COLORBEARER OF ATHENS IS BENDING REALITY
LOCALLY OWNED SINCE 1987
DECEMBER 20, 2023 · VOL. 37 · NO. 50 · FREE
Nancy Baker Cahill Augmented Reality at the Georgia Museum of Art p. 13
Jerry Ackerman • Elizabeth Alder • JoBeth Allen • Joyce E. Allen • Lisa Allen • Nicholas Allen • Charles Apostolik • Krysia Ara • Meredith Arlio • Clyde Austin • Tucker Austin • Jeffrey Balance • Christopher Barnes • John Barrow • Jean Bartunek • Lisa Bayer • John Bazzle • Matthew Beall • Mary Overton Beall • Chenda Beaty • Patricia Bell-Scott • Heather Benham • Kenni Beam • Sara Beresford • Mary Berry • Daphne Blackburn • Lauren Blais • Anita Blaschak • Barbara Bloom-Fisher • BonnieWelch • Jennifer Bray • Duke Briscoe • Brian Brodrick • SMA Brothers • Teresa Brown • Susan Brown • Connie Bruce • Jenn Bryant • Irene Budoff • Julie Buffalo • Kim Burch • William Cammack • Josh Campbell • C. Carlisle • Jared Carollo • Emily Carr • Charles Carroll • Stuwart Chen • Austin Childers • Sandra Clark • Jean Cleveland • John Conner • Sarah Covert • Susan Curtis • Cody Custis • Peter Dale • Ann Darby and Katie Hein • Gregory Davis • Al Davison • Jame and Ellen Day • Krista Dean • Keith Delaplane • Julia Dodge • Carol Doherty • Charles and Therese Doyle • Elizabeth Dubberly • Sean Dunlap • Betty-Anne Dye • Susan Dye • Maxine Easom • Diane Ehlers • Jacqueline Elsner • Jeffrey Engel • Drave Enterprises • Dan Everett • Christopher Fagot • Lauren Fancher • Trent Farr • Lee Fields • Kathryn Fletcher • Heather Melissa Fletcher • Allison Floyd • Jennifer Frey • Janet Frick • Sarah Frierson • Christopher Fromm • Shelby Funk • Leon Galis • Shaye Gambrell • Robert Gauthreaux • Lauren Gingerella • Mikell Gleason • Judith Goltzer • Rachel Gottlieb • Megan Graham • Cherlyn Granrose • Gail Graves • Fred Greer • John Haag • John Haar • Susan Harmon • Dudley Hartel and Louise Wicker • Alice Harris • Blake Hartis • Jill Hartmann-Roberts • Thomas Hayes • Sylvia Knight Hays • Michele Henn • Grace Herrin • Danny and Hollis • Edward Hoover • Patricia Joan Hicks • Edith Hollander • Jack Hopaluk-Gay • Daniel Hope III • Dennis Hopper • Denise Horton • Susan Hudson • Daniel Humphrey • Nancy Hunter • Jennifer Jackson • Charles Jameson • David Jarrett • Colt Jensen • Alec Jones • Emma L Jones • James Jones • Dick Jurgenson • Deidre Kane • Sybilla Kazez • Jane Keene • Laura E Kellum • Dave Kincaid • Iva King • Laura These flagpole supporters have helped with contributions Klein • David Knowlton • Kathryn Kyker • Richard Lafleur • Cambridge throughout 2023 to keep flagpole covering Athens and LaSalle • Alexander Lawrence • Lane • Ashlea M Lane • Brendan striving for quality journalism. Some give regularly on a Jennifer Lazo • Casie LeGette • Daniel LePage • Suzanne Lester recurring basis, others with a one-time gift. • Jennifer Lewis • Jerry and Mary Beth Lewis • George Lord • Daniel Lorentz • William Loughner • Brian Lowe • Bruce Luzzi • David Lyle • MH Solutions • Eric MacDonald • Robyn MacDonald • Hannah Mapes • Jay Join them if you can, through Paypal or by mail. Margolis • Ann Mahoney • J David Marr • Janice Matthews • Barbara (flagpole.com/donations or PO Box 1027, Athens, GA 30603) • McCaskill • James McConnell • Ilka McConnell • Clinton McCrory • Babs McDonald • Lisa McGarrie • Ellie McKnight • Maggie McLaughlin • Angela Meltzer • Kent Middleton • Kathleen Miller • Erik Miller • Jeffrey Miller • Mary Miller • Bob Mitchell • Kerry Mitchell • Sarah Morang • Sandra Morgan • Julie Morris • Merrill Morris • Carol Myers • Neal Nelson • Don Nelson • Kent Nessel • Michael Nicholson • Kristin A Nielsen • Phil Novinger • Mary O’Neal • Gwen and John O’Looney • Jack Pannecoucke • Thomas Paramore • Katie A Parker • Judy Patel • Douglas Patton • Susan Pelham • Jason Perry • Katherine M. Pilgrim • Alice Pinson • Anna Elizabeth Powell • Jason Pratt • White Rabbit Productions, LLC • Carolyn Pucko • Matthew Reaches • Team Redshirt • Dennis Revell • Peter Rice • Joseph Riley • Hugh Rippersburg • Byron Rivenbark • Timothy Robinson • Anna Rodriguez • Marlene Rooks • Rick Rose • Cassia Roth • Elizabeth Roushanzamir • Hugh Ruppersburg • Michael Ruppersburg • Richard Saunders • Patricia Savage • Barbara Schell • Kenneth Schroder • The Digital Scribe • Wade Sheldon • Rene Shoemaker • Sugi’s Speed Shop • John G. Shumaker • David Sibilsky • Ward Simonton • Ian Slack • Brad Smith • Susan Hable Smith • Walter Smith • Mary Songster • Leigh Ann Spence • Paige Spivey • Ben Spraker • Gerald B Stanley • Molly Stevens • Alan Stovall and Merry Reap • Rich Strom • Christopher Sugiuchi • Brett Szymik • Christopher Tanner • Kristina Tanner • Cassandra Taylor • Camille Templeton • Anna Tench • Sara Parker Textiles • Benjamin Thomas • Lydia Thomas • James Thompson • Erin Thompson • H. Grady Thrasher and Kathy Prescott • Cullen Timmons • Andre Trawick III • Thomas Valentine • Ernest Van Valkenburg • Esther K Vanderknaap • John and Diane Vodicka • James Walker • Rick Waters • Dera Weaver • Angela Welch • Daniel Wilson • Smith and Diane Wilson • Kate Woods • Elizabeth Wright • Sarah Wright • Tracy Young • Rebecca Zahn
Thanks for the support! Many Thanks!
DO YOUR PART. PROTECT YOURSELF. PROTECT OTHERS.
675 College Ave. • 402 McKinley Dr • 706-546-5526 2
F L A GP OL E .C OM · DE C E MB E R 20, 2023
this week’s issue
contents
... just listen TUESDAY, DECEMBER 21ST
HOLIDAY HUSTLE CLUB WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 22ND
ATHENS SHOWGIRL CABARET DECEMBER 24TH – 27TH
CLOSED
THURSDAY, DECEMBER 28TH
BIG BAND ATHENS
Artist Elizabeth Collins Hanes’ exhibition “Freaks of Nature” will be on view during Third Thursday at tiny ATH gallery from 6–9 p.m. For information about other events and exhibitions this Thursday, visit 3thurs.org.
This Modern World . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4
THANKS, ATHENS, FOR A CHALLENGING, BUT WONDERFUL 2023! WE LOVE OUR TOWN. LOOKING FORWARD TO MORE GOOD TIMES IN 2024
#LOVEEACHOTHER2024
NEWS: City Dope . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4
Hey, Bonita . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6
Affordable and Senior Housing
Curb Your Appetite . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8
NEWS: Feature . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5
Live Music Calendar . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10
Classic Center Arena
Event Calendar . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11
MUSIC: Threats & Promises . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6
ATHENS’ INTIMATE LIVE MUSIC VENUE hendershotsathens.com
237 prince ave. • 706.353.3050
Bulletin Board . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12
New West Records Anniversary
Art Around Town . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12 ARTS & CULTURE: Art Notes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13
Classifieds . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14
Augmented Reality Artwork
Adopt Me . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14 ADVERTISING DIRECTOR & PUBLISHER Alicia Nickles
Sudoku . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15
PUBLISHER Pete McCommons PRODUCTION DIRECTOR Larry Tenner
Crossword . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15
ADVERTISING SALES Fabienne Mack, Jessica Pritchard Mangum CITY EDITOR Blake Aued EDITORIAL COORDINATOR Sam Lipkin OFFICE MANAGER & DISTRIBUTION MANAGER Jennifer Keene CLASSIFIEDS Jennifer Keene AD DESIGNERS Chris McNeal, Cody Robinson
COTTONBRO STUDIOS
ARTS & MUSIC EDITOR Jessica Smith
CONTRIBUTORS Bonita Applebum, Gordon Lamb CIRCULATION Jennifer Bray, Gerald Burris, Charles Greenleaf EDITORIAL INTERNS Analiese Herrin, Xinge Lei PHOTOGRAPHERS Mason Pearson, Jake Zerkel COVER PHOTOGRAPH of Nancy Baker Cahill’s augmented reality installation by Jason Thrasher (see Art Notes on p. 13) STREET ADDRESS: 220 Prince Ave., Athens, GA 30601 MAILING ADDRESS: P.O. Box 1027, Athens, GA 30603 EDITORIAL: 706-549-9523 · ADVERTISING: 706-549-0301 CLASSIFIED ADS: class@flagpole.com ADVERTISING: ads@flagpole.com CALENDAR: calendar@flagpole.com EDITORIAL: editorial@flagpole.com
LETTERS: letters@flagpole.com MUSIC: music@flagpole.com NEWS: news@flagpole.com ADVICE: advice@flagpole.com
Flagpole, Inc. publishes Flagpole Magazine weekly and distributes 8,500 copies free at over 275 locations around Athens, Georgia. Subscriptions cost $100 a year, $55 for six months. © 2023 Flagpole, Inc. All rights reserved.
VOLUME 37 ISSUE NUMBER 50
PLEASE VAX UP SO WE DON’T NEED TO
Association of Alternative Newsmedia
MASK UP AGAIN
online exclusive A 2017 state law allows communities to choose one Sunday per year when bars can open. This year, that Sunday is Dec. 31. And unlike most Sundays, when alcohol sales must stop at midnight, both bars and restaurants will be able to keep the booze flowing until 2:30 a.m. on Monday, Jan. 1 See “New Year’s Eve Is On a Sunday” at flagpole.com.
