Graham Watson
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Jul 20, 2014
Sunday
-
Trivia Brawl
9:00pm to 11:00pm @
Be Here Now
505 N. Dill St.
Every week, egos are crushed and legends are born at Trivia Brawl, Muncie's longest-running trivia gameshow. Since 2007, Trivia Brawl has been mixing comedy, current events, politics, local pride, pop culture, science, history, an arms race of terrible team names, and alcohol into an Entertainment Nergasm Bonanza™.
- All players are encouraged to gain a competitive advantage by requesting topics
- Every tenth question is part of our inadvertent quest to discriminate against the deaf, and has players listening to a song and attempting to identify its title, band, and album.
- The sixth round is a special visual aid round in which the blind are instead at an unfair disadvantage.
- Booster Charades: The team in last place can optionally play a round of charades on stage for a bonus point while we point and laugh at them
- Punitive Karaoke: A team deemed worthy of punishment is called upon to read a sheet of lyrics with neither musical accompaniment nor a clue what the song is. All teams can get up to two points if they can correctly guess the band or the title of the song.Come and play for free, solo or with a team, and show off your command of all knowledge trivial. Win, and split up $25 in food and drinks. Lose, and possibly get a prize anyway. The games tend to last an hour and a half, unless we go into a Sudden Death Lightning Bloodfeud Overtime Round (of Death)™.
Sign up before 8:30pm to get a bonus point!
Sundays at 9pm at Be Here Now
505 N Dill St., Muncie, IN
Food and drinks / All agesEmail us at trivia@PhantomWatson.com if you have questions or topic requests.
Jul 27, 2014
Sunday
-
Trivia Brawl
9:00pm to 11:00pm @
Be Here Now
505 N. Dill St.
Every week, egos are crushed and legends are born at Trivia Brawl, Muncie's longest-running trivia gameshow. Since 2007, Trivia Brawl has been mixing comedy, current events, politics, local pride, pop culture, science, history, an arms race of terrible team names, and alcohol into an Entertainment Nergasm Bonanza™.
- All players are encouraged to gain a competitive advantage by requesting topics
- Every tenth question is part of our inadvertent quest to discriminate against the deaf, and has players listening to a song and attempting to identify its title, band, and album.
- The sixth round is a special visual aid round in which the blind are instead at an unfair disadvantage.
- Booster Charades: The team in last place can optionally play a round of charades on stage for a bonus point while we point and laugh at them
- Punitive Karaoke: A team deemed worthy of punishment is called upon to read a sheet of lyrics with neither musical accompaniment nor a clue what the song is. All teams can get up to two points if they can correctly guess the band or the title of the song.Come and play for free, solo or with a team, and show off your command of all knowledge trivial. Win, and split up $25 in food and drinks. Lose, and possibly get a prize anyway. The games tend to last an hour and a half, unless we go into a Sudden Death Lightning Bloodfeud Overtime Round (of Death)™.
Sign up before 8:30pm to get a bonus point!
Sundays at 9pm at Be Here Now
505 N Dill St., Muncie, IN
Food and drinks / All agesEmail us at trivia@PhantomWatson.com if you have questions or topic requests.
Aug 3, 2014
Sunday
-
Trivia Brawl
9:00pm to 11:00pm @
Be Here Now
505 N. Dill St.
Every week, egos are crushed and legends are born at Trivia Brawl, Muncie's longest-running trivia gameshow. Since 2007, Trivia Brawl has been mixing comedy, current events, politics, local pride, pop culture, science, history, an arms race of terrible team names, and alcohol into an Entertainment Nergasm Bonanza™.
- All players are encouraged to gain a competitive advantage by requesting topics
- Every tenth question is part of our inadvertent quest to discriminate against the deaf, and has players listening to a song and attempting to identify its title, band, and album.
- The fifth round is a special visual aid round in which the blind are instead at an unfair disadvantage.
- Booster Charades: The team in last place can optionally play a round of charades on stage for a bonus point while we point and laugh at them
- Punitive Karaoke: A team deemed worthy of punishment is called upon to read a sheet of lyrics with neither musical accompaniment nor a clue what the song is. All teams can get up to two points if they can correctly guess the band or the title of the song.Come and play for free, solo or with a team, and show off your command of all knowledge trivial. Win, and split up $25 in food and drinks. Lose, and possibly get a prize anyway. The games tend to last an hour and a half, unless we go into a Sudden Death Lightning Bloodfeud Overtime Round (of Death)™.
Sign up before 8:30pm to get a bonus point!
Sundays at 9pm at Be Here Now
505 N Dill St., Muncie, IN
Food and drinks / All agesEmail us at trivia@PhantomWatson.com if you have questions or topic requests.
Aug 7, 2014
Thursday
-
First Thursday
5:00pm to 8:00pm @
Downtown
111 Arts Gallery
111 E MainName: Michael D'angelo Huerta. Art style: Mixed media. "I love finding things from the streets or old vintage stuff and making them my style."
The Artist Within
313 S WalnutOne Love with PB and J
The main floor exhibit will be on display August 6-31, 2014 during regular studio hours. “One Love with PB and J” features paintings by local artist Joe Flynn and his son Parker Brian. Both artists have exhibited at the Artist Within and always make First Thursday a grand event. This year they will have music provided by friends Chad Nordoff, Jason Spencer, and Mark Manship.Worn Gender
The upper level gallery will feature an interactive exhibit by Hannah Backer July 30 through August 10, 2014. Completing her Senior Thesis at Ball State University, Hannah Backer of Ferdinand, IN. has focused her work on playfully addressing controversial topics such as personal identity, sexuality, and gender through interactive installations. Her upcoming show for August First Thursday at the Artist Within will feature Hannah’s series “Worn Gender”, a body of work examining the subconscious ways gender is communicated through image and clothing. The installation asks viewers to dress three paper doll figures with a variety of clothing options provided.Brother Animal
116 E Jackson"The newest DWNTWN eatery, Brother Animal, will be open for business during First Thursday."
Cornerstone Center for The Arts
520 E. Main St.The Ball State Institute for Digital Intermedia Arts Lab is hosting an event at Cornerstone for First Thursday. Live digital music performance. Oculus rift, Kinect, LED lighting. Performances at 6:00pm by Keith Kothman and Stephen Weigel.
The Fickle Peach (21+)
117 E CharlesA group of donors from the East Central Neighborhood has donated artwork to raise money for the restoration of the Emily Kimbrough House.
Gallery 308
308 E Main
Summer Art Camp ShowThe Summer Art Camp Show featuring the talents of 40 young artists opens at Gallery 308 August 7. Many of the cities young artists have been busy this summer participating in an Art Camp sponsored by The Artist Within. The theme for 2014 camp was “Robots, Monsters and Fairies.”
