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Apr 17 Friday
This free event is the perfect opportunity for homeowners to save BIG on all home improvement projects and meet with local and national vendors face to face, offering valuable insights and guidance to help you turn your vision into reality.
Whether you're looking to remodel your kitchen, revamp your outdoor living space, or simply make some updates around the house, the Cheyenne Fall Home Show has everything you need to get started.
Cheyenne Fall Home Show📆 April 17th-19th, 2026📍Cheyenne Ice & Events CenterAddress: 1530 W Lincoln way, Cheyenne, WY 82001🕰️Friday: 12pm-6pm | Saturday: 10am-5pm | Sunday: 11am-4pm
ℹ️ Interested in exhibiting?Give us a call at 800-201-4663For more information, visit: https://cheyennehomeshow.com
Join us at the Ucross Art Gallery to celebrate our latest exhibition, “Resilience.”
This free and public event will take place on April 17 at 6 p.m. and includes a curator's talk, gallery tours, refreshments made by our Ucross Chef Jackie Vitale, and the opportunity to meet the featured artists.
Exploring the resiliency of Indigenous artists across generations, the new exhibition features artwork from the 2025 recipients of the Ucross Fellowship for Native American Artists, including sculptor Gina Herrera (Tesuque Pueblo) of Bakersfield, California; writer Annette Saunooke Clapsaddle (Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians) of Cherokee, North Carolina; mixed-media artist Wade Patton (Oglala Lakota) of Rapid City, South Dakota; and visual and performance artist Sarah Ortegon HighWalking (Eastern Shoshone and Northern Arapaho) of Fort Washakie, Wyoming.
The exhibition is curated by Marwin Begaye (Navajo), a former Ucross artist-in-residence and working artist.
“Cultural resilience is created through language, kinship, knowledge, and our relationship to place,” said Marwin. “The work in this exhibition is rich and diverse. The collective works are visual evidence of diverse Indigenous narratives and a testament to the power held within cultural memories. Each expresses the idea of resilience in their creative voice.”
The event is free and open to the public with required registration.
Please also join us for an artist and curator talk at Sheridan College earlier in the day at 11 a.m. Learn more at ucross.org.
For more information about the Ucross Art Gallery exhibition, visit ucross.org. The Ucross Art Gallery is open Monday through Saturday from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.
Join us for our spring production by the Sheridan College Theater program at the WYO Theater Friday, April 17 at 7 p.m. and Saturday, April 18 at 2 p.m.
Apr 18 Saturday
Setting Elk Ivories in silver is not the easiest bezel setting to do, but with guidance from Lennie Poitras it is possible. Tools and equipment provided. Bring your own Elk Ivory and pay for the silver used by weight.
Make a Bird House - A great woodworking starter project involves using power and hand tools to create a birdhouse. By adjusting the hole size and height, you can attract the right birds for your area.
Riot Act Inc. is thrilled to announce another great workshop in our Adult Education Program: Intro to Tech. Classes will run Sat. April 18, Sun. April 19, Sat. April 25 and Sat. May 2 from 3-5p. Register on Riot Act’s website www.riotactinc.org/classses.
Intro to Tech: Join a class that introduces you to the fundamentals of what it takes to work backstage. In this class you will learn the basics of what behind the scenes jobs do to light up the stage.
Doug Vogel, long time Teton County resident and lighting designer, will teach you the basics of lighting design. Eric Midgley will walk you thought the basics of using QLab, a software used to run sound, lights, and projections. Macey Mott will guide you through the basics of directing. Lynnette Parry will teach you about hair and make-up for the stage.
This workshop is offered at a low price of just $240 for all 4 sessions. We must have a minimum of 4 students to run this workshop, so get your friends to sign up with you! No prior experience required. (Teens and adults only please.)
Sign up for the class today.
*Made possible by a grant from WY Arts Council.*
Apr 19 Sunday
The Organ Concert Series welcomes an accomplished local artist to perform in the first of two concerts planned in 2026. Sarah (Sutton) Howie of Cheyenne will perform 2 p.m. Sunday April 19 at the Cathedral of Saint Mary, on the Cathedral’s Visser-Rowland tracker organ.
The concert is free and open to the public. Doors of the Cathedral open for the recital at 1:30p.m., 2107 Capitol Ave.
Howie began studying organ at age 12, inspired by her grandfather and captivated by the majesty of the instrument, and she has performed in local, regional and national festivals. She is dedicating the concert to her grandfather, Harold “Chris” Christensen, who passed away in 2019.
She studied Organ at Hastings College in Hastings, Neb., and graduated in 2024 with a bachelor’s degree of Music in both Organ Performance and Piano Performance. Her program on April 19 includes a variety of works from P.E. Fletcher, Seth Bingham, Hans Zimmer, Richard Wagner, Cesar Franck, and Louis Vierne.
For information, contact Cathedral Music Director Patrick Stolz at 307-635-9261, x-2021
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