DE C E MB E R 20, 2023· F L A GP OL E .C OM
3
news
city dope
Affordable Housing Ahead PLUS, SHORT-TERM RENTAL REGS AND MORE LOCAL NEWS
By Blake Aued news@flagpole.com The Athens-Clarke County Commission county will add by 2050. Some specific areas approved subsidies for a new low-income that planners marked as “ripe for transforaffordable housing development off Hull mation” include Oak Grove off Jefferson Road at a called meeting Dec. 12. Road, the area around Jefferson Road and The Athens Housing Authority is workthe Loop, Alps/Beechwood, the General ing with Indianapolis real estate company Time development on Newton Bridge Road, Birge & Held and Decatur-based nonprofit the “Space Kroger” on Highway 29, the Tapestry Development Group on the develPiggly Wiggly on North Avenue, the Nellie opment, known as Athens Flats. It will conB/Triangle Plaza area in East Athens, the sist of 192 one-, two- and three-bedroom Firefly Trail, the Willowood shopping cenapartments totaling 305 bedrooms near ter on the Eastside and the Gaines School/ the growing “Space Kroger” area around the Barnett Shoals/College Station intersection. intersection of highways 29 and 72, and Downtown and the Georgia Square Mall a short distance from various industries area would be designated for the densest along Hull Road. development. “That’s exciting,” Commissioner Melissa But incremental growth will happen in Link said. “That’ll start to put a dent in our all neighborhoods, particularly those inside affordable housing [shortage], and in a loca- the Loop and those with sewer service. tion that’s adjacent to shopping, groceries, “They need to expect it. They need to accept near jobs—the kind of location where folks that,” ACC planner Stephen Jacques said. can get where they need to go and not be “That’s how we’re going to grow without stranded in the middle of nowhere.” bankrupting the city.” The lower the denFunded with tax credits and low-interest sity, the more expensive it is to provide city bonds through the Georgia Department of services. Community Affairs, the units will be availPlanners received more than 2,000 able to residents who make less than 60% comments at public input meetings, walkof the area median income. The AMI, set by ing and bus tours of neighborhoods, and the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban tabling at community events. Some of the Development, varies by household size. At common themes planners heard were a the 60% level, it is currently about $34,000 desire for mixed-use, human-scale developfor a single person or ment; a variety of hous$49,000 for a family of choices, including for That’ll start to put a ing four. seniors; housing affordMost of the units dent in our affordable ability; structured parkwill be leased at a fixed ing rather than parking in housing shortage. monthly rent averaging front; filling vacant com$1,000 a month, accordmercial space; support for ing to an official with Birge & Held. Thirtyrestaurants and local businesses; safe walkeight will be reserved for participants in the ing and biking infrastructure, better transit Section 8 voucher program, who pay 30% of and regional trains; more trees; protecting their income in rent. greenspace and rural areas; fishing and To support the project, the commission farming opportunities; and connections to agreed to waive $872,000 in water and parks. sewer connection fees, and to allow the Planning commissioners generally developers to make a discounted payment praised the map at their Dec. 16 meeting in lieu of taxes of $91,000, increasing by but did not vote on it. A vote is expected 3% each year. Those payments will go into early next year to send it on to the mayor the county’s affordable housing trust fund. and commission for approval. Then planThe local subsidies amount to $13,000 per ners will convert the growth concept unit, according to AHA Executive Director map into a more detailed parcel-by-parcel Connie Staudinger, and will allow the devel- version. opment partners to borrow more money. The planning commission also took its The affordability requirement for taxfirst look at proposed regulations on shortcredit projects sunsets after 18 years, but term rentals like those listed on Airbnb and when completed AHA will take the deed to VRBO. Many residents view them as a nuithe property and lease it back to the private sance and believe putting those homes back developers for 99 years. If it is ever sold, on the market would lower housing costs. AHA has the right of first refusal to buy it. Under the proposed law, homeowners “As a result, the affordability of the housing in single-family zones could continue to will be guaranteed long-term,” Staudinger rent them out to visitors for up to 30 days said. with a home business occupancy permit. “I’ve got to live there first. It’s got to be my primary residence,” ACC Planning Director Brad Griffin said. “But if I choose to rent it An early version of a plan to guide six weekends out of the year and get out of growth in Athens for the next 20 years town on football weekends, I can enjoy that focuses on “nodes” around town that would right.” slowly transition from car-centric to a more In other zones—multifamily, commerurban character. cial and employment—short-term rentals The growth concept map, last updated would be treated as a commercial use like more than 20 years ago, is meant to show bed-and-breakfasts, subjecting them to how Athens-Clarke County will accomstricter regulations. They would have to modate the estimated 30,000 people the meet commercial building code safety
“
Growth Plan Focuses on ‘Nodes’
4
F L A GP OL E .C OM · DE C E MB E R 20, 2023
Mayor Kelly Girtz, who sits on the ADDA board, said he’s had discussions with the General Services Administration about buying the Hancock Avenue federal building, which currently houses mostly U.S. Department of Agriculture employees since the Social Security office moved to Prince Avenue. The building is not officially for sale, but Girtz said he hopes to offer the U.S. government other space in exchange for the Stephens building. Voters approved $77 million in sales tax revenue for a new judicial center to relieve courthouse overcrowding as part of SPLOST 2020. Once built, the judicial center will house courts and other related functions, while ACC will consolidate scattered city offices into the existing courthouse, which cannot be expanded. The ADDA board also discussed working with Historic Athens, the historic presThe Athens Downtown Development ervation nonprofit that runs the Athens Authority is discussing plans to partner Welcome Center, to start an “ambassawith a private developer to build senior dor” program at its Dec. 14 meeting. The housing on a county-owned Dougherty ambassadors would roam downtown Street parking lot. But offering assistance the plans are on hold to visitors, like We want to figure out where giving directions while Athens-Clarke County finalizes a site or recommending the courthouse is going for a new courthouse. restaurants. A pilot before we sell any county-owned program last sumThe ADDA has been looking to redevelop mer was successful, land downtown. the surface lot in front Lynn said, but he of Hotel Indigo for and board members years, but other projects like a small-busiwant to pare back a $160,000 annual proness incubator have fallen through. The posed budget. most recent proposal consists of 120 units Remember the parking meters on for seniors—20% of them below market College Square where people could donate rate—wrapped around a 500-space parking their change to the homeless? They were deck. Four hundred people are currently on removed during the Clayton Street reconan ADDA waiting list for reserved parking struction because they only raised about downtown. $200 a year, but the ADDA is considering However, there is a chance the ACC a modernized version based on a program government may need that lot for parking in Greenville, SC. That city displays signs for a new judicial center. The commission’s with a QR code that people can scan with first choice is the Stephens Federal Building their phones, taking them to a site where downtown, but if it’s not available, the fallthey can donate as an alternative to giving back is those parking lots on the other side money to panhandlers. of Dougherty. “A lot of the folks who give money to “We want to figure out where the courtpanhandlers are students, and I think this is house is going before we sell any counsomething they’d do and feel good about,” ty-owned land downtown,” ADDA Director ADDA Director of Business Services Linda of Planning David Lynn said. Ford said. f standards and have a minimum amount of parking. The owner would have to give neighbors contact information in case there is a problem. But in those areas there would be no requirement to live onsite, so out-oftown investors could continue to buy and operate STRs. Existing STRs would be grandfathered in because other communities have gone to court to force existing properties to comply with new laws and lost, Griffin said. “Georgia has very strong vested rights case law,” assistant county attorney John Hawkins said. Griffin said the law would be enforced using data from a third-party vendor hired to track STRs. That vendor could also help ACC collect hotel-motel taxes from STRs.
Senior Housing Downtown
“
news
feature
Downtown East
THE NEW CLASSIC CENTER ARENA IS NEARING COMPLETION
By Blake Aued news@flagpole.com
A
a “club area” where patrons can purchase tables. Fans will be able to view games and concerts from a concourse above the bowl, where items from the Georgia Music Hall of Fame—currently in storage at UGA’s special collections library after the physical hall in Macon closed in 2011—will be displayed, along with work by local artists. “We’re trying to bring in Athens culture and Athens history, and bring what’s special about Athens into that arena,” said Katherine Puckett, the Classic Center’s director of sales. Salespeople are already booking events for next year, including a gymnastics tournament and the Harlem Globetrotters. UGA’s club ice hockey teams will play home games at the arena, and so will an expansion minor-league hockey team with the ECHL. One advantage of the arena over
“The more people you have living downtown, it’ll help the restaurants, the shops and other things,” Classic Center Executive Director Paul Cramer said. Cramer and other local tourism officials led a tour of the construction site last month, primarily for event planners, but invited Flagpole to tag along. The arena’s basic configuration will have 5,500 seats, but can expand to 6,500 for concerts and 8,500 for conventions. It will include 35 concession stands, 18 luxury suites and
the Classic Center’s existing Grand Hall, which has a machine to ice over the floor for hockey and skating, is a quicker turnaround time, according to Cramer. It takes three days to set up the Grand Hall’s bleachers and two days to take them down. With an arena, “you can go from concerts to hockey to dance to cheerleaders overnight,” he said. All in all, the arena is expected to host 25 concerts, 10 family events, 55 sporting events, 20 community events and 10 conventions a year. An economic impact study
MASON PEARSON
fter more than five years and countless setbacks, the new arena at the Classic Center is quickly rising above the steep slope from downtown Athens to the North Oconee River. Construction on the arena “topped out” last month, meaning the basic steel-and-cement structure is now in place, and all that’s left is to add the exterior walls and finish the interior. By the time school starts next fall, the arena should be hosting concerts, sporting events, large convention gatherings and more. But the impact on downtown will be even greater—new apartments, condos, hotels, a parking deck and an entertainment district with retail shops, restaurants and a food hall like Atlanta’s Ponce City Market are planned to sprout up around the arena, fulfilling a long-held vision to extend downtown toward the river.
A rendering of the Classic Center Arena.
