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  • Join co-authors Angel and Tracey Jimenez as they debut their first book in the Safety Dog Diego Series at Barnes & Noble Ventura! The featured book, Safety Dog Diego Gets Adopted, tells the heartwarming story of how Diego, an adventurous French Bulldog puppy, finds his forever home and begins his journey as a safety dog.

    This exciting family-friendly event will feature a live book reading, a fun sing-along with Diego's catchy song, and an interactive dance. Children will also learn Safety Dog Diego's safety oath and his empowering slogan, "Stay Safe and Stay Well!" Kids in attendance will receive special stickers, coloring pages and earn their Safety Officer Certificate.

    Don’t miss this wonderful opportunity to introduce your family to Safety Dog Diego’s helpful tips and advice for staying safe in everyday life!
  • Camerata Pacifica, the international chamber music collective renowned for its musical versatility and bold programming, traverses a range of groundbreaking music from the 20th century and the dawn of the era, including three works for solo instrument, October 25-30, 2024, at four Southern California venues.

    The performances are Friday, October 25, 7:00 pm, at Santa Barbara’s Music Academy of the West; Sunday, October 27, 3:00 pm, at Thousand Oaks’ Janet and Ray Scherr Forum; Tuesday, October 29, 7:30 pm, at The Huntington’s Rothenberg Hall in San Marino; and Thursday, October 30, 8:00 pm, at Zipper Hall in Downtown Los Angeles.

    The program opens with Sooyun Kim, “a rare virtuoso of the flute” (Libération) performing Kazuo Fukushima’s mysterious Mei for Solo Flute written in 1962 by the self-taught Japanese composer.

    Shifting back in time to 1896, Rachmaninoff’s Moments musicaux, Op. 16, a set of deeply expressive solo piano pieces, showcases celebrated Principal Piano Irina Zahharenkova, heralded for her “impressive…musical colour” (Bachtrack).

    The final solo work, Stravinsky’s 1918 jazz- and ragtime-inspired tour-de-force Three Pieces for Solo Clarinet, is interpreted by Camerata Pacifica Principal Clarinet Jose Franch-Ballester, a captivating performer of “poetic eloquence” (The New York Sun).

    Schoenberg’s 1906 landmark Chamber Symphony No. 1, Op. 9, arranged by his student Anton Webern between 1922 and 1923, caps the program with the three solo artists joined by Alena Hove, a rising violinist applauded for her “rich, smooth tone” (CityArts), and Principal Cellist Ani Aznavoorian, whose “scorchingly committed performances…wring every last drop of emotion out of the music” (The Strad).

    For tickets ($75 at The Huntington, Music Academy of the West, and Zipper Hall; $91 at Janet and Ray Scherr Forum) and information, visit www.cameratapacifica.org.
  • Gems by the Sea - San Luis Obispo Gem and Mineral Club's Annual Gem and Mineral Show

    September 27th and 28th, 2025, 10:00 am to 5:00 pm

    San Luis Obispo Veterans Memorial Building,
    801 Grand Avenue, San Luis Obispo, CA, 93401

    $5 Admission (Children 12 and under free).

    Free parking

    The show will feature dealers selling a fantastic array of gems, minerals, fossils, carvings, jewelry, beads, jade, crystals, meteorites, lapidary and metaphysical items. There will demonstrations of jewelry-making and lapidary crafts.

    Supporting local education with grants for SLO county teachers
    • Children's activities
    • Gems
    • Minerals
    • Rocks
    • Jewelry
    • Unique handcrafted gifts by local artisans
    • Demonstrations of lapidary crafts.

    slogem.org
  • The Show includes: Exhibits featuring minerals, fossils, rocks and lapidary; Vendors of jewelry, minerals, gems and fossils; a Silent Auction with rocks, fossils and other related items; Youth Room with games for prizes and learning opportunities; a Plant sale; Demonstrators of our hobby; and an Hourly raffle for a prize.
    See our Website: www.CGAMC.org

    Sat 10am-5pm; Sun 10am-4pm
  • “Tharp is America’s crossover dance queen… She melds classical ballet with modern dance, avant-garde experiment with Broadway pizzazz, technical rigor with off-the-cuff attitude, uptown glamor with downtown grit.” The Guardian(U.K.)

