7.35 acres in two parcels $340,000 mls 630340 Logan Wells Klalo, 434-981-3097 WESTERN ALBEMARLE B Greenwood Road 2.41 wooded acres $144,900 mls 532642 Mike Peters, 434-981-3995 ON 8 ACRES WITH BLUE RIDGE VIEWS 2646 Boonesville Road 5 BR, 2 BA, 1822 SQ FT $395,000 mls 633333 Jim McVay, 434-962-3420 SOUTH RIVER MEADOWS Fredericksburg Road Estate parcel of 40.70 acres $590,000 mls 622032 Steve White, 434-242-8355 WHITE HALL PARCEL Browns Gap Tpke 3.37 acres with bold stream $129,000 mls 629281 Steve White, 434-242-8355
offers private retreat & convenient location. Minutes to shopping & amenities including
12570 Chicken Mountain Rd Orange , VA Home built in 2000 from reclaimed materials - 100 acres is enhanced by being in the middle of a couple of thousand acres
6057
6057 Gordonsville Rd Keswick , VA Brook Hollow - Comfortable and manageable Keswick estate of 38 acres. Spectacular setting, opposite Castle Hill and adjoining Keswick Vineyards. Steve White (434) 989-4415
12570 Chicken Mountain Rd Orange , VA Home built in 2000 from reclaimed materials - 100 acres is enhanced by being in the middle of a couple of thousand acres 511 Shelton Mill Rd Charlottesville , VA Fox Haven offers private retreat & convenient location. Minutes to shopping & amenities including Harris Teeter Grocery, UVA Healthcare. Duke & Sharon Merrick
OPEN 11/3 | 12-3pm PRICE REDUCED 511 Shelton Mill Rd Charlottesville , VA Fox Haven offers private retreat & convenient location. Minutes to shopping & amenities including Harris Teeter Grocery, UVA Healthcare. Duke & Sharon Merrick (434) 242-8355 6057 Gordonsville Rd Keswick , VA Brook Hollow - Comfortable and manageable Keswick estate of 38 acres. Spectacular setting, opposite Castle Hill and adjoining Keswick Vineyards. Steve White (434) 989-4415
OPEN 11/3 | 12-3pm 511 Shelton Mill Rd Charlottesville , VA Fox Haven offers private retreat & convenient location. Minutes to shopping & amenities including Harris Teeter Grocery, UVA Healthcare. Duke & Sharon Merrick (434) 242-8355 6057 Gordonsville Rd Keswick , VA Brook Hollow - Comfortable and manageable Keswick estate of 38 acres. Spectacular setting, opposite Castle Hill and adjoining Keswick Vineyards. Steve White (434) 989-4415
511
511
6057 Gordonsville Rd Keswick , VA Brook Hollow - Comfortable and manageable Keswick estate of 38 acres. Spectacular setting, opposite Castle Hill and adjoining Keswick Vineyards. Steve White (434) 989-4415 Gordonsville Rd Keswick , VA Brook Hollow - Comfortable and manageable Keswick estate of 38 acres. Spectacular setting, opposite Castle Hill and adjoining Keswick Vineyards. Steve White (434) 989-4415
12570 Chicken Mountain Rd Orange , VA Home built in 2000 from reclaimed materials - 100 acres is enhanced by being in the middle of a couple of thousand acres Jane Porter Fogleman (434) 242-8355
12570 Chicken Mountain Rd Orange , VA Home built in 2000 from reclaimed materials - 100 acres is enhanced by being in the middle of a couple of thousand acres Jane Porter Fogleman (434) 242-8355 511 Shelton Mill Rd Charlottesville , VA Fox Haven offers private retreat & convenient location. Minutes to shopping & amenities including Harris Teeter Grocery, UVA Healthcare. Duke & Sharon Merrick (434) 242-8355
Healthcare.