found that the arena would generate $33 million for the local economy annually and create 600 jobs. At Athens-Clarke County commissioners’ insistence, arena jobs’ minimum wage will be dictated by MIT’s Living Wage Calculator, which currently pegs the figure at $16.29 an hour for a single adult. Those jobs come at a cost, though. Since it was first proposed in 2018, the cost has doubled from $75 million to $151 million. However, taxpayers are bearing less than a quarter of the expense. When putting together projects for the SPLOST 2020 sales tax referendum, a citizens advisory committee balked at what was then an $88 million price tag and left the arena off its proposed list. The ACC Commission put it back on, but reduced funding to $34 million. Although detractors threatened to torpedo the SPLOST vote if the arena was included, the package passed with more than 70% of the vote. Since then, supply-chain issues and interest rate hikes have driven up the cost of building just about anything, and workers found more rock and contaminated soil to remove than anticipated. At one point, the master developer, Atlanta-based Mallory & Evans, pulled out, but shortly after recommitted to the project. Several times, Cramer has had to come back to the commission for approval of what eventually became a complicated financial mechanism involving bond issues, parking revenue, naming rights, ticket surcharges, contributions from vendors, land leases, a special tax district and other funding sources—but no additional tax dollars from Athens residents. Most recently, the ACC Commission awarded a $3 million contract for construction of a bridge and stairs leading up to the
arena from Hickory Street. The concept of a sports facility surrounded by a brand-new commercial and residential district brings to mind a mini version of the Atlanta Braves’ Truist Park and The Battery, but Mayor Kelly Girtz compares it to Savannah’s 9,500-seat Enmarket Arena, noting that they are about the same size and were designed by the same architectural firm, Perkins & Will. “If you look at the Savannah programming over the last two years since their arena has been open, you probably get some idea of what you’ll end up seeing here in Athens,” Girtz told student journalists with Grady NewsSource at a Dec. 1 press conference. Upcoming events at Enmarket Arena include Ghost Pirates minor-league hockey games, a college basketball tournament, Disney’s Frozen and Encanto on ice, comedian Jim Gaffigan, and concerts by Jason Aldean and Keith Sweat, among others. Such events are too large for other venues in Athens—the Classic Center Theatre seats 2,000, its Grand Hall holds up to 6,000 people in a standing-room-only configuration, and the Georgia Theatre has a capacity of 1,000. According to the economic impact study, the arena is expected to draw visitors from a radius ranging from metro Atlanta to Greenville, SC and as far away as Charlotte. Where will they all park? Downtown hotels and thousands of residences are within walking distance, the Multimodal Transportation Center is next door, and the Greenway and Firefly Trail are a block away. A 1,200-space parking deck is also under construction, adding to downtown’s four decks, plus several others on the UGA campus that are open to the public after-hours. f
DE C E MB E R 20, 2023· F L A GP OL E .C OM
5
advice
hey, bonita…
music
threats & promises
SAD About Athens’ Future Pylon Reenactment Society’s Christmas Daze ADVICE FOR ATHENS’ LOOSE AND LOVELORN
PLUS, MORE MUSIC NEWS AND GOSSIP
By Bonita Applebum advice@flagpole.com
By Gordon Lamb threatsandpromises@flagpole.com
The short days are getting to me. By the time I get home after work, the sunset is already settling in. I tried to do an afterwork Firefly Trail stroll last week, and it was literally pitch black out by the time it took for me to reach the trail entrance. By then all I could see was our city’s new skyline, sparkling with the lights of a seemingly never-ending stream of student high-rises occupied by whimsical youth who don’t have the sense to make sure that the insides of their homes are not visible at night. I smiled at Weaver D’s and The Tire Depot, ghosts of downtown Athens’ past, and I wasn’t really bothered when a student clutched harder at their
life. I thought about moving back home to the poorest state in the nation to live with my mom. I don’t have solutions for the housing situation that renters are facing in this town, and I sit here anxiously as our Affordable Housing Advisory Committee continues their important work. I’m not hearing much about it all, and that is not comforting. What I gather from AthensClarke County’s website is that they’re hearing comments and making strategies, but I know I’m not the only person in town who needs to see results in a more timely fashion. It’s almost 2024—what am I supposed to do next year?
groceries as they walked almost two blocks from their parking garage to The Mark. I remember thinking that if someone paying $1,400 a month for a bedroom is nervous to walk from their car… I guess this is growing up, right? That’s cold as hell, but that’s how I was feeling at that moment. My sleep hygiene has gone to the dogs since my housing situation changed in August, and my therapist has been reminding me of my seasonal affective disorder (SAD) diagnosis since daylight savings happened. I’ve been denying it, insisting that it won’t happen this year or that I really don’t feel it coming on. And then I looked up what’s going up in our prestigious Vince Dooley Memorial Intersection: million-dollar gameday condos that are being specifically marketed to “second-home buyers.” I poured myself a glass of wine when the football team lost. I said out loud that I hoped those condos failed. I thought about the cost of rent and how I no longer make enough money to live alone or buy a home here. I thought about how my health thrives when I live alone, and how the current state of the rental market in Athens isn’t really allowing for that. I pictured myself at the age of 50, walking to the kitchen to cook dinner and having to wait another hour for a roommate to finish up. I thought about only leaving the house after kickoff on fall Saturdays for the rest of my
My health is suffering in major ways, and I’m starting to lose my attachment to Athens as a forever home. I mean, if median rent is $1,200 here while I’m not getting any raises, why not take a higher-paying job in Denver where I could more easily afford their median rent of $1,400? I have friends from high school who own homes in the Denver area, and I never thought a cross-country move would make more sense than staying right here. I am simply powerless against most of this, and I don’t want to end my year feeling powerless. I’m over the dance floor makeouts of yesteryear’s New Year’s Eve, but I hope to remember what I do control and what I can change by year’s end. I can get my car serviced so maybe I can commute from farther away, where rents might be (but often aren’t, let’s be honest) cheaper. I can turn the town upside down hunting for an affordable rental, if it doesn’t drive me insane. And yes, I can look at jobs out of state, if it truly comes to that. I don’t want it to, but I don’t have the years it may take for something tangible to be done about affordable housing in Athens. I still love you, Athens, and hopefully I can make lemonade out of this seasonally-affected sour mood by year’s end. f
6
Need advice? Email advice@flagpole.com, or use our anonymous online form at flagpole.com/get- advice.
F L A GP OL E .C OM · DE C E MB E R 20, 2023
Hi Everyone, This is the final “Threats & Promises” of 2023, and I just wanted to say thanks to all of you. While there’s no chance we’ll always agree on the relative merits (or lack thereof) of every record released, show performed or band created, the fact is that all these things are essential to the big wheel of Athens music that keeps turning. Indeed, they are the reason for this column’s very existence. So, thank you. And, thanks to all of you who faithfully read these words each week. It really means a lot, and I wish all of you a wonderful holiday season. Now, let’s get on with it…
new album over at strollingbonesrecords. com/pylon-reenactment-society. For more information, pylonreenactmentsociety.com.
DON’T FORGET ME: I’m starting something this year that I should have begun years ago, and that’s remembrance of those we lost during the preceding 12 months. It was only through routine and oversight this didn’t come to fruition much sooner. Please join me this year in kind remembrance of Jimmy Taylor, Keith “Bear” Fowler, Matt Lahey, Eric Agner and Todd McBride. Each had a particular impact on our music scene, and most I could count as personal friends of several years. Here’s to their memory and a wish for peace for their families and loved ones.
BLISTERS ON HIS FINGERS: Rocker Garrett Hatch has a new EP named Stories coming out Dec. 28. It features new versions of his 2020 song “Place Without A Name” and this
THE ESSENCE FROM WITHIN: Scott Creney and Brigette Adair Herron, both of Tunabunny and celebrated authors in their individual right, will return to Athens to do a reading and book signing Saturday, Dec. 30 at the Athens-Clarke County Library from 3–5 p.m. The pair has received due praise for their recently released book The Story of the B-52s: Neon Side of Town, and they’d be happy to discuss it with you when you show up.
CELEBRATE GOOD TIMES, COME ON: New West Records
will celebrate its 25th anniversary Saturday, Dec. 30 at The Georgia Theatre. The formidable label powerhouse will celebrate with performances from The Pink Stones, Elijah Johnston, Lilly Hiatt and Clover Country. Note that this is the first local appearance of The Pink Stones since AthFest as they’ve been tooling around Australia and Europe giving their sophomore album, You Know Who, the proverbial full court press. Tickets are on sale now at georgiatheatre.com. SPEND MONEY THERE: There are just a whole slew of things going on in the Pylon Reenactment Society camp. First, in advance of its Strolling Bones Records debut LP, which comes out in February, the band released a non-album holiday single named “Christmas Daze,” which is available everywhere you get digital music. Also, they’ve been accepted as a showcase artist for the 2024 South by Southwest event in Austin, TX, not to mention a cool West Coast tour they’re undertaking just as the album is released including dates in San Francisco and Los Angeles. And, if you’ve got a few bucks burning a hole in your pocket, they’ve got a new T-shirt and button available for pre-order, each designed by OG Pylon bassist and founding member Michael Lachowski. So throw those into your shopping cart when pre-ordering the
past summer’s “Nobody,” as well as a cover of Fleetwood Mac’s “Dreams” which, out of an abundance of caution, I’m going to refrain from commenting upon until I hear it. Right now, though, you can hear the new version of “Gatekeeper” which was originally released as a single back in January. Hatch will celebrate this release with a show this same night at Flicker with Patrick Barry and Suture Self. Get up to speed on all things Hatch over at garetthatch.bandcamp.com. TWO FOR TUESDAY: Mac McComb, who released the quite good and impressive fulllength album The Nameless back in August, has returned to close out the year with a two-song EP named 100 Proof. The title track is a slow and smooth, gently plucked and reverberated guitar, but with nearly three different arrangements within the song itself. Between the two, it’s the second track that’s the winner here. It’s named “I Wish That It Were Simple,” and it’s a matter-of-fact tune with straightforward writing and a nice harmony. Not essential, and neither are as good as anything from his full-length, but not a bad thing to spend a few minutes with, either. Find it at macmccomb.bandcamp.com. f
OLLI FEST
January 11, 1-3PM Oconee Civic Center
Find out more about OLLI, a dynamic learning and social organization for adults 50+ • 300+ Classes • Lunch & Learns • Travel Adventures • Shared Interest Groups • Social Events Drawing for 2 FREE MEMBERSHIPS!
Oconee Civic Center, 2661 Hog Mountain Rd, Watkinsville, GA 30677 OLLI@UGA is one of 125 Osher Lifelong Learning Institutes of The Bernard Osher Foundation, each affilated with a college or university across the country. OLLI@UGA maintains a strong 1,000+ membership.
olli.uga.edu
River’s Crossing, 850 College Station Rd, Athens GA 30602 | (706) 542-7715
Dog Spa
GET YOUR PUP A SPECIAL TREAT FROM THE BARK BAKERY FOR BEING A GOOD BOY OR GIRL THIS YEAR!
COME SEE WHY WE’RE ATHENS’
FAVORITE PET GROOMER! AKC Safety-Certified Salon
1850 Epps Bridge Pkwy • (706)-353-1065
barkdogspa.com
DE C E MB E R 20, 2023· F L A GP OL E .C OM
7
Here are restaurants that are open and waiting for your order!
S CALTLER UYOUR
TO CA
NEXT ! EVENT
LUMPKIN & CEDAR SHOALS 706-355-7087
CUBAN SANDWICH • TOSTONES • QUESADILLAS • TACOS • BURRITOS
BRUNCH MON–SUNDAY LUNCH MON–FRIDAY DINNER FRIDAY
CUBAN SANDWICH • TOSTONES • QUESADILLAS • TACOS • BURRITOS •
LOMO S A LTA D O • W I N GS • E M PA N A DA S • S H A K E S • M A D U RO S •
ALL YOU CAN EAT BUFFET
DAILY BREAKFAST & LUNCH SPECIALS
HAPPY HOLIDAYS! STOP BY TO GET SWEETS AND GIFT CARDS
JOIN US ON THE PATIO
Locally Sourced Goodness Everyday Delivery available via Uber Eats & DoorDash
393 N. Finley St. · 706-353-0029 www.bigcitybreadcafe.com
Say goodbye to 2023 with us!
Call ahead for groups of 15 or more
706-850-8299 1550 OGLETHORPE AVENUE
LET PEIKEN HELP! Selling In-Town Athens for Over 23 Years UGA Graduate / Loving Athens since 1987 Voted one of Athens Favorite Realtors by Flagpole Readers more than a few times!
