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  • A new exhibition at the Museum of Modern Art of Forth Worth — "Women Painting Women" — shows viewers what happens when women are both the subject and the artist. The result: something raw and real.
  • - Learn how to make cultured milk & milk products through fermentation! - Learn about nutrient-dense raw (unpasteurized) milk and its superpowers from the founder of Raw Farm USA, the largest raw dairy in California! The experience includes: - A presentation by Mark McAfee (CEO & Founder of Raw Farm, and Raw Milk Institute) about the benefits of raw milk - Discussion about food fermentation and its many benefits - Demo and sampling of raw and cultured probiotic-rich dairy foods such as yogurt, kefir, and fresh cheese! - Holiday bonus: Sample cultured eggnog - Includes a take-home milk kefir culture We'll be snacking on some raw dairy treats such as raw milk, kefir, butter and cheese! Homemade sourdough bread will also be served. Stay Social! Facebook & Instagram
  • Records show staffers for local officeholders use the encrypted messaging app Signal. Experts say this circumvents California’s public records law.
  • Explore the fascinating world of the Golden Age of Mexican Cinema with Gregorio Luke. The storytelling of films provides new inspiration for learning beyond your expectations. Mexico’s film industry has experienced astounding growth over the last two decades. A resurgence of great artistic talent from directors, screenwriters, producers and filmmakers. Their success has provided access to the diversification of Mexico’s stories from underrepresented groups and unconventional concepts. Date | Friday, February 25 from 6 p.m. to 8 p.m. Location | Online Register here! LAAC members: $10 Nonmembers: $15 Seniors: $10 Military and students: $5 All participants will be sent the Zoom link and instructions via email once you secure your place. Space is limited. Sponsored by the Latin American Arts Council. For more information, please visit sdmart.org/event/the-golden-age-of-mexican-cinema or call (619) 232-7931.
  • Nov. 13 through Dec. 18, 2021 Opening reception on Saturday, November 13th, 6 p.m. - 9 p.m. From the gallery: BEST PRACTICE is pleased to announce the opening of an exhibition of a new body of work by Cog•nate Collective (Misael Diaz + Amy Sanchez Arteaga). The exhibition gathers works rendered in hand-poured beeswax, drawings on cloth, and radio broadcasts to meditate on territory, borders, and what we’ve inherited from our ancestors’ labor.[1] [(see footnote poem, below)] "Como Soles: Despidiendo Luz" borrows its title from a speech by Ricardo Flores Magon, one of the leaders of the 1911 rebellion which took control of Mexicali and Tijuana for 6 months and established a short-lived radical autonomous territory along the U.S./Mexico border. The works on view place such moments in the historical evolution of the border into dialogue with the artists’ family histories of working and living binationally – drawing for example on the history of Sanchez Arteaga’s great-grandfather as an agricultural worker and UFW organizer in the Imperial Valley/Mexicali. Ultimately, reflecting on residues of resistance we inherit, hold on to and pass on; gestures of solidarity that stand in defiance of the increasingly injurious geopolitical boundaries dividing us. About the artists: Cog•nate Collective develops interdisciplinary research projects and public interventions that explore how culture mediates social, economic and political relationships across borders. Cog•nate Collective was established in 2010 by Amy Sanchez Arteaga, lecturer of Art History at SDSU, and Misael Diaz, an assistant professor in the department of Art, Media, and Design at CSUSM. They currently work between Tijuana, B.C. and Los Angeles, CA and are based in National City, CA. They have shown and presented their work at various venues nationally and internationally, including Los Angeles Contemporary Exhibitions, the Armory Center for the Art, 18th Street Art Center the Craft and Folk Art Museum, the Ben Maltz Gallery at Otis College, the Getty Center, CSUF Grand Central Art Center, the Arizona State University Art Museum, School of the Art Institute Chicago, Arte Actual FLACSO in Quito, Maison Folie Wazemmes in Lille and the Organ Kritischer Kunst in Berlin. --- 1. A Footnote Poem: She was a fire human. A mutable but focused and singular Sagittarius flame, not a conflagration. Steady, bright, white hot in the center, touchable at the borders, only for a second. A light in the darkness. Warmth in the cold. Trickster. Who singes the tlacuaches’ tails. Promethean harbinger of sustenance, legibility, peace. A hand to hold, a love to know, a legacy to cultivate from. I was a child hanging clothes to dry on the clothesline in the summer dusk. By her side I swatted at a bee afraid it would sting me, and she said, “They won’t hurt you. They’re your ancestors. They worked with your Pepe in the fields, they’ve been with us forever and they won’t hurt you, they remember.” Bees remember. Wax remembers. For more on Cognate Collective’s work please visit www.cognatecollective.com/
  • Florida state Sen. Shevrin Jones, a Democrat, says the proposed course "wasn't indoctrination, it wasn't ideology, it was facts." He fears blocking it will harm students in Florida and beyond.
