Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
Available On Air Stations
Watch Live

Search results for

  • Theme Blue...the most popular color in America! It is the color we use for first place ribbons. So let’s bring on the blue. A Regional exhibition juried by Katie Dolgov Oceanside Museum of Art - Director of Exhibitions & Collections. Join us for the Opening Reception: Saturday, August 31st, 4 p.m. - 7 p.m. Light refreshments will be served. Free event to the public. Exhibit Dates: August 31st - September 27th. Visit: https://www.ashtonartgallery.com/ Ashton Gallery on Instagram and Facebook
  • The series concludes Friday, September 27, with San Diego Music Hall of Fame inductee Fred Benedetti, Sandé Lollis, and Lisa Sanders and Brown Sugar. Benedetti studied classical guitar with Segovia and practices jazz, folk, rock, and flamenco styling. He is featured on over 200 records and numerous film and television soundtracks/ads. Singer-songwriter Lisa Sanders has a distinct country/bluesy/Americana sound; her genres include folk, pop, gospel, rock, and jazz. Sanders has garnered an extensive list of accolades as a recipient of San Diego Music Awards’ Best Acoustic Artist (two times), the San Diego Readers’ poll for Best Acoustic Artist, third-place for new folk in the Telluride Bluegrass Festival, The National Women's Association Living Legacy award, the National Association of Professional Women’s Legacy Award, and San Diego Music Hall of Fame inductee. These achievements have given her the opportunity to open and work with musical legends, including the Truckee Brothers, Lucinda Williams, Bonnie Raitt, Al Green, BB King, and Babyface. Sanders and Brown Sugar are a dynamic soulful, heartful singing duo with a gift for crafting wonderful songs and masterful storytelling. They have been together touring and recording as a duo for two decades, with Sanders singing lead and playing guitar, and Karen “Brown Sugar” Hayes, who is a nurse by day and a beautiful singing duo partner lending her gift of sweet harmonies to song by night. Sandé Lollis is an award-winning San Diego–based singer-songwriter known for her ability to weave captivating stories through her music. Drawing inspiration from personal experiences, conversations overheard in cafés, favorite books, and random thoughts, she crafts original melodies paired with introspective lyrics that explore the complexities of love, heartbreak, and life's twists and turns. Her voice and honest lyrics have struck a chord with listeners, with many praising her ability to connect on a deep emotional level. Lollis’s performance is soulful and wholly uplifting and earned her well-deserved San Diego Music Awards nominations for Best Country or Americana Album in 2022 and Best Country or Americana Artist in 2023. Visit: https://www.ljathenaeum.org/events/acoustics-24-0927 Athenaeum Music and Arts Library on Instagram and Facebook
  • "Intersections: Opera and Musical Theater," promises to be a captivating exploration of the parallels between these two beloved art forms. Collaborating with our very own music professor Dr. Ching-Ming Cheng and professional theater actress and singer Caroline Nelms, both will lead the audience on a journey through the intersecting worlds of opera and musical theater. The concert will highlight pieces that share common characters or storylines, offering a fresh perspective on familiar narratives. Audiences can expect an evening of rich vocal performance, along with Caroline’s personal anecdotes, adding a touch of comedy and warmth to the experience. Sponsored by the Funes Fund Visit: https://www.eventbrite.com/e/intersections-opera-and-musical-theater-tickets-950469077597
  • The $1.8 million grant from the California Coastal Commission will help the city establish baseline data for its RE:BEACH project.
  • High-profile burglaries of pro athletes are seen as part of a wider pattern of criminals traveling from South America to target affluent homes in the U.S.
  • About the exhibit: Quint Gallery is thrilled to present Nancy Blum: Gathered this summer, her first solo exhibition with the gallery. An installation of 9x12 inch works from her ‘Black Drawings’ series will be situated throughout the front and back rooms of the 7722 Girard Avenue gallery interspersed with a selection of other recent ‘Star’ and ‘Flame’ drawings, all on black paper. Blum’s ongoing series of ‘Black Drawings’ radiate and transform within/beyond each 9x12 in sheet of paper, etched softly by colored pencil and graphite. She begins this daily practice with an image in mind and makes intuitive decisions underpinned by careful sensitivity to plant intelligence and movement, and the spatial geometry of nature. Taken as otherworldly species or mystic equations, these Untitled compositions evade definition. What results, however, is often a labyrinthine, curvilinear meditation on cycles of existence. By setting them in a black, non-illuminated space, the inherent potential of abstracting concrete form emerges, providing space for its subjects to glow, move outward, or curl inward, always in the process of leaving or becoming something new. “Everyone carries a room about inside them,” wrote Franz Kakfa in Blue Octavo Notebooks, one of his posthumously published journals. Under Blum’s guidance, the endless knot of her forms breathe an air of secrecy and can feel like a door to her own inner world. In drawings which repeat variations on the four elements of nature, they may be approached like a meditation or prayer. This sentiment is influenced by the Tibetan Buddhism tradition of thangka paintings, which illustrate the story of Buddha and have served a multitude of purposes, among them to aid in contemplation or give thanks. Blum has made hundreds of these drawings and each one is unique. If regarded as small parts of a larger whole, an interconnected ecosystem develops. Attuned to fire, earth, water, and air, drawing as a discipline gives form to Blum’s visioning of consciousness and what lies beyond those four elements, without which we couldn’t exist. Upon this foundation, a set of larger Flame works more directly reference the element of fire and how it has been historically illustrated and mythologized in South and East Asian art. Additionally, several new Star drawings are made from graphite and dark blue colored pencil, burnished and lightly embossed onto black paper. About the artist: Beyond the solitude of her drawing practice, Nancy Blum enjoys the often-collaborative process of developing large-scale public works using a variety of media. For New York City’s MTA Arts-in-Transit program she created a suite of large botanically themed mosaics at the historic 28th Street Station (2019). In the spring of 2024, this project was included in the book Contemporary Art Underground: MTA Arts & Design New York. Blum has completed numerous other public commissions throughout the United States, including enameled glass windows at the San Francisco General Hospital, San Francisco, CA; a series of billboards in the sculpture park of the North Carolina Museum of Art, Raleigh, NC; a resin flower wall at Sea-Tac International Airport, Seattle, WA; among many others. Blum received her MFA from Cranbrook Academy of Art and has since become a widely sought-after visiting artist, critic, and lecturer at universities nationwide. Her work has also been recognized through fellowships from the Pollock‐Krasner Foundation, Peter S. Reed Foundation, Mid‐Atlantic Arts Foundation, and New York’s Lower East Side Printshop. The first monograph of her work was published in 2017 and features essays, interviews and documentation of her drawing, sculpture, and public artworks. Nancy lives and works in Brooklyn, NY. Related links: Quint Gallery website | Instagram
  • After controversial sweeps in Kern County and a CalMatters investigation, the federal government will train agents on when they can stop and arrest people.
  • Schools had until March 2026 to spend remaining COVID relief money. The U.S. Department of Education cut those funds, amounting to about $200 million for California K-12 schools.
  • Trump ordered his attorney general to move against state climate programs that clash with his energy agenda. Legal experts say his claims about the laws being unconstitutional are an overreach.
  • Santa Claus is a familiar holiday legend, but Saturday in Vista, another legend will be celebrated: Krampus. It's a figure from European folklore who punishes naughty children at Christmas.
658 of 5,331