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.

Sunday, June 8, 2025
Nature Photography Weekend
Jun 8 @ 8:00 am – 3:00 pm
Grandfather Mountain

This popular shutterbug weekend includes presentations from top nature photographers, hands-on field courses, a friendly contest and the rare opportunity to photograph the mountain’s spectacular scenery before and after regular business hours.

This revamped version of the popular weekend will include changes to better welcome all levels of photographers, making it more fun and engaging for all – while better connecting participants with the wonders and unique ecology of Grandfather Mountain. This year, more than ever, we hope to not only help participants learn about photography, but to also inspire them to preserve the natural world. Activities begin Friday evening and conclude Sunday midday.

June 6, 2025 @8:00 am – June 8, 2025 @3:00 pm

Toe River Studio Tour
Jun 8 @ 10:00 am – 5:00 pm
Toe River Arts
Toe River Arts is thrilled to announce that June 2025 Studio Tour is coming right up, June 6-8, 2025. In the wake of Helene, we know that our artists, galleries and community members need events to help lift our spirits and enliven our local economy.
This self-guided, driving tour features 97 Toe River Artists and 8 Galleries and offers local and visiting art collectors the chance to see our artists in their natural, creative studio habitats. A true glimpse into the mind and makings of each artist.
So, mark your calendars for the Spring Studio Tour happening from June 6-8, 2025. Alongside the tour is the annual Spring Studio Tour Exhibition in the Toe River Arts Kokol Gallery from May 10 – June 8, 2025. The Meet the Artists reception will be on Friday, June 6 from 5:30-7:30 in the Kokol Gallery.
 Iron and Ink: Prints from America’s Machine Age
Jun 8 @ 11:00 am – 6:00 pm
Asheville Art Museum

Our latest exhibition, Iron and Ink: Prints from America’s Machine Agefocuses on a dynamic era in American history when industrialization and advances in technology transformed urban landscapes and redefined the nature of work and leisure nationwide.

Showcasing Collection prints from 1905 to the 1940s, Iron and Ink explores connections between industrial labor, urbanization, and the growing middle class. The exhibition highlights works by Works Progress Administration artists from the 1930s whose powerful images of machinery, skyscrapers, and daily life—both at work and recreation—capture this transformational era in American society.

This exhibition is organized by the Asheville Art Museum and Robin Klaus, PhD, assistant curator.

Coatlicue & Las Meninas
Jun 8 @ 11:00 am – 6:00 pm
Asheville Art Museum

The mirror has been a powerful symbol invoked in the arts across centuries and cultures. Mirrors double reality, question the veracity of your perception, open portals to other dimensions, and act as objects of magic and divination. In the series Black Mirror/Espejo Negro (2007, ongoing), Pedro Lasch employs the mirror as an emblem that interrogates the tension between presence and absence, colonial histories, and the politics of visibility. The selections from the series displayed in this installation conceptually bring together canonical works of art from early modern Europe and prominent pre-Columbian sculptural figures, whose superimposed images emerge specter-like through darkened glass. Each work includes an accompanying text the artist produced for that pairing.

Country Brunch w/ Mucho Gumbo
Jun 8 @ 11:00 am
The Grey Eagle

The Grey Eagle and Worthwhile Sounds Present Country Brunch w/ Mucho Gumbo

Doors: 11am // Show: 11am

Grey Eagle Music Hall
– FREE SHOW!!!
– ALL AGES
– LIMITED SEATING IS FIRST COME, FIRST SERVED
Country Brunch at The Grey Eagle – a music series for early birds. Country Brunch showcases a goldmine of local country bands that can usually only be found playing late nights in local and regional venues, and brings them out  into the light of day for lovers of an early matinee show. The series runs monthly with a different band each month.
Native America: In Translation
Jun 8 @ 11:00 am – 6:00 pm
Asheville Art Museum

The Asheville Art Museum presents Native America: In Translation, an
exhibition curated by Apsáalooke artist Wendy Red Star, on view from May 22 through November 3,
2025. Featuring work by seven Indigenous photographers and lens-based artists from across North
America, the exhibition explores urgent questions of identity, heritage, land rights, and the ongoing
impact of colonialism.

Building on Red Star’s role as guest editor of the Fall 2020 issue of Aperture magazine, Native
America: In Translation continues the conversation through personal and often experimental visual
storytelling. Using self-portraits, performance-based imagery, and multimedia assemblages, the
artists offer new perspectives on Native life and representation today.

