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  • Walter Gropius opened the doors of the legendary German Art School, The Bauhaus in 1919 with the invitation that “any person of good character, regardless of age or sex” would be admitted. In the decade that followed, Gropius and other Master Teachers were skeptical of including women across the arts, thus allowing them access only to certain classes deemed within their natures. Little did these men realize that these women had no intention of staying in the basement working on arts & crafts. Their artistic responses will not only enthrall you but shed light on the talents that we see manifested today in the art world. Join us as we look back on the forward-looking women artists of The Bauhaus.

    Christine Maasdam holds a Master in Humanities and a B.A. in Cultural Geography. Her art studies include The Courtauld Institute of Art in London, The Smithsonian Early Enrichment Center in D.C. and Post Graduate studies in Antiquities Trafficking and Art Crime at the University of Glasgow. She is a graduate of the Art Crime Investigation Seminar led by Robert Wittman, founder of the FBI's National Art Crime Team. Christine is a member of the International Foundation for Cultural Property Protection and holds a certificate from Trident Manor on the Protection of Cultural Venues. Christine received Sotheby’s certification on Determining Value: An Appraiser’s Perspective. She has spent over a decade as a LACMA docent and is an active volunteer at the City of David archaeological dig in Israel.
  • Studio Channel Islands Art Center (SCIART) will present Indie Songwriter Circle Concert in the Gallery on Saturday, February 10 at 7:30 p.m. Discover the vibrant sounds of Southern California’s emerging talents at the Indie Songwriters Circle—an intimate gathering featuring four young and promising artist/songwriters. Immerse yourself in an evening of creativity, as these rising stars share their original compositions and engage in insightful discussions about their work and the art and craft of songwriting. Join us for a unique and inspiring musical experience, where passion and talent converge in a circle of artistic expression. This concert will be held in the main gallery at 2222 Ventura Blvd., Camarillo, CA 93010. Tickets are free for SCIART Members and students, $15 General Admission and can be purchased at https://events.humanitix.com/concert-in-the-gallery-indie-songwriter-circle/.
  • UCSB Library is pleased to present Kim Yasuda (Art) in the Pacific Views: Library Speaker Series for Winter 2024.Through her own place-based, public research and teaching, and drawing on the UCSB Reads 2024 book, Your Brain on Art: How the Arts Transform Us by Susan Magsamen and Ivy Ross, Yasuda makes a compelling case for the untapped potential of the arts to enhance innovative campus research and interdivisional exchange among scholars and artists.

    Kim Yasuda is an Artist and Professor of Public Practice in the Department of Art at UC Santa Barbara. Yasuda’s creative work and public research investigate the role of art practice, and educational institutions in community development and public life. Her recent projects combine her teaching and research to shape pedagogical experiments at the intersection of disciplinary knowledge production and creative practice. Yasuda has worked with campus faculty, students and staff across Arts and Humanities, Social Sciences, and STEM to build coalition and cross-sector collaborations that mitigate social and environmental challenges through models of academic stewardship, public participation and mutual aid.
  • “The reach this company has had for decades in exposing so many to ballet is a testament to the necessity of diversity, inclusion, love, passion and humor in the arts.” – Misty Copeland, American Ballet Theater Principal Dancer

    Inspired by the Stonewall Riots of 1969, Les Ballets Trockadero de Monte Carlo were fueled by the spirit of defiance and creative exuberance that the gay rights movement unleashed. This documentary film follows the troupe on tour in an epicenter of continued struggles for LGBTQ rights, interweaving original interviews and contemporary and archival performance footage to tell the company’s remarkable history.
  • 16th Annual Santa Barbara Community Seed Swap

    Sunday, January 28, 2024
    11-4pm, Free - Rain or Shine!

    A celebration to bring seeds & people together

    LOCATION

    Santa Barbara Community Arts Workshop (SBCAW)
    631 Garden Street, Santa Barbara, CA 93101

    Hosted by Santa Barbara Permaculture Network
    www.sbpermaculture.org

    Join us for the 16th Annual Santa Barbara Community Seed Swap! The event takes place at the Santa Barbara Community Arts Center (SBCAW) in downtown Santa Barbara, with both indoor and outdoor space, rain or shine.

    Hundreds attend this free event every year sharing seeds and knowledge with other backyard gardeners, plant lovers, beekeepers, farmers and more. Come be a part of this seed saving movement, making sure locally adapted seeds & plants are passed on to future generations. Free seeds offered to help gardeners get started. Local groups will have seed & plant related exhibits. Live music, and kids activities throughout the day.

