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  • The San Diego LGBTQ Community Center reopens its building after a two year COVID-19 shutdown offering more resources and renovations.
  • San Diego Art Prize recipient Beliz Iristay's art reflects the three places she calls home: Mexico, San Diego and Turkey.
  • After his military retirement, Chief Petty Officer Joshua Ives sifted through more than 15,000 photographs he took in Afghanistan. He created a mixed-media project called Noble Eagle.
  • San Diego is notifying residents and property owners of proposed changes to earthquake fault zones within city limits which could potentially impact development and real estate transactions. Plus, San Diego City Council President Jen Campbell is facing a swell of opposition from her constituents due mainly to her position on short-term rentals. But there are also deeper issues at play. And this weekend in San Diego arts: a new exhibition at Bread and Salt, the Symphony's homage to lives lost to police brutality, and the San Diego Ballet and San Diego REP take on Purim.
  • The Golden Moth - Creative Lounge offers in-person creative classes for adults and mature adults in their Solana Beach studio on South Cedros Avenue! Small groups of 3-5 participants. Obligatory face mask. Classes are 2.5 hours. Everything needed for the classes is provided. Classes offered: • Painting on canvas with acrylics: Wednesdays at 2pm and 5pm and Fridays at 2 p.m. and 5 p.m. • Watercolor painting: Tuesdays at 11 a.m. • Freehand sculpting in clay: Tuesday, Thursday & Sunday 1- 3:30 p.m. • Jewelry making: Saturday at 10:30 a.m. • French and Spanish conversation groups: Thursday and Tuesday at 5 p.m. (1.5h) This is not an "art & wine" class! We truly believe that there is an artist in each one of us. Check out their calendar at www.goldenmothclasses.com for more information and to reserve/book your seat.
  • A pop-up shop in a New York subway station is home to all things Broadway: memorabilia, live performances and handmade goods created by fans. Now, the shop's owners hope to find a permanent home.
  • The online buzz over high profile Britons' ties to the trans-Atlantic slave trade put attention on the ongoing reparations push in Barbados, and other Caribbean nations.
  • In episode 4 of HBO's 'Game of Thrones' spinoff, Daemon surrenders his crown and spends a night on the town; Rhaenyra's rumspringa doesn't sit well with the king-a.
  • After years of legal wrangling, the sprawling Roman villa filled with masterpieces from antiquity to the Renaissance will hit the auction block Tuesday with a starting price of $534 million.
  • John Singleton Copley began his career in Boston painting portraits which contributed vitally to the forging of a social identity for the American merchant class. While the American Revolution was brewing, Copley was busy painting portraits and expanding his reputation as the premiere artist in pre-Revolutionary America. His portrait of Mrs. Thomas Gage was an unusual example. She was the wife of Thomas Gage, commander in chief of the British forces in North America. The beauty of her portrait was undisputed. The artist himself deemed it “beyond compare the best lady’s portrait I ever drew.” When he sent it to London, there were those who criticized it because they expected that a portrait of the distinguished wife of a British commander would be less artistic, less informal, a more rigorous likeness. Was there more to Margaret Kemble Gage than her beauty and her languid pose? Join us for this docent-led talk to learn more. Date | Thursday, June 2 from 11 a.m. to noon Location | Online Register here for free! For more information, please visit timkenmuseum.org/free-virtual-talk-john-singleton-copley-forger-of-american-identity or contact Alexandra Riley at ariley@timkenmuseum.org or by phone at (619) 550-5955.
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