Art in the Barn | Sunday, October 3
Oct
3
9:00 AM09:00

Art in the Barn | Sunday, October 3

Twenty Summers + PAAM present

We are hosting three days of art-making in the Hawthorne Barn with our friends from PAAM. Following a brief lecture on the legacy of Charles Hawthorne in Provincetown, teacher John Clayton will give a painting demonstration and supervise a full day of painting in the Barn. Coffee and lunch will be provided.

The class is open to all levels of experience, but please bring your own supplies. We will provide easels and stools. Due to the popularity of this event, you may register for only one session: Oct 1, 2 or 3. If the event sells out, we will maintain a waitlist on a first-come, first-served basis.

Masks and proof of vaccination required.

$150

After purchasing your ticket online, please email alice@20Summers.org with proof of vaccination and any dietary restrictions to complete registration.

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Art in the Barn | Saturday, October 2
Oct
2
9:00 AM09:00

Art in the Barn | Saturday, October 2

Twenty Summers + PAAM present

We are hosting three days of art-making in the Hawthorne Barn with our friends from PAAM. Following a brief lecture on the legacy of Charles Hawthorne in Provincetown, teacher John Clayton will give a painting demonstration and supervise a full day of painting in the Barn. Coffee and lunch will be provided.

The class is open to all levels of experience, but please bring your own supplies. We will provide easels and stools. Due to the popularity of this event, you may register for only one session: Oct 1, 2 or 3. If the event sells out, we will maintain a waitlist on a first-come, first-served basis.

Masks and proof of vaccination required.

$150

After purchasing your ticket online, please email alice@20Summers.org with proof of vaccination and any dietary restrictions to complete registration.

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Art in the Barn | Friday, October 1
Oct
1
9:00 AM09:00

Art in the Barn | Friday, October 1

Twenty Summers + PAAM present

We are hosting three days of art-making in the Hawthorne Barn with our friends from PAAM. Following a brief lecture on the legacy of Charles Hawthorne in Provincetown, teacher John Clayton will give a painting demonstration and supervise a full day of painting in the Barn. Coffee and lunch will be provided.

The class is open to all levels of experience, but please bring your own supplies. We will provide easels and stools. Due to the popularity of this event, you may register for only one session: Oct 1, 2 or 3. If the event sells out, we will maintain a waitlist on a first-come, first-served basis.

Masks and proof of vaccination required.

$150

After purchasing your ticket online, please email alice@20Summers.org with proof of vaccination and any dietary restrictions to complete registration.

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Bosq
Aug
28
7:00 PM19:00

Bosq

Join us for Bosq, an evening of Afro-Latin , Disco, Funk, Reggae, House and Hip Hop. Twenty Summers Concerts at Truro Vineyards, intimate and COVID-safe outdoor shows, with a full bar and the delicious eats of Blackfish's Crush Pad food truck on offer.

$30 | 7pm doors | 8pm show

Please try to carpool as parking is limited.

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Bosq, Producer, DJ & Multi-instrumentalist, has been exploring the intersections of Afro-Latin music with Disco, Funk, Reggae, House and Hip Hop for years. Since 2013 and the release of his first album, his musicianship and craft have matured without losing any of the passion or imagination with which he approaches every project. His pursuit for collaborating authentically rather than simply appropriating musical styles from afar brought him first to Puerto Rico, where over a two week stay he recorded the entire Bosq y La Candela All-Stars - San Jose 51 in Old San Juan with legendary musicians like Tempo Alomar and Roberto Roena. Now, with 5 full original albums and countless remixes and singles under his belt (for labels as diverse and legendary as Ubiquity, Fania, Defected, Soul Clap and more), he creates and resides full time in Medellín, Colombia, one of the worlds most legendary musical melting pots.

Bosq’s music has seen consistent play from the likes of Gilles Peterson & Craig Charles on the BBC, KCRW, RinseFM & other legendary radio stations, while Dj’s like Kerri Chandler, Poolside, Yuksek, Palms Trax, Soul Clap, & GUTS give his tunes constant rotation in clubs and at festivals. Tours have taken Bosq across North & South America, Europe, and Asia, to clubs and festivals like Rakastella (Miami), OYA (Oslo), Boomtown Fair (UK) and many more. He has shared stages with the likes of Joe Claussel, Bobbito, J Rocc & Tony Touch to name a few. His music has been featured in films and television such as The Catch, You’re The Worst, Broad City, and more.

follow @bosqmusic on IG | facebook | twitter | soundcloud | spotify




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Mal Blum
Aug
14
7:00 PM19:00

Mal Blum

Join us for an evening with Mal Blum. Twenty Summers Concerts at Truro Vineyards, intimate and COVID-safe outdoor shows, with a full bar and the delicious eats of Blackfish's Crush Pad food truck on offer.