Daniel Peiken Daniel@Athenshome.com 706 296 2941 • 5Market Realty 824 South Milledge Ave., Ste 200
8
F L A GP OL E .C OM · DE C E MB E R 20, 2023
ASIAN FOOD BY “V” NOODLES • RICE • DUMPLINGS • BOBA • K-DOGS Spend $50 Get a box of donuts or an appetizer FREE Mention this ad
Open from 10am–8pm every day! Vegan options available. 1860 Barnett Shoals Rd. 706-850-6554
Go Beyond the Mistletoe Connect the dots below and spice up your holiday.
Scan the QR code, follow us on Instagram & comment on our December puzzle post for a chance to win a $100 gift card!
@BedsideManners_Blog
Discover the products that turn you on, then take 10% off with code: FLAGPOLE23 in-store or online!
4100 Lexington Road - ShopStarship.com DE C E MB E R 20, 2023· F L A GP OL E .C OM
9
live music calendar Tuesday 19
Athentic Brewing Co. 6–8 p.m. FREE! www.athenticbrewing. com HOLIDAY MUSIC KARAOKE Sing holiday classics with friends. Christmas sweaters encouraged. Ciné 8 p.m. FREE! www.athenscine.com KARAOKE WITH THE KING Show off your pipes to the world. Every first, third and fifth Tuesday. Hugh Hodgson Concert Hall 7 p.m. FREE! www.classiccityband.org CLASSIC CITY BAND Classic Christmas works by Mel Torme, Leroy Anderson and Vince Guaraldi.
Wednesday 20 Flicker Theatre & Bar 9 p.m. FREE! www.flickertheatreand bar.com DR. FRED’S KARAOKE Featuring a large assortment of pop, rock, indie and more. Porterhouse Grill 6–8:30 p.m. www.porterhousegrill athens.com JAZZ NIGHT Longest running jazz gig in Athens captained by drummer Mason Davis and featuring a rotating cast of familiar faces performing American songbook, bossa nova classics and crossover hits.
10
Treehouse Kid & Craft 5–7 p.m. FREE! www.treehousekidand craft.com HOLIDAY MUSIC SINGALONG Treehouse, The Studio and Allegro Music are partnering for a night of carols and holiday cheer on the outdoor stage. Unitarian Universalist Fellowship of Athens 6:30 p.m. FREE! www.uuathensga.org UUFA CHALICE CHOIR “Honoring the Dark, Honoring the Light” is a winter solstice program that includes music, meditation and candle lighting. The World Famous 10 p.m. www.facebook.com/theworld famousathens NUCLEAR TOURISM Skate punks playing surfy, garage-infused songs. DELTA 8 New hardcore punk supergroup with members of Beer Piss, Snuki, McQQeen and Rubber Udder. SEX MEX San Antonio act that’s equal parts power pop and punk rock.
Thursday 21 Flicker Theatre & Bar 8 p.m. $10. www.flickertheatreandbar. com LEEANN PEPPERS Local singer- songwriter playing sparse, tender folk music.
F L A GP OL E .C OM · DE C E MB E R 20, 2023
MICHAEL POTTER Experimental ambient and improv musician of The Electric Nature and tape label Null Zone. WET GARDEN Local modular synth duo exploring deep listening and sustained tones G.A.G. Improvisational noise by Joyce Le Guin. OTHER VOICES, OTHER ROOMS Spinning synth-pop and Cocteau Twins hits straight from the Go Bar glory days before and after the live performances. Hendershot’s 8 p.m. $15. www.hendershotsathens. com THE HOLIDAY HUSTLE CLUB An Athens-based jazz quartet led by songwriter and pianist Bart King performs secular classics by Irving Berlin and Mel Tormé as well as new holiday tunes from the EP Snow Day! Hugh Hodgson Concert Hall 7:30 p.m. $10 (w/ UGA ID), $25–50. pac.uga.edu BALSAM RANGE Traditional bluegrass band from western North Carolina with fiddle, banjo, mandolin, upright bass, dobro and guitar. Tonight’s performance includes well-known hits and holiday favorites. Southern Brewing Co. 6–10 p.m. www.sobrewco.com KARAOKE NIGHT Every Thursday evening.
Friday 22
40 Watt Club 7 p.m. (doors). $25 (adv.), $30. www.40watt.com DRIVIN’ N CRYIN’ Legendary Atlanta band playing hard-charging, Southern-inspired rock. VOLK Thrashing, twangy indie-rock folk outfit from Nashville. Historic Athens 7:30 p.m. FREE! www.historicathens. com DAVE MARR Local singer- songwriter and bandleader with a deep, resonant country twang. Marigold Auditorium for Arts and Culture 7 p.m. (doors), 8 p.m. (show). $10–20. bit.ly/MarigoldDec22 THE WILD JORDAN TONK-CATS An all-star group of local veteran musicians perform danceable, soulful covers and originals. SQUALLS 22 Experience ’80s Athens magic as original Squalls members Bob Hay and Diana Torell perform backed by the Wild Jordan Tonk-Cats. No. 3 Railroad Street 6 p.m. www.3railroad.org MARTY WINKLER Jazz, pop and folk singer-songwriter. Nowhere Bar 9:30 p.m. (show). $10. www.face book.com/NowhereBarAthensGA DRUG DUCKS Seasoned Athens musicians, featuring Hayride gui-
tarist Kevin Sweeney, play covers, originals and space jams. THE LOW WHITES No info available. Southern Brewing Co. Hoppy Holidays. 6:30–8:30 p.m. www.sobrewco.com QUINTET ATHENS Professional wind quintet performing a laid-back set of Christmas carols. VFW Post 2872 7 p.m. (doors), 8 p.m. (show). www. facebook.com/vfwpost2872 PRINCESS IN ROYAL BLUE BAND Motown, soul, blues and smooth R&B.
The Foundry 6 p.m. (doors), 7 p.m. (show). FREE! www.facebook.com/Basketballteam BASKETBALL TEAM Local Christmas all-star band presenting a night of holiday favorites, with everything from pop classics to carols. Hendershots 8 p.m. SOLD OUT! www.hendershots athens.com SOLSTICE SISTERS An annual holiday show by the three-piece outfit of sisterhood and soul.
Saturday 23
Flicker Theatre & Bar 9 p.m. FREE! www.flickertheatreand bar.com DR. FRED’S KARAOKE Featuring a large assortment of pop, rock, indie and more.
Athentic Brewing Co. Christmas Eve-Eve Concert. 6–8 p.m. FREE! www.athenticbrewing.com MARY & THE HOT HOTTY-HOTS Hot jazz and swing band offering music from the 1910s, ’20s and ’30s. Downtown Athens 7:30 p.m. FREE! markmobley@gmail. com PHIL KLINE’S UNSILENT NIGHT An annual tradition held across the world, Unsilent Night is a boombox parade and moving sound sculpture in which participants play the composition from audio players in unison. The parade will meet at Little Kings Shuffle Club and end outside of the 40 Watt Club.
Wednesday 27
Down the Line 12/28 Garett Hatch, Suture Self, Patrick Barry (Flicker Theatre & Bar) 12/29 The Hernies, Nihilist Cheerleader, Pervert, Hunger Anthem (Flicker Theatre & Bar) 12/30 Chris Wayne (Athentic Brewing Co.) 12/30 Hayride, Donkey Punch (40 Watt Club) 12/31 Dixeland Five (Oak House Distillery) f
Tuesday 19
event calendar
EVENTS: West Broad Farmers Market and Garden (Athentic Brewing Co.) Vendors will be on site with fresh produce, local fare, rare plants, artisan goods and more. Tuesdays, 5–8 p.m. FREE! www. athenticbrewing.com FILM: Half Japanese: The Band That Would Be King (Flicker Theatre & Bar) Screening of the 1993 punk rock documentary hosted by Attaboy Tapes. 7 p.m. FREE! www. flickertheatreandbar.com GAMES: Classic City Trivia (Akademia Brewing Co.) Test your trivia knowledge with host Garrett Lennox. 7 p.m. FREE! www.facebook.com/ ClassicCityTriviaCo GAMES: Bad Dog Trivia (Amici Athens) Test your trivia knowledge with host TJ Wayt. Tuesdays, 7 p.m. www.facebook.com/baddogathens KIDSTUFF: Family Movie Night (Bogart Library) Dress in pajamas, bring blankets and settle in for sing-along holiday fun with hot chocolate and popcorn. All ages. 6 p.m. FREE! www.athenslibrary. org/bogart LECTURES & LIT: Mystery Book Club (Bogart Library) Join Dr. Penny Mills to discuss Carl Hiaasen’s novel Double Whammy. 5:30 –6:30 p.m. FREE! www.athens library.org/bogart
Wednesday 20 ART: Tour At Two (Georgia Museum of Art) These drop-in public tours feature highlights of the permanent collection. 2 p.m. FREE! www.georgiamuseum.org CLASSES: Salsa Dancing (Starland Lounge & Lanes) Join SALSAthens for Cuban salsa lessons that meet a variety of dance abilities, including beginners. Wednesdays, 6:30 p.m. (advanced), 7:30 p.m. (beginner/ intermediate). $10. SALSAthens Dancing@gmail.com
COMEDY: Gorgeous George’s Improv League (Buvez) Townie improv that invites you to bring suggestions to help create improv magic. Every Wednesday, 7 p.m. $5 suggested donation. www.flying squidcomedy.com COMEDY: Hendershot’s Comedy (Hendershot’s) Enjoy a lineup featuring comics from Athens and Atlanta as well as newcomers. Hosted by Noell Appling. Every third Wednesday, 8 p.m. www. hendershotsathens.com EVENTS: Ugly Sweater Holiday Party (Rocksprings Community Center) Wear your ugliest sweater and enjoy a White Elephant gift exchange, holiday games, caroling and light refreshments. Ages 18 & up. Registration required. 1 –2:30 p.m. $1 (resident), $2 (non- resident). www.accgovga.myrec. com GAMES: Classic City Trivia (The Local 706) Test your trivia knowledge with host Garrett Lennox. 7 p.m. FREE! www.facebook.com/ ClassicCityTriviaCo KIDSTUFF: Busy Bee Toddler Time (Bogart Library) Join Ms. Donna for rhymes, songs, puppets and a story. 10 a.m. & 11 a.m. FREE! www.athenslibrary.org/bogart KIDSTUFF: Gingerfest (Bogart Library) Join librarians for creative, tasty crafts and fine motor activities. Ages 5 & under. 10:30 a.m.–12:00 p.m. FREE! www.athenslibrary.org/ bogart KIDSTUFF: Gingerfest: Nailed It! (Bogart Library) Join Ms. Blaine and Ms. Donna for fast-paced fun creating a no-bake gingerbread house. Ages 8–12. 2 p.m. & 4 p.m. FREE! www.athenslibrary.org/bogart KIDSTUFF: LEGO & Builder’s Club (Bogart Library) Drop in to use LEGOs and other building materials. All ages. 3:30–5:30 p.m. FREE! www.athenslibrary.org/bogart PERFORMANCE: UUFA Winter Solstice Service (Unitarian Universalist Fellowship of Athens) “Honoring the Dark, Honoring the Light” in this
service of music, meditation and candle lighting featuring the UUFA Chalice Choir. 6:30 p.m. FREE! www.uuathensga.org
Thursday 21 ART: R. Wood Studio Solstice Sale (R. Wood Studio) Browse discounted hand-crafted ceramic goods. 10 a.m.–7 p.m. www. rwoodstudio.com ART: Open Gallery & Print Sale (ACE/FRANCISCO Gallery) Limited- edition signed prints of works by artists who have previously exhibited will be on sale half-price, and “J. Grant Brittain: 80s Skate Photography” will be on view. 6–9 p.m. FREE! acefranciscogallery.com ART: Artist Reception (tiny ATH gallery) During Third Thursday, works by Elizabeth Collins Hanes will be on display. 6–9 p.m. FREE! www. tinyathgallery.com CLASSES: Yoga in the Galleries (Georgia Museum of Art) Enjoy a yoga class in the art galleries led by instructors from Five Points Yoga. Open to all skill levels. Attend in person (first come, first served) or via Zoom. 6 p.m. FREE! www.georgiamuseum.org COMEDY: Open Improv Jam (work. shop) An improv comedy practice open to the community. 8–9:30 p.m. Donations encouraged. www. flyingsquidcomedy.com EVENTS: Athens Humane Society in the Lobby (ACC Library) A representative from the AHS will be available to talk about its programs and services. 2–4 p.m. FREE! www. athenslibrary.org EVENTS: Diamond Hill Farm Stand (Athentic Brewing Co.) Vegetables and fresh flowers are available on hand and pre-ordered. Every Thursday, 4–6 p.m. www.diamondhill farmathens.com FILM: Club Ned Anime Society (ACC Library) Join club members to vote for the pre-Christmas showing contenders and watch anime.
