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11th annual downtown Arlington South Street Art Festival paints city

The South Street Art Festival is returning for its 11th annual event Friday to Sunday in Downtown Arlington. The festival will be at 300-500 Block E. South St. and runs from 4 to 8 p.m. Friday, 11 a.m. to 8 p.m. Saturday and 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. Sunday. As the longest-running and only fine arts festival in the Cultural Arts District, the free, family-friendly event hosts up to 100 national, regional and local artists, offering visitors a chance to browse and purchase original pieces. Several artists will perform live music throughout the festival, and attendees are free to bring lawn chairs, but no coolers will be allowed inside. Food vendors will also be available for people to enjoy snacks while visiting. The venue is pet-friendly, but pets must be leashed and follow all other City of Arlington dog ordinances. Steve Moya, South Street Art Festival owner and producer, said the festival uses a juried application process to select artists across 14 different categories. Painting, jewelry and photography are usually the categories with the most applicants. About a dozen artists have been at the festival with Moya since the beginning, through the challenges and successes, he said. They make the festival what it is today. “We want all the artists to be top quality, no matter where they're coming from,” he said. Moya said it’s exciting to bring in new artists each year, along with new musicians and food vendors. His goal is to create an atmosphere where people can fall in love with artists’ work and come back every year. The festival's catalog of art is large, from ceramics to woodturners, with something for everyone, said Moya. “I hope that [people] take the time to really look at the artist's work and not just walk through the event,” he said. Before the festival became a thriving staple of Downtown Arlington, Moya traveled the country selling his own artwork. In 2011, after coming back from a show in Kansas, he realized they didn’t have one in their own backyard. In 2012, he started his first festival Art on the Green at Richard Greene Linear Park, held in the spring. In 2013, he created the South Street Art Festival, held in the fall. Art on the Green was shut down in 2019 due to construction, and the South Street Art Festival moved to the spring in 2022, but Moya’s dedication continues through his current festival. What keeps him going is the people. “It's being able to give back to the community, to do something that nobody else is doing,” Moya said. “We do this all for the citizens of Arlington, and it's so they can have an event that they can be proud of.” news-editor.shorthorn@uta.edu

The South Street Art Festival is returning for its 11th annual event Friday to Sunday in Downtown Arlington.

The festival will be at 300-500 Block E. South St. and runs from 4 to 8 p.m. Friday, 11 a.m. to 8 p.m. Saturday and 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. Sunday.

As the longest-running and only fine arts festival in the Cultural Arts District, the free, family-friendly event hosts up to 100 national, regional and local artists, offering visitors a chance to browse and purchase original pieces.

Several artists will perform live music throughout the festival, and attendees are free to bring lawn chairs, but no coolers will be allowed inside. Food vendors will also be available for people to enjoy snacks while visiting. The venue is pet-friendly, but pets must be leashed and follow all other City of Arlington dog ordinances.

Steve Moya, South Street Art Festival owner and producer, said the festival uses a juried application process to select artists across 14 different categories. Painting, jewelry and photography are usually the categories with the most applicants.

About a dozen artists have been at the festival with Moya since the beginning, through the challenges and successes, he said. They make the festival what it is today.

“We want all the artists to be top quality, no matter where they're coming from,” he said.

Moya said it’s exciting to bring in new artists each year, along with new musicians and food vendors. His goal is to create an atmosphere where people can fall in love with artists’ work and come back every year.

The festival's catalog of art is large, from ceramics to woodturners, with something for everyone, said Moya.

“I hope that [people] take the time to really look at the artist's work and not just walk through the event,” he said.

Before the festival became a thriving staple of Downtown Arlington, Moya traveled the country selling his own artwork. In 2011, after coming back from a show in Kansas, he realized they didn’t have one in their own backyard.

In 2012, he started his first festival Art on the Green at Richard Greene Linear Park, held in the spring. In 2013, he created the South Street Art Festival, held in the fall. Art on the Green was shut down in 2019 due to construction, and the South Street Art Festival moved to the spring in 2022, but Moya’s dedication continues through his current festival.

What keeps him going is the people.

“It's being able to give back to the community, to do something that nobody else is doing,” Moya said. “We do this all for the citizens of Arlington, and it's so they can have an event that they can be proud of.”

news-editor.shorthorn@uta.edu

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