$30 | 7pm doors | 8pm show

Please try to carpool as parking is limited.

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Mal Blum, once dubbed “punk’s greatest hidden treasure” by Stereogum, cleverly crafted songs that are are as self-effacing as they are viscerally relatable. In 2019 they released their latest full length, Pity Boy (Don Giovanni), an album that explores boundary setting and self-sabotage, and an exemplification of Mal's ability to interrogate the human condition with lyrical ingenuity. Following that, they released a 7", Nobody Waits b/w San Cristóbal, with Saddle Creek Records' Document Series in 2020.

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Luna - SOLD OUT
Jul
30
7:00 PM19:00

Luna - SOLD OUT

Twenty Summers Concerts at Truro Vineyards are intimate and COVID-safe outdoor shows, with a full bar and the delicious eats of Blackfish's Crush Pad food truck on offer.

$30 | 7pm doors | 8pm show

Please try to carpool as parking is limited.

Luna was a New York band formed in 1991 by singer/guitarist Dean Wareham after the breakup of Galaxie 500. The band made seven studio albums before disbanding in 2005. After a ten-year break, they reunited and toured in 2015, and in 2017 released a new LP — A Sentimental Education and an EP of instrumentals — A Place of Greater Safety.

Other recent reissues include a deluxe 2xLP version of their classic Penthouse album (on Rhino) and another 2xLP set Lunafied that collects all the covers the band recorded in the 1990s.

Now scattered around the country (Los Angeles, New York and Austin) the band retains the same lineup that operated from 1999 to 2005: Dean Wareham on vocals/guitar, his wife Britta Phillips on bass, Sean Eden on guitar, and Lee Wall on drums.

"At their best, it’s hard to believe there is any other kind of music besides this simple, graceful, chiming chug" — the Guardian

"Dean Wareham has an unlikely quiver of a voice that, for whatever ungodly reason, sounds as if he’s survived something his music alludes to but never gives away" — Jerry Stahl

"One of indie rocks’ most beloved live acts" — Rob Sheffield, Rolling Stone

Photo: Luz Gallardo


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Mozelle & Mike Flanagan
Jul
16
7:00 PM19:00

Mozelle & Mike Flanagan

Join us for an evening of jazz, blues and R&B with Mozelle and Mike Flanagan. Twenty Summers Concerts at Truro Vineyards are intimate and COVID-safe outdoor shows, with a full bar and the delicious eats of Blackfish's Crush Pad food truck on offer.

$30 | 7pm doors | 8pm show

Please try to carpool as parking is limited.

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Mozelle Andrulot grew up in Eastham and attended Lesley University where she studied Liberal Arts. Her career has taken her to New York City and London where she performed at the SoHo House in both cities.

Here on the Cape, she’s performed at Mahony’s, Tin Pan Alley, The Muse and regularly with Zoë Lewis’s Bootleggers show in Provincetown. She has graced the stage with local notable jazz artists Bruce Abbot, Fred Fried, Fred Boyle and John Thomas. This local jazz jewel, along with Doug Ricardi’s Jazz till Dawn, entertains  audiences from Wellfleet’s Preservation Hall to the Yarmouth Cultural Center. This summer she will be singing outdoors regularly at the Fox and Crow.

MikeMRF is a performing artist, recording artist, multi-instrumentalist and songwriter. His latest album Mob Music 2 hit #39 on the iTunes R&B Albums Chart and was featured on Apple Music. Album opener, "Tip Jar" landed in the Semi-Finals of the 2020 International Songwriting Competition and was featured in the Amazon Prime Show "30 The Series" along with two other songs. Mike is also a Lennon Award winner in the 2017 John Lennon Songwriting Contest for his original song "Mob Music", the title-track off of his iTunes Chart-Topping sophomore album. In 2014, Mike won 2 OUTmusic Awards (with 5 nominations, the most that year) including the highly coveted Humanitarian Songwriter of the Year for his song "Be Strong (LGBT Youth)". "Be Strong" was selected as Boston Pride's Flag-Raising Anthem. 

