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  • Western Kentucky is dealing with the aftermath of a deadly tornado now, but 10 years ago Joplin, Mo., was in the same place. Joplin Mayor Ryan Stanley offers his advice for those in Kentucky.
  • Russian forces launched missile strikes on Ukraine's Kyiv and Chernihiv regions while Ukrainian officials, meanwhile, announced an operation to liberate occupied territory in the country's south.
  • Rosebud's Cafe is a place that shouts its values from its walls: bright green paint, huge family portraits, and tons of posters and flyers announcing programs for the arts, supporting local homeless initiatives and advocating for LGBTQ rights.
  • Put up to protect buildings from civil unrest, the boards have become vehicles of expression for devastated and angry Minnesotans.
  • Join the KPBS and PRX podcast “Port of Entry” for a live interview with photographer Yvonne Venegas Host Alan Lilienthal interviews artist and photographer Yvonne Venegas live on the KPBS YouTube channel for an upcoming episode of the “Port of Entry” podcast. Join us for the live interview before it becomes a podcast episode and ask your questions. Spanish captions will be provided on the YouTube stream. The online event is free and open to all.
  • The crowd-funded group ConstitutionDAO narrowly lost out in the hotly anticipated auction. The group had hoped to buy the rare historical document so it could be displayed for the public.
  • On view 7722 Girard (formerly Quint ONE) Nov. 6 - Dec. 11, 2021 Opening reception will be Saturday, Nov. 13, 6-8 p.m. In a new solo exhibition at Quint Gallery's 7722 Girard space (formerly Quint ONE), Lee Materazzi shows a series of photographs of conceptual, performance-style sculptural pieces, obscured and disrupted by thick color blocks that force the eye to a particular bend, nook or cranny of a body — often painted in otherworldly colors — and the shapes created are almost unrecognizable as human, though sometimes hyper-recognizable and intimate. Materazzi's work is informed by performance artists of the '70s, and pushes color and meaning into quotidian settings and poses. On view through Dec. 11 with an opening reception Saturday, Nov. 13 from 6-8 p.m., correlating with the reception for Mara De Luca's exhibition at the main gallery across the street, "West Coast Paintings." —Julia Dixon Evans, KPBS From the artist: "Across walls, floors, rigid corners, in folds, bent over - looking for the space, the movement-moment where form changes its outline, existing as new, as is. Activating the body as a medium, choosing autonomy- play of objectification/ body politics/ female sexuality. Alongside color, composition, texture change, surface variation, contrast of shapes, angles, curves, spatial relationships, harmoniously awkwardly, off-kilter. Moving closer to a particular hue or movement - adding or taking away to compliment, contradict, question; slightly grayish-lilac shades following a hip, torn edges of smokey teal, emerald green found on the floor. The arrangements and acts are considered sculpturally, but exist only temporarily. And, when everything is exact - it changes. Building an elaborate environment only to break it down to what is essential. Yielding to the space, the process, the abstraction. A line that deviates, rolls over you, a wave." - Lee Materazzi Related links: Quint Gallery on Instagram Lee Materazzi on Instagram About the artist
  • CEO Mark Zuckerberg says Meta will slow hiring and tighten its budget. Soaring inflation, interest rate hikes and other economic woes have affected the digital advertising the company depends on.
  • Filled with pop mosaics, Surrender feels like a quintessentially summer album. Naturally, we asked Maggie Rogers for a roséwave playlist.
  • Santigold's debut album captures the New York dream of being a singular sensation above the masses. It inspired writer Dawnie Walton when she first moved there — and again when she needed a new start.
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