Mar 312016
 

 

The Salem Arts Festival, held every year on the first full weekend in June (June 3-5, 2016), has become the first harbinger of summer in downtown Salem over the past seven years.  But a lot of work and fun goes into supporting the Arts Festival all through the spring, and there are plenty of ways for YOU to get involved right now!

  • Do you, or an organization you’re affiliated with, want to contribute your own small piece of art to a large-scale community-built public art project?  Move With Me, a collaborative public art project led by artist and architect Claudia Paraschiv, will feature a temporary installation of community-produced pinwheels over Front Street during the festival.  Student/artist/organizational groups can contact Claudia about participating, or individuals can join a pinwheel workshop any Tuesday evening in April.
  • Are you a business or individual who would like to support the festival? Sponsors who make a commitment by April 5 can get complimentary tickets to our amazing Fashion Show fundraiser!  Speaking of which…
  • Do you like FUN?!  Now in its third year, our annual Fashion Show Fundraiser is quickly becoming one of the hottest nights of the year. There’s no better way to show your support for the Arts Festival, and thanks to our fundraiser sponsor People’s United Bank, absolutely all proceeds from the evening go directly to supporting the festival in June.

Salem Arts Festival 2015 Photos by Creative Salem_4748

The Salem Arts Festival is organized by Salem Main Streets and a collaboration of Salem organizations which provide support for the festival, including the Salem State University Center for the Creative and Performing Arts, Peabody Essex Museum, Salem Arts Association, Salem Food Tours, and Creative Salem.

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Jan 242016
 

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For those new to Salem and the work of Salem Main Streets, there’s a frequent misconception that life must get quieter for us after October. We do our best to laugh politely when we hear this from friends and family, as nothing could be further than the truth!  Little do they know that we have been planning for months for Holiday Happenings, a collection of events and initiatives celebrating downtown Salem that keep us going non-stop from mid-November through New Year’s Eve.

We’re often so busy looking forward to the next season that we often neglect to celebrate what we’ve just accomplished.  As we prepare for our Annual Meeting on Tuesday night, we wanted to take a quick chance to recap all the different pieces that made up Holiday Happenings 2015 for Salem Main Streets – you’ll see what we mean about going non-stop:

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  • Wreaths and Ribbons – to add to the festive atmosphere, we hung over 100 wreaths around the downtown (this year with lovely white lights, thanks to the City of Salem’s Electrical Department!), and a squad of 25+ volunteers spent a beautiful November morning lugging ladders around and covering the downtown in red ribbon.
  • The Holiday Tree – our holiday tree on Lappin Park is always a perfect example of the collaborative spirit of Salem, and this year was no exception. From the hours the City’s Department of Public Works donates in helping to decorate, to the community partners who help with selection, delivery, and donations for the tree, to the hundreds of tourists who give donations to Duchess Gigi in October specifically for the tree, and of course, one beautiful, locally-grown and donated tree!
  • Santa’s Arrival and Tree Lighting – due to a logistical snag, we re-combined these two popular events on the Friday after Thanksgiving, and we are so glad we did!  We have never had such a crowd (see picture at the top of this post), and it was truly an incredible way to welcome in the season.
  • Small Business Saturday – Main Streets teamed up with the Salem Chamber and 40 downtown businesses this year to help promote shopping small and local the Saturday after Thanksgiving, and despite the less than ideal weather, the city was packed with happy shoppers all day long. It also marked the beginning of a month-long partnership with the Boy Scouts, who sold wreaths and wrapped gifts out of the Info Booth as a fundraiser.
  • Salem Winter Market – we tried something new this year, and decided to move our winter extension of the Salem Farmers’ Market to one weekend day a month, rather than a weekly weeknight through November and December. It seems like you all approved – we saw over twice as many people in those two days than we did for the entire winter market season last year!
  • Holiday Window Contest – our annual holiday window contest between downtown businesses returned with a vengeance, this year with a social media component where shoppers posted pictures of their favorites.
  • Festive Friday Nights – we are constantly trying new ways to encourage downtown shopping, and this year we encouraged over 30 downtown retailers to commit to staying open until 8 pm every Friday in December. We gave it kind of a trial run this year, but we are looking forward to hearing from businesses whether we should expand on this in future years.
  • New Year’s Eve – and last but certainly not least, our New Year’s Eve LAUNCH! event was bigger and better than ever, with over 700 attendees during the two hour event and a “greener” countdown this year with beachballs and paper whirligigs and airplanes to replace the less environmentally-friendly balloons we’d used in the past.

Phew!  No wonder we’re just getting around to recapping it now!  But what was it all for? Why does Salem Main Streets DO all these things in the first place? Join us for our Annual Meeting on Tuesday night at Ames Hall at the YMCA at 5:30 p.m. and find out!

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Nov 122015
 

You don’t write because you want to say something… you write because you have something to say —F. Scott Fitzgerald

Salem LitSo many, many people have had such a great deal to “say” over the years that a regular gathering of writers and readers was inevitable to share and discuss those thoughts put to words. These gatherings are called Literary Festivals and Salem has its own taking place right now, Nov. 12-18.

