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  • You’re never too old! Create your own fuzzy Monster! Saturday, February 22, from 2 p.m. - 6 p.m. Ages 12+ years or children 6-11 years if accompanied by an adult welcome! Create a professional arm-rod-and-mouth puppet of your very own from Rene Rubalcava, owner and puppeteer of LV Puppet Studio of Las Vegas who learned the art of puppet making from a Jim Henson Muppeteer. There’s no better time to create your own one-of-a-kind fuzzy monster! In this workshop, we guide you from start to finish as you select, cut, hot glue and assemble the pieces and personality of your own customized puppet. No sewing is required in this workshop. Students bring their puppets to life with their own unique interests and imaginations, and by choice and placement of different face details. Each one is unique! Find your puppet’s voice and learn some puppetry basics. All materials included. No experience necessary! • Military and sibling discounts • Scholarships available • Homeschool funds accepted • If this class is full, join the Interest List. • If you would like to be notified of future offerings, join the Interest List to be notified when new dates or spaces are available. Visit: Puppet Making Workshop San Diego Craft Collective on Instagram and Facebook
  • Discover the beauty of the natural world at By Land & By Sea, an Artist Open House on January 10, from 5:30 p.m. to 8 p.m. at the Brooks Theater Gallery. This stunning exhibit showcases landscapes and seascapes that have inspired, delighted, and impressed artists from all corners of the globe. Meet the creators and gain insight into how these breathtaking natural sights have shaped their artistry. Enjoy light refreshments, ambient music, watch a guest artist create a piece live, and mingle with artists, families, locals, and art lovers. All are welcome! Visit: Artist Open House: By Land & By Sea Oceanside Theater Company on Instagram and Facebook
  • Scientists have found a way to sample DNA out of the air on a large scale — making it possible to one day track the health and well being of all kinds of species around the world.
  • President Trump is hosting an exclusive dinner tonight for the largest investors in the $TRUMP meme coin, putting the murky world of cryptocurrencies on a collision course with White House ethics.
  • NPR took a walk through Minneapolis with its former police chief Medaria Arradondo. He says "the worst thing we can do" is dismiss the 2020 protests and outrage over police brutality as an anomaly.
  • "Finding Vivian Maier" Documentary (2013, NR, 1h 23m) Friday, Jan. 10 Real estate agent John Maloof shares how a simple trip to a local auction house, looking for historical photos for a neighborhood history book, led him to bid on a box of old negatives. What seemed like a routine find became a life-changing discovery when the powerful, mysterious images of photographer Vivian Maier ignited his passion for photography.
  • On Midday Edition, we're looking at a practice that empowers communities to trace their lineage.
  • WHAT GOES UP MUST COME DOWN: A Farewell to 530 South Coast Highway Awake Service: December 14th, 2024 | 5:00 PM - 7:00 PM Burial Site Programming: Begins January 2025 Gallery hours are 12-5 p.m. Monday through Saturday (Holiday hours may vary) From the organizers: OCEANSIDE, CA — Something about this cycle of gentrification feels permanent, like the tide has turned and will never recede. For generations, Oceanside was the city to come back to—a sanctuary where the rhythm of life was steady, the waves welcoming, and roots ran deep. But now, for many generational renters and working-class families, the city has become unrecognizable, slipping further away with each passing year. In collaboration with artist Marisa DeLuca, Hill Street Country Club invites the public to honor and mourn the Oceanside we once knew. Our exhibition and community gathering, What Goes Up, Must Come Down, reflects on the loss of affordable housing, familial spaces, and cultural authenticity in the face of aggressive gentrification. About the Artist: Marisa DeLuca is an Oceanside-based artist whose work delves into themes of home, displacement, and identity through mixed media, including painting, sculpture, and photography. A recent graduate of San Diego State University, Marisa’s art bridges the deeply personal with the universal, offering a lens into the transformative moments of her own life while reflecting on broader social changes. Her practice is rooted in memory and materiality, often using repurposed and site-specific found objects to tell stories of resilience and loss. Marisa’s recent works have focused on familial spaces and the erasure of community identity, exploring the psychological and socioeconomic impact of displacement on those most vulnerable to the sweeping changes of gentrification. Solo Exhibition by Marisa DeLuca: As part of the farewell programming, Hill Street Country Club is proud to present a solo exhibition of Marisa DeLuca’s work. Titled “What Goes Up Must Come Down”, this collection reflects on the impermanence of home and the emotional landscape of leaving a place behind. The exhibition, running from December 14, 2024, til Escrow