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  • 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.
  • 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
  • As the new concert season gets underway, composers and orchestra administrators say they are feeling a shift in whose music gets heard.
  • Dr. James Daichendt discusses the significance street art and the controversy surrounding OG Slick's "Three Slick Pigs."
  • The Oceanside International Film Festival returns this week to the Brooks Theater in Oceanside for five days of film screenings and special events.
  • MCASD’s focus on female artists continues in March 2023 with the first museum exhibition of San Diego and Tijuana-based artist Griselda Rosas. "Griselda Rosas: Yo te cuido" is the artist’s first solo museum exhibition, presenting new textile drawings and sculptural installations that explore themes of inheritance and intergenerational knowledge. Rosas, who is based between San Diego and Tijuana, adopts embroidery skills learned from her mother, grandmother, and aunts, often using her young son’s drawings as foundations on which to layer, stitch, and build. Incorporating natural pigments and collage, Rosas combines these inventive images with colonial imagery to evoke a collision and circulation of cultures. Reserve your ticket today through here. Visit our website to find applicable admission prices and discounts, including a discount for San Diego and Tijuana residents. Tickets can be purchased online and at the museum. We do not have timed tickets, tickets valid all day on the date of your reservation. Related links: MCASD on Facebook | Instagram | Twitter
  • Starting March 27, you won't be able to buy digital games for the Wii U and 3DS. Video game archivists and fans are racing to preserve titles that may soon disappear.
  • “A Bach Family” Harpsichordists: Arthur Haas and Takae Ohnishi Thursday, Feb. 9, 2023 at 7 p.m. Conrad Prebys Concert Hall Program: J.C.Bach / Sonata for two harpsichords J.S. Bach / Ricercar 6 voices from Musical Offering for two harpsichords J.S. Bach / Goldberg Variations ( Arthur Haas)
  • There’s a new grant program in San Diego that aims to help close the racial wealth gap, and KPBS Race and Equity reporter Cristina Kim caught up with the first recipient. Plus, Comic-Con has canceled two in-person shows because of the pandemic, but today it returns to in-person events with what it is calling Comic-Con Special Edition. And, this weekend in the arts you can lose yourself in contemporary art, electroacoustic music and Palestinian poetry.
  • Nolan's film tells the story of Robert Oppenheimer, the man who spearheaded the development of the atomic bomb. "Of all of the subject matter I've dealt with, it's certainly the darkest," he says.
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