Woodstock Community News

Woodstock Arts to Unveil 2026-27 Season for Free at the Reeves House This Thursday

Woodstock Community News Staff··1 min read

Woodstock Arts to Unveil 2026-27 Season for Free at the Reeves House This Thursday

The public event will unveil upcoming shows, art exhibitions, and new education initiatives for the coming year

Woodstock Arts is throwing open the doors — literally and figuratively — with a free community event this Thursday at the Reeves House in downtown Woodstock, where the organization will reveal its full 2026-27 season lineup to the public for the first time.

The evening will cover the breadth of what Woodstock Arts has planned: upcoming theatrical productions, new art exhibitions, and freshly launched education initiatives. Whether you're a longtime season ticket holder or someone who's simply been curious about what goes on inside the Woodstock Arts Theatre, this is the organization's formal invitation to find out.

Admission is free, but Woodstock Arts is asking guests to RSVP ahead of time — a reasonable ask given the organization's stated goal of packing the room with as many community members as possible. The RSVP link is available on the Woodstock Arts website and through the link in the organization's social media bio.

The choice of venue carries its own meaning. The Reeves House, a historic property nestled in the heart of downtown Woodstock, has long served as a gathering point for the city's civic and cultural life. Hosting a season reveal there rather than inside the theater itself signals something about the organization's intentions — this isn't just a marketing event, it's a community celebration, and the setting reflects that.

Woodstock Arts functions as the cultural backbone of downtown Woodstock, operating the Woodstock Arts Theatre alongside gallery spaces that bring professional-caliber performances and visual art to Cherokee County residents year-round. Its education programming extends that reach further, serving students and adults across the community. For a county that has grown as rapidly as Cherokee, having a rooted, professionally run arts organization matters — it's part of what separates a city with a downtown from a city with a zip code.

Thursday's reveal is as low-stakes an entry point as it gets: free, casual, and designed for the community. If you've been meaning to get more involved with the local arts scene, this is the week to start.

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