During the four one-week sessions, students aged 6-12 learned hand building techniques in clay and had the opportunity to throw on the potter’s wheel under the watchful eye of resident potter Toren Scott. Bob Hartley, owner of Artist Within added, “Working with the campers and the excitement and eagerness they bring to each project…well it never gets old. I look forward to Clay Camps as a way to share my passion for teaching art without the pressure of ISTEPs”.
The culmination of the student’s art camp experience will be an exhibit at Gallery 308 with the First Thursday reception. Hartley added, “The campers think it is “awesome” to see their work displayed in a real gallery. An opening reception to meet and greet the young artists will be held during First Thursday from 5-8pm. The public is welcome.
The Art Camp Show continues through August 9. The gallery is open Friday from 3:00 – 7:00 pm and Saturday from 12:30 – 5:00pm. Admission is free.
Gordy Fine Art & Framing Co.
224 E Main
Still FloatingImagine a faceless floating figure, adorned with gold and yellow over free-form shapes of blue. Imagine this feminine figure repeated in various forms – drawing, collage, ceramics – while always maintaining its surreal, but benevolent, anonymity. Bursts of gold resemble lightening bugs circle the figure and dance over the paper shapes. Reminiscent of Native American, or even Aztecan art, these faceless forms seem to speak to the Spiritual Feminine.
“I’ve been working with the floating woman image for over a decade, using drawing, painting and clay techniques. I’m often asked who the floating woman is, and my response is that I don’t know,” is all the artist offers, leaving each patron to choose their own storyline for the images. Sometimes titles give a clue. “Daydreaming,” is both stop-action and active, with small dabs of paint or cut out papers dancing across solid blue blocks while the faceless figure stands, small but mighty, calm but ready.
Trained as a fiber artist and a potter, Lambert Martin holds a B.S. in art education and a Master’s degree in Art from Ball State University. She served as a Master Teaching Artist for Very Special Arts of Indiana and has taught classes at Cornerstone Center for the Arts, Minnerista and St. Mary’s school. Shonet also taught several summer arts camps with the Gordy’s, specializing in paper making and ceramics.
Lambert Martin’s opening will be held during the First Thursday arts walk on August 7, 2014 from 5 to 8 PM. A short talk will be given at 6:15, and the artist will answer questions about her work. Light refreshments will be served.
“Still Floating” will continue through August 30, 2014, and may also be viewed during normal business hours: Monday-Friday, 9 AM to 5:30 PM, Saturday, 9 to 3, or by appointment. Gordy Fine Art & Framing Co. is located downtown at 224 E. Main Street, next door to Muncie Civic Theatre. For more information, call 765-284-8422 or visit http://www.gordyframing.com, or the Gordy Fine Art & Framing page on Facebook.
Muncie Makes Lab
628 S Walnut
Sketchbooks – Seeing Through DrawingA gallery-style display will showcase drawings done by first-year students in the Ball State College of Architecture and Planning along with sketchbooks from BSU faculty, students, and local artists. Two 45-minute workshops will be held at 5:30pm and 6:30pm, concurrent with the exhibition. The workshops will discuss/demonstrate/do the basics of sketching. If interested in participating in the workshops, PLEASE bring pencils and sketchbook (paper will also be provided if needed); no skill is required, just an interest in drawing what your eye and mind see.
Mutual Bank Marble Wall
110 E Charles
Afterhours Art Reels – Cry BabyMuncie Downtown Development will host outdoor “Afterhours Art Reels” following the First Thursday Gallery Walks, June-September. Films will be projected onto the Mutual Bank wall on Charles St. at dusk. Seating will be available on the Fickle Peach patio located at 117 E. Charles St. for guests 21 and up.
Rose Court
125 E CharlesThis month, Rose Court will be featuring photographer Ben Miller, Emmy Rawson, and an Open House for Red-tail Land Conservancy. Light refreshments will be served.
Ben Miller shoots documentary style candid situations capturing the beauty in the common reality. His main focus in photography is black-and-white story telling. He believes in prime lenses and mirrorless cameras. He shoots film and digital. Ben's work has been featured online at Leica Fotografie International as well as other websites. You can view his work at: http://www.photographsbyben.com or http://photographysbybenmiller.blogspot.com.
Emmy Rawson will be a freshman next year at Purdue University majoring in engineering. She is a graduate of Muncie Central High School. Her art focuses on assembling and designing wooden signs constructed from pallets. The signs range from shelf pieces to large scale mantle creations. All of the reclaimed wood is supplied locally. Each piece is unique and ready to be hung. You can see more of her work at https://www.facebook.com/MaimesArtShoppe.
Red-tail Land Conservancy will be celebrating their new location in Suite 200 at the Rose Court with an open house and will feature paintings by Alan Patrick as well as photography by Barry Banks. This will also be your chance to meet and greet the Red-tail board members.
Aug 10, 2014
Sunday
-
Trivia Brawl
9:00pm to 11:00pm @
Be Here Now
505 N. Dill St.
Every week, egos are crushed and legends are born at Trivia Brawl, Muncie's longest-running trivia gameshow. Since 2007, Trivia Brawl has been mixing comedy, current events, politics, local pride, pop culture, science, history, an arms race of terrible team names, and alcohol into an Entertainment Nergasm Bonanza™.
- All players are encouraged to gain a competitive advantage by requesting topics
- Every tenth question is part of our inadvertent quest to discriminate against the deaf, and has players listening to a song and attempting to identify its title, band, and album.
- The fifth round is a special visual aid round in which the blind are instead at an unfair disadvantage.
- Booster Charades: The team in last place can optionally play a round of charades on stage for a bonus point while we point and laugh at them
- Punitive Karaoke: A team deemed worthy of punishment is called upon to read a sheet of lyrics with neither musical accompaniment nor a clue what the song is. All teams can get up to two points if they can correctly guess the band or the title of the song.Come and play for free, solo or with a team, and show off your command of all knowledge trivial. Win, and split up $25 in food and drinks. Lose, and possibly get a prize anyway. The games tend to last an hour and a half, unless we go into a Sudden Death Lightning Bloodfeud Overtime Round (of Death)™.
Sign up before 8:30pm to get a bonus point!
Sundays at 9pm at Be Here Now
505 N Dill St., Muncie, IN
Food and drinks / All agesEmail us at trivia@PhantomWatson.com if you have questions or topic requests.
