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Arts Agenda

Arts and Entertainment listings are provided as a service to the visual and performing arts community.

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Merrill-Jennings Galleries Meet Miss Addie. a one-woman show honoring NC self-taught artist Addie James. Mon.-Sat. Continues through Feb. 28. 463 S. Main St., Davidson. 704-895-1213.

Microcosm Gallery Oils and Pastels. featuring Piotr Lucjan and Beata Futro. Mon.-Sun. Continues through Feb. 28. 300 N. College St. #101.

* Mint Museum of Craft & Design Myth, Object and the Animal. the glass works of William Morris. Findings: The Jewelry of Ramona Solberg. Innovative jewelry pieces from an amazing artist. Mon.-Sun. Continues through March 31. 220 N. Tryon St. 704-337-2009.

NC Museum of Art Toulouse-Lautrec: Master of the Moulin Rouge. Features nearly 50 of his famous images of Parisian nightlife during the 1890's, as well as a complementary selection of 30 posters and prints by his contemporaries. Mon.-Sun. Continues through Feb. 17. 2110 Blue Ridge Rd., Raleigh. 919-839-6262.

Pentes Artworks Gallery All Women Show. will feature the works of Sharon Augustyniak (photography), Lynda Calabrese (3 dimensional narratives & poetry), Sandy Culp (ceramic sculpture), Nisha Drinkard (fabric art), Sue Elrod (oil), Marilyn Fairchild (all media), Sue Hamilton (oil), Dolores Hibbard (oil & acrylic), Danna Pentes (multi media), and Ruth Pentes (photography). Tue.-Fri., 12-5 p.m. Continues through March 29. 1346 Hill Rd. 704-556-9897.

Pope's Gallery Betty Mitchell. Lovely photo-realistic floral still lifes painted in oil. Also exhibiting many works by local and regional artists. Mon.-Sun. Continues through Feb. 28. Seymour Simmons. exhibiting charming watercolor paintings of the French countryside. Also featuring original works by other local and regional artists in a variety of mediums. Mon.-Sun. Continues through Feb. 28.

Southeastern Center for Contemporary Art Nikki Blair: After The Instrument. From the complexities of the bio-tech industry to cosmetic surgery and prosthetics, according to the artists, we as a society have engaged in analyzing and re-structuring our bodies to the extent that scientific innovation will allow. Blair's work follows this banal practice to its extreme end and suggests the bizarre consequences of a world where our bodies are fragmented and possibly no longer able to be reassembled. Mon.-Sun. Continues through April 13. Picture Show. the works of James Casebere - a three part exhibition based on the relationship of photography and cinematography. Mon.-Sun. Continues through April 14. Photo + Video + Drawing = William Wegman. Features close to thirty years of Wegman's work in other media such as video, drawing, and altering his own and found photographs and postcards. In conjunction with the exhibit SECCA will present a selection of Wegman's videos including the U.S. premiere of his two most resent works, Reels 8 & 9. Mon.-Sun. Continues through April 12. 750 Marguerite Dr., Winston-Salem. 336-725-1904.

UNC-Charlotte 521 All Stars. A Championship Story of Baseball and Community. Photography of Byron Baldwin. Mon.-Sun. Continues through Feb. 24.

* Van Every Gallery at Davidson College Rev. McKendree Robbins Long: Picture Painter of the Apocalypse. First comprehensive exhibition by the late Rev. Long, Statesville native and former student of Davidson College. Mon.-Sun. Continues through March 1. Davidson. 704-894-2519.

Waterworks Visual Arts Center Cultures Revealed: Appliques from Around the World. Exhibition featuring traditional 20th century fiber handcraft from cultures throughout the world. Mon.-Sun. Continues through April 7. Salisbury. 704-636-1882.

Winthrop University Galleries Words and Images from Blackmon Road. The exhibit explores the concept of civic journalism through essays written by James Scott and Terry Plumb, and many of the images of veteran photographer Jim Stratakos being seen for the very first time. Mon.-Fri. Continues through March 31. 150 Years. the debut of three new works by performance artist Jennifer Marie Wallace. Both object-oriented and performance-based, Wallace's art explores Southern issues and is based on her own knowledge of the South, having grown up in South Carolina. There will be three separate performances "Fickle Ballast", "Blue Blood Trickle" and "Drawn Taut". Feb. 24, 3 p.m.; March 20, 1 p.m. 107 McLaurin, Rock Hill. 803-323-2493.