SalemNews.com, Salem, MA

Summer

May 28, 2009

BEVERLY ARTS FEST: Appreciate art, food, fun

BEVERLY — Beverly Arts Fest is more than just a day devoted to showcasing area paintings, photography, jewelry and other crafts.

It's a chance chow down on food from local restaurants, gather around street performers, listen to some live music and appreciate art as a whole.

What started as a small, community fair now draws more than 4,000 visitors each year, said organizer Gin Wallace of Beverly Main Streets. She said there are about 100 artists who set up booths along Cabot Street, which is closed to cars on Saturday, June 20, from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.

While there are many returning artists, about 30 percent are new.

"We've accepted artists from all over New England this year," Wallace said.

The event has also expanded to other parts of the community. Main Streets teamed with Endicott to display community and student art work at the college's recently completed Center for Visual and Performing Arts.

Wallace said the festival has also become more interactive. With a new activity called "Art on the Spot," people will get a small square of a famous painting that they can draw on the sidewalk with chalk.

"By the end of it, you have the community's version of the Mona Lisa," Wallace said. "We're hoping to do a whole section of the sidewalk."

If you go

Don't miss Oldies 103, broadcasting live from 1 to 3 p.m.

Be on the lookout for a shuttle to Beverly High School for Solar Field Day, where you can tour the solar panels and learn about renewable energy.

Wear sunscreen. You'll be outside most of the day.

Text Only | Photo Reprints
Summer
Local News
  • Health care law debated About 100 city union members packed the Wiggin Auditorium in City Hall last night, as the Peabody City Council debated the merits of a new law that would curb the unions' ability to negotiate their health benefits.

    February 10, 2012

  • Borders site is next chapter for auto dealer DANVERS — Danvers-based Kelly Automotive Group is ramping up expansion plans along Route 114 in both Danvers and Peabody.
    Kelly is mulling the creation of a two-story dealership out of the vacant former Borders Books and Music store on Andover Street in Peabody. The Danvers native and the company's president, Brian Kelly, acquired the property in December.

    February 10, 2012

  • Road race issue crosses finish line SALEM — The City Council agreed last night to track and monitor Salem's many road races through creation of a master calendar.
    Salem's volume of road races, and the fact that many of them run through the same sections of the city, had come under scrutiny by the council this winter.

    February 10, 2012

  • Salem businessman offers firsthand insight on Egypt SALEM — David Williams, 55, had a good feeling when he was asked to go to Egypt as part of a team of Americans dedicated to teaching that country's new democrats just how politics works.
    Today, he's less positive about a process that has seen revolution followed by elections and then, to his shock, the prosecution of Americans and others working to assist in the creation of a stable democracy.

    February 10, 2012

  • A Salem flag-raising in Afghanistan SALEM — For Veterans Day, third-graders from the Witchcraft Heights School wrote letters to U.S. troops in Afghanistan.
    The school has done this in the past, but this time was different. This time they sent them to a soldier from Salem, U.S. Army Pfc. Michael Levesque.

    February 10, 2012