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Dayton Most Metro

Lily’s Bistro Garden Party To Benefit Gem City Market

September 4, 2018 By Dayton Most Metro

On Wednesday, September 5 Lily’s Bistro is partnering again with the Gem City Market to host the Garden Party: A Summer Preservation Class.

“We love doing this annual interactive event with our customers,” Emily Mendenhall, owners of Lily’s Bistro said. “From the bar and kitchen, we’ll be walking you through how to do your own shrubs and pickling of all sorts of produce! It’s a great chance to get creative and preserve some wonderful flavors for the colder months and it’s all vegetarian and vegan friendly too!”

As a partner for the event, Lily’s will also be donating $10 from every ticket sold towards the development of the Gem City Market, a community member- and worker-owned and operated full service grocery store.

“We strongly support the work of Gem City Market and it’s great that an event like this gets to promote the use of fresh produce, while also helping increase access to these food for our neighbors,” Mendenhall said.

For those interested in attending the Garden Party, the event costs $29 and takes place at Lily’s Bistro on Wednesday, September 5 from 6-9pm. The event cost includes all of the jars and produce needed, samples of shrubs, the class, and all guests will take home a jar of their own pickle and shrub.

Additional cocktails utilizing Lily’s own shrubs as well as a snack menu incorporating Lily’s housemate pickles will be available for purchase.

Tickets are available at https://www.eventbrite.com/e/the-garden-party-a-preservation-class-tickets-49395977699?aff=efbeventtix

Filed Under: Dayton Dining, The Featured Articles Tagged With: Gem City Market, Lily's Bistro

Popcorn 5K Run & Fitness Walk

September 4, 2018 By Dayton Most Metro

NEW THIS YEAR *Kids Fun Run Obstacle Course*

Kids ages 10 and under are invited to run in an obstacle course sponsored by The Goddard School. Kids who preregister by August 30 will receive a t-shirt and medal. Each adult preregistered for the 5k will receive one free kids fun run registration.

Filed Under: Runners Tagged With: 5K Run, Beavercreek Popcorn festival, fitness walk

Ren Fest Season Kicks Off This Weekend

September 1, 2018 By Dayton Most Metro

The Ohio Renaissance Festival will operate nine weekends this year. This annual fall tradition will open September 1 and run through October 28, Saturdays, Sundays, and Labor Day. Opening weekend adults are two for the price of one Saturday, Sunday, and Labor Day! BOGO adult tickets available online or at the Box Office.

Each year thousands journey to Harveysburg in Warren County to experience the old, new, and unique that bring the Ohio Renaissance Festival to life. Once inside the recreated 16th Century English village history and fantasy collide to offer something for everyone. 15 stages feature a full schedule of continuous entertainment.

Don’t miss the hard-hitting action as the Knights of Valour joust three times each day in the Guinness Jousting Arena. Comedy and swordplay mesh as The Swordsmen showcase sharp skills with rapiers and even sharper wit. The 65-foot wrecked Galleon features a thrilling Pirate Comedy Stunt Show twice each day that is as impressive as the ship itself.

Strolling musicians in the lanes include Dylan Robertson, Glass Harmonica, The Flying Dulcimer, Kyle Meadows, Captain John Stout while many a good pub song will be heard in the village pubs. While browsing through the village enjoy a menu guaranteed to tempt your taste buds. Festival favorites such as giant roasted turkey legs, steak-on-a-stake and bread bowl soups and stews can be found. The Chocolate Raven features handmade chocolates and fudge. Archibald Drake’s features an ages old Fish and Chips recipe. KJ’s Cajun Cuisine will have a menu from across the pond and down south. Try the sweet-filled light pastries called Crepes and wash it all down with a wide variety of beers, ales, wines, Coca-Cola products, or coffees and teas.

 

The marketplace at the Ohio Renaissance Festival is a shopper’s paradise. Full of handmade wares with flare, find unique items created by world-class artisans. Witness demonstrations of time-honored crafts including glassblowing, blacksmithing, forging, leather tooling, weaving, boot making, and more. The festival also offers daily special events for those 21 and over. The Naughty Bawdy Pub Show features songs and limericks you won’t hear on the streets in an hour-long show. During the Pub Crawl learn about all things Willy Nilly (the name of our beloved village) hosted by two saucy sisters.

