Arts Consortium of Carver County

48 Hour Prose/Poetry Contest

A writing exercise for all ages that requires participants to write and submit a piece of prose or poetry within a 48 hour (2 day) window. Writing piece MUST contain the following words: knife, lipstick; prose 600 word limit, poetry 300 word limit.

LOCATION
This is a virtual event

DATES
September 14-16, 2020

DEADLINE
by midnight on September 16, 2020

DETAILS
Submissions can be sent to the ACCC Literary Committee email:  literary@artsofcarvercounty.org. First, second, and third place pieces will be featured on the ACCC social media pages, as well as the names of all who participated. Include your name, email address, phone number, and your titled poem or prose.

FEE
This is a FREE event

CONTACT
James Kane
literary@artsofcarvercounty.org

Artists of Color Experience

Call for Artists for Artists of Color Experience

Artists of Color Experience Call For Artists

Looking for Artists of Color to be part of the Arts Consortium’s Artists of Color Experience Art Show. Art will be shown in our gallery in Victoria and option to sell your art as well.

Artists of Color Experience honors all artists of color – we invite you share stories through visual art, music and literary art. We look forward to seeing many interesting and beautiful works of art.

LOCATION
ACCC Arts Center Gallery
7924 Victoria Drive, Studio Level
Victoria MN 55386

EXHIBIT DATES
July 18 to August 30, 2020

ARTS CENTER HOURS
EXHIBIT is open during Arts Center Hours
Saturdays 9-5pm
(subject to Volunteer availability)

Appointment Shopping can be scheduled by emailing giftshop@artsofcarvercounty.org

DEADLINES
Entry Deadline: by midnight Friday, July 17, 2020 (complete form below to enter)

DETAILS
Notification of Acceptance will be sent:  on or before July 17, 2020
Exhibit Dates: July 18 to August 30, 2020

Art Drop-Off:  Contact Sue Thompson at visualarts@artsofcarvercounty.org to make arrangements.
Art Pick-Up: Contact Sue Thompson at visualarts@artsofcarvercounty.org to make arrangements.
Any work left at the Arts Center 30 days after an exhibit ends becomes the property of the ACCC.

PROCESS
Information about eligible works can be found on our Gallery Standard Categories & Guidelines page. Please read before you submit your Entry Fee below. Please feel free to contact us via phone or email if you have any questions. Thank you.

  • Any ACCC Member with artwork in our Gift Shop or in an Exhibit who works 6+ hours in the Arts Center in a given month will earn an extra 10% commission on the sale of their work for that month. So, the commission paid to the ACCC goes from 40% to 30%.  To Volunteer at the Arts Center, visit our Volunteer page.

We can accept up to 3 works per artist until the gallery is full.

After you complete the Entry Form below, email your 3 images of your work to visualarts@artsofcarvercounty.org to complete your entry.

Membership is not required to be in the show. To join the ACCC, go to our Membership page. We will notify all artists via email regarding acceptance to the exhibit by the Notification of Acceptance date listed above. If space provides, we may contact you to submit additional work for the exhibit.

FEE
There is no charge for Members or Nonmembers for this exhibit.

CONTACT
Sue Thompson, Exhibit Coordinator
visualarts@artsofcarvercounty.org
952-240-3180

AFTER your work is accepted, go to the How To Submit Art page and officially submit your accepted works. Labeled artwork can be brought to the Arts Center on the Art Drop-Off date listed above. Please make sure your item label matches artwork submitted for the exhibit. MAKE A NOTE ON YOUR ART INTAKE FORM IF YOUR ARTWORK IS NOT FOR SALE, FOR DISPLAY ONLY.

You may use the graphic below to help promote the exhibit.

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Artists of Color Experience

Right click to copy and save the image for marketing. It’s the perfect size for a Facebook or Instagram post!

Haikus for Healing

Haikus for Healing

Want to lighten someone’s day?

If you write a haiku in chalk on a sidewalk (where permitted) or post a haiku in your yard, take a picture and post it on the ACCC Facebook and Instagram pages along with #ACCCHaikus4Healing.

A haiku is three lines of poetry with 5, 7, 5 syllables on the first, second, and third lines respectively.

Wouldn’t it be fun to make someone smile reading poetry!

ACCC Facebook Page: https://www.facebook.com/Artsincarvercounty/
ACCC Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/artsofcarvercounty/

Send your questions to Susan Coultrap McQuin, literary@artsofcarvercounty.org.

