Optimize Social Security
Meeting Room II 4537 Lowell Road Tampa, Fl 33618Presenter: Tim Hoppes
Presenter: Tim Hoppes
This class offers teens an enriching opportunity to engage in public art while learning from professionals.
Cymbals are a musical instrument that are fun and teach rhythm, going hand in hand with belly dancing. Veils add grace and beauty while practicing core strengthening techniques.
The Color of Light is about how we see. Without light, we would see nothing, and most of the time, we think about what light allows us to see! But […]
Metamorphosis explores the surreal terrain of the subconscious mind, where imagination outweighs knowledge and perception is freed from logic and reason. Seen through the artist’s eyes, reality is radically reconfigured, and meaning is fully open to interpretation.
Quilt Journey: Threads of Connection by Cheryl Yellowhawk explores the star quilt as both a visual structure and a living story.
Abstract painting, unlike narrative or realistic work, does not tell a story. It just “IS.” One should look at the big picture first before dismissing the work. The art may be so surreal, strange, and mysterious that it is unknowable, but that's OK. That’s why it's called ART.
Here and There displays a variety of landscapes that have intrigued me in the past several years in my travels up the coast of the U.S., along the coast of Portugal, near Tavira, and in and around the Tampa Bay area.
Give Thanks, Give Back by Hanna Rachocka is a charity exhibit benefiting the Carrollwood Cultural Center.
The collection is a series of ten impasto acrylic paintings by Hanna Rachocka that transform the traditional still life into an elemental exploration of emotion, weather, and inner fire. Each vessel becomes a metaphor for the human spirit—resilient in rain, tangled in thought, radiant in bloom, or aflame with creative force. Together, the works weave a narrative of resilience, paradox, celebration, and transformation, inviting viewers to reflect on the seasons and storms of the soul.
Six paintings by William Talenti that started with a deliberate modality—Realistic, Abstract, or Non-Objective—pairing each with a "sister" painting on an opposing wall to serve as a formal counterpoint.
The New Horizons International Music Association (NHIMA) is a worldwide organization comprised of more than 250 New Horizons groups with 10,000 members. Some played music during their school years and […]
Make a new project each week as you build your sewing skills.
Sure, you can do crunches, but why crunch when you can dance? Belly dancing is a ton of fun, but there are a lot of health benefits, too.
Students will learn to choreograph with veils and canes and how to make music with finger cymbals.
Teens will explore and master the symbols that express mood and flow in any piece of music.
Cymbals are a musical instrument that are fun and teach rhythm, going hand in hand with belly dancing. Veils add grace and beauty while practicing core strengthening techniques.
Adults will explore and master the symbols that express mood and flow in any piece of music.
Students will explore proportion, shading, perspective, and composition as they gradually develop their own style and confidence.
Get ready for plenty of laughs and maybe even a few tears—hopefully from laughing so hard! The team from Tampa Metropolitan Improv (TMI) will use your ideas to create hilarious, unforgettable moments that will have your abs aching from belly-laughing fun.
The Color of Light is about how we see. Without light, we would see nothing, and most of the time, we think about what light allows us to see! But […]
Metamorphosis explores the surreal terrain of the subconscious mind, where imagination outweighs knowledge and perception is freed from logic and reason. Seen through the artist’s eyes, reality is radically reconfigured, and meaning is fully open to interpretation.
Quilt Journey: Threads of Connection by Cheryl Yellowhawk explores the star quilt as both a visual structure and a living story.
Abstract painting, unlike narrative or realistic work, does not tell a story. It just “IS.” One should look at the big picture first before dismissing the work. The art may be so surreal, strange, and mysterious that it is unknowable, but that's OK. That’s why it's called ART.
Here and There displays a variety of landscapes that have intrigued me in the past several years in my travels up the coast of the U.S., along the coast of Portugal, near Tavira, and in and around the Tampa Bay area.