Aug 17, 2014
Sunday
-
Trivia Brawl
9:00pm to 11:00pm @
Be Here Now
505 N. Dill St.
Every week, egos are crushed and legends are born at Trivia Brawl, Muncie's longest-running trivia gameshow. Since 2007, Trivia Brawl has been mixing comedy, current events, politics, local pride, pop culture, science, history, an arms race of terrible team names, and alcohol into an Entertainment Nergasm Bonanza™.
- All players are encouraged to gain a competitive advantage by requesting topics
- Every tenth question is part of our inadvertent quest to discriminate against the deaf, and has players listening to a song and attempting to identify its title, band, and album.
- The fifth round is a special visual aid round in which the blind are instead at an unfair disadvantage.
- Booster Charades: The team in last place can optionally play a round of charades on stage for a bonus point while we point and laugh at them
- Punitive Karaoke: A team deemed worthy of punishment is called upon to read a sheet of lyrics with neither musical accompaniment nor a clue what the song is. All teams can get up to two points if they can correctly guess the band or the title of the song.Come and play for free, solo or with a team, and show off your command of all knowledge trivial. Win, and split up $25 in food and drinks. Lose, and possibly get a prize anyway. The games tend to last an hour and a half, unless we go into a Sudden Death Lightning Bloodfeud Overtime Round (of Death)™.
Sign up before 8:30pm to get a bonus point!
Sundays at 9pm at Be Here Now
505 N Dill St., Muncie, IN
Food and drinks / All agesEmail us at trivia@PhantomWatson.com if you have questions or topic requests.
Aug 23, 2014
Saturday
-
RibFest
12:00pm to 10:00pm @
Canan Commons
500 S. Walnut St
Cost: $5 (kids 10 and under free) PERFORMANCES BY
The Reverend Peyton’s Big Damn Band
Opening act: Stampede String Band
Gate Admission $5 | KIDS 10 AND UNDER FREE
Ribs and all the fixings | live music on two stages both days,
all day | The Fickle Peach presents Craft Beer Garden featuring
Flat 12 BIErwerks | Free Kids Area Sponsored by H&D Superent
Woof Boom Radio presents Muncie’s Best Ribs contest
For more informat ion visit downtownmuncie.org or call 765-282-7897
Aug 24, 2014
Sunday
-
RibFest
11:00am to 5:00pm @
Canan Commons
500 S. Walnut St
Cost: $5 (kids 10 and under free) PERFORMANCES BY
The Reverend Peyton’s Big Damn Band
Opening act: Stampede String Band
Gate Admission $5 | KIDS 10 AND UNDER FREE
Ribs and all the fixings | live music on two stages both days,
all day | The Fickle Peach presents Craft Beer Garden featuring
Flat 12 BIErwerks | Free Kids Area Sponsored by H&D Superent
Woof Boom Radio presents Muncie’s Best Ribs contest
For more informat ion visit downtownmuncie.org or call 765-282-7897
- Trivia Brawl 9:00pm to 11:00pm @ Be Here Now 505 N. Dill St.
Every week, egos are crushed and legends are born at Trivia Brawl, Muncie's longest-running trivia gameshow. Since 2007, Trivia Brawl has been mixing comedy, current events, politics, local pride, pop culture, science, history, an arms race of terrible team names, and alcohol into an Entertainment Nergasm Bonanza™.
- All players are encouraged to gain a competitive advantage by requesting topics
- Every tenth question is part of our inadvertent quest to discriminate against the deaf, and has players listening to a song and attempting to identify its title, band, and album.
- The fifth round is a special visual aid round in which the blind are instead at an unfair disadvantage.
- Booster Charades: The team in last place can optionally play a round of charades on stage for a bonus point while we point and laugh at them
- Punitive Karaoke: A team deemed worthy of punishment is called upon to read a sheet of lyrics with neither musical accompaniment nor a clue what the song is. All teams can get up to two points if they can correctly guess the band or the title of the song.Come and play for free, solo or with a team, and show off your command of all knowledge trivial. Win, and split up $25 in food and drinks. Lose, and possibly get a prize anyway. The games tend to last an hour and a half, unless we go into a Sudden Death Lightning Bloodfeud Overtime Round (of Death)™.
Sign up before 8:30pm to get a bonus point!
Sundays at 9pm at Be Here Now
505 N Dill St., Muncie, IN
Food and drinks / All agesEmail us at trivia@PhantomWatson.com if you have questions or topic requests.
Aug 31, 2014
Sunday
-
Trivia Brawl
9:00pm to 11:00pm @
Be Here Now
505 N. Dill St.
Every week, egos are crushed and legends are born at Trivia Brawl, Muncie's longest-running trivia gameshow. Since 2007, Trivia Brawl has been mixing comedy, current events, politics, local pride, pop culture, science, history, an arms race of terrible team names, and alcohol into an Entertainment Nergasm Bonanza™.
- All players are encouraged to gain a competitive advantage by requesting topics
- Every tenth question is part of our inadvertent quest to discriminate against the deaf, and has players listening to a song and attempting to identify its title, band, and album.
- The fifth round is a special visual aid round in which the blind are instead at an unfair disadvantage.
- Booster Charades: The team in last place can optionally play a round of charades on stage for a bonus point while we point and laugh at them
- Punitive Karaoke: A team deemed worthy of punishment is called upon to read a sheet of lyrics with neither musical accompaniment nor a clue what the song is. All teams can get up to two points if they can correctly guess the band or the title of the song.Come and play for free, solo or with a team, and show off your command of all knowledge trivial. Win, and split up $25 in food and drinks. Lose, and possibly get a prize anyway. The games tend to last an hour and a half, unless we go into a Sudden Death Lightning Bloodfeud Overtime Round (of Death)™.
Sign up before 8:30pm to get a bonus point!
Sundays at 9pm at Be Here Now
505 N Dill St., Muncie, IN
Food and drinks / All agesEmail us at trivia@PhantomWatson.com if you have questions or topic requests.
Sep 4, 2014
Thursday
-
First Thursday
5:00pm to 8:00pm @
Downtown
Ages: 21+ at the Heorot 111 Arts Gallery
111 E MainCraig Mathis bsu grad lucky rabbit tattoo artist painting in acrylic in found boards various folk art themes incorporating comic like feel outside of the tattoo art spectrum ,, this is Craig's first solo show he's tattooed in Muncie over 10 years at the lucky rabbit tattoo studio
The Artist Within
313 S Walnut
Aerosol and Old Lace – Series SevenThe Artist Within will feature new art by local visual artist, poet, and artivist Deborah Gindhart Dragoo. Layers of vibrant colours, textures, and vintage plastic lace motifs create this new stunning series of canvas brilliance. There will be also be PINK earrings designed specifically for The Little Red Door of Delaware County / ECI. After reading the courageous cancer journey of Muncie's own Sonya Paul, the artist chooses to share her art gifts. These special earrings will be on sale for $10 per pair with all proceeds to benefit The Little Red Door for their breast cancer awareness programs.