  • Wednesday, June 21, 2023 at 8 p.m. on KPBS 2 / Stream now with the PBS App. In 1986, to awaken America to the AIDS crisis and to honor the friends he lost, Brent Nicholson Earle runs the perimeter of the United States. In The American Run for the End of AIDS, Brent runs almost a marathon a day for 20 months straight. After enduring blisters, exhaustion, ignorance and fear, he returns home to a life of activism. Though the run finishes, Brent’s fight never stops.
  • Four Chicanx poets and authors from San Diego and Los Angeles from FlowerSong Press are reading this Saturday, May 28 from 6 p.m. - 8 p.m., at Barnes & Noble Encinitas (Town Center, 1040 N El Camino Real Drive, Encinitas, CA 92024). Collectively, these poets and writers have performed their poetry around the world, sold thousands of copies of their books, had their work published in dozens of literary journals and newspapers, performed at hundreds of colleges and universities, have been taught at dozens of colleges and universities and have engaged in powerful work to uplift and transform their communities. The FlowerSong poets and authors who will be reading: - Sonia Gutiérrez, "Dreaming with Mariposas" - Matt Sedillo, "Mowing Leaves of Grass" - Briana Muñoz, "Everything is Returned to the Soil/Todo vuelve a la tierra" - David A. Romero, "My Name Is Romero" FlowerSong Press: Based in McAllen, Texas, FlowerSong Press nurtures essential verse from, about, and through the borderlands. The voices of those from Latin America, the U.S.A. and all over the world. We are Literary, Lyrical, Boundless, and we welcome allies that understand and join in the voice of people of color and our struggle, truth, and hope. www.flowersongpress.com Sonia Gutiérrez is the recipient of the Tomás Rivera Book Award 2021 for her novel "Dreaming with Mariposas" (FlowerSong Press, 2020). In 2021, "Dreaming with Mariposas" also received an honorable mention for the Isabel Allende Most Inspirational Fiction Award from the International Latino Book Awards. She is the author of "Spider Woman / La Mujer Araña" (Olmeca Press, 2013) and co-editor for "The Writer’s Response" (Cengage Learning, 2016). She teaches critical thinking and writing, and women’s, gender, and sexuality studies. Her bilingual poetry collection, "Paper Birds: Feather by Feather / Pájaros de papel: Pluma por pluma," is forthcoming fall 2022. Presently, she is working on her first illustrated book, "The Adventures of a Burrito Flying Saucer," and teaching in cyberland. Matt Sedillo has been described by journalists and historians alike as, “the best political poet in America” as well as “the poet laureate of the struggle.” His work has drawn comparisons in print to Bertol Brecht, Roque Dalton, Amiri Baraka, Alan Ginsberg and countless other legends of the past. Sedillo was the recipient of the 2017 Joe Hill Labor Poetry Award, a panelist at the 2020 Texas Book Festival, and a participant in the 2011 San Francisco International Poetry Festival, the 2022 Elba Poetry Festival. Sedillo has appeared on CSPAN, been featured in the Los Angeles Times, Axios, the Associated Press, NPR for the Southwest, the Kenyon Review, the Pacifica Network, the Canadian Broadcast Corporation among many other publications and broadcasts. Sedillo has spoken at Casa de las Americas in Havana, Cuba, at numerous conferences and forums, such as the National Conference on Race & Ethnicity in American Higher Education, the National Association of Chicana/Chicano Studies, the Left Forum, the US Social Forum, the Left Coast Forum, the Worker Cooperative National Conference, the Association of Writers and Writing Programs and at over a hundred universities and