The South Austin Popular Culture Center (SAPCC) presents, exhibits, documents and interprets Austin art and culture of the past 50 years and makes that history accessible to local, national and international audiences. Our programs trace the evolution and the social context of Austin’s cultural production from the early 1960s through the present and interpret the local, state and national impact of the artists, art forms and recurrent themes that have profoundly shaped the city’s self-conception over the past fifty years.
COME SEE US: Thursday through Sunday 1 p.m. - 6 p.m. or by appointment and chance

It’s time again for the annual celebration of the patron saint of 709, Eddy.

This year’s celebration of all things 709 took place Friday, July 9, 2010. We all gathered at the South Austin Popular Culture Center to have a toast and watch a performance of the Uranium Savages.

The band started at 7:09 p.m.

What’s the significance of 709? “Those that say don’t know, those that know don’t say.”

Thanks to George Cummings and Trish Taylor for the photos:

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