A "Meet the Artist" opening reception with light refreshments will be held Thursday September 4th from 5-8pm; ALSO, there shall be CAKE! Celebrate "62" with the artist...YUM!
Cornerstone Center for The Arts
520 E Main5pm to 9pm: Electronic Arts Showcase in Great Room of Cornerstone (second floor). Kinect, Oculus Rift, and LED lighting on display.
6pm: Live performance by Lavonte Pugh (ala Bit_Slayer) and featuring LED hula-hooping by Cassie Gabriel and Ashley Downing.
Gallery 308
308 E Main
Conversations About Nature Through Art and PoetryA two-woman exhibit featuring artists Carol Blakney and Mary Ann Rahe opens First Thursday at Gallery 308 on September 4. “CONVERSATIONS ABOUT NATURE through art and poetry” features prints by Carol Blakney, ceramics by Mary Ann Rahe and poetry by Mike Brockley, Karen Hiday, and Jeffery Owen Pearson. The opening reception for the new exhibit will be held from 5 to 8pm on First Thursday.
Blakney explains the exhibit, “It’s a collection of the observations, inspirations, and memories of local artists in a collaborative exhibit of prints, ceramics, and poetry, inspired by our local wildlife and environment.“ Blakney stated she is interested in individuality, intelligence, and metaphor in nature. She created a series of Abobe Artistic Filter prints of the wide variety of creatures she has discovered in her Muncie garden.
Mary Ann Rahe uses ceramic forms and surfaces to explore themes of nature. She added, “For me, art inspired by nature engages the observer in both formal issues of design and imaginative interpretation. In addition, invited poets will contribute verse related to themes of nature. “
According to the two artists, “NATURE” is full of powerful and often contradictory meanings. We recognize the sounds and landscapes and familiar creatures of our local environment as part of what “home” is. The more welcoming we are of nature in all its forms, the more creative and healthy our home will be. A place where in parks and gardens and wild places we can still learn about form and color, life and death, and how we are in the universe”
A Muncie native, Rahe attended St. Louis University and earned B.A. and M.A. degrees in ceramics from Ball State University. During the nineteen-eighties, she was resident potter at Sinclair Shops, Hartford City, Indiana. She taught ceramics at Yorktown High School during most of the nineties and has taught for the Art Department and School of Extended Education at BSU for fourteen years.
Blakney received her BFA in Fine Arts and Art Education from the University of Massachusetts in 1982. She taught art and reading in a public school resource room until she was hired as the first project manager for the Oxford Guide to Classical Subject in the Arts, published in 1993. She has traveled extensively to photograph and illustrate the landscapes and wildlife of Turkey, England, Ireland, Mexico and the eastern United States. The daughter of missionaries, she was born into civil unrest that toppled the apartheid government of Rhodesia. She has remained engaged in social and environmental activism in the United States.
Gallery 308, which provides space for local and regional artists with monthly “First Thursday” exhibits, is in its 14th year as a nonprofit art gallery. For more information about the Gallery 308 ArtsWalk exhibit opening, contact sherry@jackscamera.com. The gallery is open Fridays from 3-7pm and Saturdays from 12:30 – 5:00pm. Admission is free. The show continues through September 26.
Gordy Fine Art & Framing Co.
224 E Main
Here and There: Recent Paintings by Alan PatrickWhen Alan Patrick needs to look for new subject matter for his oil paintings, he doesn’t travel far. He and wife, Cindy, live the artist’s life on their small farm just outside Albany, IN. Well-tended gardens, a fish pond, greenhouse and separate studio provide just about everything an artist could hope for, in the way of subject matter. Often, the award-winning Patrick paints flowers and still life scenes in the comfort of his studio. But sometimes, he just has to get out and tromp around in the woods to find his next inspiration. Nearby streams and a river provide both compelling scenes and a strong reflective light that bounces off tree trunks and leaves. Many artists paint beautiful stream scenes. What sets Patrick’s paintings apart has to be his technique of layers and layers of translucent colors that give a depth and brilliance even cameras can’t convey.
“I am interested in common-place subjects. If they are important, it is because of the formal elements such as line, shape and color. I do hope that they strike a chord with people, but the meaning is in the drawing and brushwork rather than the subject matter,” the prolific painter offers. He continues, “I can pass by a place a hundred times and that place is just ordinary. Then, one day, it’s magic. It has color, form, light and drama. It has suddenly become a wonderful place to look at. I know there is a painting there.”
He continues, “I photograph places and then return to my studio and think about the subject. What feeling does it evoke? What forms and colors work in the composition? I usually do compositional studies in charcoal first, working out the structure of line and value. Then I think about color. I spend a lot of time on a painting before I ever touch a brush.”
The public is invited to view the exhibit during the First Thursday’s Arts Walk on September 4, 2014 from 5 to 8 PM. The artist will give a short talk and answer questions about his work beginning at 6:15 PM. Light refreshments will be served. Gordy Fine Art & Framing is located downtown at 224 East Main Street, next door to Muncie Civic Theatre. For more information, visit http://www.gordyframing.com, or the Gordy Fine Art & Framing page on Facebook.
Heorot Pub & Draught House (21+)
219 S WalnutJanelle Summers will be the featured artist at Heorot this month. Summers focuses on drawing as an exploration of form, the figure, and at times the grotesque.
Muncie Makes Lab
628 S WalnutGraduate students from Ball State University’s College of Architecture and Planning, along with architecture professors Gernot Riether and Andrew Wit, designed and built an innovative pavilion during their summer coursework. Conceived of as a “traveling pavilion for the city,” the pavilion’s initial rendition and location served as a test of concept, structural ideas and durability. This open house exhibition shows the design process (research into computational design and fabrication methods, drawings, models, detail studies), and end result (photographs and component pieces). Students will also be present to demonstrate the fabrication of tensegrity units. The pavilion is currently located on the outskirts of Muncie, Indiana, standing in stark contrast to lush natural surroundings. Perched between a lake and a forest, the stretched lycra tensegrity structure appears to float as it lightly grazes the earth.
Mutual Bank Marble Wall
110 E Charles
Afterhours Art Reels – Hedwig and the Angry InchMuncie Downtown Development will host outdoor “Afterhours Art Reels” following the First Thursday Gallery Walks, June-September. Films will be projected onto the Mutual Bank wall on Charles St. at dusk. Seating will be available on the Fickle Peach patio located at 117 E. Charles St. for guests 21 and up.
