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  • The beloved Secret Garden Tour of La Jolla returns on Saturday, May 20, 2023. Attendees are invited to stroll behind the garden gates of some of La Jolla’s loveliest secluded gardens during this fundraiser that supports the La Jolla Historical Society’s education and public programs. Also returning this year is the Friday night Secret Garden Party, taking place May 19, 2023 which provides guests an opportunity to mix and mingle with other garden enthusiasts while enjoying hors d'oeuvres, wine and live music from the Gand Band! The ever-popular Secret Garden Boutique at Wisteria Cottage will be open and free to the public throughout the day on Saturday, May 20. The boutique features vendors known for their artistic style and craftsmanship as well as a silent auction with one-of-a-kind items. Delicious, eats will be available from food trucks. Secret Garden Party - Friday, May 19, 2023 from 6 p.m. - 8 p.m. Secret Garden Tour - Saturday, May 20, 2023. Self-Guided Tour from 10 a.m. - 4 p.m. (Registration opens at 9 a.m. and Gardens open at 10 a.m.) Platinum Tour from 9:15 a.m. - 3:30 p.m. Tickets: $45 - $150 Visit: Lajollahistory.org or call 858-459-5335 La Jolla Historical Society on Facebook / Instagram
  • India's ruling Hindu nationalist party won in three of four state elections in a vote that pitted the main opposition against that of Prime Minister Narendra Modi before national polls next year.
  • View an exhibition at the Serra Museum that focuses on the history of San Diego and the role of its name sake river and the people who have used its life giving source since time immemorial. Suggested donation $10.00 Visit: https://sandiegohistory.org/serramuseum/ or call 619-232-6203 The Serra Museum is open Saturday and Sunday 10 a.m. – 4 p.m. or by appointment for groups
  • Thousands of people are still displaced and living in limbo six months after the wildfires on Maui. The disaster has deepened a housing crisis and is taking a toll on fire survivors.
  • Monday, July 4: Bay Terrace Coronado Firework Show Reservations required for guaranteed firework seating and Chef Jesse’s BBQ dinner buffet. Buffet cost is $110 per person and $50 for children 12 and under, plus tax and gratuity. Additional for $100 all you can drink package option. Reservations can be made via Resy. BBQ dinner menu highlights include 16 hour Smoked Black Angus Beef Brisket, Mary’s Barbequed Organic Chicken, BBQ Pork Ribs, BBQ Oysters, Grilled Summer Squashes, Asparagus and Mushrooms, Jumbo Hotdogs, Hamburgers, Smoked Potato Salad, and traditional sides, Fourth of July Cake, and more. Fire pit seating packages are also available and can accommodate parties of eight or less with food and beverage minimums. For details and to book, visit Resy. In addition to the BBQ, 4th of July will also include: o Magic shows, Americana face painting, and games will take place all day for the kids o DJ from 3-6 p.m. and a live band from 6-10 p.m. BOOK: Room reservations can be made through the website at www.loewshotels.com/coronadobay. Special summer offers are available via the Special Offers page. 4th of July reservations can be booked via Resy. WHERE: Loews Coronado Bay Resort 4000 Coronado Bay Rd. Coronado, CA 92118 WHEN: Now through Labor Day weekend COST: Programming is complimentary for hotel guests with a variety of upgraded experiences available for purchase. 4th of July dinner pricing is $110 per person / $50 for children 12 and under plus tax and gratuity. Additional for $100 all you can drink package option. INFO: (619) 424-4000 www.loewshotels.com/coronado-bay-resort Instagram: @LoewsCoronado Facebook: Loews Coronado Bay Resort About Loews Coronado Bay Resort Loews Coronado Bay Resort is a water lover’s escape, with genuine southern California style. Situated on a private 15-acre peninsula surrounded by the Pacific Ocean and Coronado Bay, the resort is located minutes from downtown San Diego and a short drive to the city’s world-famous attractions. Resort amenities include direct access to the pristine Silver Strand State Beach, three tennis courts, a private 81-slip marina, 439 sea-inspired guest rooms and suites, and panoramic views of the San Diego-Coronado Bay. The resort’s signature Crown Landing restaurant shines a spotlight on San Diego’s unique character and flavors. For more information please visit www.loewshotels.com/coronado-bay-resort.
  • San Diego leaders are pushing a proposal that would make it illegal to live in a tent virtually anywhere in city limits. But many still have nowhere to go.