New this year! Enjoy whisky tastings hosted by the Witches of Willy Nilly. . .who knows brew better? The festival also offers thrilling human-powered rides, games of skill, warhorse rides, camel rides, the Amazing Maze, and the Tower of London Dungeon of Doom.

The Ohio Renaissance Festival is excited to announce the addition of several new performers to its full schedule of entertainment. Children of all ages will enjoy The MooNiE Show. An immersive silent comedy experience using whistles and gestures, MooNiE brings the audience in and puts everyone in stitches. Add to the comedy, MooNiE’s mesmerizing balancing and juggling skills will create an enjoyable family friendly show.

 

Filed Under: Community, The Featured Articles Tagged With: Harveysburg, Ohio Renaissance Festival

Amazon Grocery Delivery From Whole Foods Market Now in Dayton

August 29, 2018 By Dayton Most Metro

Starting today, Prime members in Dayton can shop through Prime Now for thousands of bestselling items including fresh produce, high quality meat and seafood, everyday staples and other locally sourced items from Whole Foods Market.

Now available in 28 cities, the service launched earlier this year with plans for continued expansion across the U.S. throughout 2018.  Customers can start shopping from the Whole Foods Market selection at www.primenow.com or by using the Prime Now app available on Android and iOS devices..

“We’ve been delighted with the customer response to delivery in as little as an hour through Prime Now, and we’re excited to bring the service to our customers in Columbus, Dayton, Portland, Greater Washington D.C. and even more neighborhoods in New York City,” said Christina Minardi, Whole Foods Market Executive Vice President of Operations. “Just in time for back-to-school shopping, grocery delivery from Whole Foods Market makes getting ready for the new school year with healthy snacks and lunches even more convenient.”

 

Delivery from Whole Foods Market is available daily from 8 am to 10 pm. If you are a prime member the two-hour delivery is free on orders of $35 or more and $4.99 for orders that don’t hit that minimum.  If you’d like your delivery within the hour that runs $7.99. To learn more about grocery pickup or delivery from Prime Now, visit www.primenow.com. Customers can also find out if these services are available in their area by saying, “Alexa, shop Whole Foods.”

 

Prime Members Shopping Whole Foods Market

Prime members shopping Whole Foods Market can take advantage of benefits available year-round, like deep discounts on select popular products and an additional 10 percent off hundreds of sale items. Eligible Prime members also receive 5% Back on Whole Foods Market purchases when using the Amazon Prime Rewards Visa Card. They can also use Prime Now to receive grocery delivery in as little as an hour in 28 cities, or grocery pickup in as little as 30 minutes in select cities, with more to come in 2018. Plus, shopping Whole Foods Market via Prime Now is even easier with Alexa – members can add items to their Whole Foods Market cart by simply saying “Alexa, add eggs to my Whole Foods cart,” when they are ready to checkout, they can just say “Alexa, check out my Whole Foods cart,” then they can checkout using the Prime Now app and choose pickup or delivery.

 

Filed Under: Dayton Dining, The Featured Articles

The Winds host Last of the Summer Rose Dinner

August 27, 2018 By Dayton Most Metro

Last of the Summer Rosé Dinner

Featuring
Miami Valley Pottery

Wednesday August 29th and Thursday August 30th
5pm-10pm
Call 937-767-1144 for reservations

Filed Under: Dayton Dining, The Featured Articles Tagged With: Rose Dinner, The WInds

Trotwood to Re-Open Renovated Cultural Center

August 25, 2018 By Dayton Most Metro

The City of Trotwood is proud to re-dedicate the Trotwood Community and Cultural Arts Center on Sunday, August 26, continuing its push to revitalize the creative and cultural aspects of the city alongside its established economic growth.

Special thanks are extended to Trotwood City Mayor Mary A. McDonald and State Representative Jeffrey Rezabek, 43 District, who recognized the community’s needs and worked to secure the funding and resources necessary to renovate and re-open the facility.

