Coming Soon
On Display: Robert Dash / Drawings
Orcas Center - Madrona Room 917 Mount Baker Road, Eastsound, WA, United StatesThis exhibit celebrates Featured Artist Robert Dash and our community show theme is Drawing and Prints. The show will be on display until October 22nd. Join us for the Art Opening on September 27th at 5:30pm!
Orcas Island Film Festival 2024
October 15-20, we will screen incredible films over the course of five days in three venues that boast state-of-the-art cinema projection systems. Films at the Orcas Island Film Festival are, "the crème de la crème of the first-tier festival circuit," says Charles Mudede, Film/Art critic from The Stranger. Attendees will see these films before their official theatrical release and the festival provides a unique opportunity for filmmakers and film lovers to connect and share the cinematic experience as well as parties, panels and special events.
Art Opening: Ponch Immel / Ceramics & Watercolors
Orcas Center - Madrona Room 917 Mount Baker Road, Eastsound, WA, United StatesThis exhibit celebrates Featured Artist Ponch Immel and our community show theme is Ceramics and watercolors. The show will be on display until November 19th. Join us for the Art Opening on October 25th at 5:30pm!
OI Library Adult Spelling Bee
Orcas Center - Center Stage 917 Mt. Baker Road, Eastsound, WA, United StatesHave you ever wanted to enter a Spelling Bee contest? Or are you a former Spelling Bee champ and crave another opportunity? Here’s your chance! The Orcas Island Library is hosting an Adult Spelling Bee on Friday, Oct. 25 from 6 to 8 p.m. There will be prizes and refreshments.
Andrew Collins Trio
Orcas Center - Center Stage 917 Mt. Baker Road, Eastsound, WA, United States7x CFMA winner/5x JUNO nominee mando-maestro Andrew Collins is joined by fellow Trio string-meisters Mike Mezzatesta and James McEleney to showcase a popular collision of folk, new acoustic roots, chambergrass and jazz, not to mention a dizzying number and energetic interplay of instruments on stage. This dynamic genre-hopping show is propelled even further by Andrew’s captivating lead vocals and James’ soaring harmonies.
Bloodworks Northwest: Blood Drive
Orcas Center - Madrona Room 917 Mount Baker Road, Eastsound, WA, United StatesIt takes 1,000 blood donors each day to save lives across the Pacific Northwest. Schedule your appointment to donate at Orcas Center on November 6th!
She Rose
Orcas Center - Center Stage 917 Mt. Baker Road, Eastsound, WA, United StatesAn exquisite and evocative multi-modality experience of sacred song, dance, ritual theater, puppeteering, and visuals, ‘The She Rose Show’ entices the hearts of the witness to bloom in reverence of the power & wisdom of the emergent divine feminine.
Orcas Center Annual Meeting: Public Welcome!
Orcas Center 917 Mt. Baker Road, Eastsound, WA, United StatesOrcas Center's annual meeting is on Sunday, November 10th at 4pm The event is open to the public! Orcas Center Members will vote prior to the meeting via online ballot. Not a member yet? Simply donate $25 or more and you'll get voting privileges to help make your voice heard on the future of Orcas Center!
Dancing in the Brass Ring
Turtleback Brass and The Orcas Dance Collective unite with community artists to celebrate our successes while enduring life’s trying transitions. Finding balance and bounty through brass and dance is one way can come together and express thankfulness. A concert of all ages for all ages!
VAC Art Opening: Animals of Orcas
The Visual Arts Committee (VAC) of Orcas Center, is excited to host an exhibit celebrating our furry and feathered island friends! We welcome artists of all mediums to show off their island animals. Three pieces per person, please!
Handmade Craft Market 2024
Celebrate the holiday season and all the incredible talent this island has to offer! The Visual Arts Committee (VAC) of Orcas Center is excited to host a Handmade Craft Market on November 30th (Small Business Saturday) from 11am-4pm
OCS: Ceremony of Carols
Join us for a wondrous Holiday Concert! Orcas Choral Society will be singing Benjamin Britten’s beloved Ceremony of Carols arranged for men’s and women’s voices, plus a wide array of well-known carols. Bruce Langford, Artistic Director, said “The mix gives us great harmonies. It is music that will stay with you long after the concert is done.”
Alias Brass
Committed to promoting an image of music that is inclusive, the Alias Brass Company strives to fulfill their mission of ensuring that music remains sustainable and thriving in today’s society by presenting works that represent a variety of global styles, genders, and cultures. Through setting an example that powerful music can be created by and for anyone, Alias creates a gateway into classical music for future musicians and music lovers alike.