Four Seasons Chamber Orchestra Spring Masterworks Concert “Visions of Hope and Peace”
Jun 8 @ 3:00 pm
St John in the Wilderness

The 4SCO is pleased to present a Spring Masterworks Concert: Visions of Hope and Peace. This uplifting program features inspiring works from iconic film scores and by pioneering contemporary composers. The concert features hopeful and visionary selections with John Barry’s award winning “Dances with Wolves Suite.” John Williams, a master of film music with a familiar and captivating sound is featured with “The People’s House” from Lincoln, “The Empire Strikes Back” and “Jurassic Park.” Valerie Coleman’s “Umoja,” which means unity, provides clashes of musical dissonance then cohesion as a unified anthem. The program concludes with Joe Hisaishi’s exhilarating “World of Dreams.”

4 Seasons Chamber Orchestra Spring Masterworks “Visions of Hope and Peace” Concert
Jun 8 @ 3:30 pm
St John in the Wilderness

The concert features hopeful and visionary selections with John Barry’s award winning “Dances with Wolves Suite.” John Williams, a master of film music with a familiar and captivating sound is featured with “The People’s House” from Lincoln, “The Empire Strikes Back” and “Jurassic Park.” Valerie Coleman’s “Umoja,” which means unity, provides clashes of musical dissonance then cohesion as a unified anthem. The program concludes with Joe Hisaishi’s exhilarating “World of Dreams.”

Heather Maloney in Olivette
Jun 8 @ 4:00 pm
Olivette Riverside Community and Farm

Join us in the beautiful Asheville neighborhood of Olivette for an outdoor concert by “writer song-singer” Heather Maloney.

BYOB • BYOC (chair) • $25 • KIDS ARE FREE!

Massachusetts-based artist Heather Maloney found music in the midst of three years at a meditation center, honing a sound moored in days of silent reflection and reverence for storytellers like Joni, Rilke, Ken Burns, and the anonymous authors of Zen parables.

With over 1,000 shows in the US & Canada, and 8 studio albums under her belt, she released her first live album, “No Shortcuts: Live at the Academy” in 2022.
Heather’s songs have played on NPR stations across the country and her live appearances have aired on syndicated programming like eTown and AudioTree. Her song “Nightstand Drawer” was used in the season finale of the CBS TV series “Elementary”, and her songs have also been featured on a number of editorial Spotify playlists & Starbucks’ in-store nationwide playlists.

Heather has toured throughout the US & Canada as a headliner and also in support of acts including Lake Street Dive, Shakey Graves, Gary Clark Jr., Rodrigo y Gabriela, Colin Hay (Men at Work), Mary Chapin Carpenter, Shawn Colvin, Dar Williams and many more.

Josh Gates Live!
Jun 8 @ 7:00 pm
Harrah's Cherokee Center Asheville

Josh Gates LIVE! An Evening of Legends, Mysteries & Tales of Adventure at the Harrah’s Cherokee Center Asheville.

Tuesday, June 10, 2025
viewshed
Jun 10 @ 11:00 am – 5:00 pm
Black Mountain College

viewshed illuminates the enduring impact of Black Mountain College as a crucible of artistic experimentation and exchange, tracing the transmission of ideas across generations and exploring how BMC’s radical pedagogical approaches continue to shape contemporary artistic practice. The exhibition stages a dynamic dialogue between past and present, featuring contemporary artists Richard Garet, Jennie MaryTai Liu, Deanna Sirlin, and Susie Taylor alongside seminal BMC figures such as Dorothea Rockburne, Sewell (Si) Sillman, and Jacob Lawrence. By engaging with transparency, structure, color, collaboration, and expanded forms, viewshed brings into focus the porous boundaries between disciplines, unfolding as a sensorial and conceptual investigation into the shifting terrain of artistic influence. The exhibition highlights works that span painting, textile, sound, and performance, inviting viewers to consider the ways in which artistic methodologies evolve and reverberate across time. At its core, viewshed underscores the ways in which BMC’s experimental ethos continues to inspire artists to challenge, reinterpret, and expand the possibilities of creative expression.

Gooseberry
Jun 10 @ 8:00 pm
The Grey Eagle

The Grey Eagle and Worthwhile Sounds Present Gooseberry with Fo Daniels

Doors: 7pm // Show: 8pm
$18.45

Grey Eagle Music Hall
ALL AGES
STANDING ROOM ONLY
Brooklyn-based trio Gooseberry, formed in 2019, melds alternative rock, indie, and blues to craft their distinctive sound. Comprising Asa Daniels (guitar, vocals), Evin Rossington (drums), and Will Hammond (bass), the band has racked up millions of streams and has garnered praise from editorial stalwarts Galore, Under the Radar, and more. They’ve become integral to NYC’s music scene, headlining venues like Bowery Ballroom, as well as supporting notable touring acts such as Ringo Starr, BabyJake, and Tanner Usrey.
Wednesday, June 11, 2025
 Iron and Ink: Prints from America’s Machine Age
Jun 11 @ 11:00 am – 6:00 pm
Asheville Art Museum

Our latest exhibition, Iron and Ink: Prints from America’s Machine Agefocuses on a dynamic era in American history when industrialization and advances in technology transformed urban landscapes and redefined the nature of work and leisure nationwide.

