Living Large In the Cheap Seats
I was first introduced to “Living Large In the Cheap Seats” by a college friend, Chris J., who introduced me to lawn tickets for popular bands. We were able to see concerts at a significantly discounted rate. After reading Brokenomics by Dina Gachman, I revised this concept and decided to share it with you. I have been doing this for years and enjoyed wonderful experiences for FREE!
Concert in the Park Series
The Keehner Park concerts are 7-9 p.m. on select Saturdays between Memorial Day and Labor Day at the Keehner Park Amphitheater. The free concerts welcome all guests to pack a picnic for the evening. Sorry, but alcohol is NOT permitted.
Kite Flying at VOA Park- Pigs Aloft Kite Association fly their extraordinary kites each month on the front lawn of the VOA Park, 7850 VOA Park Drive.
Date: June 8, 2025, July 13, 2025, August 10, 2025, September 14, 2025
Time: 12:00- 4:00
Location: Voice of America Metro Park
West Chester Farmer’s Market:
Date: Saturday
Time: 9:00- 1:00
Location: Midpoint Library
Colerain Park has their summer concerts posted starting in June at 7:00 pm.
June 6- TaylorMade
Liberty Center: Join us in the Square from 6:00- 9:00 PM for a new concert experience each Thursday.
May 2025
May 22: Naked Karate Girls
May 29: The Whammies
June 2025
June 5: Reds (Taylor Swift Tribute
June 12: 2nd Wind
June 19: Anywhere Like Heaven: The Music of James Taylor
June 26: Cassette Junkies
Movies In the Park Series
Deerfield Park has their Movies in the Park Series starting in June.
June 20, 2025- Wish: When You Wish Upon A Star (PG)
When You Wish Upon A Star Activities at 6:30-8:30
The movie starts at dusk (about 8:30 PM)
Colerain Park has their summer movies posted.
June 13- Inside Out 2
June 20- Wicked
June 21- Wizard of OZ
Summer Cinema will move to the great lawn at Zieglar Park (1322 Sycamore St.,
Cincinnati, OH 45202) Movies will be on Friday evenings (See below). Pack up the lawn chairs and a picnic basket and enjoy this beautiful downtown park! Open 7:30-11:00. All movies start around 9 PM.
May 23→ Finding Nemo
June 27→ Barbie
Summer Planning
Free Bowling For Kids (ages 2-17) This Summer
Register your child(ren) for a summer of free bowling. Your children will receive 2 free games per day for the entire summer. (Note- You will need to rent shoes or bring your own. We purchase used shoes and resell them each summer to pay for our new shoes.)
Museums
National Museum of the Air Force
Free Admission and Parking daily from 9:00 AM-5:00 PM (Closed Thanksgiving, Christmas Day, and New Year's Day)
Since 1923, the museum has grown from a small engineering study collection to the world's largest military aviation museum, and is a world-renowned center for air and space power technology and culture preservation. The museum is home to countless one-of-a-kind objects. Our once small engine collection now includes more than 350 aerospace vehicles and missiles, thousands of artifacts, and spans 20 indoor acres with additional outdoor Air and Memorial Parks that continue to grow yearly.
General Admission and Parking in the Museum Lots are FREE.
One of the oldest art institutions in the United States, the Cincinnati Art Museum is its rich collection of more than 67,000 works of art, celebrating 6,000 years of human creativity.
Special Exhibit prices vary, but some special exhibits do not charge additional fees, and Thursday evenings from 5:00 pm to 8:00 pm seem to be consistently FREE.
Tintoretto’s Genesis
April 18- August 31, 2025
FREE Exhibit
In the early 1550s, Jacopo Tintoretto (1518–1594) made a series of large paintings depicting scenes from the Book of Genesis for the Scuola della Trinità , a charitable organization in Venice. Painted just as the artist was coming into his maturity, these canvases display a fusion of Michelangelo’s forceful conception of the figure, Titian’s renowned colorism, and Tintoretto’s own vigorous brushwork, dynamic compositions, and command of the workshop system. The paintings mark the beginning of Tintoretto’s rise as the powerhouse of Venetian Renaissance painting—a position he would hold for the next four decades.
Cycle Thru! The Art of the Bike
April 4 - August 24, 2025
Free→ Thursday nights from 5–8 p.m., during CAM Kids Day on Saturday, April 5, Art After Dark on Friday ( April 25, May 30, June 27, and July 25 from 5–9 p.m.), and Tuesday, April 8 and Tuesday, April 15.
Gear up to see a cast iron velocipede designed in the mid-1800s, a 1901 Wolff-American Ice Bicycle engineered to traverse a frozen course, a seafoam green 1950s Huffy Radiobike designed so riders could cruise to their tunes of choice, and Pee-wee Herman’s customized 1953 Schwinn DX Cruiser starring in Tim Burton’s 1985 film, Pee-wee’s Big Adventure. These are just a few of the highlights waiting for you to discover in Cycle Thru! The Art of the Bike, an exhibition featuring the bicycle as a way to explore intersections of history, popular culture, design, and modern and contemporary art.
Farm to Table: Food and Identity in the Age of Impressionism
June 13–September 21, 2025
Free —> Thursday Evenings from 5-8 pm and during Art After Dark on Friday (June 27, July 25, and August 29)
Farm to Table: Food and Identity in the Age of Impressionism explores the intersections of art, gastronomy, and national identity in fin-de-siècle France. The exhibition showcases over sixty paintings and sculptures, including the work of Claude Monet, Eva Gonzalès, Victor Gilbert, Paul Gauguin, Jules Dalou, and Vincent van Gogh, artists who examined the nation’s unique relationship with food. The bounty of France’s agriculture and the skill of its chefs had long helped to define its strength and position on the international stage. This self-image as the world’s culinary capital became more important in the late nineteenth century as the country grappled with war, political instability, imperialism, and industrialization. In this climate, France’s culinary traditions signaled notions of its refinement, fortitude, and ingenuity while they also exposed fractures that destabilized national identity. From cultivation to consumption, food was central to notions of glory but also to those of collective pain. Farm to Table puts this history on view through the eyes and hands of the period’s greatest artists, who avidly brought subjects from agricultural fields to Parisian dining rooms into their painting and sculpture, documenting and reinforcing monumental cultural shifts at the heart of European modernity.
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