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  • Cynthia Erivo is a Grammy® Emmy® and Tony® Award-winning actress, singer and producer, as well as an Academy Award®, Golden Globe®, and SAG nominee. Erivo burst onto West End and Broadway stages in The Color Purple and has since taken the world by storm.Erivo most recently starred as Elphaba opposite Ariana Grande’s Glinda in Universal’s record-breaking film adaptation of the hit musical Wicked from director Jon M. Chu. Wicked Part One opened at number one and has since become the highest grossing movie ever at the domestic box office based on a Broadway musical. Erivo has received widespread critical acclaim and rave reviews for her performance as Elphaba including Golden Globe, SAG, Critics’ Choice, NAACP, BAFTA and Academy Award nominations.- Anthony Parnther, conductor- Cynthia Erivo, vocalist- San Diego Symphony OrchestraPhoto credit: Mark SeligerCynthia Erivo on Facebook / InstagramVisit: https://www.theshell.org/performances/cynthia-erivo/
  • The Annual Switchfoot BRO-AM will feature a surf contest, live music performances, and nerf surf jousting exposition between surf contest heats.BRO-AM Beach Fest is an annual celebration that gives back to the San Diego Community. Surf contests, free concert, numerous vendor booths... all to celebrate community and to raise awareness and funds for local youth organizations.Visit: https://www.broam.org/broam-eventSwitchfoot Bro-Am on Instagram and Facebook
  • Celebrate International Compost Awareness Week with 8 jurisdictions in San Diego County! This is a self-serve, self-loading and self-haul service, so please bring your own cans/bags, gloves and shovel. If you plan to haul your material in an open truck or trailer, remember to bring a tarp to cover your material. Follow our Facebook event for live updates and location maps: https://www.facebook.com/events/1392738481860957/--May 3: City of San DiegoTime: 8 a.m. - 12 p.m.Location: Sunrunner Lot, Mission Bay Park, 5193 Pacific Hwy, San Diego, CA 92109Details: City of San Diego residents only.--May 4-10: City of VistaTime: Dawn to DuskLocation: The vacant lot at Vale Terrace Drive and Williamston StreetDetails: City of Vista residents only.--May 4-10: County of San DiegoTime: 8 a.m. - 5 p.m.Locations:• Spring Valley County Park, 8735 Jamacha Blvd, Spring Valley, CA 91977• Live Oak County Park, 2746 Reche Rd, Fallbrook, CA 92028• Dianne Jacob Lakeside Equestrian Park, 11055 Moreno Ave, Lakeside, CA 92040 (Mulch) **May 4-8 Only• Collier County Park, 626 E St, Ramona, CA 92065 (Compost and Mulch)• Wilderness Gardens Preserve, 14209 CA-76, Pala, CA 92059Details: Unincorporated County of San Diego residents only.--May 5-9: City of EscondidoTime: 7 a.m. - 3 p.m.Location: Location given after appointment is scheduled.Details: Schedule an appointment through recycling@escondido.gov or (760) 839-6216.--May 5-10: City of OceansideTime: May 5-9, 7:30 a.m. to 5 p.m.; May 10, 8 a.m. to 4 p.m.Location: El Corazon Compost Facility, 3210 Oceanside Blvd, Oceanside, CA 92056Details: City of Oceanside residents only.--May 5-10: City of CarlsbadTime: 8 a.m. - 3 p.m.Location: Palomar Transfer Station, 5960 El Camino Real, Carlsbad CA 92008Details: City of Carlsbad residents only. Check in at the office.--May 5-10: City of La MesaTime: Dawn to DuskLocation: 8152 Commercial St, La Mesa, CA 91942Details: City of La Mesa residents/businesses only. Please do not block the gas pumps.--May 10: City of Chula VistaTime: 8 a.m. - 12 p.m.Location: Otay Landfill/Compost, 1700 Maxwell Rd, Chula Vista, CA 91911Details: City of Chula Vista and unincorporated County of SD Republic customers only.
