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

Search results for

  • Do you have a creative 5-11 year old? Get them out of the house this summer with this fun outdoor Art+Theater day camp! Kids will spend their days making original art, singing, dancing and preparing a final theatrical performance for their friends and family! We welcome kids of all abilities and levels! Follow Westminster Presbyterian Church on Facebook!
  • Alexander Salazar and Darcy Kempton partner to announce the grand opening of their Mission Hills fine art gallery SD Art Advisory scheduled for May 20, 2023. The opening coincides with the Art in the Hills Art Walk & Banner Contest in Mission Hills in partnership with Grant Elementary at noon. Families and students are invited to stop in to enjoy art and celebration. Later in the evening, SD Art Advisory will open to the public for the grand opening celebration starting at 6pm. Guests will enjoy art by local and world-renowned artists, cocktails, hors d'oeuvres, and live music. Guests are encouraged to wear their favorite creative attire. SD Art Advisory is the vision of Alexander Salazar, leading fine artist and gallerist, and Darcy Kempton, established San Diego Interior Designer and Curator, to create and activate a space for art to thrive in Mission Hills that will also benefit the region of San Diego, Orange County, Los Angeles, Palm Springs, Baja and beyond. Alexander Salazar is returning to San Diego to ignite the art scene with bold work by leading artists from around the world, including his own powerful body of work. Darcy Kempton plans to support collectors with curating a collection that showcases the experience they wish to have in their homes. SD ART ADVISORY plans to establish long-term relationships with artists and collectors to pair collectors with art that supports them in their own pursuit of joy. SD Art Advisory will also feature a special salon for purchasing NFT art in partnership with acclaimed artist and NFT art dealer Chris Trueman. For more information, please visit https://sdartadvisory.com/. To RSVP for the party, please register by visiting their Eventbrite page.
  • The Societe Makers Market is BACK for one of the most fun events of the season! Shop 25 local makers and artists with a drink in hand at Societe Brewing Co! Products will be a wide variety of handmade goods such as jewelry, knit goods, home decor, woodworking, prints, soap, paintings, candles, and so much more! No MLM or direct sales will be present. This event is free to attend! You only pay for the items you wish to purchase and the food and drinks you want to consume. This is a family-friendly event, however, please note alcohol will be present due to the nature of the venues. If you are 21 or older and choose to drink, please drink responsibly. For more information visit: fb.me/e/3r9BHLLj4
  • Chinese culture features a rich and eclectic wealth of stories. From legends and fairy tales to narratives steeped in history. From dragons (for this is the Year of the Dragon) to stories of love and luck to fish and fishing traditions that brought many to San Diego. January 27th, storytellers Jim Dieckmann, Aunt Li-Anne, and Mindy Donner will share tales at the museum to bring in the "Year of the Dragon." Join professional storytellers from the Storytellers of San Diego for an hour of engaging tales. Each program features different tellers and different stories. Come to one, two, or all three. Other Shows February 17th, "Love, Luck and Good Fortune" tales will be told by Fred Laskowski, David Schmidt, and Patti Christensen. March 3rd, " Tales of Fish and Fish" will be told by Marilyn McPhie, Lissette Ryan and Emily Stamets. Appropriate for all ages. This event is free for all museum members and children under 12; it also is available at no additional cost to visitors who purchase museum admission. For more information visit: sdchm.app.neoncrm.com Stay Connected on Facebook / Instagram
  • San Diego's Playwrights Project holds a public premiere on Saturday in the annual Plays by Young Writers Festival.
  • The pop star shared his remorse on Friday during a Chicago performance — his first since his Tuesday arrest in the Hamptons.
  • Only seven states have legalized human composting as a burial practice. That's why 29 percent of the bodies brought to Recompose, a composting facility in Seattle, come from out of state.
  • 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.
  • Linda Blair, popular local lecturer, is back by popular demand at the Athenaeum in La Jolla. If you like Cezanne, Matisse, and Van Gogh, this is her lecture series for you. This new generation of artists emerged in the 1880s. Like runners in a relay race, the Impressionists handed off the baton of artistic innovation to this these artists today viewed as giants of European art history. Each Post-Impressionist artist pursued his own unique artistic vision, but all were united in adopting the Impressionists’ conviction that art should not be filtered through ideology, intellect or “schools of art.” Thus liberated from constraint, art, they contended, should be independent, the exclusive product of the artist’s imagination and skill. Matisse and Picasso both claimed that Cezanne was “the father of us all,” and he does stand at the cusp between traditional, realistic art and 20th century abstraction. When Cezanne and Van Gogh met in Paris in 1886, they despised each other, a contempt that spilled over in their opinions of each other’s work. Cezanne’s forms are solid and immutable; Vincent’s inanimate objects dance with a kinetic energy. We can’t find Cezanne, the man, in his paintings; in Van Gogh’s canvases we can’t avoid him. Unlike the very conventional Matisse, Van Gogh’s life was one of alienation. Keenly aware of the isolation his odd behavior caused, he poured his longing for relationships, for human communion, into his paintings. Of his friend and archrival, Picasso said, “All things considered, there is only Matisse.” In his own words, Matisse sought to create “an art of balance, of purity and serenity, devoid of troubling or depressing subject matter.” Stay Connected on Social Media! Facebook | Instagram | Twitter
  • This art class is designed for children ages 5-10 at any level and of all backgrounds. The objective is to engage participants in the culture and heritage of Yiddishland through art. Activities include: - creating and composing art with Yiddish concepts - exploring the life and work of artists featured at the gallery. Please note that phones and tablets will not be allowed in the classroom. Information about classes cost will be available on our website! Stay Connected with Yiddishland! Facebook | Instagram | Twitter
1,184 of 5,385