May 05 Sunday
Bring the whole family to this fun free event hosted by La Parada and Farm & Table
This year we are very excited to host a Costume Pet Parade on the farm. All pets welcome!
*40+ Uniquely Talented Local Artisan Vendors 10 – 4pm* Free Piñata Decorating Workshop 10-12pm*Live Music by Juanita 11-2pm*Festival Food by Farm & Table, Street Food Institute, Sanchez Tacos 11 – 4pm*Costume Pet Parade 2:30pm*Festive Music 10 – 4pm*Kids craft table 10 - 4pm
All aboard! The Rail Yards Market, Albuquerque's iconic Farmers' Market, is slated to re-open on May 5, 2024 for in-person family-friendly fun! The market will bloom into its 10th season since opening in 2014, and hosts over 150 vendors of fresh produce, fine food, healing hands, and handmade art.Spring couldn't be here fast enough, as farms, foodies, artisans, and organizers chug along to prepare the finest Growers' Market experience for locals and tourists alike.The theme for the Rail Yards Market's grand opening is Traditions. The cultivation of our food, telling of stories, teaching of techniques, passing on wisdom, and so much more are important ingredients of our culture and rituals of our existence on this realm. Celebrate our traditions unique to New Mexico and indulge your loca-vorian spirit at the Rail Yards Market in Albuquerque!!Programming:Flamenco Works performance!At Flamenco Works they believe in the unique strengths and creativity of each of their students.Their mission is to empower youth to reach their potential through professional Flamenco dance training and the creation of visceral, cutting-edge Flamenco art.They also seek to build a sense of place within Barelas by beautifying our studio and theatre through community gardens, murals, and outdoor performances.Make your own retablo by Sean Wells!Learn about & make your own retablo ornament. Learn about this historic traditional art form that dates back more than 400 years with a 5th generation Spanish-Colonial artist, Sean Wells. Learn where traditional retablo pigments come from, see a demonstration, and even color your own to take home. No experience required!Retablo translates to "behind the altar" and have been created by artists of all skill levels for centuries. They can be an artistic way to tribute saints, pay gratitude to a ritual, or simply bring images into the home for prosperity, honor, good-luck and more.For example, a retablo of San Ysidro, a patron saint of Farming, could be crafted to welcome good weather for crops, or promote seed growth in your garden!Sean is an award-winning 5th generation Hispanic artist that has been a juried member of the Spanish Colonial Arts Society in the retablo category producing traditional Saint images. She is also well-known for her Day of the Dead themed art that has appeared on nationally distributed beers and wines and New Mexico Lottery scratchers. Her Saints and her Sinners, as she calls them, all deal with suffering and healing. The skeleton imagery has also become more symbolic in these times of division as a symbol. It is the foundation that we all share as humans. Sean aspires to educate on Hispanic culture through art and create space for compassion and understanding. Sean received "Best Visual Artist" from Albuquerque the Magazine and the 2019 Hispanic Heritage Award in Arts & Culture. Sean also demonstrates, teaches and presents to children and adults throughout New Mexico on themes related to her art imagery. Her painting television show can be viewed currently on Comcast channel 27 at 5PM on Mondays.
+±++++++++++++++++++++++🌱Sundays May-October☀️10am-2pm📍 Historic #barelas Rail Yards ABQ👛EBT/SNAP/WIC welcome♿ADA Accessible🤑FREE Event & Parking🦮Pets welcome in cool weather🎉Food, Friends, FunLearn more about the Rail Yards Market ABQ , how to visit, and vendor info: http://railyardsmarket.org/find-us.php***The Rail Yards Market accepts vendor applications through our website ONLY. We will never solicit vendors, money, or anything really through direct message -- don't fall for individual fake accounts soliciting vendors. Go to our website!