    Once again we will honor a Local Food Hero, this year the award goes to Leslie Person Ryan of Sweet Wheel Summerland Farm. Join us for an award ceremony at 1:30 pm.

    Bring seeds, plants, cuttings, and garden knowledge to swap.
    Don't have these? Then come get seeds. Seeds to sow, seeds to grow, seeds to harvest. Seeds to save and share next year.
    Activities for all ages.
    Music that will have your toes tapping.
    Plant and seed-related exhibits from local groups
    Special speakers throughout the day.
    Free Seed Painting
    A gathering of garden friends old and new.
    Seed saving is a fun and easy way to connect to the circle of life.


    A Community Event Hosted by Santa Barbara Permaculture Network. Co-Sponsored by Island Seed & Feed, Blue Sky Biochar, Explore Ecology, & Baker Creek Heirloom Seeds.

    More Info: Margie@sbpermaculture.org, (805) 962-2571

  • Please join us for a performance by renowned flutist and composer Gary Schocker in celebration of the Library’s acquisition of The Gary Schocker Archives. Schocker will perform a selection of original compositions accompanied by pianist Fumi Kuwajima and featuring special guest Gary Woodward. Don’t miss this opportunity to experience an exceptional afternoon of music!

    This event is free and open to the public. To attend, RSVP by January 24.
  • The SBCC Foundation’s 5th annual Spring Forward! Gala will be held Saturday, May 4, 2024 on the beautiful Great Meadow of SBCC’s West Campus overlooking the ocean, from 4:30 to 8:30 p.m. For more information, visit the Spring Forward! Gala website (https://www.sbccfoundation.org/spring-forward-gala/ ).

    Sponsorships are available!

    Over 300 guests joined us last year — sponsors, supporters, and friends of SBCC from near and far enjoyed a special evening celebrating our community’s college and raising funds for student success. Proceeds from the event support all of the SBCC Foundation's work, including the SBCC Promise, student achievement programs, scholarships, book grants, emergency funds, and more.
  • Flying in experts and archeologists from Denmark, Iceland, Norway, Sweden to present new Viking era discoveries using new technologies Feb 9/10.
  • The Poetry in Paper gallery exhibit will run from January 20 - April 7, 2024 at Elverhøj Museum of History and Art. Hours are Thursday through Monday from 11:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m.

    Karen Bit Vejle, an internationally acclaimed psaligrapher, is being honored with an exhibition at the Elverhøj Museum of History & Art. The debut of Poetry in Paper will be celebrated with an opening reception on Saturday, January 20, from 4:00 to 6:00 p.m. The public is invited and refreshments will be served, with no charge for admission.

    Translated literally, psaligraphy is the art of drawing with scissors and paper. Works are formed from a large, continuous piece of paper and cut with only a small pair of scissors. It is a slow art of painstaking patience that demands the utmost concentration and a steady hand.

    Vejle creates images of air and paper. Her magical cuttings are rooted in a tradition that has known a long journey through history, beginning in the first century, when paper was first invented by the Chinese. In fact, the Chinese started cutting in paper before they used it for writing. The art of psaligraphy has developed differently throughout the world, but is particularly rooted in Chinese and other Asian cultures, and also in Bit’s native country of Denmark.
    This exhibition takes the viewer into a rare artistic experience as Vejle tells magical stories with her scissors. There is a great degree of humor in her world of imagery; humor and the ability to identify joy in small things. Just as often, though, she confronts serious themes intended to cause involvement and reflection. Her works are captivating, evoking both astonishment and inspiration.

    Exhibition programming will include a paper cutting workshop with celebrated Danish artist, Torben Jarlstrøm Clausen at the Museum on March 3, at 11 a.m. To register visit, www.elverhoj.org. Space is limited.

    Poetry in Paper is a traveling exhibit sponsored by the National Foundation of Danish America and ScanDesign. Elverhøj Museum of History & Art is located at 1624 Elverhoy Way in Solvang. Hours are Thursday through Monday from 11:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m. There Is no charge for admission, but a $5 donation is suggested. For more Information, call (805) 686-1211 or visit www.elverhoj.org.
  • For his exhibition at SLOMA, San Luis Obispo-based artist Barry Goyette shows a series of portraits taken by a very specific mulberry tree as a site for portrait photography guided by the models, of varying stages of life. Attempting to reverse the traditional dynamics of power in portrait photographer, Goyette offers his camera in service to those he photographs, and they bring their own props, costumes, and stories – with the beloved mulberry tree as a key motif in all the images. Utilizing aging techniques in photography, Goyette seeks to activate slower ways of looking in the history of the medium.
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