6:30–8:30 p.m. FREE! www.anime fandom.org GAMES: Teen Dungeons & Dragons (Bogart Library) Volunteer-led gaming session for teens of all skill levels. Grades 6–12. 6–7 p.m. FREE! www.athenslibrary.org/bogart GAMES: Thursday Trivia (Johnny’s New York Style Pizza) Test your trivia knowledge with host Jon Head. 6:30 p.m. www.johnnyspizza. com GAMES: Bad Dog Trivia (The Foundry) Test your trivia knowledge with host TJ Wayt. Thursdays, 7 p.m. www.facebook.com/baddog athens GAMES: Rock ’n Roll Trivia (Athentic Brewing Co.) Test your trivia knowledge with host The Music Man. 7 p.m. FREE! www.athentic brewing.com KIDSTUFF: Santa’s Little Helper (Bishop Park) Day camp with games, gymnastics, lunch, snacks and a Christmas movie. Ages 5 –12. Registration required. 9 a.m. –4 p.m. $12 (resident), $18 (non- resident). www.accgovga.myrec. com KIDSTUFF: Read to Rover (Bogart Library) Reading aloud to a dog helps children develop their reading skills and build confidence. Ages 4 & up. 4–5 p.m. FREE! www.athens library.org/bogart MEETINGS: KnitLits Knitting Group (Bogart Library) Knitters of all levels are invited to have fun, share craft ideas and knit to their hearts’ content. Thursdays, 6 p.m. FREE! www. athenslibrary.org/bogart SPORTS: Classic City Pétanque Club (Lay Park) New players welcome. Scheduled days are Tuesdays, Thursdays and Sundays at 1:30 p.m. www.athenspetanque.org
Friday 22 EVENTS: Beloved Apothecary’s Sacred Space (1001 Winterville Rd.) This week’s gathering serving alcohol alternative beverages will
highlight movement medicine with Estra Grace. Fridays, 6 p.m. $20 suggested donation. www.instagram.com/beloved_apothecary KIDSTUFF: Winter Kickoff (Sandy Creek Nature Center) Kids will explore the winter woods and enjoy time outside. Ages 4–12. Registration required. 10 a.m.–12 p.m. $6 (resident), $9 (non-resident). www. accgovga.myrec.com KIDSTUFF: Meet & Play (Bogart Library) Drop in for facilitated open play with age-appropriate toys. Best for ages 6 & under. Every Friday, 10:30 a.m. FREE! www.athens library.org/bogart MEETINGS: Celebrate Recovery Free Dinner (Living Hope Church) Christ-centered 12-step program to help anyone with heart hurt, hang-up or habit. Free childcare, and bus route accessible. FREE! 5:30 p.m. (dinner), 6:30 p.m. (large group). 706-207-2396 PERFORMANCE: The Nutcracker (The Classic Center) The State Ballet Theatre of Ukraine will perform the classic fairytale set to Tchaikovsky’s beloved score. Dec. 22, 7 p.m. Dec. 23, 2 p.m. $32–42. www.classiccenter.com PERFORMANCE: Athens Showgirl Cabaret Fabulous Friday (Hendershot’s) Enjoy a Christmas Drag show to close out the 2023 season. Ages 18 & up. 9 p.m. $5. www. athensshowgirlcabaret.com
Saturday 23 EVENTS: Last Minute Gift Market (Athentic Brewing Co.) More than 40 local vendors will offer original art, bath and beauty products, sustainable fashion and more with live music. 1–7 p.m. www.athentic brewing.com EVENTS: Phil Kline’s Unsilent Night (Little Kings Shuffle Club) Parade through downtown to the UGA quad with handheld speakers playing holiday music. 7:30 p.m. FREE! markmobley@gmail.com
PERFORMANCE: The Nutcracker (The Classic Center) The State Ballet Theatre of Ukraine will perform the classic fairytale set to Tchaikovsky’s beloved score. Dec. 22, 7 p.m. Dec. 23, 2 p.m. $32–42. www.classiccenter.com
Wednesday 27 ART: Tour At Two (Georgia Museum of Art) These drop-in public tours feature highlights of the permanent collection. 2 p.m. FREE! www.georgiamuseum.org CLASSES: Salsa Dancing (Starland Lounge & Lanes) Join SALSAthens for Cuban salsa lessons that meet a variety of dance abilities, including beginners. Wednesdays, 6:30 p.m. (advanced), 7:30 p.m. (beginner/ intermediate). $10. SALSAthens Dancing@gmail.com GAMES: Classic City Trivia (The Local 706) Test your trivia knowledge with host Garrett Lennox. 7 p.m. FREE! www.facebook.com/ ClassicCityTriviaCo KIDSTUFF: Busy Bee Toddler Time (Bogart Library) Join Ms. Donna for rhymes, songs, puppets and a story. 10 a.m. & 11 a.m. FREE! www.athenslibrary.org/bogart MEETINGS: Film Athens (Flicker Theatre & Bar) Meet and network with others in the filmmaking community (actors, directors, etc.) during happy hour. 5 p.m. FREE! www.flickertheatreandbar.com OUTDOORS: ‘Normal’ Run (Athentic Brewing Co.) Join the Athens Road Runners for a 1–3 mile run that starts and ends at Athentic Brewing. Every other Wednesday, 6 p.m. FREE! www.athenticbrewing.com
Down the Line 12/28 Diamond Hill Farm Stand (Athentic Brewing Co.) 12/28 Standup Comedy (The Root) 12/28 KnitLits Knitting Group (Bogart Library) f
YELP REVIEWS FROM OUR PATIENTS
If you youare areinincrisis crisisdue due domestic If to to domestic violence,Phil Graduate wants violence, Hughes Athens Honda wants you to tofind findhelp. help. you When you are struggling to meet the demands of a controlling and jealous partner it is hard to plan for the future. Project Safe has advocates available to help you sort through what options are available to you, and how you can stay safe while you explore options. All services are free and confidential.
BAH! The vets & staff always TREAT me right at ! Delicious cookies. Would recommend again – Muttley
706-425-5099 i 298 Prince Ave. Across from The Bottleworks
www.downtownathensvets.com
706-543-3331
Hotline, 24 hours/day
Linea de crisis, las 24 horas del dia
DE C E MB E R 20, 2023· F L A GP OL E .C OM
11
bulletin board Deadline for getting listed in Bulletin Board is every THURSDAY at 5 p.m. for the print issue that comes out the following Wednesday. Online listings are updated daily. Email calendar@flagpole.com.
