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  • Space Time is please to present an evening that draws from the majesty and scale of the desert, with a screening documenting the creation of Nancy Holt's "Sun Tunnels" and a performance of new music from Sam Dunscombe which incorporates tape and field recordings from the Mojave Desert. Join Bread & Salt Art Gallery as they have a screening by Nancy Holt and music performance from Sam Dunscombe. Date | Sunday, April 10, 2022 at 7:30pm Location | Bread and Salt Art Gallery Purchase tickets here! $10/person or Members/Free For further information on this event please visit the website: https://www.eventbrite.com/e/nancy-holts-sun-tunnels-screening-sam-dunscombe-performance-tickets-311456132677
  • Sarah Stacke photographs life in a South African community, where residents are three times as likely to be murdered than anywhere else in the country, in her new book, Love from Manenberg.
  • Explore photography and digital media arts with Outside the Lens’ after-school program for students in grades 6-8: Content Creator Lab. OTL’s Content Creator Lab brings together youth to create and share their own digital content. Students will learn the fundamentals of photography and filmmaking, media arts and more, and then apply those skills to write, create, edit, and share their own photos, animations, films, and digital content. You will learn from our Media Educators through fun, hands-on projects to explore and express your unique voice. Through participatory, arts-integrated projects, you will explore the world around you and express your story. Date | Monday through Thursday from 3:30 p.m. to 5 p.m., from March 21 to June 27 Location | Clark Middle School This event is free and open to the public. For questions regarding this program please email grants@outsidethelens.org.
  • Malashock Dance presents "perpetual (E)motion", a contemporary dance performance that will usher in the unique choreographic voices of Christopher K. Morgan and Tristian Griffin, who are candidates for an artistic leadership position at Malashock Dance. The performance also features the world premiere of a new work by founding Artistic Director, John Malashock. Eight Malashock Dance professional Company dancers will wow audiences with a sophisticated evening of dance powered by emotional storytelling and physical expression. ADMISSION | Tickets are $15-$100 $15 Students & children under 12 $35 Reserved seating $45 Premium reserved seating (first 2 rows) $100 VIP reception + premium seating (April 16 only) No refunds. All ticket sales are final. Need assistance? Call 619-260-1622 x2 (M-F 9 a.m. - 5 p.m.) or email.
  • One of San Diego’s only volunteer run, community street fairs, celebrates 25 years this March! Join us on neighborhood streets for a day of good food, good people and good fun. With a little something for everyone, The Rolando Street Fair features 5 local bands including national headliner and longtime San Diego favorite Buck-O-Nine, with Emcee for the day, local music guru, Tim Pyles. Shop over 100 vendors, artists and makers, enjoy a variety of food options including the local craft Beer Garden, and entertainment for ages from tiny to teen in the $5 play-all-day kids zone - featuring a rock climbing wall, inflatables and more.
  • Exhibition dates: Mar. 1 through Apr. 7, 2022 Opening reception: Thursday, Mar. 3, from 4-7 p.m. Mesa College Art Gallery, FA 103 Free Parking in Lot # 1 for reception. Park in STUDENT spaces ONLY. From the gallery: Ben Allanoff and Anna Stump’s two-person exhibition delves into the contradictions of the Mojave Desert, a militarized training ground but also a place notable for incredibly tenacious forms of life. Stump’s paintings and Allanoff’s assemblages transform discarded and found materials into haunting artworks. The works represent an ironic juxtaposition: an ecology where a huge military enterprise focused on training people to kill, coexists with diverse life-forms that for millions of years have evolved, adapted, and persisted with mind-boggling creativity and determination. The exhibition renders visible often overlooked aspects of violence, conquest and resilience in the desert. The exhibition will also include a lecture by San Diego filmmaker Evan Apodaca who through interactive works and documentary video explores the ways that the military shaped and exploited San Diego. RELATED: Filmmaker Points Surreal Lens To San Diego’s Military History Learn more from the gallery website. About the artists: Ben Allanoff is an artist working primarily in large scale sculptural installations, mostly temporary and/or collaborative, but some permanent as well. He attended the University of Pennsylvania and Duke University, and earned his B.A. from Duke. Prior to his work as a public and gallery artist, Ben was a filmmaker and a screenwriting fellow at the Sundance Institute. He also was Chair of the non-profit Topanga Creek Watershed Committee, which