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  • Using artificial intelligence to identify congressional districts where independent candidates could win, an organization called the Independent Center is aiming to disrupt the two-party system.
  • About 3 million glucose monitoring sensors were potentially affected by a production error that caused incorrect low glucose readings.
  • "The Many Worlds and Identities of Guadalupe" with Alberto López Pulido / "Los Muchos Mundos e Identidades de Guadalupe" con Alberto López Pulido Over the years, Mexicanos and Chicane/a/os have been preoccupied with questions of identity in relation to its fluid and multidimensional nature. Through the power of Chicana and Chicano Art, "The Many Worlds and Identities of Guadalupe" explores Guadalupe as an embodiment of these worlds in an attempt to better understand Chicana/o culture and identity in our contemporary world Alberto López Pulido is the founding chair of the Department of Ethnic Studies at the University of San Diego, where he has taught since 2003. A native of San Diego’s South Bay, his upbringing between borders shaped his fronterizo perspective. He began his education at Southwestern College before earning degrees in Sociology and Chicano Studies from UC San Diego. He later completed graduate studies at the University of Notre Dame under the mentorship of Dr. Julian Samora. Pulido’s research explores the intersection of Chicana/o/x communities, spirituality, and cultural expression. His award-winning work on Our Lady of Guadalupe Church in Logan Heights is among his important works of scholarship. A trained sociologist, he has published widely on ethnic studies, Chicano/a studies in higher education, and material culture. Mingei International Museum on Facebook / Instagram
  • A Huntington Beach-based developer is proposing to build a nearly one million-square-foot warehouse for artificial intelligence development in the center of the Imperial Valley.
  • Community members gathered outside the federal building downtown as lawmakers introduced legislation to curb excessive force and increase transparency in immigration operations.
  • Join us for the first edition of MCASD’s new program series, "Artist on Artist," featuring artist Esteban Cabeza de Baca (whose work, "Long Lost Relationship," is currently on view in Land and Sea) and artist Heidi Howard. Presented with Two Rooms, this program takes place ahead of the artists’ exhibition opening of "Visions for Civic Gardens." "Artist on Artist" brings two creative minds together for an intimate conversation, where artists explore each other’s methods, practices, and inspirations. Through dialogue, they uncover shared themes, unique approaches, and the stories behind their work, offering audiences a rare, behind-the-scenes look at the artistic process. Program: 5:30 p.m.: Doors Open 6 p.m.: Introductions 6:10 p.m.: Talk with Esteban Cabeza de Baca and Heidi Howard begins 7 p.m. – 9p.m.: Visions for Civic Gardens Exhibition Opening at Two Rooms. OFFSITE: 5560 La Jolla Blvd. Floor 2, Suite D, San Diego, CA 92037 (7 minute drive) About the artists: Esteban Cabeza de Baca Esteban Cabeza de Baca (he/they/him) (b. 1985, San Ysidro, California) is an American painter of Mexican and Native American heritage who lives and works between Queens, New York, and the Southwest United States. He numbers among his influences San Ysidro, the liminal border town of his youth, and his parents, whose intersectional political awareness and respect for human dignity led them to shelter migrants during his youth. Cabeza de Baca’s work entwines layers of graffiti, landscape, and pre-Columbian pictographs in ways that confound Cartesian single-point perspective. He received a Bachelor of Fine Arts from the School of Art, Cooper Union (2010) and Master of Fine Arts from Columbia University (2014). He has had solo exhibitions at the San Luis Obispo Museum of Art (2025); Parker Gallery, Los Angeles (2024); Garth Greenan Gallery, New York (2023); The Momentary, Arkansas (2022); Boers-Li Gallery, New York (2019); and Kunstfort Vijfhuizen, Amsterdam (2019). He has participated group exhibitions at MCA San Diego, California (2025); Museo Del Barrio, New York (2024); Armory Center for Arts, Pasadena (2023); the Drawing Center, New York (2019). Cabeza de Baca’s works are part of the permanent collections of Harvard University, the North Dakota Museum of Art, Museum of Contemporary Art San Diego, Parrish Art Museum, Phoenix Art