11/26/2025
See Lost Bayou Ramblers at the Arkansas Museum of Fine Arts!
Join us for a terrific afternoon and evening of high-class and low-stress entertainment and enlightenment with the Adventure First Travel Club
On Thursday, February 19, we invite you to step on board a deluxe motorcoach at 2:00 p.m. to be ferried in comfort from Batesville to the state’s posh new Arkansas Museum of Fine Arts in Little Rock to explore the artistic exhibitions, have dinner, and then enjoy a concert by the two-time Grammy Award winning group, Lost Bayou Ramblers!
Reserve your space now as seating is limited. Call us at 870-612-3419 or email [email protected]
An “on your own” dinner will be at the Park Grill, the museum’s trendy but reasonably priced on-site restaurant. (Make reservations at … 501-396-0390.)
Park Grill is a full-service restaurant serving Contemporary American fare inspired by local and seasonal ingredients, with artistic flavors. It opens for dinner at 4:00. Located adjacent to the Museum's Park Entrance, the restaurant offers a variety of dining options with beautiful views of the Museum grounds and MacArthur Park.
Park Grill Dinner Menu: https://parkgrillatamfa.com/menu.html
After dinner, meander over to the Performing Arts Theater in the Museum, and settle back for a 7:30 p.m. concert by the two-time Grammy Award winning Cajun band – Lost Bayou Ramblers – to complete your day on a very entertaining musical note. To top it all off, you don’t even have to drive home – Just re-board the motorcoach outside the Museum!
Exclusive of dinner, the cost of this outing is only $70.00 per person, which includes the Lost Bayou Ramblers’ show and the transportation.
Payments are due Friday, January 2, 2026.
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About Lost Bayou Ramblers
The two-time Grammy award winning Lost Bayou Ramblers’ evolution as a progressive Louisiana French band rooted in Cajun traditions continues to excite, challenge, and redefine both genre expectations as well as cultural preconceptions.
Founded in 1999 by brothers Andre and Louis Michot, the years have brought Lost Bayou Ramblers a feature on Jack White’s television program American Epic, contributions to the Oscar nominated film Beasts of the Southern Wild, and Grammy wins for Live: Orpheum Theater NOLA (their 2023 album with the Louisiana Philharmonic Orchestra) and their 2017 studio album Kalenda.
Lost Bayou Ramblers have spent the last 25 years redefining Cajun music. Their sound fuses old-world Louisiana French traditions with rockabilly swagger, punk energy, and even a dash of psychedelia, all while singing in Cajun French. Think ancient melodies colliding with electric fuzz and irresistible rhythm.
Lost Bayou Ramblers stands at the crosscurrents of Louisiana culture by inhabiting the gray area between Cajun and Creole, convention and innovation, mystery, and a revelation, experimenting and growing the show to what it’s become today: an eclectic mix of modern sounds and rhythms with ancient Cajun melodies and lyrics.
Some of the Scheduled Exhibitions at the Museum of Fine Arts
Lori Larusso: A Paradox of Plenty
(Now showing through May 3, 2026)
Kentucky-based artist Lori Larusso's painting installation playfully tumbles across the Robyn and John Horn Gallery with no regard for centerline.
Her installations depict a parade of objects—the everyday, forgettable, or sometimes nostalgic bits that we consume and discard. An upturned shopping cart spills its contents onto the ground like an ironic cornucopia.
There is humor as well as reason for reflection as these things take on coded meanings in new contexts.
Uncommon Threads in Contemporary Art
(Now showing through April 29, 2026)
Uncommon Threads in Contemporary Art showcases work from the Arkansas Museum of Fine Arts Foundation Collection by contemporary artists who sew or incorporate various fibers into their drawings, photographs, and sculptures.
Using natural and synthetic threads in both traditional and non-traditional ways, they experiment and metaphorically speak of the lines, networks, and webs that link people together.
Working in innovative ways, artists such as Maysey Craddock, Howardena Pindell, Anna Torma, and Ursula von Rydinsgvard, among others, collapse the hierarchies between fine art and craft.