Calendar of Events
Upcoming events and things to do in Asheville, NC. Below is a list of events for festivals, concerts, art exhibitions, group meetups and more.
Interested in adding an event to our calendar? Please click the green “Post Your Event” button below.
Spring Break Basketball Camp
April 6-10 (9 a.m. to 5 p.m.)
Location: Linwood Crump Shiloh Center
Fee: $25, and it includes a T-shirt.
This basketball camp is designed for girls and boys age 12 to 16 to sharpen fundamental, offensive, defensive, and team play skills. Players of all abilities will improve their game with this focused one week training AND make new friends, increase self-esteem, and develop more passion for the game. Click here to register now!
Spring Break Camp – Youth, Grades K-5
April 6-13 (8:30 a.m. to 6 p.m.)
Locations: Tempie Avery Montford, Stephens-Lee, and Vance recreation centers
Fee: $50/child, City of Asheville residents receive a $10 discount
Come spend your vacation with us! Youth in grades K-5 will enjoy activities, crafts, exercise and all kinds of fun. Click here to register now!
Spring Break Camp – Middle School, Grades 6-9
April 6-13 (8:30 a.m. to 6 p.m.)
Location: Stephens-Lee Recreation Center
Fee: $50/child, City of Asheville residents receive a $10 discount
Youth in grades 6-9 will play games, go on field trips and spend time in the Teen Room. Click here to register now!
For more information about these and all Asheville Parks & Recreation programs, call 828-259-5800, visit the website at www.ashevillenc.gov/parks or on Facebook at www.facebook.com/APRCA.
In compliance with a directive from Bishop Jose McLoughlin, all worship services are cancelled through March in response to the coronavirus pandemic. Please stay safe.
The world has changed. It’s probably changed for you. For many people, working from home is a new experience. How do you make that work? Even if you’ve been working remotely for awhile, you may be facing new conditions. You may have people or pets wandering in and out of your workspace when that’s not happened before. How do you make working away from others work for you? We’ve got some help for you, today. We’ve got Carol Hamilton, a global communications expert to share with us some of her thoughts as she has worked with people and teams from around the world. How do you get your head right? How do you get your space right? How do you stay focused? How do you come to agreement with those around you on how you will create boundaries and work and life?
We’ve got some answers in this episode of the Tech After Five podcast.
Follow these steps:
1. Get Buy In From Your Household
2. Setting Your Environment for Success
3. Managing the potential for interruptions
4. Creating the Opportunity for Quality Contact with Colleagues
5. Keeping Yourself working with loops that preserve the selfLooking to connect with Carol Hamilton? Look for her on LinkedIn.
A Musical Love Letter from Asheville to the World
Celebrating the diversity of music in Western North Carolina, The Asheville Symphony Sessions features songs that combine the unique styles of locally based musicians, with the Asheville Symphony. The album was produced by Michael Selverne of Welcome to Mars, at Asheville’s Echo Mountain Recording Studios.
Featured artists are Doc Aquatic, Electric Owls, Free Planet Radio featuring Lizz Wright, Lovett, Matt Townsend, Rising Appalachia, Shannon Whitworth, and Steep Canyon Rangers. The album synthesizes a variety of genres including folk, country, roots, rock, pop, bluegrass, R&B, and jazz, with each track featuring ensembles from the ASO ranging in size from 9 players to 24.
A number of notable arrangers worked on the project including Michael Bearden, who works with Lady Gaga and Neil Young and was Michael Jackson’s musical director for the This Is It tour; Van Dyke Parks, who composed and arranged the score for Disney’s The Jungle Book (1967) animated film and composed Smile with Brian Wilson and the Beach Boys; and Jonathan Sacks, a composer and orchestrator who has worked on many blockbuster films including The Princess and the Frog (2009), Disney’s Cars (2006), and Seabiscuit (2003).
A peer-reviewed open-access digital publication of the Black Mountain College Museum + Arts Center (BMCM+AC). The Journal seeks to host diverse works by writers and artists of varied backgrounds. We welcome academic articles, essays, reviews, poetry, images and forms of artistic expression.
The latest issue of the Journal of Black Mountain College Studies is now online! Volume 10: Chance I Dance is an exploration of dance and performance at Black Mountain College featuring artists and interpreters of work both past and contemporary. The issue is replete with fascinating videos and photographs, as well as articles and poetry.