  • Harvest & Gather is pleased to present "missed connections", an exhibition that facilitates collaboration between artists who might have once worked together, but the stars did not align in their favor or their spirits could not quite connect. Each invited artist has selected another artist to exhibit with, thus fulfilling their missed connection at the Athenaeum. Moving beyond an exchange of glances but nothing more and the “you-smiled-at-me-on-the-subway-platform” prose of personal ads, Harvest & Gather seeks to allow the exhibiting artists a working opportunity to intimately connect with another artist’s work and practice. Artists are Deanna Barahona and Susan Aparicio; Katie Delaney and Elaine Fisher; Maria Antonia Eguiarte and Liz Nurenberg; and Stephen Rivas and A.R. Tran.Harvest & Gather is an experimental, nomadic curatorial project founded by mika Castañeda & Cat Gunn in 2023. With an emphasis on creating makeshift spaces for art anywhere at any moment, the project exists beyond traditional galleries and museums through pop-up shows in various locations.ARTISTSDeanna Barahona is a first-generation multidisciplinary artist from Southern California working in text, photography, installation, and sculpture. Barahona examines subcultures that emerge in Southern California’s integration process with materials referencing architecture, adornments, and symbols within the homes of the Latin American diaspora. Barahona’s work has been in exhibitions at Charlie James Gallery, Los Angeles; Bread + Salt, San Diego; Island 83 Gallery, New York City; Mandeville Gallery, La Jolla; Bakersfield Museum of Art; Two Rooms, San Diego; and Residencia 797, Guadalajara. She is set to participate in a group exhibition at Museo Raúl Anguiano in Guadalajara in the summer of 2024 and a solo exhibition at the San Luis Obispo Museum of Art in 2025. Barahona holds a BA in visual arts from California State University, Bakersfield, and an MFA from the University of California, San Diego. Susan Aparicio is a Southeast Los Angeles native, a daughter of Mexican and Honduran parents, and a visual artist experimenting in the mediums of stained glass, experimental video, and installation. Her stained-glass work explores worship, desire, and Latinidad-through-pop-culture-inspired imagery from the early 2000s to today, blending bling and beauty to make the fake feel real. Her works explore the complex relationship between reality and states of being, inviting viewers to reflect on their existence within our natural, digital, and consumer worlds. Her works have been exhibited at Leiminspace, Bellyman, LaPau Gallery, Charlie James Gallery, the California Museum, the Hudson River Museum, Texas Tech University, and Cal State Dominguez Hills, among others. Her work has been recognized by publications such as LVL3 Magazine and the Daily Bruin. Aparicio was a resident at Caldera Arts Residency and the Artists’ Cooperative Residency & Exhibitions (ACRE). She earned dual BA degrees in studio art and cognitive science from the University of Virginia in 2018. She then earned her MFA in art from UCLA in 2022. Aparicio is currently based in Pasadena.Katie Delaney (they/them) is a queer, non-binary artist based in Philadelphia. Their practice questions the role of the gender binary in generational trauma by creating work within a “mythspace” that transfigures traditional storytelling. They hold an MFA from the University of Delaware (’24) and a BFA in sculpture from Towson University (’20). Their work has been exhibited internationally at Galería Municipal de Arte, Valparaíso, Chile; virtually at the Alternative Art School, Vox Populi; Grizzly Grizzly, Philadelphia; throughout the DMV, ICA Baltimore; Delaplaine Art Center, Frederick, Maryland; and The Hen House, Washington, D.C.Elaine Fisher received her BA in archaeology and ancient history from the University of Liverpool in 1996 and her MFA from the University of Gloucestershire in 2015. She continues her research independently and collaboratively in the areas of art, archaeology, and depth psychology, through place-based residencies and commissions, including B-side Festival; SLUICE Exchange, Berlin; and most recently at The Florence Trust , London. In 2022 she was invited to exhibit her COVID project Domestic Structures at Project 1628 in Baltimore. Group exhibitions include Fibres at AIR Gallery, Manchester, UK; Garden Party by Latela Curatorial, Washington, D.C.; and Flat Files at the Institute of Contemporary Art, Baltimore. In 2024 Elaine was nominated for a Castlefield Gallery Award for her entry in the Manchester Open Exhibition at HOME, Manchester. She currently lives and works in Manchester.Maria