“I am extremely proud of Mayor Mary A. McDonald and the Trotwood City Council for their vision of this extraordinary community asset.” said Quincy Pope Sr., Trotwood City Manager. “This community and cultural arts center will positively impact Trotwood residents for decades to come.”

The effort to renovate the center is part of a larger campaign led by Mayor McDonald and the Trotwood City employees to achieve lasting growth within the city. Alongside drawing economic growth into the community by providing businesses an attractive place to grow, efforts like the rededication of the Community and Cultural Arts Center seek to give Trotwood an even stronger community foundation.

“The Trotwood Community and Cultural Arts Center will serve the Trotwood citizens as a great community asset for many years to come.” said Mayor McDonald. “We are excited for the many great future opportunities it will bring.”

The rededication ceremony takes place from 3:30 pm to 4:30 pm Sunday at the Community and Cultural Arts Center, located at 4000 Lake Center Drive.

Musical guest, C. Baccus will be providing live entertainment during the event, and light refreshments will be offered as well.

Filed Under: Community, The Featured Articles Tagged With: Trotwood, Trotwood Community and Cultural Arts Center

The Little Foxes

August 23, 2018 By Dayton Most Metro

In a small Alabama town in the year 1900, a southern family’s selfish pursuit of the American Dream ends up destroying them and those they love. Three siblings –the manipulative Regina, the cruel and arrogant Oscar, and the possessive Benjamin—have decided to partner together to increase their already substantial, ill-gotten wealth. But Regina’s terminally ill husband, Horace, refuses to give them the money they need. In the end, blood and money mix with money coming out on top, leaving a broken family behind

Filed Under: Arts & Entertainment

Remembering Matilda … Queen of the Gypsies

August 21, 2018 By Dayton Most Metro

Matilda Joles Stanley was said to have a wonderful gift of telling fortunes and remarkable powers as a mesmerist. She was described in the press as a “plain, hardy–looking woman and having a manner indicative of a strong and pronounced character.”

 

Many of the Stanley family and other clans buried their dead in Dayton, Ohio, in Woodland Cemetery. On Palm Sunday 1877, one of Levi and Matilda’s daughters and her husband were buried in the family lot after a nine-mile long procession of colorful wagons and carriages through the rain. Newspaper stories of the time noted the “rather bright colors of apparel and the expressive features of these people standing in the rain without umbrellas” when the minister stood at the head of the wide grave, the only umbrella upraised was over his head.

 

Matilda died in Vicksburg, Mississippi in January 1878 after an illness described as cancer. Her body was embalmed and was sent back to Dayton. When she arrived at Woodland Cemetery, she was placed in the receiving vault. Here, her family would visit every day and receive visiting guests and onlookers and lay fresh flowers over her casket. It would be another eight months before Matilda was finally laid to rest.

 

During the time before her funeral, word was spread not only in the United States but also in Canada and Europe that the Queen of the Gypsies had died. Chiefs and their tribes came to visit and pay their respects to Matilda and the family. There was a steady flow of this unique group of people in and out of the city.

 

Matilda was buried on September 15, 1878. Several hundred gypsies from other parts of the United States assembled along the banks of the Mad River in the neighborhood of the present Keowee Street Bridge. Here the funeral cortege formed, carriages were provided by McGowan and Lake, a pioneer Dayton livery firm, to the attending mourners.

 

A Dayton newspaper reported the following:  The funeral services were very simple. The casket had to be removed from the vault to the grave. The procession assembled at 1:30 p.m. but the people began to go toward the cemetery at noon. They came from all over the city. Nearly 1,000 vehicles of every type were making their way to the cemetery. The street cars were not able to make their way down Wayne or Brown streets. Woodland Avenue and the streets and alley ways around it were clogged with horses and carriages.  Once inside the gates, the crowds filled every space they could, covering the hills and strolling about the grounds. The Police captain had a large contingency of police officers on hand but it was difficult to control such a large crowd.

 

The casket was carried from the receiving vault to the grave site. A mass of men, women and children were so tightly compressed that it was almost impossible to force a passage through them to carry the casket to the final resting place.