Haikus for Healing

 

 

 

ACCC Poetry Contest

Celebrate Poetry Postponed

At this time, we are postponing the Poetry Celebration scheduled for April 28 in the Arts Center and Ruby’s Roost.  We do not yet have an alternative date but hope to do something in May at which all those who entered will be invited to read, and ribbons will be awarded to winners.  Joyce Sutphen, Minnesota Poet Laureate and other judges will also read.

We hope you will join us to celebrate Poetry Month and the winners in this year’s ACCC Poetry Contest on April 28, 2020.  The event will be hosted jointly by the ACCC Arts Center and Ruby’s Roost.  We will share social time with poets, family, and friends from 6:30-7:00 in the Arts Center.  We will have a poetry reading beginning at 7 pm  in Ruby’s Roost by the contest winners, others who submitted poems, and the judges.  Our reading will also feature Joyce Sutphen, Minnesota Poet Laureate, who was our awards judge.  At the conclusion of the reading, we will proceed downstairs to the Arts Center for special treats and an opportunity for photographs.  We are looking forward to the celebration and hope all will join us.

Please watch our website for further details and to see if the current health crisis necessitates we cancel or postpone.

LOCATION
ACCC Arts Center and Ruby’s Roost
7924 Victoria Drive, Victoria

MAX NUMBER OF ATTENDEES
60

DATE
April 28, 2020

TIME
The event begins at 6:30pm

FEE
Free; donations accepted.

CONTACT
Susan Coultrap-McQuin
literary@artsofcarvercounty.org
952-443-3200

ArtStock Art, Wine & Music Festival

Call for Artists – ArtStock Art, Wine & Music Festival 2020

It breaks our hearts to say that we have cancelled the ArtStock Art, Wine & Music Festival for 2020 due to the COVID-19 pandemic. We are brainstorming and working creatively to come up with additional ways to fulfill our mission of bringing the arts to Carver County. If you’d like to help us reinvent how we spread the love for art, please consider becoming a Volunteer! Fill out the form on our Volunteer page. Thank you and be safe!

Call for Artists

2020 ARTSTOCK ART, WINE & MUSIC FESTIVAL – 10TH ANNUAL!ArtStock Art, Wine & Music Festival

ArtStock Art, Wine & Music Festival is a 2-day art & music festival. In addition to the artist booths and the picturesque, vineyard/orchard setting, live music fills the air both days enhancing this wonderful, summertime experience.
LOCATION
Parley Lake Winery, 8280 Parley Lake Rd, Waconia, MN 55387
DATE/TIME
Saturday, July 11 from 10am to 5pm
Sunday, July 12 from 11am to 5pm

The musical performers line up…

Saturday, July 11th
10-12 Tara B
12-2 Holly and Matt
2-5 Traveled Ground

Sunday, July 12th
11-1 Carol Z
1-3 Lehto & Wright
3-5 Blue Skies Band


ATTENTION ARTISTS

Thank you for considering our 2020 ArtStock Art, Wine & Music Festival as part of your 2020 show schedule. It is our goal to make this an easy, fun, and rewarding show for all involved! We are eager to have you join us and will do everything to make ArtStock a huge success!

Parley Lake Winery is our festival location and offers a great, natural, outdoor setting and features a vineyard and orchard on the grounds. Parley Lake Winery is located between Victoria and Waconia Minnesota off of Highway 5. Directions

This event is sponsored and hosted by the Arts Consortium of Carver County. We are a nonprofit organization dedicated to creating and sustaining the vibrant arts scene in Carver County… creating community through the arts and supporting the arts through community!

APPLICATION
Artist Application Form is on zapplication.org.

SUBMISSION DEADLINE
On or before midnight on July 2, 2020

FEES
Booth Fee $150*, +$25 Application Fee (goes to application processor)

*MEMBERS SAVE $25!

If you are an ACCC Member: Please submit your request to be in the show on Zapplication. We will confirm your Membership is current, approve your application, then send you a coupon for $25. Apply the coupon when you checkout on the Zapplication page. This process will ensure that all Members receive the coupon before they checkout.

If you are not a Member, we’d love to have you join us before you apply so you can save too! Membership Information.