Antonia Eguiarte Souza is a Mexican American artist raised in Mexico City and based in San Diego. She engages in gesture-based performance and object making. Eguiarte has shown in group expeditions in both Mexico and the United States, including at the ICA San Diego, Patio Trasero, Brea Gallery, NIXON, Proxyco NYC, Working Title with Project Blank, the New Wight Gallery UCLA, and Museo Ex Teresa Arte Actual.Liz Nurenberg (b. 1978) is a Los Angeles–based artist. She received a BFA from Grand Valley State University (2003) and a MFA from Claremont Graduate University (2010). Liz is an associate professor in the Foundation Department at Otis College of Art and Design. She is a member of Tiger Strikes Asteroid Los Angeles. Liz was awarded a fellowship to Ox-Bow School of Art and Artist Residency and a Helen B. Dooley Fellowship at Claremont Graduate University; she received a California Community Foundation Emerging Artist Grant. She has exhibited her work nationally and internationally at such venues as the Holter Museum, Helena, Montana; Pasadena Armory Center for the Arts; Elephant Art Space, Los Angeles; HilbertRaum Gallery, Berlin; Galleri CC, Malmo, Sweden; and the Contemporary Calgary.Stephen Rivas is an interdisciplinary artist raised in Palmdale, California. Working across photography, video, sound, and writing, Rivas creates deeply personal, multilayered works that interrogate intersections of history, identity, and resistance. His work often adopts an autobiographical lens, utilizing multi-channeled projections to weave narratives that explore memory, love, death, joy, anarchy, and the fleeting nature of time within his family’s collective history. Central to Rivas’s practice is the critique of colonial narratives and systems of power. By uncovering the preexisting “threads” of resistance and resilience within his family’s past—what he refers to as “weapons against empires”—Rivas reclaims stories that challenge dominant historical frameworks. As systemic oppression persists, Rivas sees focusing on past resistance as a method of preserving memory and a strategy for imagining liberated futures. His work highlights the connections between historical uprisings and contemporary struggles, emphasizing the enduring relevance of resilience and decentralized resistance.Rivas’s installations invite viewers into a space where personal and political histories collide, emphasizing the importance of storytelling as a tool for survival and subversion. Rivas completed his BFA in 2019 at the California Institute of the Arts, where he began exploring themes of identity, migration, and memory. He later earned an MFA from the University of California, Irvine in 2023, further refining his interdisciplinary practice and conceptual approach. A.R. Tran was born in Monterey Park, California, in 1993 and moved to New York in 2011 to attend New York University’s Gallatin School of Individualized Study. In 2015, he received his BA in Critical Race Theory and visual studies and was awarded the Finish Line Grant and Founder’s Day Award. That same year he was selected to participate in the Gallatin Arts Festival as a visual and performance artist. For more than five years, he worked in arts education and public programming for institutions such as the Museum of Contemporary African Diasporan Arts (MoCADA), the Metropolitan Museum of Art, and the Mark Morris Dance Center and participated in a number of student shows at 205 Hudson Street. In 2020, he enrolled in the University of California, Irvine’s MFA program in art. There he developed his interdisciplinary art practice while taking PhD-level courses in Critical Race Theory and Black studies. In 2022, he was accepted into UC Irvine’s Pedagogical Fellowship program, was nominated for the Tom Angell Fellowship, and was named a Claire Trevor Society Scholar in Art. In spring 2023, he was awarded an Interdisciplinary Research residency at UC Irvine’s Experimental Media Performance Lab (xMPL) and his solo exhibition, entitled "THE ROOT OF DESIRE IN VIOLENT AND I STILL WANT TO BE WANTED", opened at University Art Gallery in Irvine.The exhibition can be viewed in the Joseph Clayes III and Carolyn Yorston-Wellcome Rotunda Galleries at the Athenaeum Music & Arts Library (1008 Wall Street, La Jolla, CA 92037) during open hours, Tuesday through Saturday, from 10 a.m. to 5:30 p.m.Visit: https://www.ljathenaeum.org/events/exhibition-2025-harvest-gather-walkAthenaeum Music & Arts Library on Instagram and Facebook
  • A number of books out this week — a tale of tribal politics, a close-focus mystery, measured criticism and a unique relationship — are tied up in answering the question: How do we define ourselves?