We welcome you to submit proposals and submissions for upcoming issues. At the moment, submissions we have already received are leading us to focus the next issue on pedagogies and practices of writing at BMC, and we can accept more contributions related to that theme.
Poetry, images, reviews, academic articles, essays, memoirs, archival material, and media are most welcome. We strongly suggest sending us an abstract or a proposal before you proceed to develop a finished submission. The only criteria are submissions of substance and integrity, and an evident connection with the history and heritage of Black Mountain College in all its diverse educational and artistic practices. Email us at [email protected]
Tom Frank
Julie J. Thomson
Co-Editors
ALL posted UNCA events are CANCELLED
https://artsandculture.google.com/project/streetviews
Virtual tour
Explore panoramic views of famous sites in 360˚ Street View tours.
These are unprecedented times for the YMCA, the nation, and the world. As the coronavirus pandemic continues to evolve, the YMCA of Western North Carolina is adapting to adjust operations.Effective Monday, March 16, all YMCA of WNC centers will close to the public for at least two weeks.These locations are the Asheville YMCA, Black Mountain YMCA, Corpening Memorial YMCA, Ferguson Family YMCA, Hendersonville Family YMCA, Reuter Family YMCA, Woodfin YMCA, YMCA at Mission Pardee Health Campus, and YMCA Youth Services Center at Beaverdam.All YMCA programs, including wellness programs, youth sports, and swim lessons, are also suspended.“The YMCA has a strong history of adapting to meet our community’s needs,” said President and CEO Paul Vest. “During this time of need, we are working with community partners to support our neighbors and to help them stay healthy in spirit, mind, and body.”Emergency child care programsSome parents must work and cannot stay home. We are here for them.Because the majority of our afterschool programs take place in schools that will be closed for the next two weeks, we are not able to run those programs. The Y will not charge families for afterschool care while schools are closed. Any payments that were made in advance have been credited to future weeks when our afterschool program resumes.We are in discussions with county emergency management officials, and are preparing to offer child care to healthcare providers and first responders in our centers while schools are closed.We are supporting our afterschool families by sending daily emails with fun activities, including active play ideas (scavenger hunts, kids yoga, kids Zumba and more), character development work, and STEAM (science, technology, engineering, art and math) projects for all ages.To help us assess community child care needs, we encourage area parents to complete this brief survey.Ensuring food securityStarting March 16, our mobile food markets will hand out prepackaged bags for our neighbors to pick up at scheduled market sites. As always, there’s no charge for this service, and no questions are asked.We are also working with local school systems to deliver food to children in need. Starting Monday, March 16, we will serve packaged take-home dinners at Oakley, Estes, Black Mountain, Pisgah, West Buncombe, and Weaverville from 11:30 a.m. to 1 p.m. alongside Buncombe County Schools lunch service.If anyone is quarantined and needs food resources, they can reach out to 828 775 7081 for assistance.Maintaining connectionsWe realize this is an uncertain and anxious time, and that our members and participants depend on us for programs that support their health and well-being.Many of our evidenced-based health intervention classes, such as our Diabetes Prevention Program, are being held virtually.We are also pleased to offer our members access to a variety of free online workouts and group exercise classes to help them stay fit during this time of social distancing. These options offer high-quality workouts via TV, computer, tablet, and smartphone:
- MOSSA Move is free to Y members for 60 days.
- Y360 group exercise classes are also free to members for a limited time.
“The Y is the leading nonprofit committed to strengthening community by connecting all people to their potential, purpose, and each other,” said Vest. “We have received an incredibly supportive response from our members and the community, with many members deciding to continue their membership dues to help us ensure vital services that preserve and protect community.”Those who need assistance with membership may call the Y Business Center at 828 210 5910.Providing emergency reliefThe community need for child care and food security is great. Please help us continue to provide these essential services by donating to our Community Emergency Response Fund.To volunteer to provide these services to the community, please see our volunteer signup page.
|
Join us to hear four unique women who live and work in our community share their stories of juggling business and personal life and being challenged to lead.
