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  • Support local news through our Impact Journalism Fund. Support for the KPBS Impact Journalism Fund begins with gifts of $25,000. Local recognition is available, commensurate with the level of support.
  • From the museum: "A Kind of Heaven" is an exhibition of recent paintings by Southern Californian visionary artists who imagine the world as another place, where alternatives to everyday reality are made manifest, and landscapes, animals, and people are transformed. As the visionary genre has matured, the paintings have become increasingly sophisticated. Techniques have evolved from early airbrush work to incorporating painterly finishes within the works, and the range has expanded to include grisaille painting and old masters’ techniques. The subject matter has expanded, too, influenced by developments in technology and neuroscience, which have added breadth to the subject matter available to artists working within the genre. Today’s visionary art began in California as outsider art in the 1930’s, inspired by immigrants who brought with them the ideas of the anti-authoritarian back-to-nature German "Wandervögel" movement and the aesthetics of "Jugendstil." It was profoundly influential on Disney animation artists, influencing films like the classic Fantasia. By the 1960s, visionary art had become the dominant expression of the hippy counter-culture, shaping the appearance of classic rock posters and album covers, and since then it has developed into a burgeoning field within the art world. A range of paths to this other world are treated with equal respect—"A Kind of Heaven" seeks common ground between visionaries, the conceptions of science fiction and fantasy, and intrepid explorers of the imagination. California is the land of imagination, the home of epic fantasies and wild creativity. The recipe for the show is a dash of Hieronymus Bosch, a taste of alternative reality, and a generous helping of dreams. Featured Artists: Jasmine Alexander Mandy Cao Adrian Cox Tim Hengst Martin Jarmick Cody Jimenez Guy Kinnear Cliff McReynolds Victor Adame Minguez Steve Ohlrich Michael Pearce Scott W. Prior Cynthia Sitton Peter Zokosky Kirsten Zirngibl Aihua Zhou About the curator: Michael Pearce is a dynamic writer, curator, and critic. He is an active and enthusiastic participant in the conversation about 21st century art and its roots, especially contemporary imaginative realism. He has published dozens of articles about art and artists, and wrote a book about art and neuroscience titled Art in the Age of Emergence. He is a champion of art that emerges from popular culture and shapes the spirit of the age. His book Elephant - the story of the invention of the American avant-garde - will be published later this year. He is Professor of Art at California Lutheran University. Related links: Oceanside Museum of Art on Instagram Oceanside Museum of Art Visiting information
  • Britain announced a series of tax proposals that led to a major sell-off of the country's currency and the government's debt. Just over a week later, the government has been forced to change tack.
  • Gov. Greg Gianforte banned the app on state government electronic devices last December, and has said he is concerned about people's user data being compromised by the Chinese government.
  • Superman faces a challenge that reveals the show's beating heart and turns him into an average guy with a battleship-size nemesis: cancer that has stricken his beloved. The season finale airs Tuesday.
  • Join us in-person at Oceanside Museum of Art for a free community screening of the film "A Choice of Weapons: Inspired by Gordon Parks" (99 minutes). Presented in partnership with Oceanside Public Library and the North County African American Women’s Association, the film explores the power of images in advancing racial, economic, and social equality as seen through the lens of Gordon Parks, one of America's most trailblazing artists, and the generation of young photographers, filmmakers, and activists he inspired. From the 1940s through the 2000s, Parks' bold and revealing body of work captured the intersections of art, race, class and politics across the United States, documenting civil rights and social justice as part of the everyday experience. Free copies of the book "A Choice of Weapons" by Gordon Parks will be given away by Oceanside Public Library while supplies last. Date | Sunday, February 6 from 2 p.m. to 4 p.m. Location | Oceanside Museum of Art Register here to attend. This event is free and open to the public. For more information, please visit oma-online.org/events/a-choice-of-weapons or call (760) 435-3720.
  • Sidro Saturdays will return for it’s sixth installment at Living Rooms At The Border. Sidro Saturdays are the product of a collaborative effort between The FRONT Arte Cultura Gallery and El Salon Cultural Center. This event will include an art vendor market, with food vendors, performers, and a pop-up gallery! Date | Saturday, December 18 from 5 p.m. to 8 p.m. Location | Living Rooms At The Border For more information, please visit thefront.casafamiliar.org or call (619) 428-1115.
  • Sapporo intends to produce its Sapporo-branded beers for distribution in Stone's breweries in Escondido and Richmond, Virginia
  • Public health officials said testing wastewater for diseases is the future tool for surveillance.
  • This year's Nobel Prize in chemistry has been awarded in equal parts to Carolyn R. Bertozzi, Morten Meldal and K. Barry Sharpless for developing way of "snapping molecules together."
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