Closes, will showcase Marisa’s poignant mixed-media installations and oil paintings that capture the tension between lost futures and the inevitability of change. An Oceanside Transformed: As Hill Street Country Club faces displacement from its beloved home at 530 South Coast Highway, many farewells are tied to California’s Ellis Act, which allows property owners to evict tenants in order to "withdraw" properties from the rental market. This policy has been increasingly exploited during the pandemic to issue no-fault evictions, often under the guise of minor renovations. Between 2020 and 2023, California saw a 40% rise in no-fault evictions, with cities like Oceanside disproportionately affected as landlords sought higher returns from an influx of wealthier residents. Policies originally designed to provide flexibility for landlords now serve as catalysts for widespread displacement, uprooting families, artists, and small businesses. Marisa and Hill Street share a profound connection to this transformation. The pier fire and subsequent renovations, a poignant metaphor for the city’s prioritization of tourism and affluence, parallel the displacement of its long-standing community pillars. Looking Ahead: During the Burial Site Programming beginning in January 2025, Hill Street Country Club will share its future plans and vision for supporting Oceanside’s creative community. As we transition to a new chapter in Barrio Logan, we remain committed to Oceanside’s artists, audiences, and the legacy of fostering cultural engagement. Hill Street will continue beloved programming such as the Oceanside Zine Fair, High Tea Music Festival, and Gentry Fries, ensuring these initiatives remain rooted in the city. We also aim to explore new opportunities, including land acquisition for a permanent community art center near the coast, offering studio spaces and a creative hub for future generations. Our commitment is steadfast: to amplify local voices, preserve authentic storytelling, and provide spaces for creativity and connection in Oceanside, even as the city evolves. A Funeral for the Oceanside We Knew: Join us on December 14th, from 5:00 PM to 7:00 PM, for an awake service celebrating what once was. This gathering will honor the memories we’ve created in this space: the laughter, the art, the collective dreams that gave life to our gallery and community. 14 Years of Labor, Love, and LegacyHill Street Country Club has been a beacon for Oceanside’s creative community for 14 years, providing an accessible and authentic space for artists and neighbors to connect, create, and thrive. As we commemorate our contributions to Oceanside’s cultural landscape, we invite you to reflect with us on the power of community art spaces and the cost of their loss in the face of gentrification. Hill Street Country Club thanks you for being part of this journey. Let us celebrate the Oceanside that shaped us, even as we prepare to move forward. Together, we honor the past and embrace the future, knowing that every ending seeds a new beginning.
  • Founded in 2001, Meta4 is one of Finland’s most celebrated string quartets. Their Polarkr(e)is Drifting North program explores works from the sound worlds of the Arctic Circle, from the Inuit themes of American composer Amy Beach’s String Quartet, to works of their fellow Finns Kaija Saarhiaho and Jean Sibelius, paired with Italo-Indian composer Krishna Nagaraja’s Stringar, a piece that combines old and new through Nordic folk dance tunes. In 2004, the ensemble won first prize and the special prize for the best interpretation of a Shostakovich work at the International Shostakovich String Quartets Competition in Moscow and, in 2007, first prize at the International Joseph Haydn Chamber Music Competition in Vienna. The Finnish Ministry of Culture awarded the ensemble the Finland Prize in recognition of its international cultural influence and Meta4 was chosen for the “BBC New Generation Artist Scheme” (2008, 2010). Program: Kaija Saariaho Fleurs de neige Amy Beach String Quartet in One Movement Krishna Nagarja Stringar Jean Sibelius String Quartet “Voces Intimae” Visit: Meta4 | 'Polarkr(e)is Driftin North'
  • Nubya Garcia isn’t an artist you can easily classify. Is it jazz? Sure, the London-born saxophonist, composer and bandleader grew up studying the genre under the noted pianist Nikki Yeoh at Camden Music. But it isn’t until you listen to albums like 2020’s Source and 2024’s Odyssey that you hear broader creativity shining through: It’s jazz, classical, dub, R&B and whatever else Garcia wants to convey. It all comes from a place of exploration and self-study, of wanting to do all the things across all disciplines while ignoring arbitrary boxes that don’t fit. Garcia’s sophomore album Odyssey, out in September 2024 via Concord Jazz, is a majestic feat on which she blends orchestral arrangements with R&B, jazz, broken beat and dub, resulting in a grand, nuanced record that feels airy and celestial without sacrificing the groove. It’s a deeply personal offering about her trek to falling back in love with musical composition over the past four years. Visit: Nubya Garcia Nubya Garcia on Instagram and Facebook
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