SET UP/TAKE DOWN
Early setup is available Friday, July 10 from 5:00 pm – 8:00 pm
Saturday setup is 7:30 am – 9:30 am
Take down is Sunday, 5:00 pm – 7:00 pm

Artists must provide current ST19 to be handed in at the start of the show.

CONTACT
Barbara J Hone
bjhone@gmail.com
952-443-2066


VOLUNTEERS WANTED

If you, or someone you know, would like to Volunteer at ArtStock, Art, Wine & Music Festival, please complete the Volunteer Form at the bottom of the ArtStock page. We are looking for Volunteers to assist with set up and take down as well as in the ACCC Booth. Thank you for considering!

Arts Consortium of Carver County

 

 

ACCC 2020 Flash Fiction Contest Awards Celebration

Holly Brown was awarded first place in the 2020 ACCC Flash Fiction Contest at an awards celebration held Mar. 5 at the Arts Center in Victoria. Her story The Astrophysicists Wife, links one drop of water and the laws of physics to a tragic outcome.

Walter Treat won second place for First To Go, an imagining of the beginning of the end of the world.

Third place in the adult category went to Letha Woods. Her story, Milestones, is about a woman triumphantly beating the odds after suffering a horrific accident.

Izzy Sanders won first place honors in the contest’s inaugural Young Adult category. Her story, Invisible Scars, is about a girl struggling to survive a drug overdose.

Second place went to Linnea Barto for Before the Fall: Eve’s Story, a re-imagining of the Garden of Eden story.

Twelve writers entered the contest this year, and all were invited to join the winners in reading their stories at the celebration. The ACCC thanks everyone who entered the contest. Our judge this year is a language arts teacher and himself a writer who sent a note with his selections saying he “enjoyed the level of quality in the pieces and it was a hard choice selecting finalists.”

Holly and Letha requested that their stories not be published online at this time. Here, then, are the other winning tales.

FIRST TO GO
By Walter Treat

A plane glided over the frozen ocean like a vulture searching for carrion. With glossy-black camouflage, a soaring altitude of 50,000 feet, and a velocity of six hundred miles per hour, any observers below would have had difficulty spotting it—not that many would have been looking, there on the thin winter ice. Even if some sky gazing polar explorer had the luck to spot the bomber, what would they do? Murmansk lay only a few minutes south, and after the plane reached the city, any efforts to stop it would be fruitless, no matter how many fighters Moscow scrambled into the sky.

The crew, meanwhile, moved like automatons. Following memorized procedures, they groped at the instruments. Shadowy careerist bureaucrats had shielded them from knowing the intricacies of the geopolitical quarrel choking the world; all they knew was that they’d been given the nuclear scythe and told to reap the 300,000 souls of the far-north Russian port.

They emerged over the snow-covered mainland, by a sparkling river still clear of ice. The crewmen saw the bright red and sky-blue roofs of the city below, and one of them pressed a button. The bomb bay doors slid open, and the sudden loss of aerodynamism shook the plane. The crewman, then, pressed the button to release the bombs, and they began to plummet. The pilot sighed. Now, his plane bereft of fuel, he would have to decide where to crash-land.

The bombs, meanwhile, spiraled down through the atmosphere. Some clever engineers at a secretive government laboratory once fitted together the explosive lenses and electrical detonators and arming controls, now so brilliantly activated—and yet never seen to its victims as more than a piece of falling machinery.

The bombs went off about five thousand feet above the ground; they burst at altitude to maximize the affected area. A flash of light leapt outwards, blinding onlookers and igniting fires on every dark surface. A fireball roared through the streets, vaporizing entire buildings. A great mass of air, heated to impossible temperatures, shot upwards, forming a mushroom cloud and flinging cancer-riddled fallout into the stratosphere. From this cloud came the shock wave, which at close distances crushed concrete buildings like pop cans under a freight train. Further away, it shattered windows into shards of glass that sliced open those investigating the flash of light.

The fallout would continue to descend and poison the residents in the days to come, but, otherwise, the weapon had finished its work. The city of Murmansk lay crushed in a bed of rubble, burning, with 60,000 of its inhabitants dead and another 90,000 injured. Those who escaped the atomic reaper had the most horrific wounds—melted skin, roasted eyeballs, and teeth and nails worming their way out of the body.
The survivors huddled together and tried to evacuate south as the fiery maelstroms ignited by the bomb turned the city into a funeral pyre. Most traveled by foot, and they all prayed that assistance would be sent to them—many were too weak to walk much further—but no help ever came. Murmansk, being the remotest of the Russian cities worth attacking, was the first to fall. But all the other Russian metropolises also fell under the same atomic fist. And likewise, too, the great cities of America and China and the whole world died, in an inferno whose instigator would go unknown forever. Thus, the death of Murmansk became not just an ending of one city, but the first act in the beginning of the end of the whole world.

