The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Garden tour replaces the Inman Park Fest

Organizers say the 2021 event marks the arrival of spring.

- By Mary Welch

There are not a lot of degrees of separation between the Inman Park community and Kevin Bacon’s character, Ren, in “Footloose.” In the iconic movie, a staid community couldn’t keep Bacon and his friends from dancing; likewise, COVID-19 and the city’s ban on event permitting can’t keep Inman Park from partying.

“We just couldn’t, couldn’t go two years without doing something,” says Jane Bradshaw Burnette, who, along with Samantha Bailey, is the co-chair of the Inman Park Tour of Gardens. “This is a neighborho­od that loves to celebrate. We just needed something to mark the arrival of spring and we knew that, regardless of COVID, people would need something to celebrate. We started planning this in the fall before the vaccine came out, but we decided to do this with the focus on safety first, and then fun.”

Of course, the neighborho­od made sure it is completely in compliance with the city’s ban against festivals and gatherings, as well as medical recommenda­tions about COVID-19 safety. So, instead of the annual Inman Park Festival and Tour of Homes, this year it is called the Inman Park Tour of Gardens. The garden party will take place April 23-25 where nine neighbors, plus the Trolley Barn, will welcome the public to their gardens. “We don’t need a city permit for people to open up their gardens so people could walk through. It’s a private ticketed event.”

On the garden tour will be new landscapes and untraditio­nal touches, such as pathways and sculptures, while other gardens are more formal in style. Many of the homeowners will talk to guests as they stroll through the property.

Traditiona­lly, the festival involved the garden tour as well as concerts, dance performanc­es, arts and crafts booths, food stalls and the colorful and rowdy Inman Park Parade. In keeping with the times — and bypassing the city’s restrictio­ns — the event will still have some of those elements. Instead of musicians performing on a public stage, they will be on the private front porches or lawns of homeowners. Several artists, such as Mallory Brooks and Matt Terrell, will also display their work outside at private residences.

For those who want to stay and listen to the music, they are welcome to sit on the lawns of friendly neighbors and sidewalks. “There are no street closures and no security. We would have to get a city permit to do that,” Burnette says. “We tried to pick houses that had a lot of available space, were near parks or intersecti­ons, and where people could stay and enjoy the performanc­es.”

Local art gallery Whitespace will show Eric Mack’s exhibition “Of Stone and Stem,” “Search and Recovery” by Mark Bradley Shoup and Julia Hill’s “American Niche.” Wristbands are not required but face masks must be worn.

Traditiona­lly, dance has been a part of the festival since 2001, so it was important that it was included this year. Two dance festival regulars, Full Radius Dance and Immerseatl, will create sitespecif­ic works for the weekend. Full Radius will perform on the steps of Lizzie Chapel at 850 Euclid Ave., and Immerseatl will create a work for Delta Park at Edgewood Avenue and Delta Place. The performanc­es will take place on at 1 and 3 p.m. Saturday and Sunday. The shows, which are

free and open to the public, will run about 20 minutes and be the same for all four performanc­es.

There will be no food options other than two food trucks and King of Pops carts, so no city permits were needed; also, in compliance with the regulation­s, no alcohol will be available.

In keeping with COVID19 precaution­s, there will be only 500 tickets per day offered, and, unlike previous years, are only good for the specific date. Attendees must purchase the tickets online and redeem them for a wristband that can be picked up at the Trolley Barn. Masks will be required and there will be volunteers ensuring that proper crowd spacing is maintained. The festival is a fundraiser with the money going to help repair public sidewalks and will includedon­ations to the area’s public schools, library and theater groups.

This year would have been the 50th anniversar­y of the festival and tour of homes, so that’s why it’s only being called the Inman Park Tour of Gardens.

“We decided to call it a ‘tour of gardens’ rather than a festival and, we’re going to fudge a bit on the year, and call next year’s celebratio­n the 50th anniversar­y,” Burnette says. “It’ll be big.

“This is a neighborho­od that loves to celebrate and when youaretold­youcan’t,well,you miss it even more. We really needed this and needed something to look forward too; we really did,” she says. “Nothing can keep us down.”

 ?? COURTESY OF INMAN PARK NEIGHBORHO­OD ASSOCIATIO­N ?? Several artists will showcase their works on the front porches of Inman Park residents.
COURTESY OF INMAN PARK NEIGHBORHO­OD ASSOCIATIO­N Several artists will showcase their works on the front porches of Inman Park residents.
 ?? COURTESY OF WHITESPACE GALLERY ?? Eric Mack’s mixed media on paper work “RSRFC-5374” is featured at Inman Park’s Whitespace Gallery.
COURTESY OF WHITESPACE GALLERY Eric Mack’s mixed media on paper work “RSRFC-5374” is featured at Inman Park’s Whitespace Gallery.
 ?? COURTESY COURTESY OF OF INMAN INMAN PARK NEIGHBORHO­OD NEIGHBORHO­OD ASSOCIATIO­N ?? A number of bands will perform free concerts on neighbors’s’ lawns and porches, including the New Kevins, at the Inman Park Tour of Gardens.
COURTESY COURTESY OF OF INMAN INMAN PARK NEIGHBORHO­OD NEIGHBORHO­OD ASSOCIATIO­N A number of bands will perform free concerts on neighbors’s’ lawns and porches, including the New Kevins, at the Inman Park Tour of Gardens.

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