Latest Trusted Mic Series!
Free Outdoor Concert at the Glass Station Lawn – Bring your own chairs – Sit Back – Enjoy! Food and Drinks will be available for purchase.
Straight from NYC “Trusted Mic Live” Featuring GLRYA and Rakiem Walker Project bringing you the very best music to get you on your feet and dance along! This FREE outdoor concert will also feature guest artist Jamal Peoples ! There will also be some very special artists from Eastern NC that will light the stage on fire with their hot vocals ! Bring your own chairs ! Come and enjoy at the DeVisconti Lawn behind the ECU Glastation on Wilson St in downtown Farmville.
Currently in the Emily Monk Davidson Gallery
is featured artist
Andrea Horton-Morton
artistry in resin, fluid art and mixed media
Andrea Horton-Morton is from Wilson, NC where she operates a gallery and teaching space called Art at 123 Gallery. She found painting without a paintbrush a new adventure that brought joy, excitement, energy, and good vibes.
Farmville Art Walk – Every Third Friday
Come to downtown Farmville and experience glass blowing demonstrations at the ECU Glass Station, with Mike Tracy. Pitt Community College’s Ceramic Studio is right next door. Then walk over to the Farmville Community Arts Center to visit our latest exhibit, featuring the works of Dindy Reich. The East Carolina Art Space is open as well, featuring an eclectic collection of art, located on Main Street one block south of Farmville Community Arts Council. The Farmville Public Library will be open with something special too! Afterwards, enjoy the Plank Road Restaurant or a real sweet treat of homemade ice cream at Paleteria Deya of Farmville. If you’re in the mood for a delicious cocktail, the Pour Haus is a fun pub and maybe some karaoke!
Upcoming Shows
Recent Events
Grammy Award Winning “Ranky Tanky” is a quintet who performs hip swinging dance songs and traditional spirituals as jazz influenced Gullah music. Due to the geographic isolation of the Low Country shore of the US Southeast, the Seal Islands preserved West African rhythms, dialects and musical traditions emerging as the distinct Gullah culture.
Welcome to Almost, Maine, a place that’s so far north, it’s almost not in the United States. It’s almost in Canada. And it’s not quite a town, because its residents never got around to getting organized. So it almost doesn’t exist. One cold, clear, winter night, as the northern lights hover in the star-filled sky above, the residents of Almost, Maine, find themselves falling in and out of love in unexpected and hilarious ways. Knees are bruised. Hearts are broken. But the bruises heal, and the hearts mend—almost—in this delightful midwinter night’s dream. Almost Maine by John Cariani. (Fourth Revised Edition – DPS-Broadway Licensing Group)