  • From the gallery: The Hill Street Country Club presents OUTSIDE THE MALL, recent works by Mark Chamness Mark Chamness, a Californian artist based in Oceanside, is exhibiting new works in fibers and what the artist calls “discarded urban plastic” at the Hill Street Country Club September 2nd to December 9th, 2023. Mark’s work draws from legacies of abstraction, his training as a painter and carpenter, and his daily experiences of the last several years with the ongoing Covid pandemic. The last three years have been a time of significant personal and cultural change. Many people have been reexamining the domestic space and reconnecting to labor-intensive hand work. Though Mark’s practice stretches back much farther than that, these new works have evolved to include new materials from 2020 onwards. While supply chain issues and shipping made some materials harder to come by, there has been no shortage of single-use plastic. Mark collects bags caught in bushes or left on the beach, cuts them into strips, and tufts the strips into his needlepoint. Each piece becomes a record of its time, incorporating the stories embedded in the environment around him. “I deal in fragments. I love things that are stuffed in between the cracks, that are unimportant, things that are tossed aside.” - Mark Chamness Mark lives as a carpenter by day. He started working with wood in high school and transitioned into art making as funding for woodshop started waning. He eventually entered Cal Arts as a painter in 1992. Blending these traditions is at the core of his practice and allows the work to bounce back and forth between art and craft, structural and decorative, sensual and conceptual. —The Hill Street Country Club, edited by Akiko Surai Opening reception: 5-8 p.m. on Sept. 2 On view Sept. 2 through Dec. 9. Exhibition Programming begins in October. The gallery is wheelchair accessible with street parking. Related links: The Hill Street Country Club: Website | Instagram
  • Sparks Gallery is pleased to announce San Diego artist Kathleen Kane-Murrell’s solo exhibition, “Wayfinding in Suspended Times,” opening on May 7, 2023 in conjunction with Sparks Gallery’s annual small works show, “minis 2023.” The small works exhibition will feature over 60 works that are 12×12 inches and under; each are $500 retail or less. This exhibition is a chance to collect a small work of art from both prominent and emerging artists from California. Below is a preview of several small works that were selected for the exhibition. Kane-Murrell’s work is inspired by her observation of the interconnectivity between humans and nature, and her longing to reconnect after isolation during the pandemic. Her solo exhibition brings her perceptions and musings to life through her highly textured collage techniques. Many of her works present themselves like a miniature ecosystem; reverse-painted plexiglass panel is placed between the viewer and the textural backdrop of the work. Highly detailed renderings of butterflies, gingko leaves, and other organic elements painted on the transparent plexiglass appear to float over the materials affixed to the layer behind. Kane-Murrell’s specific style of mixed media collage both unites and contrasts familiar icons of nature with abstraction and human-designed composition. She reflects “My work is abstractly narrative. I aim between spontaneous and controlled…patinas of layered mark-making reflect my perception of light, color, and sound. When a viewer reaches to touch my work to understand what is seen, I have achieved an elusive goal.” Kane-Murrell’s work investigates the human experience as but one aspect of the natural world. With work inspired by wondrous natural phenomena that scientists are only beginning to understand, the artist explores the concept of our place in this interconnected web of life. The idea that everything is intertwined, even in ways we may not expect or be aware of, also brought Kane-Murrell comfort during the isolating time of the pandemic. Kane-Murrell holds reverence for the mycorrhizal network (in which trees communicate with each other through their underground root systems), the migration patterns of monarch butterflies, and starling “murmurations” – birds that fly together collectively in groups of seven. This philosophy is visually explored in the repeating motifs within each work; the artist repeats butterflies, leaves, or cut paper shapes across the piece, drawing attention to their similarities and mass as a group. Subtle changes in these repetitions, such as unique colors or placement, differentiate individual elements from each other. Yet the abstract work is undoubtedly unified, communicating the connectedness of every unit to the entire composition as a whole. Regular Gallery Hours: M,TH,F 10 a.m. - 6 p.m., Saturday 11a.m. - 7 p.m., Sun 11a.m. - 5 p.m. Sparks Gallery on Facebook / Instagram
  • Louisiana's Fort Polk became Fort Johnson, the latest Army base to replace its Confederate name. It now honors a soldier who earned a Medal of Honor a century after the night that made him a hero.
  • Saturday, Oct. 21, 2023 at 2 p.m. on KPBS TV / PBS App. Test cook Lan Lam makes host Bridget Lancaster Stir-Fried Beef and Gai Lan. Equipment expert Adam Ried reveals his top picks for bamboo steamers. Test cook Dan Souza makes host Julia Collin Davison Congee.
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