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

Search results for

  • NPR's Leila Fadel speaks with Israeli filmmaker Eran Kolirin and Palestinian actor Alex Bakri about the film 'Let it Be Morning'.
  • Dr. James Daichendt discusses the significance street art and the controversy surrounding OG Slick's "Three Slick Pigs."
  • Artists will be opening their studios to the public at 7 PM. RSVP on our website to let us know you're coming! Performances start at 7:30 PM Chris Warren Ania Sundstrom with her trio Figmentum Jonathan Piper Nick Lesley with his band Necking Holi March 18th also marks the celebration of Holi, the Indian festival that ushers in spring. People traditionally celebrate it as a day of spreading happiness and love, and color each other with different colored powders. We will be (lightly) coloring anyone who wants to participate! COVID-19 Protocols Proof of COVID-19 vaccination is required for entry. Please be prepared to wear a mask when asked. Each artist will determine the boundaries for their own studio space. Location and Parking We share the property with other tenants, so street parking is all we are able to offer. The entrance to Space 4 Art is located on 16th St, near J St, directly across from Goodwill. A staff member will be posted at the gate to let you in.
  • Inspectors for the Department of Homeland Security found dangerous problems in immigration detention facilities. For years, the government fought NPR's efforts to obtain its often damning reports.
  • In court documents filed in a Tennessee probate court, Oher alleged that the Tuohys convinced him to sign documents that agreed to a conservatorship in 2004.
  • Though hospitalization rates have not reached the highs of last winter, the ongoing crush of patients is testing the resources of San Diego’s emergency departments. And California Gov. Gavin Newsom and San Diego Mayor Todd Gloria are promoting reforming conservatorship laws in an effort to address homelessness. In other news from Sacramento, state regulators are holding off on considering a proposal that would upend the state’s solar marketplace. Plus, KPBS Arts reporter Beth Accomando checks in at Comickaze, a comic book store she has been going to for decades, to see how it has overcome multiple challenges these past two years. And this year’s California Children’s Report Card has found that, from the pandemic to systemic racism, the state’s youth are under a lot of pressure and more resources are needed to address that. Finally, Jamie Deering, the CEO of Spring Valley’s Deering Banjo Company, joins KPBS Midday Edition to break down some of 2021's best in banjo music — from bluegrass to blues to world and experimental.
  • MFA Thesis Exhibition from Visual Arts Graduate Student. "tether" is a video installation that meditates on kelechi agwuncha's subconscious childhood memories of performance. it documents a new ritual that bridges their memories of playing the recess game, "tetherball" and witnessing traditional Ojiọnu Igbo masquerade figures gesture in a kind of spectacular, uncensored reality. each screening is live accompanied by video jockeying and musical scoring performances by Eva Marie Gonzalez Ruskiewicz and kelechi agwuncha. Visit https://visarts.ucsd.edu/news-events/20220505-07_kelechiagwuncha.html
  • Look around the room tonight at the country’s largest popular culture event and one will see an ever-growing array of Black superheroes, characters, and comics. But, if one were to look for the largest collection of iconic, legendary, and uniquely Black heroes, it wouldn’t be the booth of Netflix, HBO, Disney+, Mattel, or Hasbro, where one would lay eyes on them. Rather, the work of a single Black artist, a self-taught sculptor, on what can only be described as a fanatical and driven mission to contribute through the documentation of Black history past and present, through collectible art, plants a flag to show where collectibles should be moving towards in the future. Acori Honzo started his artistic career in collectibles more than a decade ago. Confronted with the opportunity to purchase only a single Black superhero, Blade, at retail, and even fewer Black mentors in the world of collectible figures, he picked up clay and taught himself how to fill the gap in the creative world for himself. Hundreds of iconic sculpts later, he retains, without a doubt, the largest private collection of iconic Black heroes ever carved, printed, and remembered, of any artist in recent memory, and certainly from a singular artist. A private obsession to create for himself has transitioned from recognition by private collectors, to that celebration and manning of a gallery space within the city of Philadelphia, to now the launching, creatively leading, and co-owning of a collectible brand, Depicting Our People’s Excellence (aka DOPE), with other similarly focused Black artists. An effort dedicated to documenting and making more widely available through produced collectibles, the rich history of Black icons throughout this country’s long story, with all the skill, authenticity, and love they deserve. From Basquiat to Harriet Tubman, Miles Davis to Easy E, Acori’s work shows a range and depth of focus, especially on the finest of details, that are one of the reason’s his collectors covet his pieces. Disburst, the premier global distributor of designer collectibles, is proud to show just a tiny sample of Acori’s original work, over 17 pieces, most never seen outside the artist’s private workspace, at booth #2549 at San Diego Comic-Con. The artist, visionary, and especially contributor, himself, can be found at booth #2649 right next door, for signings and questions throughout the convention in his first ever appearance in San Diego, California, or anywhere west of the Mississippi. San Diego Comic-Con main exhibit hall is open to all attendees, July 20 from 6 p.m. - 9 p.m. and July 21 – July 23 from 9 a.m. - 7 p.m., and July 24 from 9 a.m. - 5 p.m. Acori Honzo on Instagram Depicting Our Peoples Excellence on Instagram
  • Yolanda López: A Studio of One’s Own will reflect on one of the most important Chicano/a/x artist and activist who worked in California over the past five decades, with a special focus on the art produced during her time as an MFA (1979) in the Department of Visual Arts. Yolanda López was born in San Diego in 1942 and passed in 2021. The title for the panel echoes the playful take on her first solo museum exhibition Portrait of the Artist at Museum of Contemporary Art San Diego, Downtown. The exhibition presents a compendium of López’s work from the 1970s and 1980s, when she created a vivid body of paintings, drawings, and collages that investigate and reimagine representations of women within Chicano/a/x culture and society, and where UCSD looms large in the work. Panelists: David Avalos, Cal State University San Marcos Alana Hernandez, Celebración Artística de las Américas Alessandra Moctezuma, San Diego Mesa College Susan Mogul, UC San Diego Alumx Moderator: Ricardo Dominguez, Department of Visual Arts This event is co-sponsored by Chicanx and Latinx Studies, Visual Arts, Latin American Studies, and the Institute of the Americas. Click here to register!
  • Artist Sofie Ramos encloses everyday objects — laundry, recycling, shoes, furniture — with brightly colored latex paint into assemblages. The works are installations, sculptural against a gallery backdrop also transformed by vivid color in geometric shapes or whimsical patterns. At Bread and Salt, the Los Angeles-based Ramos will show her work in "Life Raft," a solo exhibition in the main gallery, opening Feb. 11. —Julia Dixon Evans, KPBS Related links: Sofie Ramos on Instagram Bread and Salt on Instagram
1,689 of 5,451