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  • It's not that there are too many bad shows. It's that there are too many perfectly fine ones. That has implications for jobs in Hollywood.
  • With the midterms approaching and lots of chatter about whether Biden will run in 2024, Donald Trump is a useful foil for the president once again.
  • When visitors make their way to Italy's pavilion at Dubai Expo 2020, most will only see the head of Michelangelo's famous statue.
  • From the gallery: On view now at Quint ONE: An installation of lenticulars and glass-blown mixed media sculptures from the oeuvre of brothers and artistic collaborators Einar and Jamex De La Torre. The artists were born in Guadalajara, Mexico but now create on both sides of the border in Baja California, Mexico and San Diego, CA. This multicultural perspective functions literally through their employment of lenticular technology, which uses multiple images meant to be viewed independently from different angles but merge together when viewed head on. This perspective arises in the central work of the exhibition, Vodyanoy, which suffuses its title character (a creature of the swamps from slavic mythology that can care for people or drown them) with metaphors for a nature-deity serving an overdue bill for humanity’s excess. The results are shifting images of both utopian salvation and realistic warning, evidenced through the clean water flow brought on by meditative Sufi Whirling Dervishes. In the alternating image, a murky green swamp serves as the backdrop for Flemish renderings of the wounded and dead from futile wars. The De La Torre Brothers’ endless book of historical, cultural, religious, and artistic references are all compounded on and distilled in the moral storytelling which permeates their practice. Also included in the exhibition are mixed media blown glass sculptures created over the past decade whose motifs elaborate on the multi-layered concerns of the De La Torre Brothers, including financial excess, corruption, and consumerism, which often lead back to the natural disasters looming large on the planet. Vodyanoy will remain on view at ONE through October 30, 2021
  • Alexa Lopez Dance & Choreography presents its first independent production Foünd. Foünd is an evening-length dance piece that researches and embodies the feelings of victims of femicides and other gender-based violence in Mexico. The production will debut various explorations never seen before by the audience, as well as repertoire featured in the short film. In this intimate venue, audiences will be able to connect to the stories told by each performer and even participate in the performance. Foünd ensures an evening of artistic and emotional explorations that will entertain and educate our patrons. Please join us on this unique performance while supporting up and coming local dance artists! Date | Saturday, October 9 at 6:30 p.m. and 8:30 p.m. Location | Light Box Live Arts Theater, formerly known as the White Box. Get tickets here! General Admission tickets will be available for advanced purchase online for $20 General Admission at the door: $25 Discounts for Students, Seniors and Military will be available for advanced purchases only. For more information, please visit alexadancechoreo.com.
  • This weekend, find spacey dance with the City Ballet of San Diego, Vivaldi in a parking lot with Mainly Mozart's new "Mozart at the Drive-In" series, a virtual encore of Roustabout's 2017 "Margin of Error" production, a radio play of Miranda Rose Hall's "Best Lesbian Erotica 1995" and CSUSM's "Re-use Project" at Hill Street Country Club.
  • Lola Flash has challenged gender, sexual and racial preconceptions, and in the '80s was a key figure in ACT UP. Now she's being honored for sustained achievement.
  • The band Animal Collective performs a transfixing, unpredictable concert at MASS MoCA.
  • Artist Jill Magid inscribed pennies with "The body was already so fragile" — and now brings a film of the process to Brooklyn, giving people a chance to reflect on the pandemic.
  • Tony Dow, who played Wally Cleaver on the hit TV show Leave It To Beaver, has died at 77. He had cancer.
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