under his guidance worked to diminish the negative impacts of human activity on a fragile and important ecosystem in the Santa Monica Mountains, mostly through community education and political activism. His work promoting non-toxic methods of pest control earned awards from the County of Los Angeles and from elected state representatives. Anna Stump is an artist and arts educator. She earned her Bachelor’s degree at Occidental College and her Master of Fine Arts at San Diego State University. She was a Senior Fulbright Scholar to Turkey in 2006-2007 (kloeamongtheturks.com) and was recently awarded residencies at Cill Rialaig, Ireland, Centre Pompadour, France, Guapamacataro, Mexico, and Hrisey, Iceland. Anna teaches studio art courses at Grossmont College in El Cajon. Anna is the founder of the San Diego Feminist Image Group (fig-art.blogspot.com). She is one-half of the painting team Hill&Stump (hillandstump.com). She is co-owner of the Moonhuts, a photo and events studio in Los Angeles (moonhuts.com). She is currently rehabilitating a large property that will support the arts in the high desert near Joshua Tree (desertdairy.com) Related links: Mesa College Gallery on Instagram
  • Our gallery will host the winners of our 2022 juried exhibition, (S)LIGHT OF HAND. Juror Christina Z Anderson, a well respected author, teacher, and maker of Alternative Process photographs chose the work of Marek Matusz of Houston Texas and his four-color gum prints of boldly colored flower still lifes; Director Donna Cosentino selected the quiet Cyanotype still life work of Lou McCorkle from San Francisco. Although they use similar materials, the engaging photographs of these two artists contrast greatly in subject and in use of color palette. The opening will be a celebration with both photographers attending. Reception hours are Saturday, February 11 from 5-8 p.m. This event is free and open to the public. Parking is available nearby. Regular Gallery Hours are Friday and Saturday 11 a.m.-5 p.m. and by appointment. Exhibition runs through March 4. Contact Donna Cosentino for more info. Follow The Photographer's Eye on social media: Facebook & Instagram
  • Calling all live music fans! Veteran tour director Paul “Skip” Rickert will discuss all aspects of conceptualizing and creating a live music tour in the rock and roll industry. Skip has been a tour director for decades working with well-known bands and artists such as Santana, Barbara Streisand, Backstreet Boys, Guns N' Roses, Ice Cube, ZZ-Top, Korn, Paris Hilton and more. Skip will explain in detail what a typical day is like, from beginning to end, and will discuss the marketing and the “behind the scenes” strategies and knowledge he has practiced in his years of experience staging live music events. “My dear brother / friend (Skip) is a wealth of knowledge and wisdom. A fellow road warrior who spent quality time co-managing Stevie Ray Vaughan. We are blessed to be sharing life and music with him with joy, grace and a whole lot of class. Ask him anything, he knows the answers. It gives me great joy to endorse his luminous radiant spirit in his quest to share his knowledge.” - Carlos Santana Co-Sponsored by: Sound Image
  • The urge to build a community of sound, first found on the streets of Philly playing with The Roots, still drives bandleader Joshua Abrams. Since Time is Gravity deepens the jazz band's own roots.
  • The origin of humans is a difficult scientific problem in evolution that is grounded in biology and molded by culture. Recent advances in neuroscience and artificial intelligence have led to synergies and surprising new hypotheses. Mysteries such as the origin of language and human sociality are being illuminated by these advances. This symposium will be explored by researchers at the frontiers of A.I., machine learning, language, and sociality. Join the live webcast! “Artificial Intelligence and Anthropogeny,” is the topic of a FREE, virtual public symposium hosted by the UC San Diego/Salk Center for Academic Research and Training in Anthropogeny (CARTA) on Friday, Mar. 3, 2023 (Beginning 10:00 a.m. Pacific with LIVE Expert Discussion and Q&A commencing ~ 1:30 p.m. Pacific), co-chaired by Terry Sejnowski (CARTA External Advisor; Professor and Director of the Computational Neurobiology Laboratory, Salk Institute for Biological Studies) and Patricia Churchland (CARTA Internal Advisor Emerita; Professor Emerita, Dept. of Philosophy, UC San Diego). For updates regarding the live webcast on Friday, Mar. 3, 2023, follow CARTA’s Twitter (@CARTAUCSD), Facebook (@ucsdcarta), and LinkedIn accounts and/or visit the event page here. For more information, please email: khunter@ucsd.edu or carta-info@anthropogeny.org. Funding for this symposium was provided by many generous CARTA friends like YOU. Closed captioning for the recordings was made possible by CARTA Patrons Ingrid Benirschke-Perkins and Gordon Perkins.
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