Showcasing Collection prints from 1905 to the 1940s, Iron and Ink explores connections between industrial labor, urbanization, and the growing middle class. The exhibition highlights works by Works Progress Administration artists from the 1930s whose powerful images of machinery, skyscrapers, and daily life—both at work and recreation—capture this transformational era in American society.

This exhibition is organized by the Asheville Art Museum and Robin Klaus, PhD, assistant curator.

Coatlicue & Las Meninas
Jun 11 @ 11:00 am – 6:00 pm
Asheville Art Museum

The mirror has been a powerful symbol invoked in the arts across centuries and cultures. Mirrors double reality, question the veracity of your perception, open portals to other dimensions, and act as objects of magic and divination. In the series Black Mirror/Espejo Negro (2007, ongoing), Pedro Lasch employs the mirror as an emblem that interrogates the tension between presence and absence, colonial histories, and the politics of visibility. The selections from the series displayed in this installation conceptually bring together canonical works of art from early modern Europe and prominent pre-Columbian sculptural figures, whose superimposed images emerge specter-like through darkened glass. Each work includes an accompanying text the artist produced for that pairing.

Native America: In Translation
Jun 11 @ 11:00 am – 6:00 pm
Asheville Art Museum

The Asheville Art Museum presents Native America: In Translation, an
exhibition curated by Apsáalooke artist Wendy Red Star, on view from May 22 through November 3,
2025. Featuring work by seven Indigenous photographers and lens-based artists from across North
America, the exhibition explores urgent questions of identity, heritage, land rights, and the ongoing
impact of colonialism.

Building on Red Star’s role as guest editor of the Fall 2020 issue of Aperture magazine, Native
America: In Translation continues the conversation through personal and often experimental visual
storytelling. Using self-portraits, performance-based imagery, and multimedia assemblages, the
artists offer new perspectives on Native life and representation today.

viewshed
Jun 11 @ 11:00 am – 5:00 pm
Black Mountain College

viewshed illuminates the enduring impact of Black Mountain College as a crucible of artistic experimentation and exchange, tracing the transmission of ideas across generations and exploring how BMC’s radical pedagogical approaches continue to shape contemporary artistic practice. The exhibition stages a dynamic dialogue between past and present, featuring contemporary artists Richard Garet, Jennie MaryTai Liu, Deanna Sirlin, and Susie Taylor alongside seminal BMC figures such as Dorothea Rockburne, Sewell (Si) Sillman, and Jacob Lawrence. By engaging with transparency, structure, color, collaboration, and expanded forms, viewshed brings into focus the porous boundaries between disciplines, unfolding as a sensorial and conceptual investigation into the shifting terrain of artistic influence. The exhibition highlights works that span painting, textile, sound, and performance, inviting viewers to consider the ways in which artistic methodologies evolve and reverberate across time. At its core, viewshed underscores the ways in which BMC’s experimental ethos continues to inspire artists to challenge, reinterpret, and expand the possibilities of creative expression.

Full Moon Serenity Sound Bath
Jun 11 @ 6:30 pm – 7:30 pm
Center for Spiritual Living Asheville

Celebrate the Full Moon by immersing yourself with the healing vibrations of a Sound Bath! The full moon offers a boost in healing to our energy field.

Join your host Kristin Hillegas, for a one-hour Serenity Sound Bath and experience a deeply immersive, full-body sound and vibrational experience. A sound bath can cleanse your soul, restore your balance, surround you with peace and tranquility and stimulate healing.

Note: Please bring a yoga mat/pillow/blanket since you will be lying on the floor. Wear warm, comfortable, and flexible clothing.

The Sound Bath will take place upstairs in the Education Building. Choose your space starting at 6:15 PM, doors close promptly at 6:30 PM.

This session is being offered on a Sliding Scale of $10-$20.

Accessible parking is available in the Center for Spiritual Living Asheville upper parking lot. The entrance to the upper parking lot is off of S. Bear Creek Rd between Science of Mind Way and Sand Hill Rd.
There is a boardwalk walk-way from the upper parking lot to the building entrance.

