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  • Referred to as the "School of Paris" to set them apart from the French-born young artists of this period, this two-day course will look at the group of immigrant painters and sculptors who dominated the new art scene of Montparnasse in Paris for a couple of decades before World War II. The up-and-coming thriving artistic and literary neighborhood was centered around the varied and innovative artists Amedeo Modigliani, Marc Chagall, Chaim Soutine and Jules Pascin. Through struggles and tragedy, each artist eventually found success and respect.

    Katherine E. Zoraster is an Art Historian and a Professor of Art History at several local colleges specializing in Western art from the Renaissance to the 20th century. She graduated with a double major in English Literature and Art History from the University of California, Los Angeles. Following her undergraduate degree, she received a Master’s Degree with Distinction in Art History from the California State University at Northridge.
  • America’s first all-female mariachi
    Blazing a trail for women in a male-dominated musical genre, Mariachi Reyna de Los Angeles brings sensitivity, beauty, warmth, and vivacious spirit to the historic art of mariachi. Established in 1994, the group had a strong beginning thanks to the mentorship of Lola Bertran, La Reina de La Musica Ranchera. Mariachi Reyna de Los Angeles has since gone on to record three albums, share the stage with world-renowned musicians like Vicki Carr, Guadalupe Pineda and Lucha Villa, and perform for some of the world’s highest-profile celebrities including Tom Cruise, Oprah Winfrey, and Barack and Michelle Obama.

    THREE FREE PUBLIC PERFORMANCES
    Fri, Jan 19 | 7 PM | Isla Vista Elementary, 6875 El Colegio Rd, Goleta
    Sat, Jan 20 | 7 PM | Guadalupe City Hall, 918 Obispo St, Guadalupe
    Sun, Jan 21 | 6 PM | Marjorie Luke Theatre, The Marjorie Luke Theatre, 721 E Cota St, Santa Barbara

    For more information please visit:
    https://artsandlectures.ucsb.edu/learn/viva-el-arte-de-santa-barbara/
  • In this lecture, we will explore reporting during times of war. Dating back to Thucydides, correspondents have reported from the frontlines to keep people apprised of what was happening in war zones. In modern history, reporting on war has shaped public perceptions of conflict and influenced the government’s decision-making, while photojournalism has brought the reality of war to front pages and television screens. War correspondents risk their lives to bring the stories of war to the people and this work continues in coverage of today’s conflicts between Ukraine and Russia and Israel and Hamas. More recently, news organizations have become increasingly concerned about the impact such reporting has on its people, so this lecture will also touch on aspects of trauma-informed reporting.

    Kirstie Hettinga (Ph.D., The Pennsylvania State University) is an associate professor of communication at California Lutheran University. She teaches media writing, editing, and content creation and serves as the faculty adviser to Cal Lutheran’s award-winning student newspaper, The Echo. Her research addresses issues of accuracy and credibility in news media, as well as how students learn in student newsrooms. Her work has been published in Newspaper Research Journal, College Media Review, Journal of Media Ethics, and Journalism Practice.
  • America’s first all-female mariachi
    Blazing a trail for women in a male-dominated musical genre, Mariachi Reyna de Los Angeles brings sensitivity, beauty, warmth, and vivacious spirit to the historic art of mariachi. Established in 1994, the group had a strong beginning thanks to the mentorship of Lola Bertran, La Reina de La Musica Ranchera. Mariachi Reyna de Los Angeles has since gone on to record three albums, share the stage with world-renowned musicians like Vicki Carr, Guadalupe Pineda and Lucha Villa, and perform for some of the world’s highest-profile celebrities including Tom Cruise, Oprah Winfrey, and Barack and Michelle Obama.

    THREE FREE PUBLIC PERFORMANCES
    Fri, Jan 19 | 7 PM | Isla Vista Elementary, 6875 El Colegio Rd, Goleta
    Sat, Jan 20 | 7 PM | Guadalupe City Hall, 918 Obispo St, Guadalupe
    Sun, Jan 21 | 6 PM | Marjorie Luke Theatre, The Marjorie Luke Theatre, 721 E Cota St, Santa Barbara
  • Napoleon was right when he noted “China is a sleeping giant. Let her sleep for when she awakes, she will move the world.” She has indeed awakened though too many Americans linger clueless about how powerful she has become and how dangerous this can be. She is the world’s second-largest economy with nuclear arms. Churchill called Russia a “riddle wrapped in a mystery inside an enigma.” It is a superpower mired in the savage, botched invasion of neighboring Ukraine. It possesses more nuclear weapons than anyone else yet is obsessed with its own declining political and economic status. And America? It remains the foremost global power in history yet is riven by internal political discord and unsure of not only its power but what to do with it. China and Russia appear to be drawing closer to one another, what should be our response? Three nuclear powers: one rising, one falling, one wondering. They are like scorpions in a bottle, each with the capacity to kill the other, but itself die in the stinging. These talks explore the inter-relationships among the three, assess what is behind the rise and fall, and ask what do we have to fear and hope.

    Dr. Herbert Gooch is Professor Emeritus of Political Science at California Lutheran University. He formerly served as Director of the Masters in Public Policy and Administration program and Assistant Provost for Graduate Studies at Cal Lutheran. A graduate of U.C. Berkeley in History, he holds a M.B.A in Management and both masters and doctoral degrees in Political Science from U.C.L.A. He has written extensively and is a frequent commentator on political affairs locally and statewide. He has been at Cal Lutheran since 1987 and lives in Newbury Park with his wife. His interests include politics, film and travel.
  • Los Angeles experienced a population explosion during World War II. Airplane factories like Donald Douglas, Lockheed, and Northrop were producing 80% of the warplanes for the British and French before the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor. Once the U.S. entered the war, they were churning out planes 24/7. The need for workers led to new opportunities for Blacks, Hispanics, and women, but racism and sexism were still prevalent. In this presentation, we’ll look at how the fear of a Japanese invasion of L.A. led to nightly blackouts, air-raid drills, rationing, and the internment of thousands of Japanese that Americans feared were enemies. We’ll also look at the Hollywood movies that fostered patriotism, and the songs that cheered up soldiers and civilians alike. We’ll conclude with a view of how the war changed L.A. for the future — sprawling suburbs, crowded freeways, and the first smog alerts.

    Sharon Boorstin is a contributing writer for the Los Angeles Times, specializing in lifestyle, food and travel. In 2019 she won Visit California’s Eureka Award for Best Newspaper Travel Article. In the 1970s and ‘80s, Sharon was the Restaurant Critic of the (late) Los Angeles Herald-Examiner, and in the ‘90s she edited the annual Gayot Guidebooks for Los Angeles and other cities. She also wrote for magazines including Bon Appetit, Smithsonian, and Town & Country Travel. With her husband Paul, she wrote dozens of screenplays for feature films and television including Angel of Death (ABC) starring Jane Seymour. Her memoir/cookbook, “Let Us Eat Cake: Adventures in Food and Friendship” (Harper-Collins 2002), was a selection of the Pulpwood Queens Book Club. Raised in Seattle, Washington, Sharon moved to Los Angeles in 1966 after earning a California Lifetime Teaching credential at U.C. Berkeley. She taught high-school History, English, and Social Studies in L.A. for 11 years.
  • 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.
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