Art ATHENS CREATIVE DIRECTORY (Athens, GA) The ACD is a platform to connect creatives with patrons. Visual artists, musicians, actors, writers and other creatives are encouraged to create a free listing. athenscreatives@gmail.com, www. athenscreatives.directory CALL FOR ART (Dudley Park) The ACC Leisure Services Arts Division invites artists to submit proposals for temporary light sculptures to display during the Flight of the Fireflies Lantern Parade on Mar. 16. Four artists/teams will receive $500 each for their work. Application deadline Jan. 19, 5 p.m. www. accgov.com/10862/Call-for-ArtFlight-of-the-Fireflies CALL FOR ARTISTS (Lyndon House Arts Center) Applications are now open to fine arts and craft vendors who would like to participate in the Lyndon House Art Mart. Applications are free, but the vendor fee is $60 if accepted. Deadline Jan. 15. Market held May 11. www.lyndon houseartsfoundation.com CALL FOR ARTISTS (Winterville, GA) The Winterville Marigold Festival is seeking marigold-or Winterville-themed art submissions to be the featured artwork of the 2024 festival. Artwork will be used on posters, T-shirts and publications. Deadline Jan. 1, 5 p.m. Submit up to three images. www.marigold festival.com/call-for-artists CALL FOR ENTRIES (Lyndon House Arts Center) This year’s 49th Juried Exhibition at the LHAC will be juried
by Jen Sudul Edwards, chief curator at The Mint Museum. The call for submissions will be live Jan. 4, 10 a.m.–Jan. 26, 5 p.m. A drop-in clinic to receive help applying will be held Jan. 23, 12–3 p.m. The exhibition runs Mar. 12-May 4. www.accgov.com/lyndonhouse JOKERJOKERTV CALL FOR ARTISTS (Online) JOKERJOKERtv is actively accepting proposals for collaboration from visual, musical and video artists and curators living in Athens. Artists worldwide can also submit music videos, short films, skits and ideas to share with a weekly livestream audience. www. jokerjokertv.com/submit OPEN STUDIOS (Lyndon House Arts Center) Studio members have access to spaces for painting, printmaking, photography, ceramics, jewelry, fiber and woodworking. Tuesdays through Saturdays, 10 a.m.–6 p.m. $65/month. www. accgov.com/7350/Open-Studio- Membership
Classes BLACKSMITHING CLASSES (Greenhow Handmade Ironworks, Washington) A variety of classes include “First Time at the Forge” (Jan. 6 or Feb. 17), “Railroad Spike Knife” (Jan. 13 or Mar. 9), “Basic Tong Making” (Jan. 20 or Mar. 30), “Two-Day Railroad Spike Knife and Tomahawk” (Jan. 26–27 or Mar. 15–16), “Art of Chain Making” (Feb. 3), “Crash Course in Artistic Blacksmithing” (Feb. 9), “Forge a Spear” (Feb. 24), “Forge a Tom-
art around town 1055 BARBER (1055 Barber St.) Stephen Humphreys presents “Ukraine: Photos from the Front Line,” a collection of wartime photographs taken during the last year. Through December. ACC LIBRARY (2025 Baxter St.) Fiber artist Beatrice Brown shares “Seasons,” a collection of colorful quilts. Through Jan. 21. ACE/FRANCISCO GALLERY (675 Pulaski St., Suite 1500) San Diego-based photographer J. Grant Brittain presents “80s Skate Photography,” a collection of iconic images. Open for Third Thursday Dec. 21, 6–9 p.m. and through December by appointment. ATHENTIC BREWING CO. (108 Park Ave.) Valley Stipemaas creates blackand-white illustrations of animals and monsters. Through December. ATHICA@CINÉ GALLERY (234 W. Hancock Ave.) An exhibition spotlighting visual artists of the Elephant 6 Recording Co. includes works by Beth Sale, W. Cullen Hart, Lucy Calhoun, Andy Gonzales, Hannah Jones, Jill Carnes and Jeremy Kiran Fernandes. Through Dec. 25. AURUM STUDIOS (125 E. Clayton St.) Greg Benson presents “Next Places,” a collection of oil paintings. Through January. CLASSIC CENTER (300 N. Thomas St.) In Classic Gallery I, “Wild Thing” features animals, plants and people intermingling through the works of Margo Rosenbaum, Shelby Little, Carolyn Suzanne Schew and Amanda Burk. • In Classic Gallery II, “LOVE.CRAFT Athens” features works by Melanie Jackson, Hannah Jo, Norman Austin Junior and Brittany Wortham. FLICKER THEATRE & BAR (263 W. Washington St.) Artwork by Caitlyn Riesinger. Through December. GEORGIA MUSEUM OF ART (90 Carlton St.) “In Dialogue: Power Couple: Pierre and Louise Daura in Paris” features paintings by Louise, engravings by Pierre and several objects that appear in their images. Through Feb. 11. • “Nancy Baker Cahill: Through Lines” is a mid-career survey demonstrating the artist’s progression from drawing into digital works of art in augmented reality. Through May 19. • “Decade of Tradition: Highlights from the Larry D. and Brenda A. Thompson Collection.” Through July 3, 2024. GLASSCUBE@INDIGO (500 College Ave.) Zane Cochran presents “Aurora,”
12
F L A GP OL E .C OM · DE C E MB E R 20, 2023
ahawk” (Mar. 2). Classes run 10 a.m.–5 p.m. www.greenhowhand made.com/blacksmith-classes HEALING WITH BALANCE (Heart Stone Therapeutic Healing) This workshop combines EMDR, trauma sensitive yoga and acupressure to help participants release, reset and heal from their past while honoring their mind, body and spirit. RSVP by Jan. 12. Workshop held Jan. 19 & Jan. 26, 5–7 p.m. info@Heart StoneTH.com INTRO TO CLOWNING AND IMPROV (work.shop) “Intro to Clowning” is a six-week course that begins Jan. 7, 2–4 p.m. $150. “Intro to Improv” is a six-week course that begins Jan. 16, 6–8 p.m. $150. www.flyingsquid comedy.com NIA TECHNIQUE CLASSES (RxGym) Nia combines dance, martial arts and mindfulness with uplifting music to create a holistic fitness experience. Mondays and Thursdays, 10 a.m. $15-20/class. athens pt.com/rx-gym/athens QPR SUICIDE PREVENTION TRAINING (Nuçi’s Space) Nuçi’s hosts free monthly QPR (Question, Persuade, Refer) suicide prevention sessions for anyone interested, not just mental health professionals. Nuçi’s also offers free training for businesses and organizations. qpr@nuci.org, www.nuci.org/qpr SPANISH CLASSES (Multiple Locations) Casa de Amistad offers beginning and intermediate GED and ESL classes in-person and online. An eight-week course to learn Spanish meets Mondays and Wednesdays, 12:30–1:30 p.m.
$60. www.athensamistad. com TRADITIONAL MARTIAL ARTS CLASSES (Live Oak Martial Arts) Traditional and modern-style Taekwondo, self-defense, grappling and weapons classes are offered for all ages. Classes in Jodo, the art of the Japanese staff and sword, are held Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays at 7 p.m. Visit the website for a full schedule. liveoakmartialarts@gmail. com, www.liveoakmartial arts.com YOGA AND MORE (Revolution Therapy and Yoga) Revolution is a multipurpose mind-body wellness studio offering yoga and therapy with an emphasis on trauma-informed practices. Check website for upcoming classes and programs. www.revolution therapyandyoga.com YOGA CLASSES (Let It Be Yoga Studio, Watkinsville) Drawings and paintings by Jacob Wenzka are currently on view at Republic Salon. Classes are offered in Hatha, Vinyasa, Kundalini, beginner, ADOPT AN ANIMAL (Bear Hollow schools and churches will host gentle and other styles. Check Zoo) Different sponsorship levels volunteer service projects on Jan. online calendar for weekly offerings. are available to “adopt” a zoo resi15 in honor of Martin Luther King www.letitbeyoga.org dent. Donations are used for exhibJr. Register to volunteer by Jan. 12. its, food and wildlife education. www.accgov.com/mlkday 706-613-3580 SEEKING MENTORS (Athens, GA) BLING YOUR PROM (ACC Library) The Athens Anti-Discrimination Seeking donations of formalwear AAAC VOLUNTEERS (Athens, GA) Movement’s End School to Prison that will be given to local teens for The Athens Area Arts Council is Pipeline Program seeks community prom. Items can include men and seeking volunteer board members members to support and mentor women’s formalwear, jewelry and and at large members to help the students who are experiencing accessories, shoes, unused cosnonprofit in connecting the arts to bullying, have been suspended/ metics and hair products, service/ the community through promotion, expelled, or need to complete store coupons and paper shopping education and funding. Leadership court-ordered service hours. www. bags. Donations accepted until Feb. positions are available. Expectations aadmovement.org 29. ehood@athenslibrary.org include monthly board meetings SEEKING VOLUNTEERS (Athens MLK DAY OF SERVICE (Multiple and a few hours each month. Email Area Humane Society) Volunteers Locations) Approximately 30 difif interested. president@athensarts. are needed on Christmas Day to ferent community organizations, org help feed, clean and administer
Help Out
a sculptural interpretation of the aurora borealis using 3D geometric figures and lights. LAST RESORT GRILL (174-184 W Clayton St.) Susan Pelham’s collages are inspired by Magic Realism, Surrealism, nursery rhymes and fables. Through Jan. 16. LYNDON HOUSE ARTS CENTER (211 Hoyt St.) Collections from our Community presents Peggy Curran’s collection of Madame Alexander Dolls. Through Jan. 13. • Ato Ribiero presents “Growing Together,” a solo exhibition of wooden assemblages referencing both Ghanian strip-woven kente cloth and Black quilting traditions of the American South. Through Jan. 13. • Curated by Keith Wilson, “The Image Moves: New Film and Video Work by Athens Artists” includes Drew Gebhardt, Katz Tepper, Jamie Bull, Selia Hooten, Vivian Liddell, CC Calloway, Shawn Campbell and AJ Aremu. Through Jan. 13. • “The 8th Collegiate Paper Art Triennial” includes works by 36 students from 11 different schools. Through Jan. 13. • Abraham Tesser presents “Maquettes,” a collection of small-scale works in wood used as drafts for larger pieces. Artist talk Feb. 8, 6 p.m. Through Mar. 1. • “Memory Worker: Kelly Taylor Mitchell” explores ancestra seeking through hand-sewn stitches and handmade paper. Through Mar. 12. • “Tell Me A Story: Jasmine Best” presents narrative works combining fabric, yarn and digital sewing to reflect on memories and Black female identity. Through Mar. 12. MADISON-MORGAN CULTURAL CENTER (434 S. Main St., Madison) “The John Lewis Series: Paintings by Benny Andrews” is a collection of 17 works chronicling the early life of John Lewis before he became Congressman. • “The Andrews Family Legacy: Rooted in the Agriculture and Arts of Morgan County” is a new permanent exhibition honoring the artistic and literary contributions of members of the Andrews family. MAGALLERY (125 W. Jefferson St., Madison) “MAG SQUARED” is an annual exhibition featuring small square-shaped original art by over 20 artists. Through Dec. 23. REPUBLIC SALON (312 E. Broad St.) Jacob Wenzka presents a collection of paintings and drawings of robots, futuristic floating cities, and various other sci-fi and fantasy inspired scenes. SPACEBALL BAZAAR (130 N. Church St., Bogart) “Planes, Trains & Cryogenics: Modes of Transport” is a group exhibition of local artists.
STEFFEN THOMAS MUSEUM OF ART (4200 Bethany Rd., Buckhead) “Something to Declare/Algo para Declarar” represents nine Latin American countries through the works of Jorge Arcos, Yehimi Cambron, Marisa Cerban, Franklin Delgado, Pedro Fuertes, Catalina Gomez-Beuth, Dora Lopez, Morgan Lugo, Paula Reynaldi, Maria Sarmiento, Carlos Solis and Melvin Toledo. Through Jan. 6. TINY ATH GALLERY (174 Cleveland Ave.) Elizabeth Collins Hanes presents “Freaks of Nature,” mixed media sculptures that incorporate collected treasures. Closing reception Dec. 21, 6–9 p.m. UGA SPECIAL COLLECTIONS LIBRARIES (300 S. Hull St.) “House Party” explores Athens’ house show history through photos and artifacts from The Green House on Milledge across from Taco Stand, The Landfill, Spillage, The Lounge, Saint Mary’s Church, The Ultramod Compound and others. Through December. • “Exploring St. Catherines Island” lays out centuries of American history found in artifacts dating back to the 16th century, tracing the island’s history from the establishment of indigenous towns through Spanish and English colonialism. Through December. • “HBO at 50: The Rise of Prestige Television” highlights some of the groundbreaking programming created by and aired on HBO with items selected from the Peabody Awards Archive. Through May 2024. • “Legacy: Vince Dooley, 1932-2022” celebrates the life and career of the late UGA football head coach and athletic director through photographs and artifacts. Tours held before home games on Fridays at 3 p.m. Through spring 2024. • “Paving the Road to Progress: Georgia Interstate Highways” traverses the rocky path of the interstate system’s development through maps, reports, correspondence and legislation. Through Apr. 24. UNITARIAN UNIVERSALIST FELLOWSHIP OF ATHENS (780 Timothy Rd.) Watkinsville artist Leslie Guo presents “Joyful Encounters,” a solo exhibition of watercolor paintings. Through Jan. 2. WINTERVILLE CULTURAL CENTER (371 N. Church St., Winterville) The Athens Plein Air organization presents 50 works by 17 different artists. Through Jan.19. WINTERVILLE LIBRARY (115 Marigold Ln., Winterville) Winterville Arts Council members Judy Hammond and Sherre Watwood share new paintings. Through Jan. 7.
