Mar 17 Sunday
The team at Bordas & Bordas is excited to announce their 2024 Fighting for Justice Award which honors an Anti-Bullying Ambassador in the winner's school and community. This will be awarded to a senior in each high school in Ohio, Marshall and Belmont counties. An ideal candidate is someone who strives for equality and stands up for those who are discriminated against. To learn more about this award, take a look at our nomination page!
⭐ Cincinnati Reds Hall of Fame & Museum allows you to explore the rich history of the Cincinnati Reds and their part in the history of baseball.
Ticket types
🎫 Admission tickets for the Cincinnati Reds Hall of Fame & Museum.🎫 Tickets providing entry to the Cincinnati Reds Hall of Fame & Museum.🎫 Access passes to the Cincinnati Reds Hall of Fame & Museum.🎫 Tickets granting you entry to the Cincinnati Reds Hall of Fame & Museum.
Highlights
🎟️ Grab your tickets for the Cincinnati Reds Hall of Fame & Museum and explore the Reds' history from 1869 to today. 🕰️
🏆 Check out the Hall of Fame Gallery to see the plaques of all the Reds Hall of Famers. 🎑
🎙️ Feel like a broadcaster in the Marty and Joe Broadcast Exhibit, where you can even record your own post-game show in the Bally Sports Booth. 🎤
📍 LocationThe Cincinnati Reds Hall of Fame & Museum can be found within the city of Cincinnati.
DescriptionExperience the electrifying journey of the Cincinnati Reds at the mind-blowing Hall of Fame & Museum! Brace yourself for a jaw-dropping 150-year adventure, where you'll gasp at iconic jerseys, marvel at authentic lockers, and even craft your very own baseball card! Join the adrenaline-pumping Marty and Joe Broadcast Exhibit and immortalize your own epic post-game show. Don't let this extraordinary opportunity slip away! Grab your tickets pronto and become an indispensable part of the Reds' awe-inspiring legacy!
📝 Additional info
Hours change on game daysGames starting at 16:10 or later: open from 10:00 to 20:00Games starting at 12:30 or 13:10: open from 10:00 until 2 hours after the gameWheelchair accessiblePresent your smartphone ticket at the HOF Box Office in main lobbyChildren under 12 enter for free, choose a free ticket for themCheck schedule before visiting on game days
Please join us on March 8th from 6-9 PM for the public opening reception of our next exhibition, Delicate Ecologies, Painting Selections From: Kelley Booze, Katherine Colborn, and Samantha Haring.
The exhibition will be on view in the gallery and our website from March 8th-August 10th, 2024. Please visit indianhillgallery.com for more information and hours of operation.
This year there will be two consecutive days of music, dance, food and comradery. Saturday, March 16 and Sunday, March 17. The Irish Heritage Center is the place to be every year but this year we are presenting all the fun in one weekend! Both days will offer continuous music and dance in our Concert Hall, a Children’s Festival, sessions with our Genealogy expert, lectures on Irish History and St. Patrick himself will be strolling the halls. You can feast on Guinness stew, corned beef sandwiches, homemade scones, soda bread and desserts. The Thatched Roof Pub is on-site and that along with the music and dancing will provide you with the best St. Patrick’s Weekend experience this side of the Atlantic!
Please visit our website, CincyIrish.org or our FaceBook page, Irish Heritage Center of Greater Cincinnati page for details.
Duane Malinowski Band St. Patrick Day DanceYour favorite ballroom selections for your dancing pleasure!Sunday: March 17, 2024 3 - 7pmAmerican Czechoslovakian Club922 Valley Street, Dayton OH$14 Members, $15 non-MembersIncludes: Beer * Wine * Soft Drinks * Snacks(Food Available)Reservations if desired:Mary Chidester 937-287-4275reservations@accdayton.comwww.accdayton.com
Performers:Seven Hills SymphonyAik Khai Pung, conductorMatthew Moquin-Lee, assistant conductorWilliam Herzog, violin
Program:Aaron Avshalomov: Four Biblical TableauxErnest Bloch: Baal Shem Suite, B. 47Marc Larvy: Negev, Symphonic Poem, Op. 251Marc Lavry: Emek, Symphonic Poem, Op. 45
In celebration of Israeli composer Marc Lavry’s 120th anniversary, Seven Hills Symphony will present an orchestral concert featuring his music along with music by Aaron Avshalomov and Ernest Bloch. Dr. William Herzog, violin professor at Northern Kentucky University, will perform Bloch’s Baal Shem Suite with the orchestra.
The Oxford Community Arts Center and ECO will host an exhibition of art pieces focusing on climate change and sustainability, opening on March 8. The opening event will run from 6 p.m. to 9 p.m. during the Second Friday Celebration of the Arts at the Oxford Community Arts Center. The exhibition will be on display until April 5th.In its third iteration, this exhibition turns science and societal impacts into artistic action to raise awareness about climate change. The exhibition encourages reflection, questioning, understanding, and action by highlighting the various interpretations and experiences of climate change as felt by artists and community members. The exhibition will include artwork by elementary, middle school and high school students, and Miami University students, as well as community members and local artists.
Experience the magic of the enchanting Amélie The Musical, inspired by the beloved French film. With a book by Craig Lucas and music and lyrics by Daniel Messé and Nathan Tysen, this whimsical story follows Amélie, an imaginative young woman who lives quietly in the world but loudly in her mind. She covertly improvises small but surprising acts of kindness that bring joy and mayhem. But when a chance at love comes her way, Amélie realizes that to find happiness, she’ll have to risk everything and say what’s in her heart.
Friday, March 15 at 7:30 p.m.Saturday, March 16 at 2 p.m. & 7:30 p.m.Sunday, March 17 at 3 p.m.Wednesday-Friday, March 20-22 at 7:30 p.m.Saturday, March 23 at 2 p.m. & 7:30 p.m.
Mar 18 Monday
African Modernism in America features nearly 80 dynamic and vivid works of art created in Africa during the 1950s and ‘60s. Co-organized by the American Federation of Arts and Fisk University Galleries, the exhibition explores the relationships formed between African artists and American patrons, artists, and cultural organizations amid the interlocking histories of civil rights, decolonization, and the Cold War. Many of the paintings, sculptures, and works on paper in the show were drawn from Fisk’s remarkable collection of gifts from the Harmon Foundation. Following World War II, this foundation, along with other institutions such as the Museum of Modern Art in New York, Fisk University, and other historically Black colleges and universities, supported and exhibited the work of Black artists, including the important modern African artists Ben Enwonwu (Nigeria), Ibrahim El-Salahi (Sudan), and Skunder Boghossian (Ethiopia). Showing African art in the United States rooted it in the present and encouraged American audiences to engage with African artists as contemporaries. The inventive nature of the works in this exhibition challenges the assumptions of the time about African art being isolated to a “primitive past.” Some pieces took inspiration from early Christian art, West African sculpture, and Nigerian literature, while others reflect the influences of American jazz and modern European art.
Learn more at taftmuseum.org/Exhibitions/AfricanModernism.
Nature can provide inspiration for beautiful objects or set the mood in a painting. Anything from flowers to a sunset can spark an artist’s creativity. For this exhibition from the Taft collection, our curators have selected small nature-inspired works of art from storage.
Learn more at taftmuseum.org/Exhibitions/NatureInspires.