Among the highlights of this year’s Salem Literary Festival will be guest lecturers Frank Bidart, Stacy Schiff and Brunonia Barry, plus a full day of activities for writers that features an open mic session, a scavenger hunt and playwriting advice from the creators of the critically acclaimed local mainstay Cry Innocent.Salem Lit Fest

11/12/15 – Frank Bidart
Kick off the festival at the Salem State Writer’s Series with a reading from poet Frank Bidart whose first books, Golden State and The Book of the Body, gained critical attention and praise. His reputation as a poet of uncompromising originality was made with The Sacrifice, published in 1983. The 2007 recipient of the Bollingen Prize for Poetry, he teaches English at Wellesley College.

(Time: 7:30pm at Salem State University, Martin Luther King Room, Ellison Campus Center. Admission is free of charge.)

11/13/15 – Stacy Schiff
Join Pulitzer Prize winning author Stacy Schiff for the keynote address and presentation of her new historical work, The Witches, Salem 1692 which she researched at Peabody Essex Museum’s Phillips Library. Schiff is the author of Véra (Mrs. Vladimir Nabokov), winner of the Pulitzer Prize; Saint-Exupéry, Pulitzer Prize finalist; A Great Improvisation: Franklin, France, and the Birth of America, winner of the George Washington Book Prize. Named a 2011 Library Lion by the New York Public Library, she lives in New York City.

(Time: 7pm at Peabody Essex Museum, East India Marine Hall. Admission: PEM Members $7; nonmembers $10. Reservations must be made by November 12. For more info go to http://pem.org/calendar/ or call 978-542-1511.)

11/14/15 – A Day For Writers
Nestle into the beautiful Salem Athenaeum for the day. It will begin by bringing you prompt sessions to wake up your writer’s brain. Choose your guide from among fantastic local writers, such as Jaffa award-winning poet Danielle Jones-Pruett or Audrey Mardavich. Keep the creativity flowing with panels on writing adolescent characters for adults, YA, sci fi / fantasy, and poetry.

Learn how to start and run a literary magazine with The Critical Flame and Buck Off Magazine, and gain insights to the page-to-stage process of playwriting with Mark and Kristina Stevick, creators of the Salem theatrical institution, Cry Innocent.

Share your own work at the afternoon open mic, investigate Salem’s literary history and hidden gems as part of an ongoing scavenger hunt, and stay for a Movietelling Reading where fresh young poets will read their own versions of the script over such favorites as Disney’s Cinderella and Return to Oz.

(Time: 10am – 1pm and 2:30pm – 6pm at Salem Athenaeum. Admission is free of charge.)

Brunonia-Barry-RGB-273x30011/18/15, Brunonia Barry
End the Salem Literary Festival by attending the last of the “Seven Lectures at Seven Gables” series with New York Times bestselling author (The Lace Reader) Brunonia Barry who will lecture on her book, The Map of True Places. Set in Boston and Salem, this well-crafted novel has been described as immersive and beautifully written as it explores finding one’s true place in the world.

Barry was the first American author to win the International Women’s Fiction Festival’s Baccante Award and was a past recipient of Ragdale Artists’ Colony’s Strnad Invitational Fellowship as well as the winner of New England Book Festival’s award for Best Fiction.

(Time: 6pm at House of Seven Gables. Admission: House of the Seven Gables members are free; Non-Members pay $7. For more info email groups@7gables.org, or call 978-744-0991 ext. 104.

There is nothing to writing. All you do is sit down at a typewriter and bleed – Ernest Hemingway

Come to the Salem Literary Festival where you will meet those who have achieved success as writers and mingle with those (such as yourself?) thirsting for that success.

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Nov 012015
 
2015-10-31 14.26.15

Less than 24 hours ago…

The day after.  The streets have been swept, the barriers are being moved away, and sooner or later, the portapotties will roll out of town.  Halloween is over for another year. All the fun is over, too, right?  WRONG!  Salem, MA is truly alive and well all year round, and next week alone is a perfect example of how much there is to do and enjoy every day in this great city.

Let’s get the sad news out of the way first.  Today, Sunday 11/1, is the last official day at Artists’ Row.  We’ve had some amazing tenants this year – as you may have seen from our profiles of  Nikky Bergman JewelryBoston Woodturning, Diane Hoffman Textiles,  and Witch City Wicks.  But don’t be too sad – Boston Woodturning and Ceramics by Sibel are going to continue working in their spaces as long as they can stand the cold, and all tenants will be returning for a special event on Nov. 22 (more details to come).

November 1st also signals the start of sales all over town – and not just on Halloween merchandise!  For example, fashion boutique J. Mode is offering 30% off any single apparel item of your choice, SUNDAY ONLY, NOV. 1, open 12-5pm.

We’re also entering the season of giving, and The House of the Gables is kicking off a major Thanksgiving Drive to help It Starts With Me to provide 150 Thanksgiving dinners to families on the North Shore.  Right next door to the Gables, the new Zephyr Gallery is celebrating the opening of their next show, “Giving Thanks”, on Friday, Nov. 6 starting at 5:30 p.m.

