Apr 28 Sunday
Explore the galleries with the Museum mascots and the Kids Guide! Select which cowpoke and trail you would like to follow and learn more about all the fun and fascinating things at The Cowboy. Join Chester the Scissortail Flycatcher, Hopalong the Jackrabbit, Ma’ii the Coyote and Cisco the Mustang and solve the Cowboy Code.
Free for members or with Museum admission.
Inspired by Oklahoma’s wide-open landscape, WOEFF showcases experimental films that will open peoples’ eyes to the alternative forms, structures, and styles of film. The third annual festival will showcase 58 short films from around the world.Free admission to all five screenings.
Award-winning Drew Holcomb & the Neighbors bring their new album to our stage - April 28! Come celebrate community, collaboration, and contemporary American roots music at their Find Your People Tour.
Doors at 7:00 PM. Show at 8:00 PM.
Tulsa Community College Theatre presents original play, After Olive April 25-28
Tulsa Community College Theatre will present an original play, After Olive written by Bee Johnson April 25-27th at 8pm and April 28th at 2pm in the PACE Studio Theatre on the TCC Southeast Campus. Bee Johnson is currently a film student at Columbia University in Chicago. She attended TCC from 2020-2022 and wrote After Olive as a screen play in Scriptwriting class. TCC chose the original script for its 2023-2024 theatre season and adapted it into a stage play. The story is about a young woman, Olive played by Valentine Tarpley who dying of a mysterious disease decides to spend her last week and a half in the company of her friend, the captain, played by Brayden Marchant and finally leave the island that she has lived on her whole life to explore the mainland in the brief time she has left. Also appearing in the play is Ana Nunez, Jillian Mohn, Allie Newton, Emily Bruegger, Brenen Hankins, Gavin Boudreaux, and Aspen Marshall. The production stage manager is Jenna Soltis and the assistant stage manager is Canyon Garner. The play is student designed with Jenna Soltis designing sound, Alex Ryals designing lights, Moriah Jestus designing set and properties and Melanie Torres Cordero designing costumes. Mark Frank is directing the play with Aaron Kennedy and Emily Westerfield serving as faculty advisors. Randall Pike is the technical director with Aaron Kennedy designing projections. The play is an associate entry for the Kennedy Center American College Theatre Festival, Region VI.
Apr 29 Monday
Turn your passion for yoga into YOUR CALLING! Dig deep, discover your strength, and fire up your life!405 YOGA OKC has one of the highest alumni-rated Yoga Teacher Training programs in the nation.Our Spring 2024 Training starts March 9th! Join us for 4 months and graduate by the end of June...With our diverse, passionate and experienced teaching team, you will gain the skills to empower yourself and those around you, explore and deepen your own practice through a powerful athletic ashtanga-based practice and personally grow in a more authentic, sustainable way.TUITION includes full YTT investment AND a 4 month unlimited yoga pass at 405 YOGA for use during the program! Want to learn more? Visit www.405yoga.com/ytt200
ARTSPACE at Untitled’s annual Spotlight exhibition features an all-indigenous show featuring woodblock prints, a form of carving in which the artist makes markings on the top surface of a woodblock, leaving a raised image. Ink is then applied to the carved woodblock and is then printed on paper or fabric. Mark your calendars now for the opening of Marking: Indigenous Narrative at ARTSPACE at Untitled on April 11th, 5-8 PM.
Held since 1968, Muskogee's Azalea Festival in Honor Heights Park boasts 40 acres of manicured gardens with over 30,000 azaleas in 625 varieties. Visit this stunning park throughout the month of April for one of the top events in the South. The annual festival celebrates the blooming of azaleas, tulips, dogwoods and wisteria as these buds begin to unfurl during the warmer temperatures of spring to the delight of visitors.
Often considered one of the top spring events in the nation, Muskogee's Azalea Festival attracts visitors from around the world. Make your way to Honor Heights Park to enjoy a drive along paved roadways that wind around the blooming flowers, walkways perfect for runners or birders, five lakes, a variety of picturesque ponds, a butterfly sanctuary and a tree arboretum.
The Azalea Festival not only highlights the beauty of nature in Spring, but also plays host to a parade and numerous other events. The annual Azalea Festival parade features everything from floats, antique cars, clowns and pageant queens, to horseback riders and cyclists.
In recent years, this much-loved festival has expanded to include a chili and barbecue cook-off, a 5K and fun run, a bicycle ride, garden market and plenty of live entertainment. In mid-April, the park will welcome visitors for Party in the Park, a tasting of Oklahoma food and wine in a breathtaking setting. Thousands of tulips will be in bloom surrounding the event, which will be set up on a lawn under tents.
Celebrate the kaleidoscope of color that blooms each spring. Enjoy free tours of Honor Heights Park and don't forget your camera - you'll want to capture every bloom and every memory at the Azalea Festival.
"Magnificent Beauty: Georgia O’Keeffe and the Art of the Flower" examines explorations of flowers in painting and photography by O’Keeffe and Imogen Cunningham, highlighting their unique interpretations of the traditional subject matter.
The annual Trail of Tears Art Show, hosted on the grounds of Cherokee Springs Plaza in Tahlequah, presents authentic Native American art in one of Oklahoma's oldest art shows. Open to artists from all federally recognized Native American tribes, the Trail of Tears Art Show displays a wide range of creativity and artistic style. This diverse art show attracts artists, art dealers and visitors from across the nation.
One of the most prestigious multi-tribal art shows in the country, the Trail of Tears Art Show began as a means of cultivating the art form of painting as a way of expressing Native American heritage within the Cherokee Nation. Peruse this year's Trail of Tears Art Show and view categories that historically have included basketry, pottery, graphics, sculpture, miniatures and the annual "Trail of Tears" theme.