  • A new cultural tradition is coming to East County! On Saturday, June 7, 2025, Downtown El Cajon will debut Artivál, East San Diego County’s first-ever arts festival. The free, open-air celebration brings together local creatives, musicians, food and drink vendors, and the community to highlight the city’s cultural identity.Held from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. in the heart of Downtown El Cajon at Main & Magnolia, the free festival kicks off the summer season with a vibrant showcase of more than 50 artists and makers, interactive installations, live music, and gourmet food trucks. For those 21 and up, East County Arts Association has curated a ticketed Wine & Beer Garden experience that adds an elevated experience with tastings from local wineries, craft brew, and beverage brands.Artivál’s mission is clear – to transform Downtown El Cajon’s public spaces into a living canvas, spark cultural dialogue, and create lasting access to the arts in a part of San Diego that’s long been underserved by creative programming. Featuring a dynamic lineup of visual and performing artists, from rising talents to veteran creatives, Artivál celebrates the full spectrum of local artistry across disciplines and cultures.FESTIVAL HIGHLIGHTS· Art Walk (10 a.m. – 6 p.m.): A vibrant outdoor gallery featuring local and regional artists across diverse mediums.· Food Trucks (10 a.m. – 6 p.m.): Flavor-packed bites from East County’s favorite mobile kitchens.· Wine & Beer Garden (Noon – 6 p.m.): Guests 21+ can sip and relax with beverages JuneShine, Flying Embers, Burning Beard Brewery, The Tap Truck East San Diego, Granite Lion Winery, Fog Wine Co., and Snake Oil Co.· Live Music (Noon – 6 p.m.):- Cassie B (11:30 a.m. – 2:30 p.m.): High-energy pop, funk, and soul.- Kimba Light (2:45 p.m. – 5:30 p.m.): Latin, funk, and Afro-Caribbean fusion.EVENT DETAILSWHEN: Saturday, June 7, 2025. 10 a.m. – 6 p.m.WHERE: Main & Magnolia, El Cajon, CA 92020TICKETS: FREE EntryWine & Beer Garden:- 10 Tastings Tickets - $45.00*- 5 Tastings Tickets - $25.00**Tasting = 1 Ticket*Full Pour = 2 Tickets Cocktail Tickets: $15 eachWine & Beer Garden Tickets and Cocktail tickets will only be available for purchase onsite (cash or card). Wine & Beer Garden Tickets will be sold at the entrance within the fenced garden, while Cocktail Tickets will be sold at Belly Bar next to Snake Oil Canopy.To learn more, visit www.artivalsandiego.com.“El Cajon is one of the most diverse cities in the county, and yet, East County has never had an arts festival to call its own,” said Chris Berg, Marketing & Engagement Manager for the City of El Cajon and Downtown El Cajon Business Partners’ Board Member. “Artivál is our way of creating a new tradition for the community and visitors to experience the city’s creativity. Plus, the sun is always shining in El Cajon in June!”