Cristina Hall Ackley – Founder/owner of Ginger’s Revenge and WomanUP’s 2019 Rising Star
Leah Ashburn – President/CEO of Highland Brewing Company and WomanUP’s 2019 Woman Executive of the Year
Jennifer Pharr Davis – Founder of Blue Ridge Hiking Company and WomanUP’s 2019 Woman Entrepreneur of the Year
Libby Kyles – CEO of YWCA of Asheville
In our popular panel discussion format, these four local leaders will share how they’ve worked to embrace their leadership roles while keeping life in balance.
On display daily January 18 – April 19, from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. in the upstairs gallery of the Education Center, the Asheville Printmakers’ newest exhibit, Natural Impressions, will feature a variety of two- and three-dimensional print pieces utilizing numerous printmaking processes. Works will inspire visitors to think about the beauty and fragility of plants and the natural world through various perspectives and printmaking techniques. All pieces are available for purchase and a portion of the sales will benefit The North Carolina Arboretum Society.
Founded in 2013, the Asheville Printmakers is an energetic group of artists dedicated to expressing ideas and imagery through the medium of print. The group encompasses a wide range of processes and content, including traditional methods, such as lithography, woodcut and screen printing, and contemporary photographic printing processes, such as carbon printing, platinum-palladium and photopolymer etching.
Parking Fees
- Members: Free
- Personal Vehicles: $14
- Motorhomes / Vehicles (21’ or larger): $50
- Buses: $100
There are no other admission charges required for visitors to access the Arboretum’s grounds and facilities during the day beyond the standard parking fees listed above.
Asheville City Schools began delivery March 17 to the following locations from 11:30 a.m.-1:30 p.m.
- Community centers at Pisgah View Apartments
- Hillcrest Apartments
- Klondyke Apartments
- Arthur R. Edington Education & Career Center
- Isaac Dickson Elementary School will have a drive-thru option, with that site open from 2-4 p.m.
Public historian Sharon Baggett Withrow will present a lecture, Molasses Catches More Flies Than Vinegar: Woman Suffrage in Western North Carolina, at noon on Thursday, March 19, in the Highsmith Student Union Mountain Suites. This event, part of UNC Asheville’s observance of Women’s History Month, is free and open to everyone.
About the lecture
North Carolina’s woman suffrage movement was born in the mountains. This talk will explore how suffragists and their supporters in Western N.C. used existing preconceptions and power structures to win the right to vote.
About the presenter
A native North Carolinian, Sharon Baggett Withrow has a BA in history from UNC Asheville and an MA in public history from NC State University. She has worked as the education coordinator at the Raleigh City Museum and as director of education at the Smith-McDowell House Museum and Western North Carolina Historical Association. She was the assistant director of International Programs at Warren Wilson College and the department assistant for UNC Asheville’s Office of Graduate Studies and Professional Education before moving to her current role in UNC Asheville’s Chemistry Department. Withrow is an active member of the League of Women Voters of Asheville-Buncombe County.
For more information, please contact Caitlin Manely in UNC Asheville’s Women, Gender and Sexuality Studies Program, [email protected] or 828.251.6634.

Downtown Asheville is known for its eclectic arts and culture and a vibrant food and drink scene that celebrates independent restaurants and locally-sourced ingredients. Learn about this gorgeous city on a Taste Carolina walking tour and discover why Asheville was hailed by National Geographic’s Traveler Magazine as one of the top 15 places in the world to “treat your taste buds”!
Asheville Downtown Eats & Drinks Tour – Asheville’s Downtown Eats & Drinks Tour is a spirited and delicious way to explore the city! You’ll enjoy substantial bites and sips on this guided walking tour, sampling savory and sweet favorites, most paired with small drink pairings. This tour visits Asheville’s hidden gems, including eclectic restaurants and bars, and specialty food stores. You’ll also learn about the history of the city, the architecture, and the incredible culinary scene from your tour guide. By the end of this tour, you will feel like a local!
Private and custom tours can be arranged for any day or night of the week for groups.
Learn gardening basics on how to improve soil, composting, what and when to plant, pest control measures and other techniques to get your vegetable garden off to a great start in this 3-day program. Led by John Murphy.
https://www.facebook.com/AshevilleCommunityTheatre/?epa=SEARCH_BOX
THANK YOU to everyone who has shared videos! We’re going to try the Watch Party again tonight from 5-6 pm. If you aren’t in this line-up, we’ll get you in tomorrow night!
