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  • Join UCSD as they host a MFA Thesis Exhibition from Visual Arts Graduate Student "Blight Birth Burning in Brine is reimagining my feelings of my personal memories through misremembering, adding, and subtracting its details. Blurring truth and fiction to create new imagined memories." Dates | Monday, May 16th- Thursday, May 19th at 5pm Location | UCSD Visual Arts Facility Free Event! For further information on this event please visit: https://visarts.ucsd.edu/news-events/20220511-20_victorcastaneda.html
  • Starting Wednesday, San Diego’s sidewalk vendors will face new rules. They come after plenty of community feedback and controversy.
  • "Connecting the Dots" exhibition at the San Diego Mesa College Art Gallery features artwork created by 72 SDCCD faculty and staff members, including participants from Mesa, City, Miramar, Continuing Ed and District Office. For a complete list of artists, go here. Guest juror, Wendy Wilson-Gibson, director of the Bonita Museum and art curator helped finalize the selection of works. On view Apr. 26- May 26, 2022 Reception: Thursday, May 5 from 4-7 p.m. For Gallery info email or call: (619) 388-2829 Gallery Director: Alessandra Moctezuma, amoctezu@sdccd.edu Gallery Coordinator: Jenny Armer, jarmer@sdccd.edu Location: San Diego Mesa College, Fine Arts Building, Art Gallery, FA103 7250 Mesa College Dr. SD 92111 Closest entrance is through Marlesta/Genesee Lot #1. FREE parking in STUDENT spots. Masks required. Gallery Hours: T, W, TH, 11 a.m. – 4 p.m. Closed Mondays, Fridays, Weekends and School Holidays.
  • The California Education Code mandates art, music, theatre and dance be offered to every student, yet less than one-in-five public schools today have a full-time arts and music teacher. That could change with a proposed state ballot measure that would guarantee funding for arts in public schools. Meanwhile, a new state law requires that all food waste be composted rather than sent to landfills. A composting specialist calls the new law a much needed "kick in the pants" for cities and counties that have not been doing this in the past. Plus, in what many are calling a surprise victory, an Indigenous woman was found not guilty on federal charges of blocking border wall construction in Organ Pipe Cactus National Monument.
  • What inspires an artist? There are countless possibilities to answer this question, all as individual as the artists themselves. But throughout the history of art one of the consistent inspirations is ‘travel’ - the location and surroundings in which the artists find themselves. As the summer months are generally a time for travel, in today’s docent-led talk we’ll join Timken artists in their travels around the world and examine works inspired by their journeys. So buckle-up and enjoy the ride! Add it to your calendar! Visit: https://www.timkenmuseum.org/calendar/event/virtual-talk-oh-the-places-ive-been-travel-paintings-from-the-timken/?back=month Timken Museum of Art is on Facebook + Instagram
  • The highly sophisticated, multibillion-dollar defense system has been under constant redevelopment since its inception in the early 2000s. Here's how it works.
  • More Cubans have fled to live in the United States in 2022 and 2023 than the waves of migration in the '80s and '90s. Three couples' stories show the complex realities of the current exodus.
  • New artificial intelligence tools are being rapidly developed across the sciences. They may not be able to solve every problem, but in some cases, they're shortening the time to new breakthroughs.
  • The Brooklyn-based composer talks about the artistic powers of her island homeland, writing scores for America's top orchestras and making music with plants.
  • The small, quiet enclaves have long thrived on leftist ideas about collective living. Those located near Gaza suffered some of the worst of the Hamas attacks, with hundreds reported dead.
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