Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
Available On Air Stations
Watch Live

Search results for

  • Each week some revelation about bird flu seems to flutter through the news cycle. Here's what the latest research is saying about how it is spreading and how to keep yourself and your pets safe.
  • Officials have not yet released the names of the 14 people killed in the New Orleans New Year's Day truck attack, but their families and friends have started sharing their stories.
  • Drawing on her background in neuroscience and architecture, artist and UC San Diego Professor Dr. Pinar Yoldas (b. Denizli, Turkey) has built a practice of speculative design that imagines new products, appendages, and creatures in the service of a more compassionate culture. While Yoldas has shown extensively in Europe for nearly two decades, this show will be Yoldas’s first solo museum exhibition in the United States. At ICA Central, Yoldas is producing several new projects, including photo bioreactor systems that transform algae into a biodegradable plastic alternative. In addition, she will debut CATGPT–a companion video to her 2016 work, The Kitty AI– that considers the relationship between AI and human creativity. Yoldas will create an immersive experience that illuminates the connections between technology, creativity, and human desire in contemporary life. “If we ask ourselves what drives technological progress,” Yoldas explains, “we can see that it is as much our collective desires –wealth, longevity, beauty– as it is our collective needs, such as access to clean water, food, and shelter.” This exhibition invites us to consider how desire and emotion can combine with technology to create a more just and compassionate future. ICA CentralSaturday, Feb. 24 - Sunday, June 23, 2024 Hours: Thursday–Sunday Noon to 5 p.m. Monday–Wednesday Closed Visit: icasandiego.org/art/pinar-yoldas-synaptic-sculpture/ ICA San Diego on Facebook / Instagam
  • UCSD said it had placed some student transcripts and degrees on hold pending an investigation into a violation of the student code of conduct.
  • Manhattan prosecutors Monday night filed murder and other charges against Luigi Mangione, 26, in the killing of UnitedHealthcare's CEO last week, according to online court documents.
  • David DePape, who was sentenced to 30 years in federal prison for attacking Paul Pelosi with a hammer, was sentenced to life without the possibility of parole following a separate state trial.
  • Reception: Saturday, Feb. 10, 4:30 p.m. – 6:30 p.m. Artist Walk-Through: Friday, Feb. 16, 3 p.m. Explore Bonita and Sweetwater Valley neighborhoods through the eyes of local artist Susan J. Osborn. Susan is a well-known artist in San Diego County known for her colorful interpretations of life. Visitors can walk along the many trails with Susan as she explores Morrison Pond, San Miguel and the topography around the valley. About “Neighborhood Impressions and Dreams” Artist Statement I have lived in Bonita for over forty years. Most of the work from 2007 to 2019 was assembled sculpture. Then came the COVID lockdown and I couldn’t get my needed art supplies from estate sales and thrift stores. At that time, I encountered the patterned paintings of Marian Estes and the architectural landscapes of Francis McCormack, finding their work inspiring. I longed to get back to painting and began working old canvases and boards I found around my house. Using photos I had taken during my daily walks, my new paintings came from impressions of those photos and the images in my mind. The work used fabric because of my love for patterns and I also added collaged magazine photos, painted paper and acrylic. Moving forward, most artwork corresponds to an area near my house, yet the latest works have a bit of fantasy such as you see in “Giraffes or “WIndy Day.” Bonita Museum and Cultural Center on Facebook / Instagram Susan J Osborn Art on Facebook
  • Please join us for free Friday lectures at the Oceanside Campus of MiraCosta College. At 1:00 p.m. "The SoCal Sumo Open and other Grappling Arts" with JJ Jones and Christina Griffin-Jones from the Maximum Effort Foundation, Hanu Sumo Club. The Maximum Effort Foundation mission is to provide access to martial arts and physical activities for children and individuals from marginalized communities. Let's learn how they help kids. At 2:30 p.m. "Forgotten San Diego, a Historical Journey" presented by Eileen Magno, Architectural Historian. "Forgotten San Diego" uncovers the city's hidden stories and lost past through a compelling blend of vintage postcard imagery and expert narrative and will take you on a brief journey into some of San Diego County's lost past. LIFE=Learning Is For Everyone Refreshments are available between speakers and here will be time for Q&A, always. Parking passes are required on campus and are available in the lots or by becoming members of LIFE. We support MCC Scholarships. For more information visit: miracosta.edu Stay Connected on Facebook and Instagram
  • Students had to make all kinds of decisions about college before knowing how much financial aid they would get. Now, some are scrambling to stay in school.
  • Paul Ninson had an old-school, newfangled dream: a modern library devoted to photobooks showing life on the continent. He maxed out his credit cards, injured his back — and made it happen.
109 of 1,402