Nov 08 Saturday
Stretch & Reset Mobilitywith Mobile Om Second Saturday of every month, 10a-11a
FREE COMMUNITY EVENT SPONSORED BY H-E-B and UNIVERSITY HEALTH
Enhance your flexibility and balance with Stretch & Reset Mobility, a 60-minute low-impact class designed to support your overall wellness and range of motion. This session combines gentle stretching and dynamic mobility exercises to help you feel refreshed, strong, and energized. Beginner-friendly and welcoming to all, this class offers modifications so everyone can participate at their own comfort level. Suitable for all ages and abilities, it’s a great way to unwind and care for your body.
Duration: 60 minutesWhere: Will Naylor Riverwalk Plaza at The Tobin Center (weather permitting; indoor location TBA during inclement weather).What to Bring/Wear: A yoga mat or towel, comfortable clothing you can stretch in, and water to stay hydrated.Free Parking: Free parking is available from 9:30 AM to 11:30 AM in the surface lot located at the corner of 4th Street and Auditorium Circle (142 Auditorium Circle). Additional street parking may be available.Enjoy the benefits of moving with intention, feeling more at ease in your body, and connecting with others in your community.
Join San Antonio Parks & Recreation to celebrate San Antonio's urban forest at DÍa Del Árbol - Texas Arbor Day. This free event is open to all ages with activities for everyone!
• Tree Giveaway - 1,000+ Trees available• Interactive Demonstrations, Crafts, & Shows• Nature Activities• Tree Care Resource Info
Instructor Annette Graham will provide one-on-one consultation to assist in interpreting DNA results and learning how to use it in genealogy research. Three one-hour sessions are offered each second Saturday: 9:00 am, 10:00 am and 12:00 noon. Participants must bring their DNA Access Codes for the program used, and bringing a laptop is helpful for a better understanding, but it is not required to attend the program.
Please pre-register by calling the SAGHS Library at 210-342-5242 (specifying which time period you are requesting) and pre-pay by either mailing or leaving payment at the SAGHS library, 911 Melissa Drive, San Antonio, TX 78213-2024.
$20 for SAGHS members; $30 for non-members
Free All-Day Community Event!Saturday, November 8 | 10 AM – 4 PMRegister for FREE!
Highlighting the continued vibrancy and artistic traditions of Native American communities – and the local tribes who helped shape San Antonio – the Briscoe Western Art Museum invites everyone to enjoy its annual Yanaguana Indian Arts Festival. The event is FREE and includes admission to the Briscoe, making it a perfect way to celebrate the important role Native Americans played in shaping the West while enjoying art and artifacts that highlight Native American history.
The Bugs, Bikes, & Botany: Nature Adventure Kit Program invites families to experience the Mission Reach from a whole new angle—a bug’s-eye view! Brought to you by the San Antonio River Foundation, BiblioTech and San Antonio BCycle, with support from PeopleForBikes and the Better Bike Share Partnership, this program is your ticket to a wilder side of San Antonio, where each bike ride introduces you to both our city’s unique nature and the perks of using BCycle, San Antonio’s bikeshare system.
A lush showcase of Romantic elegance—a richly expressive pre-Soviet sound world.
Rachmaninoff: Two Pieces for Cello and Piano, Op. 2A. Taneyev: Feuillet d’album, Op. 33aTchaikovsky: Souvenir d’un lieu cher, Op. 42S. Taneyev: Piano Quartet, Op. 20
This year, our FREE movie nights on the Will Naylor Smith River Walk Plaza come with a twist! Screenings now happen on Saturdays, featuring quarterly themes showcasing some of your favorite films.
Join us on the second Saturday of the month for a perfect evening under the stars. The plaza opens at 6 PM, and the movie begins at 7 PM. Bring your lawn chairs or a cozy blanket to enjoy the show on our stunning 32-foot LED video wall! Full concessions and a bar will be available to enhance your movie experience.
🌧️ Rain or Shine: These events will go on regardless of the weather. If the skies don’t cooperate, we’ll move the fun indoors.
🚫 Please note: Pets, outside food, and outside drinks are not permitted on the plaza or in our theaters.
Not sure what to expect? Here are a few tips for making the most of your night out:
Make your Saturday nights memorable at The Tobin Center—see you there! 🎥✨
Movies we will be featuring this year:May 10th: Asteroid CityJune 14th: Moonrise KingdomJuly 12th: E.T. The Extra-TerrestrialAugust 9th: The GooniesSeptember 13th: Back to the FutureOctober 11th: Curly SueNovember 8th: BeethovenDecember 13th: Home Alone
A pillar of the Second Saturday ArtWalk, this monthly outdoor pop up art market hosts local artists, makers, & vendors, often featuring a different school, start-up, or non-profit. So come out to support your local creatives, enjoy some tunes, and grab a bite to eat at our guest food truck! The ArtWalk includes galleries inside 1906, plus those around the corner on Lone Star Blvd, as well as across the tracks on LaChapelle, and along S. Flores, not to mention other pop up markets!Free & open to the public
A black farce masterpiece, LOOT follows the fortunes of two young thieves, Hal and Dennis. Dennis is a hearse driver for an undertaker. They have robbed the bank next door to the funeral parlour and have returned to Hal’s home to hide-out with the loot. Hal’s mother has just died and the pair put the money in her coffin, hiding the body elsewhere in the house. With the arrival of Inspector Truscott, the thickened plot turns topsy-turvy.
TPR members $20
Nov 09 Sunday
Drawn primarily from the McNay’s outstanding collection of works on paper, this exhibition highlights the extraordinary creativity in 19th-century France, a time when we also rarely consider that printed images were subject to censorship laws—particularly between 1820 and 1880. In fact, some of this creativity was strategy to subvert and work around existing laws. The exhibition features critical images by Honoré Daumier and Édouard Manet in the context of prints made by their peers and later artists. The latter group includes Pablo Picasso, José Clemente Orozco, José Guadalupe Posada, who were inspired by how artists such as Manet and Daumier dealt with government censorship and used caricature to make protest art. In addition, more recent works by activist Guerrilla Girls and Donald Moffett add a contemporary lens to the presentation.
"Do Not Meddle With It!!: Print Censorship in 19th Century Paris" is organized for the McNay Art Museum by Elizabeth Kathleen Mitchell, Ph.D., Curator of Prints and Drawings.
Support is provided by the Elizabeth Huth Coates Charitable Foundation of 1992.