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  • Come experience the Factory during San Diego Design Week and see what fuels it! The creative warehouse which houses over 40+ small business and local artists is hosting an art show and open studios. Connect with the tenants, view their workspaces, shop their wares, and experience their pieces on display that aim to inspire or show how they receive inspiration for their work. Attendees will be able to enjoy music by DEVVLOV, drinks, and live art by Jupiter Sunsets while touring the entire multipurpose warehouse full of artistic energy and inspiring, good vibes Sunday, September 25 from 1-4pm. Follow on Instagram!
  • A show on the emergence of artificial intelligence tools like ChatGPT and how human beings are reacting. Plus, how chatbots might be used in our everyday lives. And, what the future of artificial intelligence holds.
  • Opening reception: Thursday, Oct. 6, 2022 at 6 p.m. On view Oct. 6, 2022 through Jan. 7, 2023. From the gallery: Come see our newest exhibition at our opening reception on Thursday, October 6th, at 6pm. Come see traditional and contemporary artworks by Kumeyaay artists from Baja California, MEX, and California, USA. We'd like to thank our curator Karla Garcia @karla.lachamaca for working with us on this incredible and much needed exhibition. Participating artists: Eva Salazar Israel Esparza Dominguez Guillermo Garcia Christy Gomez Johnny Bear Contreras @johnnybearart Raymundo Marquez @rebelray619 Yinna Lila Muñoz Aldama @yinna_aldama Fox Maxy @foxm4xy Weshoyot Alvitre @weshoyot Juan A. Reynoso @jreynoso25 Jorge Sanchez Derrick Herrera As described by the curator Karla Garcia: The Kumeyaay people have lived on this land since time immemorial. Our story is vast, complex, resilient, and never-ending. We are artists, singers, dancers, filmmakers, organizers, advocates, educators, and keepers of our culture. Our stories have been passed down for more than 60 generations on this land, much has been lost but so much has remained. Beyond what we have kept for over 12,000 years, today we create new stories, grow as a community and instill who we are in the next generation of indigenous youth. Our tribe pre-dates the United States, Mexico, and the U.S./ Mexico border. Yet we are divided by these nations and European-American-made walls. Families have been divided, a tribe cut in half, and our way of life was forever changed. Yet we are still here, on both sides of the border, each person, each family, band, community, and ejido, holds a different piece of our story. Today we will show you some of the pieces that we have in hopes that you may see us and that you may listen. Related links: The Front Arte & Cultura website The Front on Instagram En español Visíta la nueva exposición durante nuestra recepción de apertura el jueves 6 de octubre a las 6 p.m. Ven a ver obras de arte tradicionales y contemporáneas de artistas Kumeyaay de Baja California, MEX y California, EE. UU. Nos gustaría agradecer a nuestra curadora Karla García @karla.lachamaca por trabajar con nosotros en esta increíble y tan necesaria exposición.
  • In California, where kindergarten is not mandatory, enrollment for that grade fell 10.1% from the 2019-20 to 2021-22 school year.
  • No experience necessary. Ages 10+ welcome and 8+ with an adult! Join us in crafting your very own handmade books! In this two-hour workshop, students will learn how to use bookbinding tools to create accordion and pamphlet stitch books. The accordion book is composed of one long sheet of paper folded several times into an accordion and then glued between two covers. The pamphlet stitch book gets its name from the method of sewing the book together. No sewing experience is required. • Scholarships available • Homeschoolers • Military and sibling discounts
  • NPR's Don Gonyea says looking through his old baseball scorecards stirs up sweet memories from summers long past.
  • Three Stanford graduate students built an AI tool that can find a location by looking at pictures. Civil rights advocates warn more advanced versions will further erode online privacy.
  • President Biden has $52.7 billion to invest in U.S. semiconductor manufacturing plants. But there's a big shortfall in workers for the new jobs.
  • San Diego County Supervisor Nathan Fletcher announced on Sunday that he’s checking into a treatment center for post traumatic stress, trauma and alcohol abuse. In other news, we hear about Javier Salazar Rojas, who is known in Tijuana as the Deported Artist. Plus, NASA is running a competition to get kids to imagine future space missions. We hear from a local third grader who’s doing just that.
  • Activists have used scrapbooking as a way to chronicle and archive their lives since the Victorian era. By recycling items such as newspaper clippings, photographs, letters, and badges - activists turn blank pages into personal documentation of their experiences. Join the Women's Museum of California for our July craftivism class will you decorate a scrapbook journal and learn how to be the archivist of your own story. About Craftivism Classes: From yarn bombing to femmage, the Women's Museum's Craftivism Classes invites a local artist featured in the museum's current "Crafting Feminism" exhibit to teach participants a crafting skill and how they can use it in their activism. All classes are bilingual and taught in English and Spanish For more information visit: womensmuseumca.org
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