is enhanced by
12570 Chicken Mountain Rd Orange , VA Home built in 2000 from reclaimed materials - 100 acres is enhanced by being in the middle of a couple of thousand acres Jane Porter Fogleman (434) 242-8355
12570 Chicken Mountain Rd Orange , VA Home built in 2000 from reclaimed materials - 100 acres is enhanced by being in the middle of a couple of thousand acres Jane Porter Fogleman (434) 242-8355 511 Shelton Mill Rd Charlottesville , VA Fox Haven offers private retreat & convenient location. Minutes to shopping & amenities including Harris Teeter Grocery, UVA Healthcare. Duke & Sharon Merrick (434) 242-8355 Gordonsville Rd Keswick , VA Brook Hollow - Comfortable and manageable Keswick estate of 38 acres. Spectacular setting, opposite Castle Hill and adjoining Keswick Vineyards. Steve (434)989-4415White
12570 Chicken Mountain Rd Orange , VA Home built in 2000 from reclaimed materials - 100 acres is enhanced by being in the middle of a couple of thousand acres Jane Porter Fogleman (434) 242-8355 C H A R L O T T E S V I L L E 4 3 4 9 5 5 5 1 5 5 Z I O N C R O S S R O A D S 4 3 4 5 8 9 2 6 1 1 G R E E N E C O U N T Y 4 3 4 . 9 8 5 . 2 3 4 8
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503 Faulconer Drive| Charlottesville | VA 22903 | office: 434.295.1131 | email: homes@mcleanfaulconer.comGREENFIELDSFARMImpressive 763-acre country estate approximately 25 miles south of Charlottesville. The property showcases a stately southern residence, built circa 1904, extensive equestrian facilities, recreation opportunities, creeks and a pond. MLS#623792 $6,295,000 Steve McLean, 434.981.1863 greenfieldsfarmva.com
434.981.1863 PRIVATE & PROTECTED 2-story, custom home, 4 BR, 5 BA, 7 FP, spacious rooms, and numerous windows providing an abundance of light and airy feeling. Idyllic wooded setting overlook ing pond with enormous privacy on 76 acres. Under conservation easement with the VOF. MLS#628772 $2,750,000 Steve McLean, 434.981.1863 WILLOWFIELDS FARM Stunning Virginia farmhouse perfectly sited on 156 protected acres overlooking a pond and the rolling hills of Southern Albemarle.
and other
addition has
MLS#629743
WEEKLYESTATEREALTHE 202223,-17AUGUSTWWW.C-VILLE.COM 523133ISSUE WWW.MCLEANFAULCONER.COM
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UNDERCONTRACT
Spacious first floor living within seconds of the many amenities of the Historic Downtown Mall. The 2,194 sf. residence comprises a large bright LR w/FP, kitch en with generous counters and cabinetry along with a breakfast area, DR, master bedroom and bath, second BR which is flexible space for office/library/media area and adjacent full bath and laundry/utility/ storage. Enjoy the outdoors from two bal conies. Privately situated with easy access to the reserved parking. Great opportu nity to have convenient, spacious down town living! MLS#633696 $775,000 Charlotte Dammann, 434.981.1250 WOOD’S END Striking residence on 5+ acres in the heart of Keswick. Architecturally-designed with numerous high-end custom features. Gracious one level living with 3,471 fin. sq. ft. Minutes from the world class Keswick Hall, Charlottesville, UVA, and Pantops. MLS#626196 $1,195,000 Charlotte Dammann, 434.981.1250 GREEN ACRES Pastoral views from this 3 bedroom brick home set on over 159 acres in Southern Albemarle. Ideal for farming with fenced pastures and ample water sources. Property is not under easement and has 4 division rights. MLS#630428 $1,685,000 Steve McLean, 4-BR, 4-full & 2-half BA. the main residence charming, 1-BR, 1-BA log “barn”. to Pippin Hill vineyards!! $5,985,000 Steve McLean, 434.981.1863 PARAN CHURCH Church residence. Redesigned by architect Bruce Wardell, as his own home. A separate 3 or 4 BR and 3 full BA. Has been further and Bucolic the perfect setting. MLS#630270 $810,000 Tim Michel, 434.960.1124 WHIPPOORWILL HOLLOW Ivy location! Western school district. This home has over 2 acres, and is quietly situated on a culde-sac. The main level floor plan is an open concept and includes 4 bedrooms, 3.5 baths, full walkout basement and lots of storage. MLS#630693 $574,000 Jim Faulconer, 434.981.0076 AERIE FARM 170 acres of rolling to hilly fenced pastures, hardwood forest, plus several creeks and a pond, features an elegant and renovated circa 1850 manor home (4 BR, 3.5 BA) with quality materials and exquisite details throughout. Dependencies include a 5 BR, 3 BA guest home, renovated 3 BR, 2 BA tenant home, studio, 3 stall stable. Two 2-car garages with attached storage or shop, pool, and three equipment storage buildings. AERIE FARM is the perfect location for almost any agricultural endeavor, particularly a horse or cattle farm. MLS#633483 $2,200,000 Jim Faulconer, 434.981.0076
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improved by the current owners.