Mike holds a Bachelor's of Music in Jazz Saxophone & Music Education from Berklee College of Music, as well as a Master's of Music in Music Theory & Composition from New York University where he currently teaches Songwriting and Composition as an Adjunct Professor. Mike has performed with Ada Vox, Matt Alber, Esera Tuaolo, Ruth Pointer (Pointer Sisters), Cassandra Wilson, Esperanza Spaulding, Varla Jean Merman and many more. He performs and music-directs various shows in Provincetown, MA.


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Hello Neighbor: Climate Migrants & Community Journalism with Brian Vines
Jun
5
3:00 PM15:00

Hello Neighbor: Climate Migrants & Community Journalism with Brian Vines

LIVE via Zoom | Free

Brian Vines is a Chicagoan by birth and a New Yorker by choice. After completing the Masters Program in Broadcast Journalism at Boston University’s College of Communication he fetched coffee for some of the most respected journalists and news figures in the world during his tenure at CNN. After a stint in political communications Brian fell in love with his own reflection and reported for here! networks, NYC-TV, Brooklyn Independent Media, the internationally syndicated VJIAM show, and Broad Band Network3 among others. In addition to reporting, show running and producing Brian is also a skilled host and moderator of live events on topics ranging from contemporary memoir to police brutality. A dedicated cyclist, NPR subscriber, and podcast enthusiast, Brian can be spotted balling-on-a-budget, fighting the urge to binge watch and answering questions about his hair.

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Vital Signs: Artist Talk with Maynard Monrow
Jun
5
1:00 PM13:00

Vital Signs: Artist Talk with Maynard Monrow

LIVE via Zoom | Free

Maynard Monrow was born in Hollywood, California and currently lives in New York City. Monrow received his BFA and MFA from California Institute of the Arts. His work has been exhibited at numerous institutions and galleries including: The FLAG Art Foundation, New York, NY; Art and Culture Center of Hollywood, Hollywood, FL; Gavlak Gallery LA and Palm Beach; Booth Gallery, New York, NY; Gavin Brown’s Enterprise, New York, NY and ACME Gallery, Los Angeles, CA (2005). He has staged international performances in Rome, Italy, and participated in numerous projects including Ruffian’s Spring 2016 Ready-to-Wear Collection and LAX Art’s L.A.P.D. Billboard Project.

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Moving the Needle: Writing and Filmmaking with Shaina Feinberg
May
28
3:00 PM15:00

Moving the Needle: Writing and Filmmaking with Shaina Feinberg

LIVE via Zoom | Free

Shaina Feinberg is a writer/director from New York City. Her book Every Body – a candid look at sex from every angle – came out in January 2021 from Little, Brown. Her bi-weekly column in The New York Times, "Scratch" is an illustrated look at the world of business. Shaina is also a filmmaker who specializes in micro-budget filmmaking. In 2019, she was named by Indiewire as 1 of 25 queer filmmakers to watch. She has directed two original series for Audible: Aliens of Extraordinary Ability, starring Maeve Higgins and Cristela Alonzo, and Phreaks, starring Christian Slater, Carrie Coon and Justice Smith. She is a visiting professor at the Vermont College of Fine Art in the MFA program for film. She lives in Brooklyn.

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Willed by Wit and Wisdom with Chanel Thervil
May
28
1:00 PM13:00

Willed by Wit and Wisdom with Chanel Thervil

LIVE via Zoom | Free

Chanel Thervil is a Haitian American artist and educator that uses varying combinations of abstraction and portraiture to convene communal dialogue around culture, social issues, and existential questions. At the core of her practice lies a desire to empower and inspire tenderness and healing among communities of color through the arts. She holds a Bachelor of Fine Arts in Painting from Pace University and a Master’s Degree in Art Education from Massachusetts College of Art and Design. She's been making a splash in Boston via her educational collaborations, public art, and residencies with institutions like The Museum of Fine Arts, The Boston Children's Museum, The DeCordova Museum, The Harvard Ed Portal, and The Cambridge Public Library. Her work has been featured by PBS Kids, The Boston Globe, The Boston Herald, The Bay State Banner, WBUR's ARTery, WGBH, and Hyperallergic.