On Screen: Les Contes d’Hoffmann (Met Opera)
An ensemble of leading lights takes the stage for Offenbach’s fantastical final work, headlined by tenor Benjamin Bernheim in the title role of the tormented poet. Hoffmann’s trio of lovers are sung by soprano Erin Morley as the mechanical doll Olympia, soprano Pretty Yende as the plagued diva Antonia, and mezzo-soprano Clémentine Margaine as the Venetian seductress Giulietta.
On Screen: Grounded (Met Opera)
Two-time Tony Award–winning composer Jeanine Tesori’s powerful new opera Grounded, commissioned by the Met and based on librettist George Brant’s acclaimed play, wrestles with the ethical quandaries and psychological toll of 21st-century warfare. Mezzo-soprano Emily D’Angelo, one of opera’s most compelling young stars, portrays Jess, a hot-shot fighter pilot whose unplanned pregnancy takes her out of the cockpit and lands her in Las Vegas, operating a Reaper drone halfway around the world. As she struggles to adjust to this new way of doing battle, she fights to maintain her sanity, and her soul, as she is called to rain down death by remote control. Met Music Director Yannick Nézet-Séguin oversees the Met premiere of Tesori’s kaleidoscopic score and a cast that also features tenor Ben Bliss as the Wyoming rancher who becomes Jess’s husband. Michael Mayer’s high-tech staging, using a vast array of LED screens, presents a variety of perspectives on the action, including the drone’s predatory view from high above.
On Screen: Tosca (Met Opera)
Extraordinary soprano Lise Davidsen stars as the volatile diva Floria Tosca for her first time at the Met. David McVicar’s thrilling production also features tenor Freddie De Tommaso in his eagerly anticipated company debut as Tosca’s revolutionary lover, Cavaradossi, and powerhouse baritone Quinn Kelsey as the sadistic chief of police Scarpia. Maestro Xian Zhang conducts the electrifying score, which features some of Puccini’s most memorable melodies.
Frank Vignola and Pasquale Grasso
Join us on January 31st to witness the incredibly versatile guitarist Frank Vignola team up with rising jazz guitar star Pasquale Grasso to create an unique and intimate musical experience unlike any other!
On Screen: Aida (Met Opera)
This grandest of grand operas features an epic backdrop for what is in essence an intimate love story. Set in ancient Egypt and packed with magnificent choruses, complex ensembles, and elaborate ballets, Aida never loses sight of its three protagonists. Few operas have matched Aida in its exploration of the conflict of private emotion and public duty, and perhaps no other has remained to the present day so unanimously appreciated by audiences and critics alike.
On Screen: Fidelio (Met Opera)
Fidelio’s unusual structure, glorious score, and life-affirming aura make it a unique experience. It has been called a hymn to freedom and human dignity. Formally a singspiel (with musical numbers separated by spoken dialogue), Fidelio had a long and complex gestation. Its uplifting spirit made it the obvious choice for several important productions marking the end of World War II, including the reopening of the Vienna State Opera in 1955.
On Screen: Salome (Met Opera)
The story of this incendiary and powerful opera is derived from a brief biblical account: A young princess of Judea dances for her stepfather Herod and chooses as her reward the head of the prophet John the Baptist. This subject captured the imaginations of generations of visual artists, but its full possibilities were perhaps best realized in Oscar Wilde’s 1891 tragedy (which was banned from performance in several countries). Strauss’s score combines the grandeur of Wagner’s epics with the focus and emotional punch of the short Italian verismo operas.
On Screen: Le Nozze di Figaro (Met Opera)
A profoundly humane comedy, Le Nozze di Figaro is a remarkable marriage of Mozart’s music at the height of his genius and one of the best librettos ever set. In adapting a play that caused a scandal with its revolutionary take on 18th-century society, librettist Lorenzo Da Ponte focused less on the original topical references and more on the timeless issues embedded in the frothy drawing-room comedy.
On Screen: Il Barbiere di Siviglia (Met Opera)
Rossini’s perfectly honed treasure survived a famously disastrous opening night (caused by factions and local politics more than any reaction to the work itself) to become what may be the world’s most popular comic opera. Its buoyant good humor and elegant melodies have delighted the diverse tastes of every generation for two centuries, and several of the opera’s most recognizable tunes have entered the world’s musical unconscious, most notably the introductory patter song of the swaggering Figaro, the titular barber of Seville.