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  • The COVID-19 lockdown "felt like solitary confinement," a San Diego resident tells NPR. Even after many pandemic rules lifted, American society remains deeply fractured.
  • Come celebrate the journeys—and unstoppable talent—of AMERICA'S GOT TALENT Golden Buzzer Winners, Voices of Our City Choir. Your ticket purchase helps San Diegans rebuild their lives out of homelessness. Join us for "Music Brings Us Home," our Soulful Soirée and Benefit Concert on October 26. This year our fundraiser will be held at EVE, a breathtaking new bayfront event space in the heart of downtown San Diego. Mingle and meet the artists while enjoying live jazz, heavy hors d'oeuvres and cocktails. Concert features award-winning musicians, original compositions, and Voices’ internationally acclaimed performance ensemble. Voices of Our City uses the transformative power of music and the arts to uplift and empower San Diego's unhoused community. Don’t miss out on this unique experience celebrating an organization San Diego Magazine calls “an inspirational nonprofit.” Join us for the whole evening, or just the concert. Together we can change lives through music! Voices of Our City Choir on Facebook / Instagram / TikTok
  • From the organizers: Oolong Gallery presents: Amy Pachowicz Gilded Age February 7 – March 10, 2025 Opening Reception: February 7, 6–8 p.m. Gallery Hours: Wed – Sat 11 a.m. – 5 p.m. Appointments advised: info@oolongallery.com | +1 858 229 2788 Oolong Gallery is pleased to present Gilded Age, a solo exhibition by San Diego artist Amy Pachowicz. Through a series of evocative botanical paintings and large and small-scale collages, Pachowicz explores themes of nostalgia, impermanence, desire, death and sensuality, as well as the dissonance between personal memory and the larger world’s turbulence. Pachowicz’s delicate botanical renderings depict fragments of life—branches, feathers, and leaves—suspended in rich fields of color, relics of the natural world that once pulsed with vitality but now exist as remnants of what was. The artist grapples with the tension between artistic creation and the realities of global suffering, reflecting on what it means to live and create amid conflict and loss. “I hang bundles of cut plants in my studio: flowers, sage, my neighbors weeds that grew four feet high, even a found feather. I dry them, sketch them and draw them in a large format. I draw them alone against a background of color. These are large scale oil stick drawings of relics suspended in space; remnants of the life that once flowed through them.” Her collages, constructed from carefully sourced print media spanning the 1960s through the 1980s, are deeply personal yet universally resonant. Drawing from childhood encyclopedias, vintage magazines, and family ephemera—including materials from her father’s career as a traveling encyclopedia salesman—Pachowicz weaves together a visual narrative of a world once filled with analog wonder, before the digital age redefined the way we consume imagery and knowledge. The muted tones and textures of these compositions stand in stark contrast to the oversaturated, pixelated media landscape of today. “I compile collages of print media from my childhood and nostalgic images I’ve collected. 1980’s Penthouse, our family encyclopedia set (my father was a traveling encyclopedia salesman back in the 70’s), teen beat magazines and Charlie’s Angels posters, my grandmother’s Betty Crocker cookbook; the things of a girl growing up in a previous era of California, all make it into the collages. I remember a time when printed media had a feeling of value. I grew up reading books and playing in canyons, feeling grass and sun and skinned knees on concrete. The digital age and computerized images are different." "Color pictures from the 1967 encyclopedia Britannica are rich and soft; nuanced teals, magentas, mint greens and lilacs entertained me. Color photos today are full of primary reds, blues and yellows. I glance and look away. It must have something to do with a change in printing and inks. The encyclopedia I looked at as a child also had black and white images of far off places. A distant island, an uninhabited beach, an arctic glacier photographed in a way where it looked like an explorer was approaching for the first time; discovering a new land. Today the world feels overexposed from digital advertising.” Amy Pachowicz (born 1968) was raised in San Diego and is working with themes of nostalgia and nature. She studied archaeology and graduated from UCSD in 1996 with a minor in studio painting following a year at Barnard College, Columbia University, NY. Pachowicz’s practice is informed by an early academic foundation in archaeology, a discipline that continues to shape her exploration of artifacts—whether organic or printed—as vessels of memory and meaning. Her work has been exhibited at Oolong Gallery in Encinitas, juried exhibitions at the Athenaeum in La Jolla, and numerous group shows across San Diego since the late 1990s, including ICE Gallery in 2002.
  • David Lynch was a damn fine filmmaker, and the world has become significantly less weird as we lose a unique and wildly audacious cinematic voice.
  • Vision 2074 celebrates the 50th anniversary of the “Temporary Paradise?” (Donald Appleyard and Kevin Lynch,1974), one of the few forward-projecting planning documents for our multinational region, by calling upon designers to boldly envision what our region can become in the next 50 years and beyond. Inspired by the San Diego Tijuana World Design Capital 2024 (WDC2024) the exhibition presents designs that address social, structural and climatic challenges that will define our region into the distant future. Visit: https://psfa.sdsu.edu/calendar#event-details/93ba510a-4cb5-4d79-8fc1-5cb7c124b0e3/instances/2024-10-15T19:00 SDSU School of Art and Design on Instagram and Facebook
  • Scheduled from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. on March 7, 8, 14, 15 and 16 at Southwestern College's Library, the career fairs are scheduled to help Gaylord and the San Diego Workforce Partnership fill more than 800 positions.
  • In Pittsburgh, entire houses have been converted into individual art installations filled with unusual objects. A new house is now open.
  • Singer/songwriter Lucy Dacus's new album Forever Is a Feeling features music written about "falling in love, falling out of love." She adds, "You have to destroy things in order to create things. And I did destroy a really beautiful life."
  • The incarcerated former Silicon Valley star is advising her partner on a new health tech startup. Holmes was convicted of defrauding investors in her blood-testing company Theranos.
  • "Picturing Health" curated by Elizabeth Rooklidge features works by Philip Brun Del Re, Maria Mathioudakis, Bhavna Mehta, Tatiana Ortiz-Rubio, Elizabeth Rooklidge, and Akiko Surai Exhibition runs: Saturday, Nov. 9 - Saturday, Dec. 14, 2024 Gallery hours (during exhibitions): 11 a.m. - 4 p.m. About the exhibition: From the KPBS Fall Arts Guide: Curated by Elizabeth Rooklidge, a curator, professor, artist and scholar on disability in art, this exhibition at Best Practice (inside Bread and Salt) includes work by local artists Philip Brun Del Re, Maria Mathioudakis, Bhavna Mehta, Tatiana Ortiz-Rubio, Rooklidge, Akiko Surai and Christina Valenzuela. Many of these artists comprise the advisory committee for the Museum of Contemporary Art San Diego's "For Dear Life" exhibition (a major historical survey of disability in art) — and it's significant that these living, local artists also have a space and exhibition to showcase their own work on disability, illness and impairment. Each artist brings a unique approach and style, and many will be familiar to San Diego visual art audiences. Brun Del Re's text-based work is accessible, disruptive and delightful; Mathioudakis' sculpture is profound and simultaneously beautiful and disturbing; Mehta's papercut and embroidery works are stunning both in scale and detail; Ortiz-Rubio's murals and large-scale works often play with concepts of physics, memory and time; Rooklidge's recent series, "Sick Women," collects and collages stills of women in their sick beds in modern cinema; and Surai's work draws on a variety of mediums like embroidery, collage, photography, drawing, found objects and poetry to insightfully comment on highly researched concepts like memory, neurology and more. —Julia Dixon Evans, KPBS Related links: Best Practice website | Instagram
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