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Poetry–Speaking to and Speaking with Raymond Antrobus
May
22
3:00 PM15:00

Poetry–Speaking to and Speaking with Raymond Antrobus

LIVE via Zoom | Free

Raymond Antrobus was born in London to an English mother and Jamaican father. He is a Cave Canem Fellow and author of ‘The Perseverance’ and 'All The Names Given' both being published in the US this year by Tin House. His first children's picturebook 'Can Bears Ski?' illustrated by Polly Dunbar is published by Candlewick Press. His work has been featured on NPR, BBC, The Guardian, Lit Hub, POETRY Magazine among others. His accolades include a Ted Hughes Award, Sunday Times/University of Warwick Young Writer of the Year Award, the Rathbone Folio Prize and he was awarded an MBE for his contribution to English language literature. He is currently based in Oklahoma City.

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Spaces of Reconnecting: Of Deafness, Internment, and Pandemic with Jeffrey Mansfield
May
22
1:00 PM13:00

Spaces of Reconnecting: Of Deafness, Internment, and Pandemic with Jeffrey Mansfield

LIVE via Zoom | Free

Jeffrey Yasuo Mansfield is a design director at MASS Design Group and a Ford-Mellon Disability Futures fellow, whose work explores the relationships between architecture, landscape, and power. Jeffrey is a recipient of a Graham Foundation grant and a John W. Kluge Fellowship at the Library of Congress for his work on Architecture of Deafness, which explores how Deaf schools and other Deaf Spaces emerged as sites of cultural resistance. Jeffrey holds a Master of Architecture from the Harvard Graduate School of Design and an AB in Architecture from Princeton University. Deaf since birth, Jeffrey is a Yonsei, or fourth-generation, Japanese American, and attended a deaf school in Massachusetts, where his earliest intuitions about the relationship between aesthetics, geography, and power emerged.

Incidents of Presence: Sensual Aesthetics and the Crisis of Meaning in the Asylum

Incidents of Presence: Sensual Aesthetics and the Crisis of Meaning in the Asylum

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Natural Local Dyes with Elizabeth and Patricia Perry
May
15
1:00 PM13:00

Natural Local Dyes with Elizabeth and Patricia Perry

LIVE via Zoom | Free

Elizabeth James-Perry is an enrolled member of the Aquinnah Wampanoag Tribe on the island of Noepe (Martha’s Vineyard). Her fine art work focuses on Northeastern Woodlands Algonquian artistic expressions: Wampum carving, weaving and natural dyeing. As a member of a Nation that has long lived on and harvested the sea, Elizabeth’s is a perspective that combines art and an appreciation for Native storytelling and traditional environmental knowledge in her ways of relating to coastal North Atlantic life. With a degree in Marine Science from the University of Massachusetts, Dartmouth 2001, she has off-shore commercial fisheries research experience, and published independent Native research projects. Elizabeth was honored to be a 38th Voyager onboard the historic Charles W. Morgan whaling vessel, as a descendant of the Gay Head crewmembers. Her work has appeared in Native People’s Magazine, Native Fashion Now, and First American Art magazine. She was a recipient of the Massachusetts Cultural Councils 2014 Traditional Arts Fellowship from Massachusetts Cultural Council, resides in South Coast Massachusetts and worked in her communities Tribal Historic Preservation Office.

Born in 1944, artist Patricia James-Perry’s roots are in Wampanoag ancestral lands in Aquinnah, on Martha’s Vineyard. She was born into a creative family, and was most drawn to the tradition of scrimshanding – the once-common regional art of hand-crafting decorative and functional items from  whale ivory, bone and antler. She also practices Gay Head pottery. Patricia studied Education and Fine Arts at Southeastern Massachusetts University, where she began producing illustrations, paintings, and sculpture. Early career was spent working in Head Start and she pioneered the Teachers Aid Program in New Bedford. In the 1970s, to help support her growing family, she carved scrimshaw for sale at LaFrance’s Jewelers. She painted murals, including at the New Bedford Art Museum, when employed there. Patricia apprenticed her son Jonathan James-Perry in scrimshaw (using fossil ivory and deer antler) with support from the Connecticut Historical Societies traditional arts grant, and they demonstrated at Lowell Folk Festival, as well as during Cape Cod Visitors Center’s annual Wampanoag Festival. She was honored to be recognized as a descendant of the Cuffees at the opening for the Captain Paul Cuffee Park, and resides in Dartmouth, Massachusetts.

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