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  • New details from a Census survey shows just how much more diverse the American electorate is becoming, with political implications still to come.
  • As part of its monthly lecture series, the Santa Barbara Maritime Museum is pleased to present Disaster at Devil’s Jaw, a new film about the Naval disaster at Honda Point. The film screening will take place at SBMM on Thursday, September 21, 2023 at 6:00 p.m. Producer and Director Lee Abbott will speak about the film, which is 115 minutes, while also sharing photographs and stories, and answering questions. The cost is free for SBMM Navigators Circle members; $10 for all other members; and $20 for the general public. SBMM members will enjoy a pre-lecture reception from 5:15-5:45 p.m. Space is limited; reservations are required.
    Register at: https://bit.ly/Disaster-at-Devils-Jaw. Learn more about becoming a member here: https://sbmm.org/santa-barbara-maritime-museum-membership/.

    “Honda is the largest tragedy that very few people know about,” said SBMM Executive Director Greg Gorga. “But while many mistakes were made, once wrecked on the rocks, our sailors displayed amazing acts of courage and bravery. And we have a lot of local connections to this disaster.”

    Just up the California coast from Santa Barbara, north of Point Conception, there is a location known locally as Honda Point. To mariners, this area has been known as "the graveyard of the Pacific" and to 16th-century Spanish explorers it was known as "La quijada del diablo”.... the devil's jaw. It was here, 100 years ago this year, that the largest peacetime disaster of the U.S. Navy occurred on September 8, 1923.

    On a cold moonless night, in thick coastal fog, 14 new ships of Destroyer Squadron 11 were sailing at a record pace from San Francisco to San Diego under radio silence and in close formation. The ships turned hard east into the Santa Barbara Channel - or so they thought. Seven destroyers, and 23 sailors were lost to the jagged shore. Was it human hubris? Natural phenomenon? Foreboding omens? This film is their story.

    "I'd really like to thank Greg Gorga and SBMM for their incredible contributions to getting this film made and made right,” said Lee Abbott. “Greg's knowledge and introductions to key interviews was absolutely invaluable to the final quality of the film."

    This event is generously sponsored by Marie L. Morrisroe.
  • Santa Barbara Permaculture Network participates in
    2024 I Madonnari Chalk Art Festival
    Come & Be Inspired!

    Memorial Day Weekend: May 25 – 27
    Free, 10am-6pm

    Location: Old Mission Santa Barbara, 2201 Laguna St, SB, CA 93105


    Join Santa Barbara Permaculture Network for our sponsored art square at the 38th Annual I Madonnari Chalk Art Festival that takes place every Memorial Day weekend at the Old Mission Santa Barbara. Sponsored by the Children’s Creative Project, Santa Barbara Permaculture Network began participating in 2020 with Nature inspired art squares, with themes that included beaver & wetlands; the amazing world of fungi; coastal kelp forests; & the biologically alive soils beneath our feet.

    Our 2024 theme shares the work of ecological design pioneer John Todd and his “Living Machines” that work with nature using only sunlight, plants, & microorganisms to clean & restore waterways & oceans from toxic waste created by human activity. In 2023 John Todd was honored with the Santa Barbara Permaculture Network Eco Hero Award.

    The I Madonnari Festival is special as it gives the public an opportunity to watch the artists in action, sometimes with a chance to talk with them. For the second year, local artist Kristen Sell will be the Santa Barbara Permaculture Network featured artist.

    The festival also has music, food, and visitors from around the world attending, a chance meet new friends at the tables provided on the Mission lawn.

    Our art square is usually located below the Old Mission steps, on the right side as you face the Mission. Hope to see you there!







    Learn More:



    FACEBOOK EVENT PAGE

    https://www.facebook.com/events/816877973649398



    RESOURCES:

    2024 I Madonnari Chalk Art Festival

    https://ccp.sbceo.org/about-the-festival

    3rd Echo Hero Award John and Nancy Todd

    https://www.sbpermaculture.org/events.html#event65

    John and Nancy Todd

    Ecological Design - John Todd

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=V8IRbYerwxM

    Ocean Arts

    https://www.oceanarksint.org/

    Kristin Sell Chalk Mural Artist

    https://www.instagram.com/kriimadstensellsart

    Soil Web Magic Mural MOVIE 2023 I Madonnari Chalk Art Festival

    ttps://vimeo.com/836723101

    Santa Barbara Permaculture Network

    www.sbpermaculture.org ,https://www.facebook.com/sbpermaculture




  • Celebrated German soprano Sarah Maria Sun, considered among the foremost interpreters of contemporary music, makes her Camerata Pacifica debut in a semi-staged performance of Schoenberg’s groundbreaking masterwork Pierrot Lunaire, February 7-13, 2025, at four Southern California locations.

    The performances are Friday, February 7, 7:00 pm, at Santa Barbara’s Music Academy of the West; Sunday, February 9, 3:00 pm, at Thousand Oaks’ Janet and Ray Scherr Forum; Tuesday, February 11, 7:30 pm, at The Huntington’s Rothenberg Hall in San Marino; and February 13, 8:00 pm, at Zipper Hall in Downtown Los Angeles.

    Schoenberg set Pierrot Lunaire, commissioned in 1921 by actress/singer Albertina Zena, to 21 poems by the Belgian Symbolist poet Albert Giraud. With this piece, the self-taught composer who early in his career served as the musical director in a cabaret, contributed substantially, to the development of a new form of musical expression in which the sound of a word is transformed into an animalistic portrayal of sensual and spiritual movement, making it as important as the word’s meaning.