    “What invigorates about Tharp is her restless and unceasing quest to reveal truth in human movement.” The Washington Post

    Twyla Tharp is an American dance legend renowned for crafting accessible, impeccable, startlingly original works that expand the boundaries of ballet and modern dance. Celebrating her 60th anniversary as a choreographer, this Diamond Jubilee program features Tharp’s Olivier-nominated triumph, Diabelli, set to Beethoven’s masterpiece of the same name. Rounding out the evening is Tharp’s first partnership with Philip Glass in nearly 40 years, a new collaboration inspired by the composer’s Aguas da Amazonia and performed to live music by Grammy-winning Third Coast Percussion. An Arts & Lectures co-commission.
  • Julia Morgan, the first woman to earn an architect's license in California, was a prolific designer of hundreds of buildings. Among the more than 700 buildings in California that she designed, she is best known for her collaboration with publisher William Randolph Hearst and her work on Hearst Castle in San Simeon, California. This two-part lecture will look at her life and career, beginning with Julia being the first woman admitted to the architecture program at l'École nationale supérieure des Beaux-Arts in Paris. This two-part lecture will also detail the conception and construction of this pioneering structure, while exploring the structures and the vast grounds. An expanded description can be found on the FAB website.

    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.

    The Fifty and Better (FAB) program was designed for people 50 years of age and older, seeking intellectual stimulation through university-level courses — without the pressure of grades — for the sake of learning and social engagement.
  • “The Lost Art of Instrumental Music” focuses on a time in popular music history when creativity in composing music without vocals not only flourished but was commercially viable. Today, you rarely hear memorable melodies that do not feature lyrics. Television shows don’t have theme songs and film scoring has hit a new low in memorable melodies. The apex of instrumental music was the 1940s, ‘50s and ‘60s, when all of these elements came together in a variety of different forms.

    Week 1: Musical Miniatures

    Week 2: Mood Music and Sonic Explosions

    Week 3: Television Theme Songs

    Week 4: Movie Theme Songs

    Visit the website for an extended description.

    Bio:

    Cary Ginell is a Grammy-nominated writer and author of 12 books on American music. After a 30-year career in radio, he has spent the last 20 years as a public speaker, talking about music in classrooms, at conferences, and on cruise ships. Cary brings a lifelong passion for the recording industry to his work and is one of the world’s foremost authorities on his specialty, western swing. Cary previously served as President of the Association for Recorded Sound Collections, an international organization of music scholars and world-renowned institutions.

    The Fifty and Better (FAB) program was designed for people 50 years of age and older, seeking intellectual stimulation through university-level courses — without the pressure of grades — for the sake of learning and social engagement.
  • What was life in the Soviet Union like? This class combines history lectures with an insider’s view of someone born and raised in the USSR. The Bolshevik Revolution, followed by several years of civil war and foreign intervention, changed not only the political structure of the country, but its economy, its social fabric and even the nature of the most personal relationships among its citizens. In this course, we will consider the Soviet planned economy, its repressive dictatorial political regime and its imperial nature. We will examine in what ways post-Soviet Russia continues with economic, political and social models that were established by the Soviet regime.

    Visit the website for an extended description.

    Bio:


    Asya Pereltsvaig received a degree in English and History from the Hebrew University of Jerusalem and a PhD in Linguistics from McGill University. She taught at Yale, Cornell, and Stanford universities, and has been teaching in lifelong education programs since 2010. Her expertise is in language, culture, and history, and the relationship between them. Asya has published five scholarly books with Cambridge University Press.

    The Fifty and Better (FAB) program was designed for people 50 years of age and older, seeking intellectual stimulation through university-level courses — without the pressure of grades — for the sake of learning and social engagement.
  • Ancient art serves as a portal to understanding the cultural, historical, and technological aspects of civilizations long past. This interdisciplinary course will explore the science and engineering aspects of ancient art from cave paintings to frescoes, mummy portraits, and sculptures in stone and bronze. This journey back in time will unravel the mysteries of how the ancients made the captivating art that we love today and the role that technology played in its creation. This course invites students to delve into the fascinating world of color creation, technique, tools, and materials used by ancient artists. We will explore various art forms including cave painting, frescoes, portraits, stone statuary, the lost-wax method of bronze casting, and ancient Greek pottery.

    It will answer the question, “How did they do that?”

    Visit the website for an extended description.

    Bio:

    Scott Jones is a retired naval officer and businessman with broad experience in national security, foreign relations, and politics. Scott is also a docent at the J. Paul Getty Museum (Getty Villa) where he leads tours in the Greek and Roman Galleries, special exhibitions, Roman architecture, and Roan gardens. He teaches for a few lifelong learning programs in the area.

    The Fifty and Better (FAB) program was designed for people 50 years of age and older, seeking intellectual stimulation through university-level courses — without the pressure of grades — for the sake of learning and social engagement.
  • The Folk Orchestra of Santa Barbara, a 30-piece orchestra of local musicians, celebrates Winter! Chinese plums blooming in the snow. Ancient Norwegian chants sung in the darkest night. Simon & Garfunkel bringing a smile. Haunting melodies from Schubert and Sibelius. The nyckelharpa, hurdy-gurdy, and Chinese flute join the violin, cello, accordion, harp, bagpipes, mandolins and more for a unique experience that can't be heard anywhere else.
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