INVISIBLE SCARS
By Izzy Sanders

He yelled at me with sharp words. His screaming rang through the house as it did my own ears.

Scars. A permanent mark of pain.

“You’re so stupid! How could I live with such an idiot!”

Invisible. The description of something general society can’t seem to find.

“You’re just a waste of space! My life would be better if you died!”

I pulled my knees closer to my tight chest which held my now barely beating heart and lungs that I wished would cease to work. I couldn’t cry, but I had the tears to. My room was dark and the weight of the air seemed so heavy, too heavy.

“You should be ashamed of yourself! You haven’t accomplished anything except for ruining my life!” I tear away from his burning words and sprint down the hall. I know that teardrops are flowing down my face like runny paint on a canvas. I keep going. I grab the orange bottle labeled ‘My Pills’ from my bathroom counter before I slam and lock, the only thing between him and I.

Harsh remarks repeated in my mind. They hurt me. I didn’t want to live with him, with that reality. I had such agony and no one even saw it. No one fought for me so why should I have fought for myself?

“You can’t hide your ugly face in there forever! There’s a better place for you. A garbage pile ‘cause that’s where all broken and useless things go! Maybe you’ll find some of your friends. Wait, you don’t have any!” I wish my door was thicker so I would be spared the disgusting things he has to say about me. I open the top of the container and pour the glossy pills onto my palm. Without hesitation, my hand moves to my mouth and my head tilts back. I swallow hard.

I could feel sweat coat my skin as I felt my breath slip from my body along with my strength. I grabbed a hold of my shelf and pulled myself up. I couldn’t die on the floor. But, the moment I got to my feet, my legs gave out and I fell on my back. That’s when I realized it. I didn’t want to live. But I didn’t want to die.

Gulp. I take another handful of the shiny tablets that will soon end my life. And then I repeat. I finally empty the bottle and lean my back against the wall. I look around my room. Purple light looms through the entire room and compliments the glowing stars stuck to my ceiling. I remember being so excited when I was younger after I hung them. I just wanted to go to bed right away so I could see them light up. Some things never change. Now, I can sleep and see the stars forever. I pull my knees closer to my tight chest which holds my now barely beating heart and lungs that I wish would cease to work.

I didn’t want to die. It was true that I didn’t want to live with it anymore but I was not ready to die. I started to panic and my breathing grew heavier. I could almost feel my body shutting down and all I wanted to do was live for once. But now I couldn’t. I dragged the garbage can over and stuck my fingers so far down my throat I feared they wouldn’t come up. The liquid from my stomach slid up and out of my mouth. I’m alive. I survived and- thud.

BEFORE THE FALL: EVE’S STORY
By Linnea Barto

The first thing I knew was Light. Light opened my eyes for the first time. Light surrounded me, enveloped me. Light formed me. This Light is not the sun. He is a being; living, fearsome and good. This was my beginning. I was formed by the Light of the World, created to be a human, a being made in His image.

When my feet were set on the ground of Eden, Light melted the sparkling mist to reveal another human. This human was like me, made in the image of the Light of the World, but we were not identical. The Light woke him from a deep sleep. In the dazzling brightness, Adam saw me for the first time. Joy quivered through him, and he laughed in delight, telling anyone willing to listen that he had finally found one made for him.

Then he gave me my name. He called me Woman because I was formed from his rib, taken out of Man. We became the first husband and wife.

Everything was perfect. No sin, no pain, no death. Until that day. The day to go down in history as the Fall. The day when death entered our perfect world. How I wish to return to those first days when all was good, true and right.

Adam was keeping the Garden, his job given to him by the Light. In those painless days, it was an easy job. I was gathering fruit when a serpent took notice and joined me.

He asked if the Light had told me that I may not eat any fruit in the Garden. I replied that He had told my husband that we might eat any fruit, except of the tree in the center of the Garden, lest we die. The serpent said that if I ate of that tree, I would not die, but I would become like the Light. He told me that I would know good and evil. I already knew good but had no notion of evil. I wish I were still so innocent.