NC Writers Network & The Brandy Bar host “In the Company of Writers” series with author Tom Hooker
Jun 11 @ 7:00 pm – 9:00 pm
The Brandy Bar + Cocktails

The North Carolina Writers Network West and The Brandy Bar + Cocktails present TOM HOOKER as next in their series “In the Company of Writers.”

This program offers a series of personal and conversational dialogues featuring guest writers/poets followed by an open mic forum. These inspirational gatherings will elucidate and entertain those attending. The guest author speaks from 7-8 PM with an open mic from 8 -9 PM. The Chicago blues music of “Hollywood Johnny Cosgrove” (accompanied by Charlie Wilkinson) welcomes you, continues during intermission, and closes the evening. Sign-ups for the open mic are available at the entrance to the reading room.

Born and raised in North Mississippi, Tom Hooker graduated from the University of Mississippi. He and his family moved to western North Carolina in 1988. Out of the Frying Pan is Tom’s most recent novel. He’s also authored the novels Year of the White Dog and Twenty-Five Angels and co-authored with Gary Ader The War Never Ends. Two non-fiction books—Calvary’s Child: The Life of Amanda Carol Hooker and Season of Shadows—add to his publishing credits. His short stories and poems have appeared in various literary journals, and his poem “The Senses of You” won the 2024 Mensa International Poetry Competition. Books will be available for purchase.

Ginger Root
Jun 11 @ 8:00 pm
The Grey Eagle

The Grey Eagle and Worthwhile Sounds Present Ginger Root.

Doors: 7pm // Show: 8pm
$30.75

Grey Eagle Music Hall
ALL AGES
STANDING ROOM ONLY
A multi-instrumentalist, producer, songwriter, and visual artist from Southern California, Cameron Lew has crafted his Ginger Root project steadily since 2017, inviting a fervent and growing legion of fans into storylines drawn across mediums: captivating albums with accompanying films and globe-spanning tours.
Thursday, June 12, 2025
A Mid-Summer Soireè at Overmountain Vineyards
Jun 12 all-day
Overmountain Vineyards

Join us at Overmountain Vineyards with DJ Aaron Greene for an evening of fun, food, and dancing! Ticketholders will be treated to Overmountain Vineyard wines, NC craft beers, and heavy hors d’oeurves while breaking down on the dance floor! More info to come…

 Iron and Ink: Prints from America’s Machine Age
Jun 12 @ 11:00 am – 6:00 pm
Asheville Art Museum

Our latest exhibition, Iron and Ink: Prints from America’s Machine Agefocuses on a dynamic era in American history when industrialization and advances in technology transformed urban landscapes and redefined the nature of work and leisure nationwide.

Showcasing Collection prints from 1905 to the 1940s, Iron and Ink explores connections between industrial labor, urbanization, and the growing middle class. The exhibition highlights works by Works Progress Administration artists from the 1930s whose powerful images of machinery, skyscrapers, and daily life—both at work and recreation—capture this transformational era in American society.

This exhibition is organized by the Asheville Art Museum and Robin Klaus, PhD, assistant curator.

Coatlicue & Las Meninas
Jun 12 @ 11:00 am – 6:00 pm
Asheville Art Museum

The mirror has been a powerful symbol invoked in the arts across centuries and cultures. Mirrors double reality, question the veracity of your perception, open portals to other dimensions, and act as objects of magic and divination. In the series Black Mirror/Espejo Negro (2007, ongoing), Pedro Lasch employs the mirror as an emblem that interrogates the tension between presence and absence, colonial histories, and the politics of visibility. The selections from the series displayed in this installation conceptually bring together canonical works of art from early modern Europe and prominent pre-Columbian sculptural figures, whose superimposed images emerge specter-like through darkened glass. Each work includes an accompanying text the artist produced for that pairing.

Native America: In Translation
Jun 12 @ 11:00 am – 6:00 pm
Asheville Art Museum

The Asheville Art Museum presents Native America: In Translation, an
exhibition curated by Apsáalooke artist Wendy Red Star, on view from May 22 through November 3,
2025. Featuring work by seven Indigenous photographers and lens-based artists from across North
America, the exhibition explores urgent questions of identity, heritage, land rights, and the ongoing
impact of colonialism.