    The program also features Schoenberg’s earlier atonal work Little Piano Piece, Op. 19, No. 6, as well as musical gems familiar and less familiar by three other composers whose lives and work were inextricably linked with Schoenberg in the early 20th century: Gershwin, Weill, and Debussy. They include Debussy’s Clair de Lune, Gershwin’s Prelude No. 2 in C Sharp Minor, and four Weill songs, among them “It Never Was You” from the musical Knickerbocker Holiday, later made into a film starring Nelson Eddy.

    Lara Morciano’s virtuosic Embedded Tangles, composed in 2013 for flute and real-time electronics, opens the program with flutist extraordinaire Sébastian Jacot, who returns to Camerata Pacifica following his critically acclaimed West Coast recital debut with the international chamber collective last February.

    Principal Cello Ani Aznavoorian, Principal Clarinet Jose Franch-Ballester, and Principal Piano Irina Zahharenkova are also joined by Jolente de Maeyer, one of Belgium’s leading violinists, who makes her Camerata Pacifica debut along with soprano Sarah Maria Sun.

    For tickets ($75 at The Huntington, Music Academy of the West, and Zipper Hall; $91, including fees, at Janet and Ray Scherr Forum) and information, visit www.cameratapacifica.org.
  • Celebrated German soprano Sarah Maria Sun, considered among the foremost interpreters of contemporary music, makes her Camerata Pacifica debut in a semi-staged performance of Schoenberg’s groundbreaking masterwork Pierrot Lunaire, February 7-13, 2025, at four Southern California locations.

    The performances are Friday, February 7, 7:00 pm, at Santa Barbara’s Music Academy of the West; Sunday, February 9, 3:00 pm, at Thousand Oaks’ Janet and Ray Scherr Forum; Tuesday, February 11, 7:30 pm, at The Huntington’s Rothenberg Hall in San Marino; and February 13, 8:00 pm, at Zipper Hall in Downtown Los Angeles.

    Schoenberg set Pierrot Lunaire, commissioned in 1921 by actress/singer Albertina Zena, to 21 poems by the Belgian Symbolist poet Albert Giraud. With this piece, the self-taught composer who early in his career served as the musical director in a cabaret, contributed substantially, to the development of a new form of musical expression in which the sound of a word is transformed into an animalistic portrayal of sensual and spiritual movement, making it as important as the word’s meaning.

    The program also features Schoenberg’s earlier atonal work Little Piano Piece, Op. 19, No. 6, as well as musical gems familiar and less familiar by three other composers whose lives and work were inextricably linked with Schoenberg in the early 20th century: Gershwin, Weill, and Debussy. They include Debussy’s Clair de Lune, Gershwin’s Prelude No. 2 in C Sharp Minor, and four Weill songs, among them “It Never Was You” from the musical Knickerbocker Holiday, later made into a film starring Nelson Eddy.

    Lara Morciano’s virtuosic Embedded Tangles, composed in 2013 for flute and real-time electronics, opens the program with flutist extraordinaire Sébastian Jacot, who returns to Camerata Pacifica following his critically acclaimed West Coast recital debut with the international chamber collective last February.

    Principal Cello Ani Aznavoorian, Principal Clarinet Jose Franch-Ballester, and Principal Piano Irina Zahharenkova are also joined by Jolente de Maeyer, one of Belgium’s leading violinists, who makes her Camerata Pacifica debut along with soprano Sarah Maria Sun.

    For tickets ($75 at The Huntington, Music Academy of the West, and Zipper Hall; $91, including fees, at Janet and Ray Scherr Forum) and information, visit www.cameratapacifica.org.
  • As NPR's senior national correspondent, Linda Wertheimer travels the country and the globe for NPR News, bringing her unique insights and wealth of experience to bear on the day's top news stories.
  • Lara Downes is among the foremost American pianists of her generation, a trailblazer both on and off the stage, whose musical roadmap seeks inspiration from the legacies of history, family and collective memory. As a chart-topping recording artist, a powerfully charismatic performer, a curator and tastemaker, Downes is recognized as a cultural visionary on the national arts scene.
  • This is the first time Navarro has reached the quarterfinals at one of the tennis majors, while Gauff's loss was the latest in a string of exits by top-seeded women at the tournament.
  • For 15 weeks this summer, Shaboozey's "A Bar Song (Tipsy)" had the No. 1 song in the country, but a new song breaks its streak this week. Plus, pop fans mourn Liam Payne.
  • Join us for the 7th Annual BFF Binge Fringe Festival of FREE Theatre, Oct 15 - Nov 6, offering over two dozen plays and family-oriented events thanks to generous grants from the City of Santa Monica and the Santa Monica Arts Commission and Playhouse PALS. What’s on today?

    Finding My Light, starring Barbara Brownell. Barbara and her array of characters reveal how her love of light carried her through a difficult childhood, to Broadway and Hollywood stages and beyond, and helped illuminate the truth of her own existence that lay hidden in the shadows for 65 years. “It’s not the cards you are dealt, but how you play them that makes all the difference.” Written and performed by Barbara Brownell. Directed and developed by Jessica Lynn Johnson. Join Barbara for an insightful and intriguing post-show Q & A.

    Prefer the safety of your living room? Email us at theatre@SantMonicaPlayhouse.com to get the live-streaming link.
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