I walked to the tree. Its leaves glistened; its perfect fruit sparkled. Only a moment did I pause. I would be disobeying the Light. But the fruit looked so delightful. How could something so beautiful, made by the Light, be bad?

I touched it. I ran my fingers over the silky skin. I ate.

It was as delicious as promised. I had to share. So I handed the fruit to Adam, compelling him to eat it. He knew what it was, but he ate.

Then came the realization. We saw that we were naked and had sinned. We knew evil. We were ashamed.

We hid from the Light, trying to cover our shame with leaves. But the leaves could hide nothing when the Light came to find us. He asked Adam where we were. All was known.

Man, woman and serpent were cursed, and through us, the world. Man was to toil in thorns. Woman, to have pain in childbirth. We both would die. The Light did not delight in cursing us; we brought it upon ourselves by dishonoring Him, for He is holy.

But though the Maker cursed us, He did not leave us hopeless. When He cursed the serpent, He promised that though the serpent would torment humanity, one of my offspring would crush the serpent, forever defeating evil.

This is my story, our story. You would have done no differently. But amidst all this evil and pain, hope still shines. The Light will keep His promise.

Flash Fiction Contest Coordinator
Jim Kane
jkanefabulousfiction@gmail.com
952-448-4526

 

Reflections and Abstractions Exhibit

Call for Artists for Reflections and Abstractions Exhibit

Reflections and Abstractions Call For Artists

We invite all artists to enter our upcoming exhibition Reflections and Abstractions. Our search for Reflections is precisely those aspects one focuses on and what is visual at certain points in time which features aspects of light. Like the return of light from a surface, the production of an image by or as if by a mirror or the action of bending or folding back, reflective patterns.  Abstractions borrow certain coordinations from already constructed structures or images and reorganize them in a function of new givens. This can originate from certain color, figure, nature and consistence having been observed to go together, or perceived, and compounding them.

We look forward to seeing many interesting and beautiful works of art.

LOCATION
ACCC Arts Center Gallery
7924 Victoria Drive, Studio Level
Victoria MN 55386

EXHIBIT DATES
April 8 to May 29, 2019

ARTS CENTER HOURS
EXHIBIT is open during regular/ARTS CENTER HOURS * Extended Hours on special occasion.
Wednesday-Saturday 9-5pm
(subject to Volunteer availability)

DEADLINES
Entry Fee Deadline: by midnight Wednesday March 25, 2020 (complete form below to enter)

DETAILS
Notification of Acceptance will be sent:  on or before March 26, 2020
Exhibit Dates: April 8 to May 29, 2019
Artists’ Reception: April 16, 2020 from 6:30-8:30pm

Art Drop-Off:  Monday, April 6, 4-7pm or Tuesday, April 7 12:30-4pm
If the drop-off time doesn’t work for you, please contact Mary Strother to make arrangements.
Art Pick-Up: Friday, May 29, 5-7pm or Saturday, May 30, 10-3pm (Note: this is Memorial Weekend)
Any work left at the Arts Center 30 days after an exhibit ends becomes the property of the ACCC.

PROCESS
Information about eligible works can be found on our Gallery Standard Categories & Guidelines page. Please read before you submit your Entry Fee below. Please feel free to contact us via phone or email if you have any questions. Thank you.

  • NEW (as of 3/12/20) Any ACCC Member with artwork in our Gift Shop or in an Exhibit who works 6+ hours in the Arts Center in a given month will earn an extra 10% commission on the sale of their work for that month. So, the commission paid to the ACCC goes from 40% to 30%. This is effective immediately and will apply to the March hours volunteered at the Arts Center. To Volunteer at the Arts Center, visit our Volunteer page.

We can accept up to 3 works per artist until the gallery is full.

After you complete the Entry Form below, email your 3 images of your work to visualarts@artsofcarvercounty.org to complete your entry.

Membership is not required to be in the show, but Members are eligible for a reduced Entry Fee. To join the ACCC, go to our Membership page. We will notify all artists via email regarding acceptance to the exhibit by the Notification of Acceptance date listed above. If space provides, we may contact you to submit additional work for the exhibit.

Members, please SIGN IN so you can pay the Member rate. If you haven’t signed into your ACCC Membership Account yet, please go to our Account page for instructions.

FEE
ACCC Members $15 for first entry, $5 for each additional entry, up to 3 total.