The Salem Theatre opens the curtain on their final production in their old space at 90 Lafayette this week, before preparing for a big new move in 2016.  Shakespeare’s Hamlet opens on Thursday, Nov. 5 and runs through Sunday, Nov. 21. Tickets can be purchased at http://salemtheatre.ticketleap.com/hamlet/.

The fun continues well into the weekend, with the National Park Service’s second annual Downrigging Festival on Saturday, Nov. 7 – a fantastic way to celebrate both our maritime heritage and the passing of the seasons. Later that evening, don’t miss the much-anticipated “Best Chef” competition at the Salem YMCA.

After you’ve gotten a taste at Best Chef Salem, the Salem Chamber’s fall Salem Restaurant Week kicks off on Sunday night.  Running Nov 8-12 and 15-19, take advantage of the opportunity to enjoy the amazing culinary scene is Salem as our restaurants take a chance to say “welcome back” to the locals.

And last but not least, we get to VOTE!!!  On Tuesday, Nov. 3, Salem residents will get to make their voices heard, specifically regarding Ward City Councillors, City Councillors At-Large, and School Committee. Not sure where to go?  Check this handy “Where Do I Vote?” tool.

Oh yeah, and don’t forget to turn your clocks back today for Daylight Savings Time,  so you get an extra hour to enjoy all that Salem has to offer!

 

 

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Oct 132015
 
Howloween crowd Creative Salem

Crowd on Artists’ Row for Howl-o-ween – Photo Credit Creative Salem

In case there was any doubt, last weekend confirmed it – the Halloween season has arrived in full force in Salem, MA! While there’s little we love more than introducing people to our beloved city, many residents have mixed feelings about Salem’s popularity this time of year. Some even make it a practice to avoid coming downtown for the entire month.

But is this self-imposed exile really necessary? There are many times throughout the week when the downtown is accessible as usual, and truth be told, the local businesses miss their regulars! If the Halloween crowds aren’t for you, remember that things usually start to quiet down as early as Sunday night, and there’s really no need to stay away on Mondays, Tuesdays, or Wednesdays (or even Thursdays). Some businesses have even pointed out that mornings on Saturday and Sunday can still be relatively quiet.

So don’t deny yourself your favorite haunts, just change your habits! Even better – a number of Salem businesses actually offer specials for Salem residents during the month of October. We’ve pulled together a list of just a few great ways for Salemites to enjoy the downtown over the next few weeks:

GREAT DEALS FOR EVERYONE

  • Boston Woodturning on Artists’ Row – Free woodturning demonstrations, lessons Tues, Wed, and the weekends, and a special on select items in the retail gallery during the month of October
  • Clever Diva Boutique and Consignment – 20% off yellow tag items everyday, open til 8pm
  • House of Seven Gables20% discount on general membership for first-time members in the month of October
  • J. Mode – Double points on purchases 10/10 through 10/30
  • Longboards – Local musicians and ½-off quesadillas every Monday from 9 pm-11:30 pm.  ½ priced burgers on Tuesday 9 pm-11 pm. Trivia on Wednesdays starting at 8 pm, with $5 off lobster rolls starting at 9 pm.
  • O’Neill’s – 25 cent wings and live music on Mondays
  • Opus – Monday through Thursday, offers a 5-5-5 menu – five of the restaurant’s most popular appetizers, for just $5 each AND $1 oysters, available from 5:00 to 6:00 pm
  • Salem Dental Arts – has changed their weekday hours to 7am-3pm during October.
  • Waters and Brown – has a HUGE fall sale going on this month

SPECIALS JUST FOR LOCALS DURING OCTOBER (Whoohoo!)

  • Edward John Home Decor – 10% off for residents
  • Far From the Tree – Wednesday and Sunday, 20% discount to Salem residents with ID
  • The Happy Sunflower – $5 off any $25 purchase, open until at least 8pm
  • Kan.del – 10% discount for Sunday nights from 4pm to 8pm
  • Laura Lanes Skin Care – 15% off services Tues-Fri for Salem residents AND people who work in Salem.
  • Ocean Chic Boutique – 10% off for residents
  • Partridge in a Bear Tree – 10% off for residents, open every night until at least 9
  • RJ Coins & Jewelry – 20% off jewelry repair and insurance appraisals Mon – Wed with proof of residency
  • Salem Theatre – Salem Resident Night on Thursday, October 22 for “Rocky Horror Picture Show” – $5 off your ticket at the door with an ID! Discount tickets are also available online – printed ticket and ID must be presented at the door.
  • Salem Witch Walk – free for locals; and notes that, as long as they’re not sold out, some tour companies offer free or discounted tours to Salem residents.

And last but not least, don’t miss the LAST TWO WEEKS of the Salem Farmers’ Market – Thursday, Oct. 15 and Thursday, Oct. 22, 3 pm to 7 pm on Derby Square!

What say you, Salemites?  What are your favorite tricks or treats for navigating downtown Salem during the month of October?

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