 

Matilda’s funeral attracted press coverage by the major newspapers of the country and was front page news. Four years after Matilda’s funeral, two more children were interred at Woodland, and the Dayton Democrat reported that the “attendance was quite large, tent-dwellers having come from all parts of the country – from New York to Mississippi – to be present at the funeral.” The story was picked up by the New York Times as well.

 

By the time that King Levi Stanley died in Marshall, Texas thirty years later, the national press did not even mention his passing. In an article on the arrival of his remains in Dayton by train, it was noted that the wealth of his family was in the hundreds of thousands of dollars, made from horse trading and fortune telling. The family also owned substantial tracts of real estate, mainly in the north Dayton area. Levi’s burial was made in the spring and was attended by only thirty members of the family from around the country.

 

Today, the grave site of Levi and Matilda Stanley is one of the most visited sites in the cemetery. September 15th of this year will mark the 140th anniversary of the burial of Matilda Stanley. In her memory, a special event will take place on this day to honor Matilda and bring attention to the beautiful monument. The 20’ granite column with the angel on top is in need of repair and restoration. Current conditions of the monument will lead to the dismantling of the structure out of safety concerns for visitors. It is Woodlawn’s  hope that they can do the repairs to the monument while it is still standing and in place without removal from the grave site.  In order to raise those funds, you’re invited to gather at Woodland for a remembrance ceremony.

A Celebration of Gypsy culture and heritage

On Saturday, September 15th from 5- 8pm Woodland Cemetery and Arboretum , located at 118 Woodland Avenue in Dayton is hosting an event in

in rememberance of the 140th Anniversary of the burial of Gypsy Queen Matilda Stanley.  Food, beverage, music by Tiempo Perdido, tarot card readers and fortune tellers and a historic candlelight walk tracing the original steps of the burial of Matilda Stanley are just some of the attractions of the event.

Ticket Sales
You can purchase tickets online here.

 

$30/person = 1 food bowl and 2 drinks

$50/person = all of the above plus a Stanley booklet and a Woodland Cemetery 175th Anniversary t-shirt

$150/person = all of the above plus a set of ceramic coasters and a certificate for a personalized golf cart tour for a future date all in a Woodland tote bag.

If you cannot attend, you are welcome to make a donation. Sponsorship opportunities are available. For more information please contact Angie Hoschouer at 937-228-3221 ext. 111 or [email protected].

 

Filed Under: Community, The Featured Articles Tagged With: matilda, Queen of the Gypsies, Woodlawn Cemetery

Pop Art Show with Beatles Cartoonist Ron Campbell

August 20, 2018 By Dayton Most Metro

The Beatles Cartoon Art Show is a one man show featuring legendary animator/director Ron Campbell. Ron was the Director of the Saturday Morning Beatles Cartoon series which aired from 1965 – 1969 and animator on the Beatles film Yellow Submarine. Ron Campbell will make a rare personal appearance at the Edward A. Dixon Gallery, 12 South Ludlow Street in Dayton, Ohio, Tuesday, August 21st through Wednesday, August 22nd from 4-8pm.

Ron will showcase his original Beatles cartoon paintings created specially for the show as well as feature other artwork based on his 50-year career in cartoons including Scooby Doo, Rugrats, Smurfs, Flintstones, Jetsons and more.

The exhibit is free and all works are available for purchase.

 

Filed Under: The Featured Articles, Visual Arts Tagged With: Beatles Cartoonist, Edward A. Dixon Gallery, Ron Campbell

Blind Bob’s 10 Year Anniversary: Night One

August 20, 2018 By Dayton Most Metro

There’s a 2 day celebration scheduled for Blind Bob’s 10th Anniversary!  Join the fun in the Oregon District!

Filed Under: Dayton Music

Brokeman’s 3rd Annual Dayton Endurance Run

August 20, 2018 By Dayton Most Metro

Brokeman’s Running is a local grass roots running movement aiming at taking the glitz and swag out of the racing scene and bringing back the focus on community, the beauty of the grind, and the promotion of physical and mental health.

Filed Under: Runners

Ale-O-Ween Beer Festival to Haunt Dayton Again This Fall

August 20, 2018 By Dayton Most Metro

Promising no tricks and even more treats than last year, the Ohio Craft Brewers Association presents the second annual Ale-O-Ween festival at the Dayton Steam Plant on Saturday, October 20 from 6-9 p.m.