Nonmembers $25 for first entry, $10 for each additional entry, up to 3 total.

CONTACT
Mary Strother, Gallery Coordinator, Visual Art Liaison
visualarts@artsofcarvercounty.org
952-448-4432

AFTER your work is accepted, go to the How To Submit Art page and officially submit your accepted works. Labeled artwork can be brought to the Arts Center on the Art Drop-Off date listed above. Please make sure your item label matches artwork submitted for the exhibit.

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Reflections and Abstractions Exhibit

flash fiction contest

Flash Fiction Contest Awards Reception

Writers who entered the ACCC 2020 Flash Fiction Contest are invited to attend a reception March 5 at the Arts Center in Victoria beginning at 6:30 p.m. Ribbons will be awarded and all entrants are invited to read their entries. The public is also invited. Light refreshments will be served. Shop our Gift Shop and see the Gallery Exhibit.

LOCATION
7924 Victoria Drive, Studio Level
Victoria MN 55386

MAX ATTENDEES
40

DATE
Thursday, Mar. 5, 2020

TIME
Social time 6:30-7:00. Awards and readings end at 8:30

FEE
free

CONTACT
Jim Kane
jkanefabulousfiction@gmail.com
952-448-4526

flash fiction contest

Hank Williams Hillbilly Shakespeare Class April 14 & 21

This class has been cancelled due to the COVID-19 outbreak. Please visit our website or sign up to receive our emails should we decide to reschedule this class for a later date. Thank you!

 

Hank Williams “Hillbilly Shakespeare” Class

The class will look at Hank’s time and place in country music, examine his lyrics and discuss whether or not the descriptive is appropriate for Hank or for William Shakespeare.

Two Classes in this Series.

Tuesdays, April 14 and 21
9:30am to 11:30AM

Skill Level: All
Age: Adults 16+

Minimum Students Required: 4
Maximum Students Allowed: 8

Register by: Sunday, April 12, 2020.

Location: ACCC Arts Center
7924 Victoria Drive, Studio Level
Victoria MN 55386

All proceeds benefit the ACCC!

NonMember Price: $35.00
ACCC Member Price: $31.50

Material Details: Handouts. Bring notebook for your own benefit.

Barb HoneInstructor:
Barb Hone
952-443-2066
bjhone@gmail.com

I love teaching. I love “words.” I love Shakespeare and love inspiring others to explore his works and understand why he rises above all other writers in the English language.
BA, English, Ohio Wesleyan University.
MA, English Education, Ohio State University.

My experience includes teaching middle school language arts – 2 years, London, OH and 7 years high school literature, Dublin, OH. I’ve presented Romeo & Juliet  for a local book club and taught it at the ACCC Arts Center.  I have 3 years of consulting experience (teaching adults in a business setting). Teaching piano – 19 years +. I’m a teacher – we’ll have fun!

I am an arts advocate. I’ve been an active member of the Arts Consortium of Carver County since 2011. I recently published a book about the Barn Quilts of Carver County Project.

Hank Williams Hillbilly Shakespeare Class

Elevate Your Experience

Elevate Your Experience Feb 27

Join Artists from the ACCC on Thursday,  February 27 for an event where you can elevate your experiences. Find out more about elevated travel experiences, local and abroad. Join a select group of like minded people who love to experience the finer things in life and be elevated to new experiences.  Find out about unique travel opportunities. From intimate boutique river and ocean adventures around the world, to small group custom safaris and expeditions. Take a VR (Virtual Reality) Walk on board the new Regent Seven Seas ship – while you mingle and sample wines and spirits from around the world.

Meet with local organizations, companies, shops and restaurants and pubs in Victoria and find out about all the amazing opportunities to elevate your experiences both at home and abroad.  A wonderful event not to be missed.  Must be 21 or over to attend. Door Prizes, Food and Wine included.

LOCATION
Winchester and Rye Restaurant
7929 Victoria Drive
Victoria MN 55386
(across the street from the ACCC Arts Center)

MAX NUMBER OF ATTENDEES
50

DATE
February 27, 2020

TIME
6:30pm – 8:30pm

FEE
$15.00 in advance, $20 at the door
Purchase your tickets for Sue Thompson’s event on EventBrite

CONTACT
Sue Thompson
The Travel Boutique
sue@pointofdeparture.pro
952-240-3180

MORE INFO
https://www.facebook.com/events/622277701857833/

Elevate Your Experience