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  • Matsu is thrilled to host a once-in-a-lifetime collaboration dinner featuring chefs Nino Fjordside and Agnes Karrasch—visionaries from the 2-Michelin-starred Koks in the Faroe Islands, along with our very own Chef William. Experience an exclusive tasting menu inspired by Nordic traditions, masterfully reimagined with California’s unparalleled bounty. This is an extraordinary meeting of Michelin-starred excellence and Matsu’s artistic philosophy, curated to surprise and delight. ✨ Seats are limited. Don’t miss your chance to savor a story told in every bite. Visit: https://www.opentable.com/booking/experiences-availability?experienceId=393919&restref=1166083&rid=1166083&utm_campaign=shared&utm_medium=referral&utm_source=external Matsu on Instagram and Facebook
  • Gear up to cheer on the San Diego Mojo, San Diego’s major league volleyball team, for their home opener on Thursday, January 16, against the Orlando Valkyries! Kick off 2025 with tickets to the Mojo's first home game of the season in Viejas Arena, located at San Diego State University. Experience an electric and thrilling showdown and receive a free commemorative Mojo volleyball t-shirt and fridge magnet. With killer seats starting at $15 and five amazing ticket packages available, it's time to show off your team spirit at this spike-tacular event. Whether you are looking for some weekend fun or are a volleyball enthusiast, don't miss your chance to grab some exclusive swag and kick off the season in style! Buy Tickets Today! Visit: https://www.ticketmaster.com/san-diego-mojo-tickets/artist/3100304?_gl=1 San Diego Mojo Pro Volleyball on Instagram and Facebook
  • The San Diego Jewish Men's Choir will present An Evening of Uplifting Jewish Music at Tifereth Israel Synagogue in San Diego on April 9, 2025 from 7 p.m. - 8 p.m. The program will include selections in a variety of styles and genres and in multiple languages including Hebrew, English, Ladino and Yiddish. A special section celebrating Passover will be included. The concert is appropriate for audiences of all ages. Visit: https://www.jewishinsandiego.org/san-diego-jewish-community-calendar/an-evening-of-jewish-music-with-the-sd-jewish-mens-choir-1735629763/ San Diego Jewish Men's Choir on Instagram and Facebook
  • The award-winning and Billboard music charting San Diego Jewish Men's Choir will present and Afternoon of Uplifting Jewish Music at Temple Emanu-El in SanDiego. The concert will include a mix of styles and genres in the English, Hebrew, Ladino and Yiddish languages. This is a concert that everyone in the family can enjoy! Come celebrate this wonderful music with us! Visit: https://www.jewishinsandiego.org/san-diego-jewish-community-calendar/an-afternoon-of-jewish-music-with-the-san-diego-jewish-mens-choir-1735628913/ San Diego Jewish Men's Choir on Instagram and Facebook
  • Opening Reception | 32nd Annual Juried Exhibition Athenaeum Music & Arts Library 1008 Wall StreetLa Jolla, CA 92037 July 20–September 28, 2024 Opening Reception: Friday, July 19, 6:30–8:30 p.m. JOSEPH CLAYES III & CAROLYN YORSTON-WELLCOME ROTUNDA GALLERIES 32nd ANNUAL JURIED EXHIBITION One of the most prestigious juried shows in San Diego, selected artists will exhibit their work in our galleries, receive excellent exposure, and mingle with both artists and art lovers at an opening reception. Prize winners, including the recipient of the Leslie Von Kolb Memorial Award, will be announced at the opening reception. Our juror this year is Armando Pulido, Writer and Curatorial Assistant, Lucas Museum of Narrative Art. Pulido is a regular contributor to Frieze magazine. He has reviewed exhibitions in Los Angeles that help to expand the social art histories of contemporary art, such as the Made In L.A. biennial and Painting in the River of Angels: Judy Baca and The Great Wall. His research has focused on art from the U.S.-Mexico borderlands, Mexican Muralism, and contemporary U.S. Latinx art. He has contributed to exhibition projects at the Hood Museum of Art at Dartmouth College and the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston and was recently a fellow of the AllPaper Seminar at the Benton Museum of Art at Pomona College. Prior to the Lucas Museum, Armando held curatorial positions at the Whitney Museum of American Art. The exhibition can be viewed in the Joseph Clayes III and Carolyn Yorston-Wellcome Rotunda Galleries at the Athenaeum Music & Arts Library (1008 Wall Street, La Jolla, CA 92037) during open hours, Tuesday through Saturday, from 10 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. Visit: https://www.ljathenaeum.org/events/exhibition-2024-juried Athenaeum Music & Arts Library on Instagram and Facebook
  • The $1.8 million grant from the California Coastal Commission will help the city establish baseline data for its RE:BEACH project.
  • Our top picks for theater in San Diego this season: Agatha Christie, 'Midnight at the Never Get' and opera.
  • 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.
  • 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.
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