Rose Court
125 E Charles
Doodles, Down Time PatternsRose Court is pleased to host artist Cynthia McHone and her exhibit entitled: 'Doodles, Down Time Patterns' for September's First Thursday. Cynthia's primary medium is pen and ink. Here is what Cynthia has to say about her work:
"When I moved from Albuquerque, New Mexico to Muncie, Indiana I knew that life would bring me new opportunities. I had no idea that in my leisure/down time I would find relaxation and enjoyment through random doodling. Albuquerque averages 310 days of sunshine a year and since Muncie's weather patterns are quite different I found myself appreciating indoor activities a great deal more. One day, while watching the evening news I picked up a sketch book and a few color pens and began to draw.
"The dictionary describes a doodle as a simple drawing that is unconsciously created while a person’s attention is otherwise occupied. Often done to relieve boredom, I found that these repetitive patterns were relaxing and somewhat addictive.
"This exhibit celebrates the rhythms, geometries, textures, and abstract landscapes created under the influences/echoes of Gustav Klimt, William Morris, Owen Jones, and appliqué quilting. I hope you enjoy these little works of art to find that these abstract harmonies lessen the stresses of your day as they have done for me. "
Sep 7, 2014
Sunday
-
Trivia Brawl
9:00pm to 11:00pm @
Be Here Now
505 N. Dill St.
Every week, egos are crushed and legends are born at Trivia Brawl, Muncie's longest-running trivia gameshow. Since 2007, Trivia Brawl has been mixing comedy, current events, politics, local pride, pop culture, science, history, an arms race of terrible team names, and alcohol into an Entertainment Nergasm Bonanza™.
- All players are encouraged to gain a competitive advantage by requesting topics
- Every tenth question is part of our inadvertent quest to discriminate against the deaf, and has players listening to a song and attempting to identify its title, band, and album.
- The fifth round is a special visual aid round in which the blind are instead at an unfair disadvantage.
- Booster Charades: The team in last place can optionally play a round of charades on stage for a bonus point while we point and laugh at them
- Punitive Karaoke: A team deemed worthy of punishment is called upon to read a sheet of lyrics with neither musical accompaniment nor a clue what the song is. All teams can get up to two points if they can correctly guess the band or the title of the song.Come and play for free, solo or with a team, and show off your command of all knowledge trivial. Win, and split up $25 in food and drinks. Lose, and possibly get a prize anyway. The games tend to last an hour and a half, unless we go into a Sudden Death Lightning Bloodfeud Overtime Round (of Death)™.
Sign up before 8:30pm to get a bonus point!
Sundays at 9pm at Be Here Now
505 N Dill St., Muncie, IN
Food and drinks / All agesEmail us at trivia@PhantomWatson.com if you have questions or topic requests.
Sep 14, 2014
Sunday
-
Trivia Brawl
9:00pm to 11:00pm @
Be Here Now
505 N. Dill St.
Every week, egos are crushed and legends are born at Trivia Brawl, Muncie's longest-running trivia gameshow. Since 2007, Trivia Brawl has been mixing comedy, current events, politics, local pride, pop culture, science, history, an arms race of terrible team names, and alcohol into an Entertainment Nergasm Bonanza™.
- All players are encouraged to gain a competitive advantage by requesting topics
- Every tenth question is part of our inadvertent quest to discriminate against the deaf, and has players listening to a song and attempting to identify its title, band, and album.
- The fifth round is a special visual aid round in which the blind are instead at an unfair disadvantage.
- Booster Charades: The team in last place can optionally play a round of charades on stage for a bonus point while we point and laugh at them
- Punitive Karaoke: A team deemed worthy of punishment is called upon to read a sheet of lyrics with neither musical accompaniment nor a clue what the song is. All teams can get up to two points if they can correctly guess the band or the title of the song.Come and play for free, solo or with a team, and show off your command of all knowledge trivial. Win, and split up $25 in food and drinks. Lose, and possibly get a prize anyway. The games tend to last an hour and a half, unless we go into a Sudden Death Lightning Bloodfeud Overtime Round (of Death)™.
Sign up before 8:30pm to get a bonus point!
Sundays at 9pm at Be Here Now
505 N Dill St., Muncie, IN
Food and drinks / All agesEmail us at trivia@PhantomWatson.com if you have questions or topic requests.
Sep 19, 2014
Friday
-
Park(ing) Day
12:00pm to 12:42pm @
Walnut Street
Downtown
When 130 Ball State landscape architecture students take to a Muncie street on Sept. 19, the demonstration they'll stage is less about protest and more about perspective.
As the students prepare to take part in the ninth-annual international Park(ing) Day, they'll join thousands of people who take ordinary urban parking spaces and turn them into temporary art and design installations, with the focus on encouraging folks to consider the world in new ways.
"Look at an aerial image of downtown Muncie," said Nicole Rebeck, a graduate student from St. Louis. "The surface parking is taking up a lot of real estate. My hope is that the community can recognize the positive benefits that are connected to urban public spaces such as quality of life and healthier lifestyles."
The students will convert 10 spaces on Walnut Street in downtown Muncie into these short-lived parks, said Simon Bussiere, assistant professor of landscape architecture. Designs will center on the themes of eat, talk, play, learn and make, he said, transforming spaces normally reserved for cars into places for people.
"In 'play' spaces for example, students are planning activities to engage and excite passers-by. 'Learn' spaces will include educational components," Bussiere said. "The reprogramming of these urban spaces will allow students and others to take away new perspectives on community, collaboration and a greater appreciation for pedestrian environments."
The project, funded in-part by alumni donors, has practical advantages in addition to the philosophical considerations said Maggie Weighner, a second-year student from Grand Rapids, Mich. "I love that this project is design-build, because it is the best way to test if your design actually makes sense in the real world, and to see if it feels and looks like you intended it to in models and drawings," she said. "I did a design-build installation last year, and it was my favorite project because I was able to see what worked and what needed improvement in my design; it also gave me a sense of accomplishment for turning concept into reality."
As many as five of the spaces will be re-created for the Living Lightly Fair at Minnetrista on Sept. 20, and a collection of all of the projects will be reassembled for the First Thursday Arts Walk in November.
Park(ing) Day originated in 2005, when a group of designers and artists in a California firm converted a single metered parking stall in San Francisco to a so-called public, albeit temporary, park. The goal was to draw attention to a need for more shared, open space in urban areas. According to organizers, the event has grown to an estimated 1,000 temporary parks in several countries,including Brazil, France, Poland and Singapore.Sep 21, 2014
Sunday
-
Trivia Brawl
9:00pm to 11:00pm @
Be Here Now
505 N. Dill St.
Every week, egos are crushed and legends are born at Trivia Brawl, Muncie's longest-running trivia gameshow. Since 2007, Trivia Brawl has been mixing comedy, current events, politics, local pride, pop culture, science, history, an arms race of terrible team names, and alcohol into an Entertainment Nergasm Bonanza™.