Building on the success of 2017’s inaugural Halloween-themed craft beer festival, forty Ohio craft breweries will be pouring samples of seasonal styles and popular favorites. Ale-O-Ween will also take advantage of the Steam Plant’s outdoor space this year, allowing for more attendees and 40 Ohio craft breweries.

There will be  live music by TEAM VOID and The AmpFibians, a costume contest, food trucks (Drunken Waffle, Twisted Taco, PA’s Pork, The Wicked ‘Wich of Dayton), a tarot card reader and the most amazing face painter you’ve ever seen! Ohio On Tap users in attendance will receive five bonus passport stamps redeemable for prizes.

Regular and early admission ticket holders will receive tickets for 20 four ounce sample pours and a commemorative tasting glass. Designated driver tickets are also available.

Early bird discount tickets are on sale for one day only, Monday, August 20, with general admission tickets available for $30 each and 5 pm early admission tickets available for $40 each.

Starting Tuesday, August 21, general admission tickets can be purchased in advance for $40 and early admission tickets for $50. All regular admission and early admission ticket holders will receive a souvenir glass and tasting tickets for 20 four-ounce samples.

New this year is the Ale-O-Ween Six-Pack: purchase five regular or early admission tickets, get one ticket of equal value free. Designated driver admission is also available for $15 and includes a food truck voucher. Tickets can be purchased online at http://www.beerfesttickets.com/aleoween2018

Interested in volunteering?  Sign up here.

Ale-O-Ween is sponsored by Cavalier Distributing, Frantz Ward LLP, Lyft, Mosaic Employee Benefits, Ohio Beer Counsel, Prestige Glassware, The Steam Plant, and the participating Ohio craft breweries below:

16 Lots Brewing Company
Branch & Bone Artisan Ales
Carillon Brewing Company
Crooked Handle Brewing Co.
The Dayton Beer Company
Devil Wind Brewing
Elevator Brewing Company
Eudora Brewing Company
Fat Head’s Brewery
Fifth Street Brewpub
FigLeaf Brewing Company
Fretboard Brewing Company
Grainworks Brewing Company
Great Lakes Brewing Company
Hairless Hare Brewery
Heavier Than Air Brewing
HiHO Brewing Co.
Little Fish Brewing Company
Lock 27 Brewing
Lucky Star Brewery
MadTree Brewing Company
Maumee Bay Brewing Company
Mother Stewart’s Brewing
Municipal Brew Works
North High Brewing Company
Paradigm Shift Brewing
The Phoenix Brewing Company
Platform Beer Co.
Pretentious Barrel House
Rhinegeist
Roundhouse Depot Brewing Company
Royal Docks Brewing Co.
Sibling Revelry Brewing
Star City Brewing
Streetside Brewery
Urban Artifact
Warped Wing Brewing Company
Wild Ohio Brewing
Wolf’s Ridge Brewing
Yellow Springs Brewery

 

Founded in 2007, the Ohio Craft Brewers Association is a nonprofit guild that exists to promote and preserve Ohio’s unified craft brewing industry. We aspire to be recognized as the industry leader at both state and national levels for preserving the art of making high-quality, unique craft beer; to serve as the unified voice for craft brewers across the state; to advocate on behalf of the Ohio craft beer industry; to contribute to systemic, local community development by driving economic and job growth, while creating experiences that bring people together; and to serve as a beacon for local production and manufacturing through craft beer, resulting in diverse choices for consumers.

Filed Under: Dayton On Tap, The Featured Articles Tagged With: Ale-o-ween, AmpFibians, Beer Festival, Ohio Craft Brewers Association, Team Void

Exploring Restoration of Outdoor Historical Theatre

August 18, 2018 By Dayton Most Metro

Caesar’s Ford Theatre, Inc invites Theatre Practitioners (Playwrights, Directors, Technical Professionals, and Performers) to attend an open meeting regarding the restoration of outdoor historical theatre to southwest Ohio.