(And if I mess up the Watch Party again, I’ll still share your posts!)


WHAT IT IS… An experience unlike anything you have ever dreamed imaginable. Your host will engage your mind with charm and wit, and immerse your heightened senses of taste, smell, hearing and touch, while you sip five types of wine in complete darkness. Wine pours are paired with tasteful snacks, one liners, and hilarious hijinks. OR our beer tasting experience will take you on a journey of humor, tasting of five local beers, fun beer-friendly pairing, sight deprivation and enhancement of all remaining senses. The lights will be off, and this is not considered a meal. Designed for adults only, 21 and up. 50-60 minutes.
RSVP: https://book.peek.com/s/50ebbb3e-2b93-4669-8868-b0e3f44b793d/6XVp?gaClientId=25825328.1537970504&pbf=_pbf_2&mode=embedded&xp=widget
March Bike/Ped Task Force Meeting Cancelled


Mixed-media paintings in oil & pastel inspired by the local art history & landscape.
This opening reception will take place in conjunction with our True Home Open Mic, where anyone is invited to step up to share song, music, poetry, storytelling, comedy, magic, & other performances in a supportive setting. Mary Montes will present her new collection of art as one of the performances.
Mary Montes is an accomplished painter, in the Flood Gallery residency program, visiting from Miami, Florida. Mary’s new series of mixed-media paintings in oil and pastel on paper and canvas are inspired by the local art history and landscape. She is primarily an abstract expressionist painter, classically trained in figure drawing.
Mary Montes had the opportunity to meet artist Robert Rauschenberg many years ago, which inspired her to research the Black Mountain College and American art history. Mary’s desire to paint in the Asheville & Black Mountain area to find inspiration as well as to pay tribute to her friend Rauschenberg and the artists of the region, resulted in her getting into the residency program at the Flood Gallery.
Mary has had solo exhibitions in Palm Beach, at the Michael Findlay Gallery, Sag Harbor Whaling Museum, NY and Dorfsman Fine Art, Miami, as well as many group shows (Guild Hall, Ashawaga Hall, Quogue Gallery, Sag Harbor Whaling Museum with Peter Marcelle). She is currently represented by Julie Keyes Gallery in Sag Harbor, NY.
An Evening WithGeneral Colin PowellThe 7th Annual Dr. John B. Edmunds, Jr. Distinguished Lecture Series will feature retired four-star U.S. Army General and American statesman Colin L. Powell. Gen. Colin Powell served as secretary of state under President George W. Bush. Prior to that role, he was chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff for both President George H.W. Bush and President Bill Clinton, and was national security advisor for President Ronald Reagan. |
![]() |
TICKETS: https://tickets.vendini.com/ticket-software.html?t=tix&e=02e830394265dc93e364e79fe47d5be4&vqitq=91d495d9-bf3a-4bcd-95c6-05bb0b874c6b&vqitp=f09949f9-9498-4dbc-b908-bf9d019d1514&vqitts=1579043162&vqitc=vendini&vqite=itl&vqitrt=Safetynet&vqith=96b71342564e38efd6e87f33eeb383f3

Swamp Rabbits Hockey offers fantastic fun for the whole family! The Greenville Swamp Rabbits play in the South Division of the Eastern Conference of the ECHL, the premiere AA hockey league. The Swamp Rabbits play 36 home games (October-April) and offer endless entertainment opportunities! For more information on Swamp Rabbits hockey, visit swamprabbits.com. Proud affiliate of the Carolina Hurricanes.
![]()
Mitch Fortune brings you an irreverent and nostalgia filled night of pop culture trivia every Thursday night 7-9 pm at the One Stop in Downtown Asheville. A potpourri of movies, music, TV show trivia just for you!
Join host and Malaprop’s bookseller Patricia Furnish to discuss a range of books across different periods of history. The club tackles challenging subjects, hence “NOTORIOUS.” Click here to see a full schedule of what the club is reading. Club attendees get 10% off the book at Malaprop’s!
The club meets at Malaprop’s on the 3rd Thursday of every month at 7:00 pm.