  • Join us at TERI Common Grounds Café for a special Mother's Day celebration filled with amazing food, live music, and family fun. Treat the moms in your life to a delicious buffet brunch featuring chef-inspired dishes, fresh pastries, refreshing beverages, and more — all served in our beautiful café and garden patio.No reservations needed — open seating, first come, first served! Bring the whole family and make it a Mother’s Day to remember. We can't wait to celebrate with you!Doors open at 8 a.m. for coffee & pastries, and brunch begins at 10 a.m.!Mimosas available for purchase—cheers to Mom!Reservations are not required—first come, first served.Bluegrass live music from 11 a.m. - 1 p.m. on the Garden Veranda (front patio)TERI Common Grounds Café on Facebook / Instagram
  • Kids Day is back at the Cardiff Farmers Market!Join us this Saturday for a fun-filled day the whole family will love:• Little Buds Nature Club is back with hands-on nature activities. • Face painting from 10 a.m. - 1 p.m.• A special Mother’s Day succulent vase activity @studio1212ceramics & Gonzalez Nursery• A chance to win an amazing prize basket courtesy of @weareooly —perfect for kids of all ages• A fun book reading of Karma Cats by @karmacatsbooksHappening this Saturday, 10 a.m. – 2 p.m. at 3333 Manchester Ave.Don’t miss out!Cardiff Farmers Market on Instagram
  • Carnival RidesTamale FestivalMusic & DancingPicnic AreasGamesChili Cook-offVendors & FoodBeer GardenCar ShowFarmers Market& more!We’re excited to announce our lineup of events for the 75th Anniversary.Lineup of events for Western Days 2025The Western Days Festival is located at the Valley Center Community Hall & Park
28246 Lilac Rd.
, Valley Center.Friday, May 30, 2025◦ Western Days Festival 
Locals Night!5 p.m. - 10 p.m.Support Local. 
Local Bands & Local Businesses.◦ Guns & Hoses Chili Cook-off5 p.m. - 7 p.m.
 @ Festival Grounds◦ Western Days Carnival (rides)5 p.m. -10 p.m.
 @ Festival GroundsSaturday, May 31, 2025◦ Western Days FFA Pancake Breakfast6 a.m. - 9:30 a.m.29115 Valley Center Rd. 
◦ Valley Center Trails 5k Fun Run8:30am-9:30am
Along the parade route 
◦ Western Days Parade10 a.m. - 12 p.m.Along Valley Center Rd. Start at Cole Grade Rd. End at Lilac Rd. 
◦ Western Days Car Corral – Car Show11 a.m. - 4 p.m. @ Festival Grounds
◦ Western Days Festival11 a.m. - 10 p.m.◦ Western Days Carnival (rides)11 a.m. - 12 p.m. @ Festival GroundsSunday, June 1, 2025◦ Western Days Tamale Festival11 a.m. - 5 p.m. @ Festival Grounds◦ Western Days Carnival (rides)12 p.m. - 5 p.m.
 @ Festival GroundsVisit: Valley Center Western Days Festival & ParadeValley Center Western Days on Instagram and Facebook
  • Learn to Knit this Season!Saturdays, May 10, 17, 24, 9 a.m. - 11 a.m.In this workshop series students will knit a cowl, work with natural yarns and acquire a lifelong skill. Students will learn knitting basics including casting on, the knit and purl stitches, casting off, simple sewing and finishing techniques. No experience necessary. Ages 14+ welcome. Students bring knitting needles, size 15 (10mm) (wood or bamboo recommended); bulky/chunky yarn, about 138 yds (wool or wool blend recommended), and a crochet hook, any size (for picking up dropped stitches).For ideas for purchasing yarn, a great local yarn store, Apricot Yarn, offers super bulky Malabrigo Yarn ‘Rasta’ that works well for this class. Instructor Bianca Rennick will have additional yarn available for purchase.• Military, first responders and sibling discounts:• Scholarships available• Homeschool funds accepted• If this class is full, join the Interest List to be notified.• If you would like to be notified of future offerings, join the Interest List to be notified when new dates or spaces are available.Visit: 3-Week Knitting Fundamentals CourseSan Diego Craft Collective on Instagram and Facebook
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