Live Music, Every Weekend
Art, music, and live performance have a way of pulling us into the present. They shift perspective and inspire new ideas. And if we’re being honest, live music every weekend is just really good for the soul. No ticket required.

Your Weekend Just Got Better
From jazz to indie to soul to funk, the genres shift but the feeling doesn’t. You’re close to the music. Close to the people around you. And something about that changes the whole evening.
There’s science behind it. Live music lowers cortisol, lifts mood, and creates the kind of shared emotional experience that bonds people in ways that ordinary conversation simply can’t. When everyone in the room is feeling the same thing at the same time, something opens up. We didn’t invent that. We just built a space where it happens.



Art Doesn’t Hang on Our Walls. It Takes Over the Room.
We’ve never been interested in the kind of evening you forget by morning. We deliberately collapse the distance between audience and experience — layering food, music, movement, and visual art until the line disappears entirely and you realize you’re not watching the night unfold, you’re inside it.
A Halloween cabaret that earns its reputation. A winter transformation that makes the familiar feel foreign. A ballerina performing at a Nutcracker High Tea. An aerialist above a live DJ. Dancers telling the story of seed to sprout at a harvest dinner. Poetry alongside a live band.
The moment it all converges and you realize this is nothing like a normal night out. These evenings don’t trend. They stay with you. You really do have to be there.

Anderson RESIDENT ARTIST PROGRAM
The Anderson Resident Artist Program is one of the most meaningful things we do. Created by Jim Anderson as a living tribute to his wife Jackie, a devoted photographer who believed deeply in the power of creativity and community, this program gives selected artists a three-month residency, financial support, and the creative freedom to build a body of work without compromise.
Each residency culminates in a solo exhibition where the artist receives 100% of sales proceeds. When artists work among us, it changes how we see, think, and approach our own work. That ripple effect is exactly what Jackie would have wanted.