The Quarantine Concert Series – Streaming from The Orange Peel
& PULP
Iamavl and The Orange Peel are partnering to create a free live concert streaming series for Asheville and the world to enjoy!
Full schedule below!
Tune in at 7:00 pm EST to watch these amazing performances on the Iamavl Facebook Live Stream, on their website at www.iamavl.com or on their YouTube Channel.
Also please don’t forget to donate to/tip the band at: https://iamavl.com/musician-relief-fund/ !
Sit back, relax from the comfort of home and enjoy The Quarantine Concert Series on Iamavl where we bring the music to YOU!
SCHEDULE:
3/19 – Russ Wilson and his King’s of Jazz – 7:00 pm
3/20 – Travers Brothership – 7:00 pm
3/21 – Screaming Js – 7:00 pm
3/22 – Andrew Scotchie (of Andrew Scotchie & the River Rats) – 7:00 pm
3/23 – Bill Altman – 7:00 pm
3/24 – Asheville Music Hall presents The Tuesday Night Funk Jam – 7:00 pm
3/25 – The Moon and You – 7:00 pm
3/26 – The Connor Law Duo – 7:00 pm
3/27 – Asheville Circus – 7:00 pm
3/28 – Jeff Sipe and Friends – 7:00 pm
3/29 – Richard Shulman, Composer of New Age, Jazz, and Classical Music – The Richard Shulman Trio – 7:00 pm
3/30 – Lo Wolf – 7:00 pm
3/31 – Bardic Academy – 7:00 pm
4/1 – Hustle Souls – 7:00 pm
4/2 – Darby Wilcox – 7:00 pm
4/3 – Vaden Landers – 7:00 pm
4/4 – PYLETRIBE – 7:00 pm
4/5 – Pleasures of the Ultraviolent – 7:00 pm
4/6 – Lotion – 7:00 pm
4/7 – Sparrow Pants (of The Resonant Rogues) – 7:00 pm
4/8 – Dr. Bacon – 7:00 pm
4/9 – Anthony Wayne Vibe – 7:00 pm
4/10 – Ambiguous Roots – 7:00 pm

Natanya Ann Pulley, author of “With Teeth,” a Many Voices Project winner in fiction, will read from and discuss her writing at 7 p.m. on Thursday, March 19, in Karpen Hall, Laurel Forum. This event is free and open to everyone with no tickets needed.
John Pizzarelli and Catherine Russell transport audiences back in time for an evening of A Tribute to Nat King Cole and the Ladies of Song. Paying homage to Nat King Cole and the iconic singers featured on his historic television show – like Dinah Washington, Ella Fitzgerald, Peggy Lee, and Carmen McRae – Pizzarelli and Russell will perform Cole’s memorable hits, such as “Route 66,” “Straighten Up and Fly Right,” and “Paper Moon,” along with timeless works from the ladies of song.
World-renowned guitarist and singer Pizzarelli has established himself as a prime contemporary interpreter of the Great American Songbook and beyond, with a repertoire that includes Joni Mitchell, Neil Young, Tom Waits, Antônio Carlos Jobim, and The Beatles. He has been hailed by The Boston Globe for “reinvigorating the Great American Songbook and re-popularizing jazz.” The Toronto Star pegged him as “the genial genius of the guitar.” And The Seattle Times saluted him as “a rare entertainer of the old school.”
Russell dazzles audiences with familiar favorites and forgotten treasures alike. Performing as a backup singer, multi-instrumentalist, and lead singer before launching her solo recording career, she has appeared on over 200 albums. In 2012, she received a Grammy® Award as a featured artist on the soundtrack of the HBO series Boardwalk Empire. With “a voice that wails like a horn and whispers like a snake in the Garden of Eden” (NPR), “she virtually stands alone on today’s jazz landscape” (Los Angeles Times).
https://www.facebook.com/events/502845613584536/
This modern adaptation of Henrik Ibsen’s An Enemy of the People follows the fate of a small suburb and its newly opened charter school. The science teacher, Dr. Stock, discovers issues on the school grounds and takes on a mission to inform the public. Both hilarious and heartbreaking, this play addresses themes of truth, greed and denial, while serving as a mirror for our outrageous political reality.