- All players are encouraged to gain a competitive advantage by requesting topics
- Every tenth question is part of our inadvertent quest to discriminate against the deaf, and has players listening to a song and attempting to identify its title, band, and album.
- The fifth round is a special visual aid round in which the blind are instead at an unfair disadvantage.
- Booster Charades: The team in last place can optionally play a round of charades on stage for a bonus point while we point and laugh at them
- Punitive Karaoke: A team deemed worthy of punishment is called upon to read a sheet of lyrics with neither musical accompaniment nor a clue what the song is. All teams can get up to two points if they can correctly guess the band or the title of the song.Come and play for free, solo or with a team, and show off your command of all knowledge trivial. Win, and split up $25 in food and drinks. Lose, and possibly get a prize anyway. The games tend to last an hour and a half, unless we go into a Sudden Death Lightning Bloodfeud Overtime Round (of Death)™.
Sign up before 8:30pm to get a bonus point!
Sundays at 9pm at Be Here Now
505 N Dill St., Muncie, IN
Food and drinks / All agesEmail us at trivia@PhantomWatson.com if you have questions or topic requests.
Sep 28, 2014
Sunday
-
Trivia Brawl
9:00pm to 11:00pm @
Be Here Now
505 N. Dill St.
Every week, egos are crushed and legends are born at Trivia Brawl, Muncie's longest-running trivia gameshow. Since 2007, Trivia Brawl has been mixing comedy, current events, politics, local pride, pop culture, science, history, an arms race of terrible team names, and alcohol into an Entertainment Nergasm Bonanza™.
- All players are encouraged to gain a competitive advantage by requesting topics
- Every tenth question is part of our inadvertent quest to discriminate against the deaf, and has players listening to a song and attempting to identify its title, band, and album.
- The fifth round is a special visual aid round in which the blind are instead at an unfair disadvantage.
- Booster Charades: The team in last place can optionally play a round of charades on stage for a bonus point while we point and laugh at them
- Punitive Karaoke: A team deemed worthy of punishment is called upon to read a sheet of lyrics with neither musical accompaniment nor a clue what the song is. All teams can get up to two points if they can correctly guess the band or the title of the song.Come and play for free, solo or with a team, and show off your command of all knowledge trivial. Win, and split up $25 in food and drinks. Lose, and possibly get a prize anyway. The games tend to last an hour and a half, unless we go into a Sudden Death Lightning Bloodfeud Overtime Round (of Death)™.
Sign up before 8:30pm to get a bonus point!
Sundays at 9pm at Be Here Now
505 N Dill St., Muncie, IN
Food and drinks / All agesEmail us at trivia@PhantomWatson.com if you have questions or topic requests.
Oct 2, 2014
Thursday
-
First Thursday (ArtsWalk 2014)
5:00pm to 8:00pm @
Downtown
111 Arts Gallery
111 E Main“Collab show of local artist all art for sale cash or trade”
The Artist Within
313 S Walnut
A Retrospective Look at a Muncie Legend, the Artwork of Bette GrahamIn addition to the easily recognized block prints, work in water color and pen and ink will be on display in a salon style format "like it, buy it, take it". We will welcome back the BSU Ceramics Department and students with our potters wheels and throwing demonstration in the Old National Trust/YART parking lot. "Meat Tray Prints" is an activity for children and will be in the YART activities area. For many years, Bette Graham introduced Girl Scouts and young children to printmaking through this technique at Camp Munsee. BSU Art Education majors will help continue this at the printmaking booth. This will be a free activity.
Gallery 308
308 E Main
Such a Good SportAn exhibit featuring award-winning photographer Pamela de Marris opens at Gallery 308 on October 2. “Such a ‘Good Sport” is a collection of fine art photography of the artist’s shared life experiences with her husband James Meadows spanning thirty years. The opening reception for the new exhibit will be held from 5 to 8 p.m. The public is welcome.
De Marris explains her exhibit, “The pieces hanging on these walls describe his influence on my life, which has been more than any other person I have known. These images visually describe my changing interpretations and emotional views of the different periods we have gone through with our children and each other. Depicting Jim during the early years was basically documentation. As our relationship and children grew, I began to express feelings toward him abstractly. The most recent photographs of Jim are a combination of reality and personal concerns. Images were selected from past series, providing a chronological portrayal of interactions with family and friends.”
De Marris began taking photos when she was nine years old. She won a Brownie camera by signing up 12 new subscribers along her paper route in rural Michigan for the Niles Daily Star. "I didn't have the greatest childhood, so I used the camera to document the things I was questioning--my siblings, my parents, whatever," she says. "It allowed me to control the moment I captured."
Like 19th-century photographers, De Marris favors long exposure times. Her lighting is simple, her images lushly saturated. The colors look more like they came from an oil palette than photographic dyes. De Marris makes life-size prints, laminates them with an ultraviolet protector, and frames them herself with elegant black molding.
De Marris stated, “The importance of this exhibition lies in the fact that Jim has allowed himself to be transferred outside his around the clock physician’s duties into a personal pictorial diary about his life. This body of work shares my intense feelings regarding him, which range from happiness to anguish. The various environments, lighting styles and costumes employed to capture Jim on film reflect my concerns regarding our relationship.”
According to the photographer, while computer generated images are commonplace today, these pieces have been printed from unaltered negatives. The only slight exception is that, in some images, original negatives were spliced together. The photographs honestly represent James Meadows.
De Marris earned her Master of Fine Arts in Photography from the School of the Art Institute of Chicago, IL. She also did graduate work in photography, video, film and digital at the Rhode Island School of Design, Providence, RI. Her work has been exhibited in the United States and abroad including New York, Chicago, Boston, France, Belgium, and Italy winning numerous awards and recognitions. De Marris was a faculty member at Ball State University in the Fine Art Department from 1991-2011. She has also served as a visiting artist at the Universidad de Antioquia, Medellin, Colombia and at the American Museum, Giverny, France.
Gallery 308, which provides space for local and regional artists with monthly “First Thursday” exhibits, is in its 14th year as a nonprofit art gallery. For more information about the Gallery 308 ArtsWalk exhibit opening, contact sherry@jackscamera.com. The gallery is open Fridays from 3-7pm and Saturdays from 12:30 – 5:00pm. Admission is free. The show continues through October 24.