Museum and Williams College Museum of Art. Heidi Howard Heidi Howard (She/They) is an American artist born, raised, and currently based in Queens, New York. Howard’s work extends the legacy of New York painting looking from Alice Neel to the Abstract Expressionists. In Howard’s performances and installations, color engages space through gesture, marking a specific point in time and way of cultural and community-based engagement. The core of their practice stems from portraits painted with a sitter in the room. Their process and style changes with each person, reflecting the color feelings of both Howard and the sitter, their shared aesthetics, environment, and the images that emerge over the course of the sitting. Howard’s work has been exhibited across the United States and Europe. Their first monograph "Colors make us do vibrant deeds!" was released in 2024 and will be on view this fall at the Stedelijk Museum in Amsterdam as part of the year’s Best Dutch Book Designs. @heidihoward About Two Rooms Gallery: Two Rooms is an artist-run gallery and project space founded by Lizzie Zelter in January 2023. Two Rooms works with artists engaged in contemporary practices in the San Diego / Tijuana bi-national region dedicated to experimentation, critical thinking, and the creative process. About "Visions for Civic Gardens": Esteban Cabeza de Baca and Heidi Howard August 29 - October 4 Book a visit to see the Two Rooms exhibition here. Two Rooms is proud to present "Visions for Civic Gardens," a two-person exhibition featuring Esteban Cabeza de Baca (b. 1985, San Ysidro, CA) and Heidi Howard (b. 1986, Queens, NY). Expanding upon the traditions of landscape painting and portraiture, Cabeza de Baca and Howard challenge conventional representations of place and personhood. Working both in their shared studio and directly within the natural environments they depict, the artists center collaborative and ecological approaches to artmaking. They have been creating alongside one another for over a decade after meeting in 2012 at Columbia University’s MFA program. Cabeza de Baca’s practice intertwines temporalities, histories, and cultural narratives. Incorporating plein-air painting with material experimentation, his paintings and sculptures reveal multiple dimensions of landscapes that are both observed and imagined. Howard is primarily a live portrait painter, channeling her sitters’ spirits into bright colors and wild patterns. She connects with her sitters through shared memories, conversations, and ideas. Howard then lets these conjured perceptions and associations guide her paintings. In "Visions for Civic Gardens," Cabeza de Baca and Howard share paintings and sculptures that reimagine San Diego’s past and future landscapes. Their work envisions a borderless city where humans and plants coexist and flourish. Drawing on both art historical references and contemporary political concerns, the artists explore the garden as a space of shared resources and civic possibility. Their paintings present speculative infrastructures that include outdoor activations, public restrooms, communal living spaces, and plant houses. Many works are influenced by Niki de Saint Phalle’s sculpture parks and her ethos as a feminist, activist, and collaborator with her partner, Jean Tinguely. Museum of Contemporary Art San Diego on Facebook / Instagram
  • One of the reasons for the expected shortfall is the chronic underfunding of special education, Superintendent Fabi Bagula said.
  • A few moments of controversy have touched an otherwise sleepy, wide open race to be California’s next governor.
  • A Logan Heights church is suing to remain a safe space for immigrant worshippers. And there is a growing campaign to fix a dangerous intersection in University Heights. We then turn to the South Bay where residents brace for sewage problems to worsen. And, in North County, tenants of an affordable RV park fight evictions leaving a nonprofit in the cold. Finally, hear from KPBS’ new Public Matters social media reporter Jake Gotta about getting good journalism in front of new audiences.
  • Ever since the Legislature narrowly passed a bill last month that will pave the way for more apartment buildings around major public transit stops in the state’s biggest metro areas, the California political universe has been impatiently awaiting Gov. Gavin Newsom’s signature or veto in a heated statewide game of “will he, won’t he.” Today, he did.
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