MCGUFFEY HILL
Enhancing
HATTON RIDGE FARM 175 acre grazing farm with 2/3 mile frontage on the James River. Impressive 4-5 bedroom, brick Georgian home, circa 2000 in excellent condition. Fertile James River bottomland for gardens, plus many recreational uses. MLS#632477 $2,670,000 Jim Faulconer, 434.981.0076














53 2022,2317AUGUST WEEKLYESTATEREALTHE3133ISSUE WWW.C-VILLE.COMWWW.MCLEANFAULCONER.COM 503 Faulconer Drive| Charlottesville | VA 22903 | office: 434.295.1131 | email: homes@mcleanfaulconer.com GREY OAKS Spectacular 53-acre country estate with incredible custom-designed home, wonderful outdoor spaces, multi-functional 1,800 sf barn, 2-acre lake, Blue Ridge views, and a private, serene setting—all within 15 miles of Charlottesville. MLS#617485 $3,965,000 Steve McLean, 434.981.1863 greyoaksfarmva.com SUNNYSIDE Remarkably large parcel located convenient to Charlottesville and UVA. Exceptional Blue Ridge views, charming farmhouse (in need of restoration). Under VOF easement but with divisions into already predetermined parcels. MLS#585228 $4,400,000 Steve McLean, 434.981.1863 ROUND HILL 120-acre Albemarle County estate featuring a 5-bedroom manor home with views of the Blue Ridge Mountains and Rivanna Reservoir frontage. Close proximity to the city limits and Charlottesville-Albemarle airport! MLS#625402 $5,450,000 Steve McLean, 434.981.1863 ESTATE PARCEL IN AFTON Stunning, mountain views available on this attractive 14± acre property, possessing lovely streams and woods. This parcel is only 1.5 miles from Route 151 Brew Trail, with easy access to Wintergreen, Charlottesville & UVA. MLS#629702 Charlotte Dammann, 434.981.1250 or Robert Mellen, 434.996.7386 LAMBS ROAD Private, 6+ acre wooded lot, that’s conveniently close to Charlottesville, but still in Albemarle County. The property contains large, mature trees and a small stream that winds through the middle. Three potential division rights. MLS#626128 $259,000 Jeremy Fields, 434.270.1220 SOUTHWIND ESTATES 3 separate, parcels with commanding Blue Ridge Mtn. views, level building sites only 15 minutes from Charlot tesville. Sites have been perked, have wells, and ready for your dream home. MLS#632482 $375,000 (7.8 acres), MLS#632490 $275,000 (2.4 acres), MLS#632487 $175,000 (2.0 acres), Court Nexsen, 646.660.0700 BROOMFIELD FARM 29.74 acre farm, two approved tax parcels, lovely pastoral setting. Mountain views, historic red barn and excellent eight stall stable. Great protected neighborhood, near wineries, restaurants and other shopping. MLS#624834 $495,000 Jim Faulconer, 434.981.0076 OWENSVILLE ROAD 5-bedroom residence on 2 ac. lot in Meriwether Lewis Elementary District! Stunning home has top quality finishes and many features include: open floor concept on all levels; fully loaded chef’s kitchen; and so much more! MLS#632111 MLS#632111 $1,675,000 Will Faulconer, 434.987.9455
RIVER LAWN FARM Southern Albemarle estate with 1.5 miles of frontage on the James River with 540± acres of highly fertile, gently rolling landscape. Historic farmhouse dating to the late 1700s offers extensive views of the river. Under conservation easement with the VOF. MLS#630470 $4,865,000 Steve McLean, 434.981.1863
EDNAM FOREST Wonderfully large 1.5+ acre building lot in Ednam Forest. Build your dream home on this elevated, wooded lot located in a single family community, minutes from UVA and within walking distance to Boar’s Head Resort. MLS#598537 $289,500 Steve McLean, 434.981.1863
MURPHY’S CREEK FARM Wonderful gently rolling parcel of land with just under 26 acres, 18 miles south of Charlottesville. The land is wooded (mostly hardwoods) with an elevated building site, stream/creek, total privacy, and long road frontage. MLS#619394 $285,000 Steve McLean, 434.981.1863
SIMMONS GAP ROAD 5-acre lot with mature hardwoods. Great opportunity to build with no HOA. Private building site amongst beautiful woods. Located between Free Union and Earlysville but so convenient to Charlottesville & UVA. MLS#621177 $140,000 Charlotte Dammann, 434.981.1250
















