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  • The historically Black Penumbra Theatre has received millions in grants to remake itself into a center for racial healing. What will its choices reveal about regional theater's future?
  • The Mission Trails Regional Park Foundation (MTRP) is proud to present "A Natural Connection," an art exhibition featuring two award-winning artists, Kathryn Gail Ackley and Vanessa Rusczyk. Paintings by the artists will be on view at the Mission Trails Regional Park Visitor and Interpretive Center from Feb. 12 – March 25, 2022. Reception is free and open to the public on Feb. 20, 2022.
  • City officials in Oceanside described their drinking water as consistently "high-quality, safe and reliable" Wednesday in the hope of reassuring residents after a lawn care company ranked Oceanside's water at 198 out of 200 cities nationwide.
  • Life Kit's audience has actionable sustainability tips you can use year-round.
  • Faith and religion have been career-long themes for the Run the Jewels rapper — if often in a wary, ambivalent light. But on Michael, his first solo LP in over a decade, something has changed.
  • Join Gallery QI for "Three Echologies: Scene 2: Planetary Echologies," a performative piece by Unidad de Conciencias Colectivas Terrestres (Terrestrial Collective Consciousness Unit), Electronic Disturbance Theater 2.0 and *particle group* from QI Principal Investigator Ricardo Dominguez. Date | Thursday, May 19 at 5 p.m. Location | UCSD Atkinsons Hall Free Event, RSVPs requested to galleryqi@ucsd.edu. “Scene 2: Planetary Echologies” explores climate borders, environmental degradation and "ecosophy," a philosophy dedicated to studying links between social relations, human subjectivity and the natural world, through the medium of art. The performers find inspiration in the book “The Three Ecologies,” in which the psychoanalyst, philosopher and playwright Félix Guattari defines ecology at three different scales: planet-wide crises like the pandemic and climate change, intermediate-level relations like micro-politics and micro- and molecular scales within the body. All Gallery QI events are free and open to the public. Food and drink will be provided. An important note: The Gallery QI adheres to current UC San Diego guidelines regarding COVID-19 and public safety. Students, staff, faculty, and UC Affiliates must show their daily symptom screener and must have green thumb to attend. Non-affiliate attendees are encouraged to test within 24 hours of the event. For further information on this event please visit: http://www.calit2.net/events/
  • Some tribes have won big water agreements with the U.S. recently which is giving them an unprecedented seat at the table as the White House resets the water sharing agreement for the Colorado River.
  • Marie Watt's sculptural blanket series works are profound, powerful and eye-catching. Huge, towering pillars of folded and stacked blankets, installed inside or outside, some curving and hooking into shapes, others a simple column. University of San Diego will show a mid-career retrospective this month of the artist, who is an enrolled member of the Seneca Nation of Indians and who draws on Iroquois and indigenous histories and influence in her work. But rather than her sculptural works, they're focusing on her remarkable career in printmaking. The exhibition is called "Storywork: The Prints of Marie Watt," pulling from the collections of the Jordan D. Schnitzer Family Foundation. Many of her prints served as sketches or designs for larger installations, but stand alone as works of art. In her printmaking, Watt has collaborated with the Tamarind workshop, the Sitka Center for Art and Ecology and more. While many of Watt's shows have included some of her printmaking, and while this USD show will also include some of her striking sculptures, this exhibition will be the first to feature her printmaking as the primary focus. —Read the full selection in '5 works of art to see in San Diego in February,' Julia Dixon Evans, KPBS From the gallery: Marie Watt (Seneca, b. 1967) is one of the country’s most celebrated contemporary artists whose work draws on personal experience, indigenous traditions, proto-feminism, mythology and art history. Drawing on the collections of the Jordan D. Schnitzer Family Foundation and the University of San Diego, Storywork: The Prints of Marie Watt will present a mid-career retrospective of Watt’s work as a printmaker, accompanied by a fully illustrated catalogue. Over the course of her career, residencies at the Crow’s Shadow Institute of the Arts, the Sitka Center for Art and Ecology, and the Tamarind Institute have afforded Watt the opportunity to collaborate with master printers in producing ambitious print series. Whether working in lithography, woodcut, or etching, the medium of print has served for Watt as a laboratory for large-scale pieces and concepts. In each of her prints Watt demonstrates a tactile appreciation for the particular qualities of wood, copper, or stone, aiming to achieve in her words a “familiarity and intimacy” with the material that adds a layer of thematic resonance to her work. This exhibition is presented by Jordan D. Schnitzer and his Family Foundation in partnership with the University of San Diego. Releated events: Watt will also be in residence at USD as one of the Humanities Center’s Knapp Chair of Liberal Arts, starting with a public lecture on February 16th. Wednesday, Feb. 16, 2022 at 5 p.m. French Parlor, Founders Hall Related links: USD University Galleries on Instagram Marie Watt University of San Diego gallery information
  • Join us for Wednesday Connect: Getting Ready to Travel? Packing Tricks and Tips from a Travel Industry Professional on June 15, 2022 from 10-11 a.m. featuring Suzie Piegza, Vice President and co-founder of Classic Journeys, LLC. World traveler, adventure travel company owner, and La Jolla resident, Susie Piegza, will discuss tips for packing. From what to bring on the airplane for maximum comfort, to figuring out a flexible travel wardrobe to learning how to fit a week’s worth of clothes into a carry-on bag, this session is a must-see for anyone planning to travel. This is a free, virtual presentation. RSVP NOW Bio: Susie Piegza is Vice President and co-founder of Classic Journeys, LLC. Founded in La Jolla in 1995, Classic Journeys is the world’s leading walking tour adventure company. A multi-time winner of Travel + Leisure’s World’s Best Tour Operator designation, Classic Journeys runs curated small group tours in 80 regions in 50 countries around the world. The company’s tours are known for hand-crafted, immersive itineraries, featuring well-chosen boutique hotels and led by full-time guides who are local to each region. The company runs scheduled departures year-round as well as private and custom tours for groups and families. In addition to her work at Classic Journeys, Susie Piegza has been involved in Las Patronas and was the Jewel Ball Chair for Moonlit Mambo (2014). She currently serves on the La Jolla Riford Library Board of Directors and acts as the group’s Art and Culture Committee liaison. Susie and her husband, Edward, live in La Jolla where they raised their two sons.
  • Thousands of Afghans that were promised U.S. visas remain on the run from the Taliban. The Biden administration, however, quickly cleared red tape for Ukrainians after Russia invaded Ukraine.
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