Providence Artists Expand The Lemonade Stand Festival With Music, Murals & Community Vibes

What started as a grassroots art fair is now a growing celebration of local creativity—featuring live performances, interactive murals, and a welcoming space for artists and families alike

The Lemonade Stand features interactive art and live music.
The Lemonade Stand features interactive art and live music.
Eva Okrent
Share
The Lemonade Stand features interactive art and live music.
The Lemonade Stand features interactive art and live music.
Eva Okrent
Providence Artists Expand The Lemonade Stand Festival With Music, Murals & Community Vibes
Copy

Last summer, two full-time working artists in Providence organized a small outdoor festival called The Lemonade Stand. They wanted to provide a welcoming space for artists in the community to collaborate and give the public a chance to witness the creativity of local artists first-hand.

This year, they’re expanding, adding live performances from Providence-based musicians, an interactive public arts display, and more. Morning Host Luis Hernandez spoke with the organizers of The Lemonade Stand, Eva Okrent and Liam Anastasia-Murphy.

Interview highlights

On what makes The Lemonade Stand different from other festivals

Eva Okrent: It’s so different because we’re all a community of artists who actually know each other, and so it’s not just a bunch of band names coming for a show that was organized by, I don’t know, a larger music-only event. It’s our friends’ bands who introduced us to their friends, who are also artists. We just wanted to make a place where the people who are playing shows or getting to sell their art aren’t in galleries necessarily yet, and they’re not playing the Fete. But eventually, I think that the road there is made easier when you have opportunities to play publicly.

On hosting an interactive public mural at the festival

Okrent: The artist who designed the mural is a good friend of ours, Ryan Dean. Last year (at the festival), we noticed there were just really all ages. We’re in a time period of our lives, too, where a lot of our friends have little kids. And by creating spaces where young families can hang out in a safe, relaxing environment, it’s like a real joy because they’re tired. The mural piece will be completed, and then the backside is a huge chalkboard. Anyone who’s there can draw all day long on the chalkboard what they love about summer.

On local musicians playing at the festival

Liam Anastasia-Murphy: We have Surnames and Vvife, which is actually our two projects; we’re performing together. We have Hawk In The Nest, Avi Jacob, local to Providence, an incredible artist; Olivia Dolphin Band, also local to Providence; Zion Rodman out of Boston, but has performed in Providence a bunch and is incredible; Stace Brandt, who played last year, a good friend of ours — they are an incredible songwriter and performer. We’re just so excited to have all of them.

On whether Providence is still a welcoming place for artists

Okrent: I would say 100%. I lived in Boston before I moved here for, like, six years and couldn’t possibly live the life I’m living right now up there. I think the artists who I’ve met here want more community, want more opportunities to do non-competitive art making. The RISD-Brown environment is super-competitive. If you’re willing to put the energy towards making something, Providence is rife with possibility and people are really hungry to join. They just don’t always know how to organize it.

Superintendent Dawn Bartz is on paid administrative leave pending the outcome of a legal review that the Smithfield school district hired to investigate the incident of senior football players hazing a Jewish freshman
An independent monitor says the district and RIDE have met the terms of a 2023 settlement that required faster evaluations and placement for 3- to 5-year-olds with disabilities, effectively closing the federal class action case
Food insecurity is getting worse in Rhode Island, and the recent disruption of SNAP benefits is only partly to blame
Public health leader Amy Nunn talks about the ripple effects of federal policy shifts, the threat of SNAP cuts and rising insurance costs, and what Rhode Island can do to protect community health in the months ahead
Attorney General Peter Neronha is negotiating with Prospect Medical to keep the financially troubled hospitals open through the end of the year while a potential buyer works to finalize financing — or another steps in
Ørsted executives say they are ‘committed’ to finishing project despite financial headwinds