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  • Join us at AR Workshop for our Morning creative and crafty Christmas Art Camp, where registrants will paint a Canvas Pillow! This morning session camp is $45.00 and runs from 10:00a.m. -12:00p.m. Our Summer Camps are designed for girls and boys, ages 7-14. Participants will be able to choose their paint colors from our decor line of paints! ( Kids are encouraged to bring a snack and drink to enjoy during breaks.) We will provide hot cocoa and water. Follow on social media! Facebook + Instagram
  • September 6–October 22, 2022 Opening Reception: Saturday, September 10, 5–8 p.m. during Barrio Art Crawl From the organizers: This exhibition is a celebration of the transformation of paper and its importance in many inventive art processes and creations. Paper Print Bind showcases the Athenaeum Music & Arts Library’s extraordinary Erika & Fred Torri Artists’ Books Collection. In addition, it presents a carefully curated array of contemporary artworks made with paper by renowned regional and international artists. The common thread throughout this exhibition is the use of the traditional medium of paper in contemporary practices that empowers artists to bind, print, and create artworks out of paper. All the artists exhibiting in Paper Print Bind share a history of teaching, collaborating, or taking part in the Athenaeum’s collections and classes. Thus, this exhibition serves both to celebrate our alliance with artists in the paper community at large and to feature the Print Studio and papermaking studio in the Athenaeum Art Center in Logan Heights. A major reason for the universal allure of paper lies in its identity and utility as a truly “eco-friendly” sustainable product derived from natural practices throughout human history. Because much of our diverse cultures all over the world are created and shared on paper, we embrace the fragility and eco-friendly nature of paper as a much-needed reminder of our origins in the organic world in this modern technological age. Artworks by: Anne Covell Sally Hagy-Boyer Chelsea Herman Jean Lowe Jim Machacek May-ling Martinez Bhavna Mehta Artists’ Books by: Merilyn Britt Michele Burgess Xpetra Ernándes Chelsea Herman Michael Kuch Warja Lavater Mary Ellen Long Mary McCarthy Bhavna Mehta Xun Okotz Ámbar Past Carol Schwartzott Curt Sherman Austin Straus Peter & Donna Thomas Nancy Willard Typography and the book arts class at Scripps College Related links: Athenaeum Art Center visiting information Athenaeum Art Center on Instagram
  • Free Enjoy a cup of coffee and good conversation with fellow artists, and explore the exhibitions at OMA for free. Offered by OMA's Artist Alliance, sculptors, painters, photographers, and artists for all disciplines are welcome. Follow on social media! Facebook + Instagram
  • Some students attending San Diego Unified's Summer Academic Program are focusing their learning on designing a supply mission to a colony on Mars.
  • Premieres Tuesdays, Jan. 9 and 16, 2024 at 11 p.m. and 23rd at 11:30 p.m. on KPBS TV / Stream now with KPBS Passport + Encores Thursdays, Jan. 11 - 25 at 9 p.m. on KPBS 2. What is free speech? Is it an outdated idea? What about hate speech? The three-part series underscores how free speech is necessary for human survival as it presents thought-provoking, ironic, and often heartbreaking stories.
  • From the museum: Artist Lisa Ross describes their relationship to Uyghur shrines and culture as a story of “fate and possibly faith.” An avid traveler drawn to desert landscapes, the photo and video artist first visited the Taklamakan Desert along the former Silk Route of the Uyghur Region, officially called Xinjiang (or “New Territory) by the People’s Republic of China, in 2002. In the following decade, Ross visited over fifty holy sites nestled among sand dunes or the edges of remote oasis villages. Composed of hand-carved wooden branches and colorful flags made of silk and other fabrics, these open-air monuments are known as mazar, from the Arabic word for “shrine” or “mausoleum,” made by Uyghur pilgrims to mark the resting places of revered Muslim saints and their descendants. Ross’s work expanded through friendship and travel with Dr. Alexandre Papas, a French historian of Islam, and Dr. Rahile Dawut, a Uyghur ethnographer missing since 2017. With greater access to the Uyghur region and people, the artist began to explore other relationships in the landscape. In the prefecture of Turpan, local tradition situates beds in the open air to navigate the extreme heat of summer. Ross saw a poetic connection between the mazars and these outdoor beds, and the vast open space both occupied. Created with wood and fabric materials similar to the shrines, the beds mirror the rectangular burial markers commemorating saints, who are believed to rest in a state of eternal sleep. Following the period of the artist’s work in the region, historically unstable relations between the Chinese government and Uyghur people continued to worsen, resulting in what the US government now recognizes as genocide. Ross’s luminous photographs, first conceived as an homage to living shrines, have now become a moving visual elegy to the Uyghur homeland. They reflect the artist’s commitment to raising awareness about the atrocities against humanity currently ongoing in Xinjiang.In addition to the photographs on view, two films by Ross, entitled To Mark a Prayer and RISE, provide a glimpse into the way these sacred and beloved spaces function in the Uyghur homeland. Thoughtfully composed, poetic, and reverential in approach, Ross’s works capture the rituals and spiritual traditions associated with the desert mazars, as well as the beauty of everyday life in the region—and now represent an important archive of collective memory, histories of faith, and the perseverance of an endangered people and culture. Related links: San Diego Museum of Art on Instagram San Diego Museum of Art on Facebook Artist Lisa Ross' website
  • The city's human resources department will hosting a series of community forums, with one in each of San Diego's nine council districts throughout January.
  • Join us to celebrate the exhibition, "Script/Rescript," in the University Art Gallery at SDSU. Mix and mingle with artists while viewing the exhibition. Visit our website for details about parking on campus. The exhibition features the artwork of ten artists who use historical and contemporary medicalizing scripts of their own bodies to colorfully rescript – or rewrite – visual language attributed to individual conditions of disability. Related links: SDSU School of Art and Design website SDSU School of Art and Design on Facebook SDSU School of Art and Design on Instagram
  • In addition to the Dragon Ball offsite at the Marriott Marquis Marina Terrace, Bandai Namco fans can experience an experiential activation at San Diego Wine & Culinary Center, 200 W Harbor Dr Suite 120. The activation will include activities for the upcoming game Armored Core VI Fires of Rubicon, including a series of challenges and photo ops with a life-sized Armored Core mech. Tekken 8 fans will be thrilled by the installation artwork, playable gaming stations and enjoy a non-alcoholic beverage station, cosplayers, temporary tattoos, a DJ and more.
  • NPR's Steve Inskeep talks to Paul McCartney about his book of photographs from the time the Beatles first visited the United States.
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