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  • Art/Race/Violence: A Collaborative Response

    Crosstown Arts Galleries 1350 Concourse Ave., Suite 280, Memphis, TN, United States

    Art/Race/Violence: A Collaborative Response is a multidisciplinary project organized by visual culture historian Dr. Earnestine Jenkins and artist Richard Lou in collaboration with Crosstown Arts. Through this project, local artists collectively explore intersections of race and systemic violence through the lens of cultural expression. Conceived to commemorate the 100th anniversary of Ell Persons’ very public murder by members of the Memphis community through the act of lynching, the project was further inspired by recent events to memorialize lynching sites in the broader Memphis community in an effort to bring about greater understanding of racial oppression and violence in the South.

  • Lavender’s Landscape

    Crosstown Arts Galleries 1350 Concourse Ave., Suite 280, Memphis, TN, United States

    Anthony Lee
    Latex and Urethane on Panel, Triptych, 2017

    Composing a triptych, these works by artist Anthony Lee are a continuous, long-scale, lavender tonal gradient, equal in light value but demonstrating the effect of desaturation. Viewed from left to right, it begins as  intense lavender, and then through gradation it finishes into its grey equivalent. This adds a fourth-dimensional sense of movement or transfer within the works, allowing the viewer’s eyes to calmly experience the space in the works as they seemlessly shift color.

  • Open Crit

    Crosstown Arts’ Open Crit series, organized in partnership with ArtsMemphis, is a monthly critique event where visual artists are invited to bring new and/or in-progress studio work for critical feedback and group discussion particular to each artist’s practice. All sessions are free and open to the public.

  • MicroCinema Club

    Monthly short film screening series, presented by Indie Memphis & Crosstown Arts.

    This month: Festival Departures Shorts
    Encore of short films in this year's Indie Memphis Film Festival Departures category that bend genres with experimental filmmaking and animation.

  • The Poetic Murder Mystery

    Rhodes McCoy Theater 2000 N. Parkway, Memphis, TN, United States

    Written and performed by the Crosstown Youth Theatre. Free admission

  • Hustle: Critical Art Writing

    Why is critical art writing an important part of the thriving arts scene? What does relevant critical writing look like? Who does it? How can you do it? Professor Virginia Solomon will help us explore this important topic.

    Hustle: professional development for artists is a free program organized by ArtsMemphis, UrbanArt Commission, and Crosstown Arts.

  • Travel Talk: Ultimate Journeys for Two

    National Geographic authors, HoneyTrek bloggers, and the world's longest honeymooners, Mike & Anne Howard, are coming to Memphis. Join them for an afternoon of travel inspiration, tips, and tricks as […]

  • Art/Race/Violence: Artist+Community Conversation

    Crosstown Arts Galleries 1350 Concourse Ave., Suite 280, Memphis, TN, United States

    Conversation with artist teams Jamin Carter and Mary Jo Karimnia and Terry Lynn and Andrea Morales, led by Ladrica Menson-Furr and Richard Lou.

  • Indie Wednesday Film Series

    Weekly film screenings hosted by Indie Memphis. Films will screen at Crosstown Arts, Malco’s Studio on the Square, and Ridgeway Theatre on a rotating basis.

    This week: Rat Film — Across walls, fences, and alleys, rats not only expose our boundaries of separation but make homes in them. Rat Film is a feature-length documentary that uses the rat — as well as the humans who love them, live with them, and kill them — to explore the history of Baltimore.
    The film will be followed with a Q&A with director Theo Anthony. Admission is pay-what-you-can.

  • The Moonpie Project presents Elloo

    Crosstown Alley 430 N. Cleveland

    A new mural by Elloo

    Location: Crosstown Arts alley between 430 & 438 N. Cleveland

    Free food + drinks

    The Moonpie Project is an ongoing, rotating mural series curated by Michael Roy in memory of muralist Brad Wells