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  • Join business and industry leaders from film, theatre, fashion, music, dance, opera, spoken word, and more for a 2-day experiential conference that challenges creative professionals to consider their collective power to change the future of their sector. Participate in panel discussions, workshops, quality networking opportunities, and one-on-one coaching with creative leaders from a variety of industries. Explore emerging trends that are impacting how arts & culture patrons respond to our work. Lean into the future of creative resource sharing, mutual support initiatives, and design-forward thinking through this one-of-a-kind conference designed to bring our creative workforce together. Click here to learn more about this event!
  • New cooking school in Barrio Logan teaches children culinary arts with plans to help the homeless.
  • Every Wednesday from 2-3:30 p.m. This month-long series is full of hands-on, engaging crafts using STEAM (STEM + Art!) to teach hand skills to children using safe materials. Each project teaches craftsmanship, dexterity and material exploration, and ranges from woodworking, sewing, ceramics, paper crafts, textiles to fusing glass. Young students will make beautiful pieces to take home over the course of the series. All materials included. Drop-ins welcome. SOCIALS: Facebook | Twitter | Instagram
  • Stream now with the PBS app / Watch Thursday, Aug. 14, 2025 at 9:30 p.m. on KPBS TV + Monday, Aug. 18 at 9:30 p.m. on KPBS 2. Check out a factory where they make amphibious airplanes! It's called Icon Aircraft, and they are making these amazing flying Ferraris made out of carbon fiber. Watch as we learn about the laminating process, and all the parts and pieces that are put together in this factory of toys for big boys.
  • They're from Israel and Gaza. A man whose parents died on Oct. 7 feels as if he is swimming in an sea of sorrow. A young man has a soldier's bullet lodged in his spine. Yet they have not lost hope.
  • The mixed-use development has a unique focus on art and affordability. It features 60 affordable units, an artist gallery, workshop and retail space.
  • From the organizers: What propels us forward? Are we aware of all the cycles that influence our lives? Can we control these rhythms? Do we love the dance? Locked Groove is a looped audiovisual experience that traces and morphs along the entire curb edging of Point Loma’s Plumosa Park. Locked Groove presents a rhythmic visual design using temporary chalk pigments based on conceptual ideas about life rhythms. These rhythms are divided into four themes: domestic, social, industrial, and natural. These rhythms’ graphical patterns are inspired by rhythmic sound palettes designed by the artist and ancient, modern, and contemporary visual media. Audiences can engage with the visual experience of this work at various positions around the park’s perimeter. Audiences can also augment their experience by using digital devices to open a web-hosted, multichannel sound mixer. This app allows audiences to hear the sound art rhythms which influenced the curb graphics. Audiences can also isolate sounds from each theme or mix the four sound fields. “Locked groove” refers to the repeating loops found on vinyl records. Locked Groove has no beginning and end and can be completed as audiences see fit. To experience, find the QR code on the edge of the park, and walk the perimeter of the grass, observing the artwork on the curb and playing the sound from the mixer on your smartphone. Related events: Park Social Exploration Day is July. 16. Related links: Park Social website "Locked Groove" listening app City of San Diego Commission for Arts and Culture on Instagram Margaret Noble on Instagram
  • All concert attendees must be vaccinated and face masks must be worn indoors. Peter Boland has been playing music and writing songs his whole life. His first solo album was called Frame, released in 2002. It earned a Best Americana Album nomination at the San Diego Music Awards. His band, The Coyote Problem, won the Best Americana Album prize for both their albums, Wire in 2005 and California in 2007, at the San Diego Music Awards. Subsequently, Peter “fired” himself from his own band and released his solo album, Two Pines, also nominated for Best Americana album. Peter, in addition to being a singer/songwriter/musician, is also a speaker, writer, and philosophy professor, and has said “In my mind, all of these various modes of expression root back to a common core – the hunger to understand and the passion to connect. To me, philosophy, spirituality, and art are healing modalities – we turn to them to salve our wounds, bind our broken places, and cultivate our growth. Whether in song, in prose, or in oratory, I simply want to open up to the grandeur and depth of being alive.” Rupert Wates was born in London. He signed an exclusive publishing deal with Eaton Music in the late 1990s and has been a full-time songwriter ever since. He moved to the United States in fall 2006. Since 2007, he has won over fifty songwriting awards. He has released eleven full-length CDs. Each has received outstandingly good reviews, and has been played regularly by radio stations in the United States, Canada, France, Germany, Israel, Australia, and The Netherlands. In 2015 and 2016, over twenty of his songs were recorded by other performers, and two tribute albums to his material were recorded by independent artists in Nashville and Los Angeles. Rupert averages 120 live shows per year, for audiences totaling around 3,500 annually, in America, Canada, and Europe. Everyone who hears him responds to his acoustic, melodic, haunting songs that ring true. Follow on Rupert Wates on Facebook!
  • Closed beaches. Contaminated water, and the unfortunate stink of sewage have long been problems for coastal areas in the South Bay. But a settlement to a long-running lawsuit announced Tuesday hopes to improve the problem. Then, the Biden Administration is extending its mask mandates on airlines and public transportation until May 3. San Diego’s COVID-19 infection rate is relatively low and the county says the spread of the virus is likely decreasing. But could we see a bump in infections from the BA.2 variant? Next, a San Diego judge says he believes the county fair can go on this year, but fair officials say that may be impossible. Meanwhile, a new poll shows growing support for trash collection fees if officials provide replacement trash bins to San Diego residents. Next, part two of KPBS’s ongoing series “Let’s talk about it” looks at the art of having difficult conversations about race and equity. Finally, The Old Globe will present a new two-play adaptation of Henry VI in 2023 and is launching a yearlong program of citywide arts engagement and humanities events.
  • Stop by Park Social artist Mario Mesquita's Mobile Lab to share reflections about the past and future in exchange for a popsicle. The artist will be mobile and moving back and forth between Market Creek Canyon and Kennedy Neighborhood Park, so look out for his Mobile Lab. Park Social is a citywide initiative introducing social-specific public art into San Diego's vast and varied park system. Held for six months in 2022, Park Social engages with a broad and constantly shifting audience of park-goers through responsive artistic projects. Learn more about the artist practice and Park Social project by visiting sdparksocial.com. Related links: Park Social website, schedule, artists and more San Diego Commission for Arts and Culture on Instagram KPBS feature on Park Social
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