Gordy Fine Art & Framing Co.
224 E Main
Scabrous SciaphobiaSomething frightening is brewing in the gallery at Gordy Fine Art & Framing. An exhibit titled, “Scabrous Sciaphobia,” will hang for the month of October and it may just give some patrons the shivers. “Scabrous,” can mean, “having a rough surface,” or, “full of difficulties.” “Sciaphobia” is a fear of shadows. Together, these words create a perfect expression for the haunting month in a century-old building in downtown Muncie.
The artist Lynette Whitesell says about her work, “Scabrous Sciaphobia is defined to me as a fear of shadows that is full of difficulties. Interpreted differently, this body of work confronts life issues, fears, relationships and struggles that haunt us in our lives and how we hide from those struggles.
“I enjoy pushing our classically-conditioned society to peer at the difference between happy and sad, dark and light, etc. I am utilizing heavy impasto with strong hues juxtaposed with photos and ephemera from long ago. I relate our lives and years of experience with multiple layers on the panel. These mixed media pieces resemble encaustic work with techniques that include different textures, images, transfers, text and new to my work: stitching.”
Whitesell works in mixed media, using heavy pigments and strong hues juxtaposed with photos from long ago. One piece, titled, “The Culmination of Amy,” shows a young couple, embraced, perhaps in gardening or work clothes. They are surrounded by a collage of brightly colored papers, hand-stitched on one side, with illegible writing across the scene. Is it a postcard? The couple looks down at the ground in front of them. Are they planting something, or burying something? What difficulties or shadows are we being shown?
Born and raised in Hartford City, Indiana, Lyn is a fine arts graduate of Ball State University. She has worked in East Central Indiana for sixteen years as a graphic designer, illustrator, and creative director and has won numerous awards for her graphic design work. She has also taught at the collegiate level, conducted arts workshops, participated in the Governor’s Arts Awards, and serves on the board of Arts Place in Portland, Indiana. The recipient of two Indiana Arts Commission Artist Grants, Lyn has exhibited her work in art shows and galleries, and has work in numerous public and private collections.
The artist will speak briefly about her work and answer questions beginning at 6:15 PM. Light refreshments will be served, and the public is invited to attend. There will be art-related activities for both children and adults. Gordy Fine Art & Framing is located at 224 East Main Street, next door to Muncie Civic Theatre. For more information, call 765-284-8422, visit Gordy Fine Art & Framing on Facebook, or go to their website, http://www.gordyframing.com.
Horizon Convention Center
401 S High“The Horizon Convention Center will host the Prime Trust soup crawl and the wonderful art work that the stitchers from Elegant Needlepoint shop.”
The Living Room
130 W JacksonBall State's Fine Arts League presents a collaborative show featuring works from student artists in the university community. Come check out works in a variety of media from drawings, to hand-made books, to design, and much much more! The League will also be selling artfully-decorated cookies and artist trading cards.
Muncie Civic Theatre
216 E Main
Muncie Open ScreenMuncie Open Screen is a monthly showcase for local filmmakers at the Muncie Civic Theatre. It operates similarly to an ‘Open Mic Night’ for singers or comedians— local filmmakers can bring their short films, music videos, commercials, home movies, or whatever else they have in a video format and see it played on the big screen.
There is no cost to submit, but there will be an optional, suggested donation at the door. All donations go directly to the Muncie Civic Theater. Each screening is all ages and open to the public.
Muncie Makes Lab
628 S WalnutCAP Americano Sur 2014: An exhibition of Latin American design seen through the eyes of sixteen College of Architecture and Planning students. One Month / Two Continents / Four Countries / Ten Cities
Artistic Explorations of the Proposed Damming of the White River: Work created by local artists Judy Wand, Cindy Norrick Turner, the Hoosier Environmental Council and others in support of the movement against damming the White River in Anderson will explore both large scale and small scale impacts of this proposed dam on the environment. Analyses of the affected area in Mounds State Park, by students from the College of Architecture and Planning will accompany this exhibit.
Rose Court
125 E CharlesRose Court is pleased to have the following artists for the October's Arts Walk – featuring the work of two award winning photographers – Jennifer Smith and Andrea Swartz as well as the pen & ink work of students from Ball State University.
Jennifer Smith is a self-taught photographer who enjoys using her skills to document her travels. This past summer she spent two weeks in Iceland. Thursday's exhibit features images highlighting colors and textures of this unique and beautiful country.
Andrea Swartz is an architect and professor at Ball State University's Department of Architecture. Her photography work is used in the exploration of architecture and informs her design process and the communication of ideas. The photographs presented document the design competition Sukkahville2013 in Toronto Canada, in which Swartz's design for a sukkah (small temporary structure used in the celebration of Sukkot, a Jewish festival) was selected as a finalist in an international design competition. The project was built and exhibited in Toronto with help from the build team of Shannon Buchanan and Morganne Walker (undergraduates in architecture), Julie Musial (graduate architecture student), Janice Shimizu (faculty), Maya Coggeshall and Jennifer Smith. For more information on Sukkahville2013 see http://andreaswartz.com
Student Exhibition of self-portrait pen and ink drawings by advanced-level drawing and animation students in the School of Art at Ball State University: Barbara Balogun, Shawna Gardner, Paisley Hansen, Sydney Hellgeth, Jordan Johnson, Jordan Lewers, William Long, Kait Mahl, Jessica Maxwell, Ty Porter, Rachel Scott, Bowen Tang, Maureen Van Empeh.
Coordinated by Assistant Professor, Barbara Giorgio. "
Yart
Corner of Walnut and Charles StreetsYART is a Yard Sale for Art! YART began in Muncie, Indiana with students at Ball State University and continues in several U.S. cities! The Muncie YART is now held Downtown, twice a year, Spring and Fall.
Muncie’s Fall YART 2014 will be held in conjunction with the October 2014 ArtsWalk, in the Old National Financial lot on the corner of Walnut and Charles Streets in Downtown Muncie, Indiana, on Thursday, October 2nd, from 5-9pm. This community art sale, with a goal of making art affordable and accessible to everyone, brings together artists and art patrons in a casual and unique setting.
All forms of art are welcome! Art of all kinds, by all kinds of artists! YART encourages interaction between artists and the community, hoping to make art more accessible, especially to those who think they cannot afford to buy art for themselves. To this goal, all YART art will be priced below $40!
Each YART Artist will be present throughout YART to meet the public, discuss their art, handle sales personally, and some artists will be making art LIVE at YART!