Building on Red Star’s role as guest editor of the Fall 2020 issue of Aperture magazine, Native
America: In Translation continues the conversation through personal and often experimental visual
storytelling. Using self-portraits, performance-based imagery, and multimedia assemblages, the
artists offer new perspectives on Native life and representation today.

viewshed
Jun 12 @ 11:00 am – 5:00 pm
Black Mountain College

viewshed illuminates the enduring impact of Black Mountain College as a crucible of artistic experimentation and exchange, tracing the transmission of ideas across generations and exploring how BMC’s radical pedagogical approaches continue to shape contemporary artistic practice. The exhibition stages a dynamic dialogue between past and present, featuring contemporary artists Richard Garet, Jennie MaryTai Liu, Deanna Sirlin, and Susie Taylor alongside seminal BMC figures such as Dorothea Rockburne, Sewell (Si) Sillman, and Jacob Lawrence. By engaging with transparency, structure, color, collaboration, and expanded forms, viewshed brings into focus the porous boundaries between disciplines, unfolding as a sensorial and conceptual investigation into the shifting terrain of artistic influence. The exhibition highlights works that span painting, textile, sound, and performance, inviting viewers to consider the ways in which artistic methodologies evolve and reverberate across time. At its core, viewshed underscores the ways in which BMC’s experimental ethos continues to inspire artists to challenge, reinterpret, and expand the possibilities of creative expression.

“WNC Craft Futures: From Here” Community Reception + Open Studios
Jun 12 @ 5:30 pm – 7:30 pm
Center for Craft

Join the Center for Craft as we celebrate the 40 regional artists from Western North Carolina in our current exhibition, WNC Craft Futures: From Here. The show provides a view into the deep well of craft skill and creativity from here while also offering a glimpse of where our community can go in the aftermath of a devastating storm.
Live music, refreshments, hands-on craft-making activities, open studios, and more! Free and open to the public. RSVPs kindly requested to help us plan!

Turning the Page on Helene – Altered Book Art Night
Jun 12 @ 5:30 pm – 8:00 pm
The Whale :: West Asheville Location

See how to make altered books and make a page for one of the volumes of Turning the Page on Helene. All supplies are provided free of charge. No previous art experience is necessary!

Turning the Page on Helene is a community-based art project that is using the transformative power of altered books to tell our communities’ stories of Hurricane Helene through the visual arts. The goal is to create a safe space for community members to share experiences of the hurricane as well as their hopes for rebuilding a better and brighter future.

Josh Blake’s Jukebox Presents: An Evening of Latin Grooves + Lotus Feet and DJ MTN Vibz
Jun 12 @ 7:00 pm
The Grey Eagle
Doors: 6pm // Show: 7pm
$16.06

Grey Eagle Music Hall – Special Event
ALL AGES
STANDING ROOM ONLY
Josh Blake’s Jukebox Presents: An Evening of Latin Grooves
Get ready for a vibrant night of rhythm and soul as Josh Blake’s Jukebox returns to The Grey Eagle with “An Evening of Latin Grooves”, a special live music experience that celebrates the rich and infectious sounds of Latin-inspired music.
Friday, June 13, 2025
FLORA AND FAUNA: TROPICAL PARADISE! WITH BE ROSE SNYDER
Jun 13 @ 9:00 am – 12:00 pm
Odyssey Clayworks

Join us for a summer full of creativity in our fun and festive studio. Ages 6-10. Every camper will get at least one day on the potter’s wheel. Wheel camps will use the wheel each day in addition to other cool projects. Are you ready? Let’s start the show!

 Iron and Ink: Prints from America’s Machine Age
Jun 13 @ 11:00 am – 6:00 pm
Asheville Art Museum

Our latest exhibition, Iron and Ink: Prints from America’s Machine Agefocuses on a dynamic era in American history when industrialization and advances in technology transformed urban landscapes and redefined the nature of work and leisure nationwide.

Showcasing Collection prints from 1905 to the 1940s, Iron and Ink explores connections between industrial labor, urbanization, and the growing middle class. The exhibition highlights works by Works Progress Administration artists from the 1930s whose powerful images of machinery, skyscrapers, and daily life—both at work and recreation—capture this transformational era in American society.

This exhibition is organized by the Asheville Art Museum and Robin Klaus, PhD, assistant curator.

Coatlicue & Las Meninas
Jun 13 @ 11:00 am – 6:00 pm
Asheville Art Museum

The mirror has been a powerful symbol invoked in the arts across centuries and cultures. Mirrors double reality, question the veracity of your perception, open portals to other dimensions, and act as objects of magic and divination. In the series Black Mirror/Espejo Negro (2007, ongoing), Pedro Lasch employs the mirror as an emblem that interrogates the tension between presence and absence, colonial histories, and the politics of visibility. The selections from the series displayed in this installation conceptually bring together canonical works of art from early modern Europe and prominent pre-Columbian sculptural figures, whose superimposed images emerge specter-like through darkened glass. Each work includes an accompanying text the artist produced for that pairing.