colleges, including the University of Cambridge. Matt Sedillo is the author of "Mowing Leaves of Grass" (FlowerSong Press, 2019) and "City on the Second Floor" (FlowerSong Press, 2022), both of which are taught at universities throughout the country as coursework. Briana Muñoz is a poet from Southern California. She is the author of "Loose Lips," a poetry collection published by Prickly Pear Publishing (2019) and of "Everything is Returned to the Soil" published by FlowerSong Press (2021). Her work has been published in the Bravura Literary Journal, the Dryland Literary Journal, the Oakland Arts Review, in Boundless: The Anthology of the Rio Grande Valley International Poetry Festival, and the anthology, Reimagine America, among others. She is an Indigenous Mexica danzante. She is also the co-creator of Hairy Leg Lingerie, a creative collective birthed to highlight local talent from the non-binary, femme, and trans communities. Briana currently serves as the Volunteer Event Coordinator for the Sims Library of Poetry and the Volunteer Fundraising Coordinator for the Luis J Rodriguez for CA Governor 2022 campaign. David A. Romero is a Mexican-American spoken word artist from Diamond Bar, California. Romero is the author of "My Name Is Romero" (FlowerSong Press, 2020), a book reviewed by Gustavo Arellano (¡Ask a Mexican!), Curtis Marez (University Babylon), and founding member of Ozomatli, Ulises Bella. Romero has appeared at over seventy-five colleges and universities in thirty-three states in the USA. Romero's work has been published in literary magazines in the United States, England, and Canada. Romero has opened for Latin Grammy winning bands Ozomatli and La Santa Cecilia. Romero’s work has been published in anthologies alongside poets laureate, Joy Harjo, Lawrence Ferlinghetti, Luis J. Rodriguez, Jack Hirschman, and Tongo Eisen-Martin. Romero has won the Uptown Slam at the historic Green Mill in Chicago, the birthplace of slam poetry. Romero’s poetry deals with family, identity, social justice issues, and Latinx culture. Romero offers a scholarship for high school seniors interested in spoken word and social justice: “The Romero Scholarship for Excellence in Spoken Word.” Barnes & Noble is on Facebook + Instagram
  • Gov. Gavin Newsom on Friday announced the nation's first coronavirus vaccine mandate for schoolchildren once they received final approval from the FDA for various grade levels. Plus, legal scholars are calling for the disbarment of a law professor who worked to keep Donald Trump in office after his election loss. And a preview of the arts happenings this weekend.
  • Join Camille Bethune-Brown, Mingei Curator for a rich discussion on Beaded African Adornment. Beads are central to the lives of all African people, and an integral part of a multilayered communication system across cultural communities as well as a celebration of cultural heritage. African Adornment is community art where personal touches are infused in each object. You will come away with a deep understanding of the world around us and our shared experience that unites us all. This discussion coincides with the Museum's exhibition, COLORFUL CULTURE: AFRICAN BEADS and will take place in Mingei's new Theater. Art Break is Mingei's new monthly lunchtime lecture series focused on folk art, craft and design. This event is free with museum admission. Admission Pricing: Adults (18 years and older): $14; Seniors, Students with ID and Military: $10; Children: Free Event Date: Nov. 12, 2021 (12:00pm-1:00pm) Event Location: Mingei International Museum Who: All Are Welcome For more information on this event please visit HERE!
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