Kidstuff ACCOUNTING 101: BE AUDIT YOU CAN BE (UGA Terry College of Business) Youth Programs at UGA and UGA’s J.M. Tull School of Accounting offer a two-day workshop for ages 15–17. Feb. 24-25, 10 a.m.–4 p.m. $20. www.georgiacenter.uga.edu/youth/spark ART CLASSES (Brella Studio) After school art classes are offered several times a week for ages 5–10. Subjects include watercolors (Tuesdays, 4 p.m.), “Just Add Paper” (Thursdays, 4 p.m.), and yarn and thread (Fridays, 4 p.m.). $20/drop-in. “Preschool Art: Mess- Free Mondays” for ages 1–5 is held every Monday, 10 a.m. “Preschool Art: Read Make Play” for ages 2–6 is held every Thursday, 9:15 a.m. $50/drop-in. Programs run through Dec. 15. www.brella studio.com ATHENS FOREST KINDERGARTEN (Sandy Creek Park) Now enrolling children ages 3-6. AFK is a cooperative preschool that aims to develop initiative, persistence, interdependence, and empathy. www.athens forestkindergarten.org CCCF SCHOLARSHIPS (Athens, GA) The Classic Center Cultural Foundation is now accepting applications for performing arts and visual arts scholarships. Applications are open to 9th–12th grade high school students living in Northeast Georgia. Deadline Mar. 1. www. classiccenter.com/scholarships DAYS-OFF-SCHOOL PROGRAMS (Athens, GA) ACC Leisure Services offers a variety of themed camps for ages 6–12 when schools are not in session. “Jingle Bell Jamboree” runs Dec. 21-22 at Rocksprings Community Center. “Sweet Beginnings” runs Jan. 2–5 at Lay Park. “Icy Investigations: Winter Science Extravaganza” runs Jan. 3 at Rocksprings Park. accgovga.myrec.com GROUPS AT REBLOSSOM (ReBlossom) New Parents, Infants and Crawlers Play Group is for babies ages 0-12 months and their caregivers to discuss parenthood. Tuesdays, 10 a.m.–12 p.m. Afternoon Play Group is for children 1–4 years old and their caregivers to meet each other and build relationships. Wednesdays, 3–5 p.m. All Ages Play Group is for children 1–5 years old and their caregivers to play inside and outdoors. Fridays, 10 a.m.–12 p.m. Sunday Support and Ply Group is held for ages 1–4 and their families. Sundays, 1–3 p.m. www.reblossomathens.com LIBRARY STORYTIMES (ACC Library) Storytime for preschool aged children and their caregivers is offered every Tuesday and Wednesday, 9:30 a.m. www.athens library.org TREEHOUSE ACTIVITIES (Treehouse Kid & Craft) A variety of crafting and playtime activities are offered for various age groups. Popular activities include Crafterday Saturdays, Storytime with Mr. Doodles and Craft Inc. Kid Business. Visit the website for details and to register. www.treehousekidandcraft.com
Support Groups ACA ADULT CHILDREN OF ALCOHOLICS AND DYSFUNCTIONAL FAMILIES (Holy Cross Lutheran Church) This support group meets weekly. Tuesdays, 6:30–7:30 p.m. annetteanelson@gmail.com
AL-ANON 12 STEP (Multiple Locations) Recovery for people affected by someone else’s drinking. Free meetings at lunchtime and evenings throughout the week in Athens and Watkinsville. www.ga-al-anon.org ALCOHOLICS ANONYMOUS (Athens, GA) If you think you have a problem with alcohol, call the AA hotline or visit the website for a schedule of meetings in Barrow, Clarke, Jackson and Oconee Counties. 706-389-4164, www. athensaa.org ATHENS COUNCIL OF THE BLIND (Athens, GA) Open to people of all ages with vision impairments, their families and friends. Topics include adaptive equipment, recreational and social opportunities, and advocacy. 706-424-2794, dlwahlers@ gmail.com LGBTQIA+ VIRTUAL ALPHABET FAMILY GATHERING (Online) This is a safe space for anyone on the LGBTQIA+/TGQNB spectrum. Fourth Sunday of every month, 7–9 p.m. uuathensga.org/justice/ welcoming-congregation MENTAL HEALTH PEER RECOVERY GROUP (Nuçi’s Space) Participants support each other through life’s challenges by sharing from their skills, experiences and proven coping mechanisms. Newcomers welcome. First Tuesday of the month, 4–6 p.m. pr@nuci.org, www.nuci.org NAMI FAMILY SUPPORT GROUP (Oconee Presbyterian Church) Peer-led support group for any adult with a loved one who has experienced symptoms of a mental health condition. Second Monday of the month, 6:30–8 p.m. FREE! joannehnamihallga@gmail.com NEW PARENTS AND INFANT FEEDING SUPPORT GROUP (BYL Family Resource Center) Come as you are for community, snacks and feeding advice from professionals. Babies and children of all ages are welcome. Wednesdays, 10 a.m.–12 p.m. FREE! www.byyourleave.org OVEREATERS ANONYMOUS (24th Street Clubhouse) Learn to stop eating compulsively or curb other unwanted food-related behaviors. Tuesdays, 12 p.m. Text: 678-736- 3697 PARKINSON’S SUPPORT GROUP (First Baptist Church) This group is to encourage, support and share information with fellow sojourners who manage the challenges of Parkinson’s disease or other movement disorders. Second Friday of the month, 1 p.m. gpnoblet@ bellsouth.net PROJECT SAFE (Family Protection Center) Project Safe hosts a support group for survivors of domestic violence. Mondays, 6:30–8 p.m. www. project-safe.org RECREATE JOY (Sunny Days Therapeutics) Nuçi’s Space hosts a recreational therapy support group. Improve coping skills and self esteem while reducing depression and anxiety through adaptive yoga, games and leisure education. Six- week sessions. Wednesdays, 5–6 p.m. tinyurl.com/rnvuhesa RECOVERY DHARMA (Athens Addiction Recovery Center) This peer-led support group offers a Buddhist-inspired path to recovery from any addiction. Visit the website for details. Thursdays, 7 p.m. www.athensrecoverydharma.org SEX ADDICTS ANONYMOUS (Athens, GA) Athens Downtown SAA offers a message of hope to anyone who suffers from compulsive sexual behavior. Contact for location. athensdowntownsaa@gmail.com SUPPORT GROUPS (Integrity Counseling & Personal Development) ICPD offers several support
groups. “LGBTQIA+ Young Adults Group” is offered for ages 18–30. “Survivors of Suicide Loss Group” is offered the first Wednesday of every month, 7–8 p.m. “Veterans, Dependents & Caregivers Benefits Resource & Claim Assistance Group” is offered the first Saturday of every month, 9–10 a.m. www. integrityofjefferson.com
Word on the Street ATHENS MLK JR. DAY PARADE AND MUSIC FESTIVAL (Hot Corner) Now accepting registration for vendors, parade participants and performers. Event held Jan. 15. knowalogic@gmail.com, www. aadmovement.org ATHENS ON ICE (Classic Center, 440 Foundry Pavilion) Public ice skating is currently available Feb. 19. Check website for schedule of skating sessions. $15. www.classic center.com BIKE REPAIR STATIONS (Multiple Locations) Over 15 free bike repair stations are located across Athens with tools, an air pump and a QR code for quick guides on basic bike repairs. Visit the website for participating locations. www.accgov. com/10584/Bike-Repair-Stations BRING ONE FOR THE CHIPPER CHRISTMAS TREE RECYCLING (Multiple Locations) Give your undecorated tree a second life as compost, mulch or fish habitat. Receive a free tree seedling in return. Drop off on Jan. 6, 9 a.m.–1 p.m. Tree recycling is available past Jan. 6 at select locations or by setting your tree out with regularly scheduled leaf and limb pick up. Check website for drop-off locations. www.keepathensbeautiful.org RABBIT BOX THEMES (Athens, GA) Seeking storytellers to share true short stories on stage. Upcoming themes include “Food for Thought” on Jan. 23, “Duets” on Feb. 27, “Better Late Than Never” on Mar. 26, “The Story of Your Name” on Apr. 23 and “With This Ring” on May 28. Visit website to apply. www.rabbitbox.org/tell RABBIT HOLE EVENTS (Rabbit Hole Studios) Weekly events include Open Mic (Tuesdays, 7–11 p.m.), Acoustic Song Circle (Thursdays, 7–11 p.m.), Seventh Generation Native American Church services and community potlucks (Sundays, 11 a.m.), and Drumming and Song Circle (Sundays, 3–5 p.m.). Wednesday Yoga (5 p.m.) is followed by Meditation and Integration (6 p.m.). Events are free or donation based. www.rabbitholestudios.org VHS DIGITIZATION (Athens, GA) Brad Staples (of the Athens GA Live Music crew) is seeking previously recorded concerts and events on VHS, VHSC or DVDs to digitize and archive on his YouTube channel, vhsordie (@vhsordie3030). Original recordings will be returned, and credits and dates will be included in the online video description. Digitization services are free. Contact for details and to coordinate shipping. bradley.staples88@gmail.com WINTER ACTIVITIES (Athens, GA) ACC Leisure Services offers a variety of arts, environmental science, recreation, sports and holiday events this winter for all ages. Now registering. www.accgov.com/myrec WINTER WONDERLIGHTS (State Botanical Garden of Georgia) A half- mile fully accessible trail through the garden is currently decorated with twinkling lights and illuminated displays for the holidays. Select nights through Dec. 30. Disco Nights will be held Jan. 4–7. $15. botgarden.uga.edu f
arts & culture
art notes
Nancy Baker Cahill
‘THROUGH LINES’ PRESENTS AUGMENTED REALITY ARTWORK By Jessica Smith arts@flagpole.com As technological advances lead to a rise in the popularity and accessibility of digital art, many creative tools risk erasing an artist’s mark or the human touch that often makes artwork feel so personal and precious. Interdisciplinary new media artist Nancy Baker Cahill redefines the possibilities of drawing in contemporary art by blurring the boundaries between analog and digital production. Currently on view at the Georgia Museum of Art, “Nancy Baker Cahill: Through Lines” is a mid-career survey exhibition that traces the artist’s hybrid practice as it moves between traditional mark-making and technologically-based techniques to bridge the physical and virtual worlds. Located outdoors in the Jane and Harry Willson Sculpture Garden, “Margin of Error” is an animated, geolocated AR installation that expands the boundaries of land art. Unlike most traditional works that physically alter or manipulate the landscape in some way, Cahill’s is monumental yet leaves no trace. This particular installation “imagines an inevitable, toxic and ungovernable outcome created by humans’ impact on the environment.” Here, an impending “Petit Mort” climate catastrophe is represented by a swirling vortex of colorful shards and pure obliteration. As the photograph on this week’s Flagpole illustrates, the installation is revealed when using a smartphone application called 4th Wall, a free AR public art platform founded by Cahill. Challenging traditional conventions of public art, 4th Wall aims to provide participatory, immersive art experiences and increase access to fine art through augmented reality. Like its name suggests, the app “breaks the fourth wall” not only by pulling viewers into the artwork’s narrative, but by establishing an art-viewing alternative to the walls of institutions. “Through Lines” traces Cahill’s artistic process as it moves through various media, evolving from drawings and three-dimensional sculptural installations into singleand multi-channel videos and digital works of art in AR. Moving counterclockwise through the main gallery, the exhibition begins with “The Conversation,” a large-scale graphite drawing on paper, and “Distortions 05,” a graphite and mixed media work that incorporates digital motifs like pixelated squares.Two-dimensional drawing-based works such as these set the foundation for Cahill’s explorations into the digital realm. “Slipstream 100” is a three-dimensional wall work created from torn graphite drawings on paper. The thin scraps of paper
resemble botanically shaped petals that explode from the corner of the room and sprawl outward. In her “Slipstream” series, Cahill scans, animates and digitally alters paper sculptures to create videos such as “Slipstream Canon” and “Lascaux.” These works push the limits of drawing through new media while preserving the handdrawn line as an integral component. The exhibition comes full circle with a pair of vibrant fine art prints, “Slipstream 17” and “Slipstream 18,” that are cinematic stills extracted from animated videos. By focusing on the prints through the 4th Wall app, the images can be reanimated. The exhibition’s flow then brings viewers to the final stop in this room, a large window offering a different bird’s-eye perspective on “Margin of Error.” JASON THRASHER
medications to animals. Shifts available 9 a.m.–12 p.m. and 4–6 p.m. Register online. www.athens humanesociety.org
On view in the Alonzo and Vallye Dudley Gallery, which focuses on new media art, “Petit Mort” is an immersive video installation that swallows viewers into a pulsating, shimmering landscape of hot pinks and purples flowing across three walls. Part of her “Slipstream: Table of Contents” series, the video references slipstream, a genre of speculative fiction that makes “the familiar strange or the strange familiar” by questioning reality. Curated by Kathryn Hill, curatorial assistant in contemporary art, “Through Lines” is Cahill’s first solo museum show. Cahill also has an AR artwork currently on view at the Whitney Museum of American Art that can be viewed from any location using 4th Wall. Entitled “CENTO,” the installation is “a bioengineered, future AR creature whose evolutionary survival depends on collective engagement” through equipping the birdlike organism with feathers representing energy conversion, toxic filtration, communication and other tools for navigating an imperiled ecosystem. “Through Lines” will remain on view at the Georgia Museum of Art until May 19, and is scheduled to travel to Villanova University Art Gallery in Pennsylvania in the fall. The museum will be closed Dec. 24–26 and Dec. 31–Jan. 2 for the holidays, but is otherwise open Tuesdays through Sundays. f
DE C E MB E R 20, 2023· F L A GP OL E .C OM
13
classifieds Buy It, Sell It, Rent It, Use It! Place an ad anytime, email class@flagpole.com
Indicates images available at classifieds.flagpole.com
REAL ESTATE
FOR SALE
MUSIC
JOBS
HOUSES FOR RENT
MISCELLANEOUS
INSTRUCTION
FULL-TIME
House, 3BR/2BA in Normaltown. Central heat/air. Apartment, 2BR/1BA. Furnished. Washer/dryer. Wi-Fi. No smokers, pets. Calls only! 706-372-1505
Business Water Solutions offers the cleanest drinking water available through innovative bottle-less water coolers and ice machines. Call 706-248-6761 or visit www.businesswatersolutions.com to set up a consultation.