The meeting will be Thursday August 30th  at 7:30pm  at the Xenia Area Community Theater located at  45 E. Second Street Xenia, Ohio 45385.
Caesar’s Ford Theatre, Inc is conducting a feasibility study with the Institute of Outdoor Theatre / Southeastern Theatre Conference and input from Theatre Practitioners is greatly needed.
As a result of this study, a “Festival of New Historic Drama” play writing festival is planned for late summer 2019. The meeting and discussions will be led by the consulting team from the Institute of Outdoor Theatre / Southeastern Theatre Conference. They include Dr. David Wohl, PhD, Dean Emeritus, College of Visual and Performing Arts, Winthrop University in South Carolina, Peter Hardy, Artistic Director of Essential Theatre in Atlanta, Georgia and former Director of “Unto These Hills” outdoor drama in Cherokee, North Carolina, and Dr. Larry Gustke, PhD Professor Emeritus, Department of Parks and Recreation and Tourism Management, North Carolina State University.
Support for Caesar’s Ford Theatre, Inc historical outdoor theatre project comes from The Dayton Book Fair Foundation, the Ohio Arts Council Capacity Building Grants Program, the Hampden W. and Erma R. Catterton Fund of The Dayton Foundation, and individual supporters. For additional information please contact Caesar’s Ford Theatre, Inc at [email protected].

Filed Under: Community, The Featured Articles Tagged With: Caesar’s Ford Theatre

NAHA names Mackensie Wittmer Executive Director

August 15, 2018 By Dayton Most Metro

Mackensie Wittmer

Mackensie Wittmer, deputy director of the National Aviation Heritage Alliance (NAHA),  has accepted the position of executive director effective Aug. 22, the NAHA board of trustees has announced. She succeeds Anthony “Tony” Sculimbrene, who is retiring.

Wittmer joined NAHA as deputy director in August 2014. Prior to that, she was development researcher at the Dayton Art Institute from 1999 to 2002. For the next six years, she was associate director of advancement research and development at Wright State University.
Wittmer is an active volunteer with the Dayton Metro Library, Destination Imagination, and Oakwood City Schools. Recent volunteer experience includes serving as co-chair of the Oakwood City School District’s levy campaign in 2013, Harman Elementary Parent Teacher Organization board member in Oakwood from 2015 to 2017, board member and past chair of the Oakwood Historical Society from 2004 to 2016. She was a member of Leadership Dayton’s class of 2016.
Wittmer holds a Master of Arts degree in public and applied history from Wright State and a bachelor of Arts degree in history and political science from Miami University.
She lives in Oakwood with her husband and two children.
NAHA is the business name for the Aviation Heritage Foundation, Inc., an Ohio 501 (c) (3) not-for-profit corporation. Sculimbrene has been its executive director since 2004 and was executive director of its predecessor, the Dayton Aviation Heritage Commission.

Tony Sculimbrene

The federal commission was created by Congress and charged with supporting the development of the Dayton Aviation Heritage National Historical Park and the restoration of the Wright Dunbar Historic District. The commission had a legislative mandate to identify a follow-on organization to carry on the work of preserving Dayton’s aviation heritage once it sunset in December, 2003. Sculimbrene was tasked by the commissioners to find a permanent successor to the commission, and to that end he advocated for the creation of a U. S. National Heritage Area to preserve and promote the aviation heritage of the region, and the establishment of NAHA as its management entity.

In 2004, Congress established the National Aviation Heritage Area around Dayton and designated NAHA as its management entity. Sculimbrene directed the foundation’s incorporation, drafted its General Management Plan and secured over $4 million of non-federal funding for its operations since it was established.
In 2006, under his leadership, NAHA received the Mathile Community Award.
From 1990 to 1999, Sculimbrene, a civil engineer, was the Base Environmental Manager for the 8,000-acre Wright-Patterson Air Force Base, where he directed $230 million in contract work to clean up groundwater contamination and restore base waste disposal sites. In the preceding years, he managed an annual $30 million construction and contract services program as chief of engineering and construction management.
Sculimbrene is a Greene County Park District commissioner, president of the Xenia Rotary Club and a member of the Wright Dunbar Inc. board of trustees. He and his wife live in Xenia. They have two grown children in Massachusetts and Washington State. 
About NAHA
The National Aviation Heritage Alliance (NAHA) is a nonprofit chartered by Congress in 2004 as the management entity for the National Aviation Heritage Area, a region of national historical importance. It includes Montgomery, Greene, Miami, Clark, Warren, Champaign, Shelby, and Auglaize counties in Ohio. The Heritage Area is one of 49 National Heritage Areas in a program administrated by the National Park Service, and the only one dedicated to aviation heritage. Visit aviationheritagearea.org for more information.