All advertising published in the REAL ESTATE WEEKLY is believed to be truthful and accurate. No advertising will be published in the Real Estate Weekly if it is known to be inaccurate or untruth ful, but this publication does not warrant, nor is it liable for, the accuracy or truthfulness of the advertising placed within this publication. Neither the Real Estate Weekly, Inc., nor its corporate parent, the C-VILLE Weekly, assume any responsibility and shall have no liability whatsoever for errors, including without limitation, typographical errors or omissions in the REAL ESTATE WEEKLY. The Real Estate Weekly, Inc. reserves the right to edit or refuse any advertising it deems inappropriate or misleading. No advertising will be published in the Real Estate Weekly if it is known to be inaccurate or untruthful. Every effort has been made to assure accuracy, but this publication does not warrant, nor is it liable for the advertising placed within this publication. This publication will not accept advertising that refers to or attempts to establish fees or rates of commissions charged for services rendered. All real estate advertised herein is subject to the Federal Fair Housing Act, which makes it illegal to advertise “any preference, limitation, or discrimination because of race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status, or national origin, or intention to make any such preference, limitation, or discrimination.” Virginia Fair Housing Law also makes it illegal to discriminate because of elderliness (age 55 and over). We will not knowingly accept any advertising for real estate which is in violation of the law. All per sons are hereby all dwellings on an equal opportunity basis. Charlottesville, VA
informed that
advertised are available
WEEKLYESTATEREALTHE 202223,-17AUGUSTWWW.C-VILLE.COM 543133ISSUE
308 E. East Main Street •
22902 • e-mail: ads@c-ville.com Send your news and/or press releases to editorREW@gmail.com THE Staff: EDITORIAL COORDINATOR Celeste Smucker • REWeditor@c-ville.com MARKETING SERVICES Beth beth@c-ville.comWood•434.996.4019FaithGibsonads@c-ville.com DESIGNER Tracy designer@c-ville.comFederico The Real Estate Weekly Is printed on 100% recycled paper HOMESTATSSALES ENDING THE WEEK OF AUGUST 14, 2022 HOMES GOVERNMENTLOCALSOLD (Note: Real estate tax information gathered from local government Web sites and is believed but not guaranteed to be accurate as of publication date. Towns may assess real estate taxes in addition to those charged by each county.) CITY OF CHARLOTTESVILLE Realwww.charlottesville.govestatetaxrate:$.96 per $100 CITY OF STAUNTON Realci.staunton.va.usestatetaxrate: $.92 per $100 CITY OF WAYNESBORO Realwww.waynesboro.va.usestatetaxrate:$.90 per $100 ALBEMARLE COUNTY Realwww.albemarle.orgestatetaxrate: $.854 per $100 FLUVANNA COUNTY Realfluvannacounty.orgestatetaxrate: $.884 per $100 GREENE COUNTY Realgreenecountyva.govestatetaxrate: $.82 per $100 LOUISA COUNTY Realwww.louisacounty.comestatetaxrate:$.72 per $100 MADISON COUNTY Realwww.madisonco.virginia.govestatetaxrate:$.71per $100 NELSON COUNTY Realnelsoncounty-va.govestatetaxrate: $.72 per $100 ORANGE COUNTY Realorangecountyva.govestatetaxrate: $.804 per $100 THERE WERE 95 SALES IN THE 11 COUNTY AND CITY AREAS n 27 were in Albemarle with an average price of $495,566 n 9 were in Charlottesville with an average price of $386,093 n 5 were in Fluvanna with an average price of $295,900 n 3 were in Greene with an average price of $304,333 n 14 were in Louisa with an average price of $502,943 n 1 was in Madison with a price of $345,000 n 6 were in Nelson with an average price of $446,715 n 18 were in Orange with an average price of $358,595 n 4 were in Staunton with an average price of $274,975 n 8 were in Waynesboro with an average price of $275,783 691 SAUNDERS HILL DR CROZET 100 DANBURY COURT CHARLOTTESVILLE 120 FALLEN OAK WAY SCOTTSVILLE 1697 COW HOLLOW RD ROSELAND 1037 BEAVER DAM RD KESWICK 1400 OHIO STREET WAYNESBORO