The Fall 2014 YART will feature holiday decorations and gifts, beaded jewelry, photography, oil/acrylic/watercolor paintings, fused glass art and jewelry, knits for children and adults, drawings, sculpture, lampwork glass beads, knit stuffed animals, clothing, digital art, poetry, faeries, mosaics, the YART Hands-On Children’s ArtSpace, Bette Graham Memorial Print-Making for Kids presented by The Artist Within, the Art Mart Mobile Supply Shop, the BSU Ceramics Guild, the John Peterson Pottery Students, LIVE MUSIC, and so much more!
Fun for all ages - YART and ArtsWalk are for the whole family!
LIKE Muncie-Yart on FaceBook! https://www.facebook.com/pages/Muncie-Yart/156725934394407
Oct 3, 2014
Friday
-
Ball State's 19th annual Fall News Roundup
12:00pm to 1:00pm @
Art and Journalism Building, Ball State University
Room 175
1001 N. McKinley Ave.
Troubled by pictures of police teargassing and arresting journalists in Ferguson, Missouri? Perplexed by the police detention of a student photographer on the Purdue campus?
What more do we need to know? And what can law enforcement officers and journalists do to create a better working relationship, especially in times of stress?
Hear a panel take on these images and issues during Ball State's 19th annual Fall News Roundup, Friday, Oct. 3. Time: noon-1 p.m. Room: AJ 175. Speakers:· Steve Bray, news director, WISH-TV, Indianapolis (tentative),
· Capt. Dave Bursten, chief public information officer, Indiana State Police, plus
· Ball State Police Sgt. David Bell, journalism Professor Adam Kuban and two of the students (one in journalism/telecommunications, one in criminal justice/criminology) from their empathy-building immersive course "Police + The Press."
A professional-in-residence event of the departments of Journalism and Telecommunications. Contact: Phil Bremen, pbremen@bsu.edu or 765-285-3556.
Oct 5, 2014
Sunday
-
Trivia Brawl
9:00pm to 11:00pm @
Be Here Now
505 N. Dill St.
Every week, egos are crushed and legends are born at Trivia Brawl, Muncie's longest-running trivia gameshow. Since 2007, Trivia Brawl has been mixing comedy, current events, politics, local pride, pop culture, science, history, an arms race of terrible team names, and alcohol into an Entertainment Nergasm Bonanza™.
- All players are encouraged to gain a competitive advantage by requesting topics
- Every tenth question is part of our inadvertent quest to discriminate against the deaf, and has players listening to a song and attempting to identify its title, band, and album.
- The fifth round is a special visual aid round in which the blind are instead at an unfair disadvantage.
- Booster Charades: The team in last place can optionally play a round of charades on stage for a bonus point while we point and laugh at them
- Punitive Karaoke: A team deemed worthy of punishment is called upon to read a sheet of lyrics with neither musical accompaniment nor a clue what the song is. All teams can get up to two points if they can correctly guess the band or the title of the song.Come and play for free, solo or with a team, and show off your command of all knowledge trivial. Win, and split up $25 in food and drinks. Lose, and possibly get a prize anyway. The games tend to last an hour and a half, unless we go into a Sudden Death Lightning Bloodfeud Overtime Round (of Death)™.
Sign up before 8:30pm to get a bonus point!
Sundays at 9pm at Be Here Now
505 N Dill St., Muncie, IN
Food and drinks / All agesEmail us at trivia@PhantomWatson.com if you have questions or topic requests.
Oct 12, 2014
Sunday
-
Trivia Brawl
9:00pm to 11:00pm @
Be Here Now
505 N. Dill St.
Every week, egos are crushed and legends are born at Trivia Brawl, Muncie's longest-running trivia gameshow. Since 2007, Trivia Brawl has been mixing comedy, current events, politics, local pride, pop culture, science, history, an arms race of terrible team names, and alcohol into an Entertainment Nergasm Bonanza™.
- All players are encouraged to gain a competitive advantage by requesting topics
- Every tenth question is part of our inadvertent quest to discriminate against the deaf, and has players listening to a song and attempting to identify its title, band, and album.
- The fifth round is a special visual aid round in which the blind are instead at an unfair disadvantage.
- Booster Charades: The team in last place can optionally play a round of charades on stage for a bonus point while we point and laugh at them
- Punitive Karaoke: A team deemed worthy of punishment is called upon to read a sheet of lyrics with neither musical accompaniment nor a clue what the song is. All teams can get up to two points if they can correctly guess the band or the title of the song.Come and play for free, solo or with a team, and show off your command of all knowledge trivial. Win, and split up $25 in food and drinks. Lose, and possibly get a prize anyway. The games tend to last an hour and a half, unless we go into a Sudden Death Lightning Bloodfeud Overtime Round (of Death)™.
Sign up before 8:30pm to get a bonus point!
Sundays at 9pm at Be Here Now
505 N Dill St., Muncie, IN
Food and drinks / All agesEmail us at trivia@PhantomWatson.com if you have questions or topic requests.
-
Trivia Brawl
9:00pm to 11:00pm @
Be Here Now
505 N. Dill St.
-
Trivia Brawl
9:00pm to 11:00pm @
Be Here Now
505 N. Dill St.
-
Ball State's 19th annual Fall News Roundup
12:00pm to 1:00pm @
Art and Journalism Building, Ball State University
Room 175
1001 N. McKinley Ave.
-
First Thursday (ArtsWalk 2014)
5:00pm to 8:00pm @
Downtown
-
Trivia Brawl
9:00pm to 11:00pm @
Be Here Now
505 N. Dill St.
-
Trivia Brawl
9:00pm to 11:00pm @
Be Here Now
505 N. Dill St.
-
Park(ing) Day
12:00pm to 12:42pm @
Walnut Street
Downtown
-
Trivia Brawl
9:00pm to 11:00pm @
Be Here Now
505 N. Dill St.
-
Trivia Brawl
9:00pm to 11:00pm @
Be Here Now
505 N. Dill St.
-
First Thursday
5:00pm to 8:00pm @
Downtown
- Trivia Brawl 9:00pm to 11:00pm @ Be Here Now 505 N. Dill St.
-
RibFest
11:00am to 5:00pm @
Canan Commons
500 S. Walnut St
-
RibFest
12:00pm to 10:00pm @
Canan Commons
500 S. Walnut St
-
Trivia Brawl
9:00pm to 11:00pm @
Be Here Now
505 N. Dill St.
-
Trivia Brawl
9:00pm to 11:00pm @
Be Here Now
505 N. Dill St.
-
First Thursday
5:00pm to 8:00pm @
Downtown
-
Trivia Brawl
9:00pm to 11:00pm @
Be Here Now
505 N. Dill St.
-
Trivia Brawl
9:00pm to 11:00pm @
Be Here Now
505 N. Dill St.