Filed Under: Community, The Featured Articles Tagged With: Mackensie Wittmer, NAHA, National Aviation Heritage Area, Tony sculimbrene

Call For Artwork for New Trotwood Branch Library

August 14, 2018 By Dayton Most Metro

The Dayton Metro Library and The Dayton Art Institute seek to commission site-specific artwork for the new Trotwood Branch Library, which will be located at 855 E. Main Street in Trotwood. Proposals will be accepted August 12 through October 15, and the commissions will be announced in November.

ReImagining Works is a partnership between the Library and the DAI to acquire original artwork for each of the Dayton Metro Library’s new or renovated locations. Susan Anable is The Dayton Art Institute’s project manager for ReImagining Works.

 

“We are excited to share the latest RFP for the Trotwood Branch, which offers four highly visible spaces for artwork,” said Anable. “Since the project began in 2014, we have commissioned 32 works of art to enhance the vibrancy of our new and remodeled Dayton Metro Libraries.”

 

For the Trotwood Branch, regional artists (within a 250-mile radius of Dayton, Ohio) are invited to propose new artwork in response to two inspirational pieces in the DAI’s permanent collection: Centerpiece by Wiener Werkstätte, and Pathway by John Safer. These pieces were chosen by community vote, particularly by patrons of the Trotwood Branch Library, to represent their unique community and Library.

 

An informational meeting for artists is scheduled for Saturday, August 25, 11:00 am at the DAI.  Ruetschle Architects will be on hand to review the building plans and answer questions.

 

“This is a great opportunity for artists to gain a better understanding of the building space and art locations, and also see the DAI inspiration pieces in person,” said Anable, who is also available for individual phone conversation with artists on Monday, August 27, between 4:00 and 6:00 pm.

 

The newly designed 13,000 square foot Trotwood Branch Library has a targeted opening date of January 2020. The architecture employs geometric expression with a cozy interior. Amenities include a quiet reading room, dedicated teen space, a larger children’s area, study rooms, an information commons, and an after-hours accessible community meeting room.

 

Proposed artwork should reflect the distinctive personality of this location; resonate with people of all ages and backgrounds; inspire collaboration, learning and creativity; and contribute to an inviting, engaging, stimulating environment. The ReImagining Works Committee welcomes submissions that relate to the mission of Dayton Metro Library or that provide a springboard for educational programming or collaborative learning opportunities.

 

“Supporting our community of artists while making our libraries warmer and more inviting places is a win-win for our city,” said Anable. “What a great legacy for an artist to have their work on view in a public space in their hometown.”

 

Questions prior to the DAI meeting can be emailed to Susan Anable at [email protected]. R.S.V.P. for the meeting or schedule a time to discuss proposals by emailing [email protected].

 

ReImagining Works is made possible by an anonymous bequest. More information about the project, including photos of installations at completed Libraries, can be found at DaytonMetroLibrary.org/Works.

 

 

Filed Under: Arts & Entertainment, The Featured Articles Tagged With: Artists, Trotwood Library

Grist Launch Dinner with Glasz Bleu Oven and Crafted & Cured

August 12, 2018 By Dayton Most Metro

Join us as we welcome Grist to the Dayton culinary scene! Hosted at the nostalgic venue of District Provisions in the Oregon District, this five-course meal brings together offerings from husband and wife chef team Casey and Patrick Van Voorhis from Grist and the team at Glasz Bleu Oven. Complete your evening by supplementing your meal with limited-production boutique Italian wines selected by Sommelier Michael Freeman.

Filed Under: Dayton Dining, The Featured Articles Tagged With: Casey and Patrick Van Voorhis, District Provisions, Glasz Bleu Oven, Grist, Michael Freeman

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