Exceptional details describe this custom-built, builder home. From the mahogany floors, the 60X96 kitchen island, exquisite moldings, spa-like primary suite to the private, park-like 10 acres. The floor plan is an entertainer’s dream, or the perfect family home with attached apartment. Sit on the beautiful gazebo overlooking your fenced, level yard including a 475’ zip line! Hardware River frontage for the water enthusiasts. Unfinished, walk-out terrace level, detached 3-bay shop plus equipment run-in shed and gated entry. MLS # 622132 $1,795,000
PENDING
Absolutely private and pristine deep water lake of 50+/- acres, with (2) miles of shoreline, in Nelson County, surrounded by nearly 800 acres of commercial pine forest, designed for staggered harvests into perpetuity. An incredibly rare recreational paradise. A new lake home, with quality appointments at waters edge, a boat house with (2) lifts and a large steel storage building to house toys and equipment. Internet and generator are in place. Nearly 7 miles of interior roads and trails with mountain views. Includes access to nearby James River! MLS # 623894 $4,400,000
BLACKWELLS HOLLOW RD Gorgeous and secluded describe this 65 acre western Albemarle parcel that is surrounded by the Patricia Ann Byrom Preserve Park. Parcel has access through the park itself and consists mostly of hardwoods. Also find beautiful rock outcroppings, spectacular mountain views (with some clearing), mountain stream, trails and a couple of possible private building sites. Parcel is located within 30 minutes of Charlottesville. Truly a one-of-kind opportunity to own 65 acres plus have access to the adjoining park’s 213 acres and trails. MLS #617660 $695,000 416 ALPHA STREET Move-in ready 3-bedroom 2.5 bath bungalow situated on an elevated city parcel. Residence features hardwood floors, spacious living and dining areas, main floor master suite with garden tub and separate shower. Upstairs, find two additional bedrooms (one with nice Blue Ridge Mountain views) and a hall bath. Property is comprised of two separate tax map parcels so building a second residence could be a possibility. This updated residence is filled with natural light, cozy spaces and a private rear deck for relaxation. MLS #632862 $249,500 ROCK SPRING ROAD
Old Trail Living! This 4-bedroom townhome has been lovingly maintained with gleaming hardwoods, granite counters and fantastic finished space over the 2-car detached garage. Cozy patio with fencedin backyard plus covered front porch overlooking a lush common space. Enjoy all the amenities Old Trail Village has to offer. MLS # 629131 $534,500 PENDINGSOLD
Steve White (434)
info@stevewhiterealtor.com242-835529YearsofSpecializinginBuyer&SellerRepresentationforResidential,Farms&Estates
SOLD
PENDINGSOLD
4189 RED HILL ROAD
4303 JAMES RIVER ROAD
55 2022,2317AUGUST WEEKLYESTATEREALTHE3133ISSUE WWW.C-VILLE.COM
Magnificent mountain views from this gorgeous 4.21 acre parcel. Located close to Faber, VA and within 1.5 miles of 29 and only 30 minutes to Charlottesville and UVA. Parcel is all open and is 1 of 4 contiguous parcels offered. MLS # 629036 $124,500 223 GRASS DALE LANE
201 CARDINAL LANE
This exceptional 15,000sf custom home created with exquisite craftsman-ship and luxurious attention to detail, sits in the Blue Ridge Mountains near Wintergreen. Eucalyptus flooring leads you past mahogany doors and foyer to the dining room with a wagon wheel ceiling and alabaster and bronze chandelier. The great room is stunning with a 19’ barrel ceiling and two-story Rumford stone fireplace. The gourmet kitchen with wet bar, custom copper vessel sink from Italy, and butler’s pantry will delight you. Located on the first floor, you also find a pool, sauna, and gym. A media and billiard room are located on the second level with three additional bedrooms. MLS 622288 $2,292,500
1100 Dryden CharlottesvilleLanestevewhiterealtor.com








We all deserve a perfect match. My human needed me as much as I needed a loving home. It’s been a match made in heaven ever since. They also decided to adopt Ting as their internet choice—another perfect match. Now we have the fastest and most reliable internet on the block to watch funny pet videos on! Sign up for Ting Internet and save big! Plus, we’ll donate $50 to the Charlottesville Albemarle SPCA. Order at tinginternet.com/match or call 1-855-846-4626