Get outdoors and join the fun as kites fill the skies with colorful shapes and sizes throughout the weekend. Bring your own kite, buy one at the festival, or watch professional stunt kite fliers maneuver their kites expertly in the wind. All ages have fun flying their kites on large grass fields and participating in kite flying contests. Visitors can also go into the wildlife zoo and get eye to eye with 20 species of native wildlife including 4 adorable tree climbing grey foxes, 2 curious cougars, bobcats, elk, Crested Caracaras and more. Food and drink are available from vendors on the Festival grounds. It's fun for the entire family.
Raven Chacon: Three Songs brings together three of Raven Chacon’s projects that pay tribute to Indigenous women through sound, video, and visual work.
This refocusing on female leadership asserts Indigenous women as both keepers of memory and creators of culture. When presented in unison, these works resound the suppressed histories and present-day stories of Native resistance in the face of systemic power.
Through original documents, photographs, and artifacts, Witnessing Justice examines the challenges and importance of the Nuremberg trials and the international community’s response to Nazi crimes against humanity. This exhibit gives insight into the experience of prosecuting war crimes from the perspective of members of the legal team.
Now, you can also dive into the stories of Nuremberg through the interactive digital scrapbooks and photo albums of those who took part. NMHIM has engaged Corrales-based digital exhibit developer IDEUM to bring a dynamic new dimension to our exhibit.
We at IPCC are honored to host the Three Sisters Collective on Sunday May 5, an incredible organization comprised of Pueblo women and youth living in and around O’Ga Poegeh (Santa Fe). This special event takes place in recognition of Missing and Murdered Indigenous Relatives (MMIR) Awareness Day at our courtyard and Art Through Struggle Gallery where the Collective’s mural “Connected” is on display. Attendees are encouraged to wear red in honor of MMIR and can expect creative performances, gallery talks and live screen printing of original MMIR designs. Come and get a bandana printed or bring your own garment or tote bag.
Included with IPCC admission or free for members.
A modern comedy influenced by the works of Anton Chekhov written by playwright Christopher Durang. Middle-aged siblings Vanya and Sonia share a home in Bucks County, PA, where they bicker and complain about the circumstances of their lives. Suddenly, their movie-star sister Masha, swoops in with her new boytoy, Spike. Old resentments flare up, eventually leading to threats to sell the house. Also on the scene are sassy maid Cassandra, who can predict the future, and a lovely young aspiring actress named Nina, whose prettiness somewhat worries the imperious Masha.
Multiple Awards - 2013 Tony Award® for Best Play, 2013 New York Drama Critics’ Circle Award for Best Play, the Drama Desk Award for Outstanding Play, Drama League Award for Outstanding Production of a Play.
The High Desert Winds Santa Fe will present our final concert of the 2023-24 Season on May 5, 2024, 2pm at the St. Francis Auditorium located in the New Mexico Museum of Art, 107 W. Palace Ave.Under the baton of Dr. Jan Gaynor, the performance will include music by Giroux, Fucik, G.F. Handel and more.Featured will be the HDWSF horn section in a performance of Carl Hienrich Hübler’s fabulous Concerto for four horns and orchestra, the “Konzertstück”!Admission is FREE with donations gratefully accepted.
The Albuquerque Concert presents a Small Ensemble Concert. This special concert will feature small ensembles made up of ACB members, their family, and friends!You will hear a great variety of music-anything from Bach, to the Beatles!Come on over to the Eldorado HS PAC and support your local musicians from around the city!Free admission and open to the public.
Sunday, May 5th3pm to 4pmEldorado HS PAC11300 Montgomery Blvd NEwww.abqband.org
Tlacayolt Dance Group (Chichimeca Mexica Azteca) will be dancing.
Celebrate the seasonal cycles through prayer, song, and dance with our Cultural Dance Program. Dances connect us to our ancestors, community, and traditions while honoring gifts from our Creator.
They ensure that life continues and connections to the past and future are reinforced. The Indian Pueblo Cultural Center is the only place in North America to offer cultural Native American dances every week, year-round.
Free for museum members, or with admission.
Dance groups and times subject to change.