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  • The tech titan and President Trump say they will avoid any conflicts of interest, but it's difficult for the public to verify that.
  • Young people today spend nearly 1,000 fewer hours per year hanging out with friends in person than they did 20 years ago. Some solutions for the loneliness epidemic are coming from unlikely places.
  • Lamar already won the year in a landslide. On his bristly new album, GNX, the rapper aims to change the state of play for everyone else.
  • Yes, there's other stuff going on this weekend — including new theater, visual art, contemporary dance, jazz, chamber music and rock. Plus: that big pop culture convention.
  • From Latin Jazz to Opera, from Hip Hop to Japanese Drums, our annual favorite event returns to the heart of City Heights. Free art projects, games, and books for the kids, plus a wide array of local food and craft vendors. And this year we will feature an award winning author and illustrator Duncan Tonatiuh and make a BIG Bodhi Tree announcement from the stage. The 2024 line-up includes: Culture Shock San Diego, Naruwan Taiko, Mariachi Victoria, Nomsa Burkhardt Quartet (South African Zulu Music & Dance), The Karen Dancers of San Diego, Opera de Tijuana's Youth Lyric Ensemble and Irving Flores' Latin Jazz Quartet. Bring the whole family for a free event not to be missed! For more information visit: bodhitreeconcerts.org
  • Closing Reception and Curator Walk and Talk with C Fodoreanu, MD MFA C Fodoreanu will talk about the current exhibition "room in a room in a room" and the works contained in it. Hear the stories behind each art work and details about the artists invited for our inaugural exhibition. Also, learn first hand about the future programming of our gallery, including upcoming shows and events. Questions are welcome! Fine wine, fruit and cheese will be served! Thursday, July 11, 2024, 6-8 p.m., Walk and Talk at 6:30 p.m. Stay Connected on Instagram
  • Threats of deportation have caused anxiety among immigrants, but schools in the Salinas Valley are helping comfort children and easing parents’ fears.
  • From the gallery: Quint Gallery is excited to present Los Angeles-based Glen Wilson's Constellation Dub, the artist’s second solo exhibition with the gallery following a 2023 presentation at ONE. With roots stretching back to documentary and street photography, his body of work spans sculpture, assemblage, installation, and filmmaking, often layering original imagery with found and constructed materials that encourage the viewer to engage the work's physical and conceptual qualities. In this presentation, Wilson uses dub as an organizing principle to form a sonic and visual landscape that resonates within and beyond the walls of the gallery. Dub music emerged out of reggae, wherein a song is created initially, and from these constituent parts emerges an ambient abstract. Wilson expands upon his lens-based practice with Elements, his interactive wall sculptures constructed from drum cymbals and photographs, and a continuation of his Gatekeeping series which presents images woven through grids of galvanized and interconnected steel wire of chain-link gates and salvaged fencing. In the rear gallery, the artist has constructed two new sculptural and light-based works honoring the lives of revolutionary thinkers and activists of the 1960s and 70s, Malcolm X and Gil Scott-Heron. Taken together, these works evolve into instruments from which the artist transmits temporal frequencies and invites the viewer to be an active participant by engaging the cymbal works and with the gates, negotiating the spaces in between perception and interpretation. The cymbals and lectern both invoke abstracted imagery of the ocean, which for the artist represents not only home, but also an infrasonic frequency created by the collision of opposing waves traveling on its surface. Infrasound has a frequency below the limit of human audibility, but at higher levels may be felt as vibrations in various parts of the body. Like the man made process of naming constellations, Wilson makes meditative connections on landscape, history, and humanity that forms an acoustic ghost, or dub, which echoes throughout his practice. This exhibition immediately follows and resonates with themes of Wilson’s solo exhibition Meridian Dub at Various Small Fires in Seoul, South Korea. He has been exhibited at The Getty Center, The Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles, the California African-American Museum, ICA:LA, the Torrance Art Museum, Frieze Art: London and in public parks in New York and Los Angeles. His work is in the collection of the Los Angeles County Museum of Art, and other private collections. He completed an MFA at the University of California, San Diego, and received his BA from Yale University. Related links: Quint Gallery: website | Instagram
  • The artifacts were stolen by British soldiers in the late 19th century and eventually made their way to a Dutch collection.
  • He says state law gives him the right to turn his garage into an apartment. His HOA says it doesn’t. Who’s right?
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