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  • Join the Women's Museum of California on June 23 for an engaging conversation with Lambda Archives, She Fest, and SDSU LGBTQ+ Studies department. Learn how women in the LGBTQ+ community continue to use art and activism to organize, educate, and lobby for their rights. Event Schedule: 5:00 p.m. - Doors of the Women's Museum of California open. Enjoy light refreshments and explore our "Women of Pride" pop-up exhibit. 6:00 p.m. - Panel Discussion with Dr. Marie Draz, Director of LGBTQ+ Studies at SDSU; Cassie Harris from the She Fest planning committee; and Nicole Verdes from Lambda Archives.
  • In a statewide poll released this month, former President Trump led a crowded field of contenders for the 2024 GOP presidential nomination. Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis was among those trailing Trump.
  • Democrats in California’s Assembly and Senate rarely vote against bills, yet few seem willing to discuss their voting records, as well as the controversial practice of declining to vote instead of saying “no.”
  • When Mary MacCarthy and her 10-year-old landed at a Denver airport, two armed police officers were waiting to interrogate them.
  • Celebrate BCSD's 20th anniversary season with a scorcher of a program featuring favorite and memorable repertoire performed over the last twenty seasons...how time flies!Turn up the heat with excerpts from Bach's B minor Mass and Easter Oratorio, to arresting moments from Handel oratorios, by way of glorious Renaissance polyphony, to the sumptuousness of Rameau, plus much more.
  • If you've found yourself reading the same picture book over and over (and over and over) to a small but determined audience we see you and salute you! Is it time to add a few new titles to the mix?
  • Cinema Under The Stars presents "North By Northwest" Thursday, August 4 at 8 p.m. Friday, August 5 at 8 p.m. Sunday, August 7 at 8 p.m. (Private Event on Saturday, August 6) “NORTH BY NORTHWEST” (1959. 136 minutes. Not Rated). Alfred Hitchcock leads us on a merry chase in a hypnotic caper of Cold War shadiness. An ad-exec (Cary Grant) is mistaken for an agent by sinister forces. Starring Cary Grant, James Mason and Eva Marie Saint. Cinema Under The Stars 4040 Goldfinch Street San Diego, CA 92103 Phone: (619) 295-4221 Website: topspresents.com Cost: $17, $18, $20 More information about Cinema Under the Stars: * A unique and intimate outdoor movie theater in Mission Hills, with heaters, and blankets provided. • Admission: Members - $17; Non-members - $18; Online reservations - $20. • Reservations for members begin 9 a.m. Monday. • Reservations for non-members begin 9 a.m. Tuesday. * If you need to cancel your reservations, they must be cancelled online before 5 PM, or by 6 PM by calling the Cinema (619- 295-4221), or your card will be charged $20 per seat. • Box Office opens 6 p.m. on movie nights. • Films start at 8 p.m. • Concessions are $3 each (popcorn, candy, drinks). Visit www.topspresents.com or call (619) 295-4221 for more information.
  • Premieres Tuesdays, July 18 - Aug. 1, 2023 at 10 p.m. on KPBS TV / PBS App. Celebrate Southern identity through the eyes of contemporary creators of literature, music, film and television, including authors Jesmyn Ward, Michael Twitty, Angie Thomas and David Joy; poets Jericho Brown and Natasha Trethewey; songwriters Jason Isbell, Lyle Lovett, Tarriona “Tank” Ball, Adia Victoria, Amanda Shires and Justin Moore; songwriter/screenwriter/actor Billy Bob Thornton and songwriter/actress Mary Steenburgen; and screenwriters Qui Nguyen and Michael Waldron.
  • A discussion of Jazz as an original American craft, it's evolution and roots in San Diego.
  • From the museum: Artist Lisa Ross describes their relationship to Uyghur shrines and culture as a story of “fate and possibly faith.” An avid traveler drawn to desert landscapes, the photo and video artist first visited the Taklamakan Desert along the former Silk Route of the Uyghur Region, officially called Xinjiang (or “New Territory) by the People’s Republic of China, in 2002. In the following decade, Ross visited over fifty holy sites nestled among sand dunes or the edges of remote oasis villages. Composed of hand-carved wooden branches and colorful flags made of silk and other fabrics, these open-air monuments are known as mazar, from the Arabic word for “shrine” or “mausoleum,” made by Uyghur pilgrims to mark the resting places of revered Muslim saints and their descendants. Ross’s work expanded through friendship and travel with Dr. Alexandre Papas, a French historian of Islam, and Dr. Rahile Dawut, a Uyghur ethnographer missing since 2017. With greater access to the Uyghur region and people, the artist began to explore other relationships in the landscape. In the prefecture of Turpan, local tradition situates beds in the open air to navigate the extreme heat of summer. Ross saw a poetic connection between the mazars and these outdoor beds, and the vast open space both occupied. Created with wood and fabric materials similar to the shrines, the beds mirror the rectangular burial markers commemorating saints, who are believed to rest in a state of eternal sleep. Following the period of the artist’s work in the region, historically unstable relations between the Chinese government and Uyghur people continued to worsen, resulting in what the US government now recognizes as genocide. Ross’s luminous photographs, first conceived as an homage to living shrines, have now become a moving visual elegy to the Uyghur homeland. They reflect the artist’s commitment to raising awareness about the atrocities against humanity currently ongoing in Xinjiang.In addition to the photographs on view, two films by Ross, entitled To Mark a Prayer and RISE, provide a glimpse into the way these sacred and beloved spaces function in the Uyghur homeland. Thoughtfully composed, poetic, and reverential in approach, Ross’s works capture the rituals and spiritual traditions associated with the desert mazars, as well as the beauty of everyday life in the region—and now represent an important archive of collective memory, histories of faith, and the perseverance of an endangered people and culture. Related links: San Diego Museum of Art on Instagram San Diego Museum of Art on Facebook Artist Lisa Ross' website
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