Athens School of Music. Now offering in-person and online instruction in guitar, bass, drums, piano, voice, brass, woodwinds, strings, banjo, mandolin and more. From beginner to expert, all styles. Visit www.athens schoolofmusic.com. 706543-5800
El Paso Tacos & Tequila Now Hiring for Servers and Bartenders. We offer flexible hours and scheduling for students. No experience is required as training is provided! Stop by in person to fill out an application! 255 W. Washington St.
HOUSES FOR SALE Looking for a house or a home? Condo or land? Call Daniel Peiken. REALTOR 5Market Realty. Selling in and around Athens for over 20 years. 706-296-2941
YARD SALES Crafter's Indoor Sale. 2145 Winterville Rd. Every Fri-Sat, 10-4. Thru Dec. 23. Home decor, jewelry, crocheted items, handmade cards and more. Zelle/venmo only. 10% discount with work i.d.
Get Flagpole delivered straight to your mailbox! Weekly delivery straight from the source. Makes a great gift! Only $55 for six months or $100 for one year. Purchase online at www.flagpole.big cartel.com, call 706-5490301 or email frontdesk@ flagpole.com.
Advertise your yard sale in the Flagpole Classifieds! Call 706-549-0301 or email class@flagpole.com today!
Flagpole ♥s our advertisers!
Flagpole ♥s our donors!
flagpole classifieds REACH OVER 30,000 READERS EVERY WEEK! Business Services Real Estate Music For Sale
Employment Vehicles Messages Personals
BASIC RATES * Individual Real Estate Business (RTS) Run-‘Til-Sold** Online Only***
MUSIC SERVICES Instant cash is now being paid for good vinyl records & CDs in fine condition. Wuxtry Records at corner of Clayton & College Dwntn. 706-369-9428
SERVICES HOME AND GARDEN Woman-Run Gardening Services: Prep for spring! We offer garden clean-up/ maintenance, invasive plant removal, raised beds, personalized native/edible gardens for home/business and more! Call/Text: 706395-5321. Flagpole ♥s our readers!
flagpole’s office will be closed from Dec. 23rd – Jan. 2nd
Taste of India is now hiring (busser, host, to-go specialist, floater). Paid weekly, employee meals, flexible schedules, full-time or parttime. $15–20. APPLY IN PERSON.
PART-TIME Join a diverse, inclusive workplace and get paid to type! 16–40 hours, Mon–Fri. NEVER be called in for a shift you didn’t sign up for. Must type 55+ wpm. Make your own schedule and work independently with no customer interaction. Starts at $13 with automatic increases. www.ctscribes. com Thai Spoon hiring servers / food runners with lunch availability. Contact thaispoonathens@gmail.com.
Enjoy Slackpole, our 2 week issue covering events from Dec. 27th – Jan. 9th ADVERTISING DEADLINES FOR THIS ISSUE Display ads: Wed., Dec. 20th at noon Classified ads: Thurs., Dec. 21st at 2:00 p.m.
ADOPT ME!
Visit www.accgov.com/257/Available-Pets to view all the cats and dogs available at the shelter
$10 per week $14 per week $16 per week $40 per 12 weeks $5 per week
*Ad enhancement prices are viewable at flagpole.com **Run-‘Til-Sold rates are for MERCHANDISE ONLY ***Available for individual rate categories only
PLACE AN AD • Call our Classifieds Dept. 706-549-0301 • Email us at class@flagpole.com
• Deadline to place ads is 11:00 a.m. every Monday for the following Wednesday issue • All ads must be prepaid
14
F L A GP OL E .C OM · DE C E MB E R 20, 2023
Andromeda (52103213) Jubilee (54774322) • You Trix (54838021) • Speaking
• A cruelty survivor, Andromeda has improved by leaps and bounds! House/potty trained, crate trained, walks well on leash, loves car rides, and good with cats, dogs and people.
might think Jubilee is part bunny because EARS but she’s 100% a cute, sweet and personable dog! She loves toys, playtime, walks, and meeting new people and other doggies.
of bunnies, a single bunny is a lonely bunny so Trix needs a pal. Lionhead rabbits can live up to 12 years so be prepared for a long term commitment of cuteness. Adopt today!
These pets and many others are available for adoption at: •
Athens-Clarke County Animal Services 125 Buddy Christian Way • 706-613-3540 Call for appointment
flagpole
SUDOKU
Edited by Margie E. Burke
Difficulty: Easy
4 9 5 8 5 3 2 9 3 4 6
8
6 2 9
4 9 8 4 1 6
1 3
5 6 4
8
Copyright 2023 by The Puzzle Syndicate
HOW TO SOLVE:
Each row must contain the numbers 1 to 9; each column must contain the numbers 1 to 9; and each set of 3 by 3 boxes must contain the numbers 1 to 9. Week of 12/18/23 - 12/24/23
The Weekly Crossword 1
2
3
4
5
14
6
7
by Margie E. Burke
8
9
15
10
11
12
13
29
30
31
16 19
17
18
20
21 Solution to Sudoku:
22
2 6 231 4 9 524 8 3 725 4 278 5 2 7 3 1 628 9 32 9 7 3 6 133 8 534 4 2 36 37 3 7 38 6 8 4 5 1 2 9 8 3 4 5 642 2 943 7 1 41 6 9 7 1 8 447 2 5 3 46 7 5 9 8 50 4 1 3 2 651 1 534 548 3 2 6 7 955 5 52 3 2 6 7 5 9 460 1 8 59 26
35 39
40 44
48
45 49
56
You’ve got this, and we’ve got your back. 57
58
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
ACROSS 1 Souvlaki meat 5 Cornfield cries 9 Stationed 14 Malarial fever 15 Mishmash 16 Eat away 17 Rack and pinion, e.g. 19 Theater platform 20 "No questions ___" 21 Fonda played one in "Ulee's Gold" 23 Diameter halves 25 Seating section 26 Rolling in dough 28 Defenseless 32 Type 33 Blue jeans' material 35 Sheik's bevy 36 Trim to fit, maybe 38 Hole-boring tool 40 Tennis score 41 Romance, e.g. 43 Exodus leader 45 Harmless cyst 46 Give rise to 48 High as a kite 50 Celestial body
READY TO QUIT VAPING?
text VAPEFREEGA to 88709 for an easy to use, anonymous (and free!) support system at your fingertips
Copyright 2023 by The Puzzle Syndicate
51 Arthur Murray moves 52 Enjoy the moment! (Latin) 56 Back in style 59 Atlantic, for one 60 Chip-making site 62 Trick-taking game 63 Wartime partner 64 Pot starter 65 Have a hunch 66 Overdue 67 Spotted DOWN 1 Tibetan priest 2 Mellows 3 Exposing scandal 4 Use the guillotine on 5 Arroz ___ pollo 6 Form of defense 7 "Early to bed..." quote ending 8 Now and then 9 Beg 10 Kind of highway 11 Bath cake 12 Leg up 13 Forest forager 18 Stated further
22 Family member 24 Notion 26 Belgian city on the Meuse 27 Like days gone by 28 Partner of vim 29 NYC dwelling 30 River embankment 31 Fix text 34 Data-sorting method 37 Ignore a "Keep Out" sign 39 Half of R & R 42 Diplomatic agreement 44 Back of a boat 47 June honoree 49 Met productions 51 Silvery fish 52 Milk dispensers? 53 Advil target 54 Tack room item 55 Singer Fitzgerald 57 Learning style 58 Doomsayer's sign 61 Sailor's affirmative
Puzzle answers are available at www.flagpole.com/puzzles
SUPPORT LOCAL
JOURNALISM flagpole is fighting to
continue bringing you the most up-to-date news. Help us keep our weekly print and online versions FREE by donating.
INDOOR A TROCK GA H E N S , CLIMBING
DONATE It’s as easy as your Spotify subscription! Just set up a recurring donation through PayPal (https://flagpole.com/home/donations) or mail in a check. F lagpole, P O Box 1027, Athens, GA 30603
INTRO BOULDERING CLASSES YOUTH TEAMS LADIES NIGHT STUDENT DISCOUNTS ACTIVECLIMBING.COM (706)354-0038
665 BARBER ST. ATHENS,GA
DE C E MB E R 20, 2023· F L A GP OL E .C OM
15