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Your Culturally Savvy, Socially Conscious Guide to the Best,
Most Exciting & Unique Cultural Events
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WEEKLY
Your Culturally Savvy, Socially Conscious Guide to the Best, Most Exciting & Unique Cultural Events.
  
August 25, 2020

Opera Hack Showcase

San Diego Opera presents the winners of last year's Opera Hack which brought together professionals from theater companies, tech companies, and prominent university engineering and theater programs for a two-day hackathon to discover new ways for technology to be used in theater. Participants partnered with local universities and tech companies to come up with creative solutions to scenarios presented by San Diego Opera.

WED, Aug. 26, 2020
11:00 a.m.

Critical Movements

All new premiere works choreographed by the brilliant artists of The Rosin Box Project and guest choreographer, Netherlands Dance Theater company member, Donnie Duncan Jr., who is virtually creating a new work all the way from The Hague, Netherlands. Filmed and streamed LIVE from the Tenth Avenue Arts Center. Following the Friday evening virtual performance, there will be a talk-back with the dancers and choreographers about their new works.

Aug. 27 - 30. 2020
7:45 p.m.

10th Annual Day of the Ancestors: Festival of Masks

Direct from Leimert Park, Los Angeles’ African American cultural hub; this festival is incredible celebration that honors ancestors and uplifts an amazing international contingent of creators from across the African diaspora. Don't miss this unapologetic display of Blackness that spotlights the creativity of artists from Leimert Park and around the world in a virtual expression of hope, solidarity and insight.

SUN, Aug. 30, 2020
2:00 p.m. PDT

Marketing & Branding for Creatives

If you are a creative industry professional in need of tools and tips to help advance in your arts business or nonprofit organization during the pandemic, then this workshop is for you. Conceived in partnership with Tiny Opera House and led by its founder & CEO T. Hampton Dohrman, a social entrepreneur and nonprofit director with ten years of experience building startup community, this workshop is designed to support creatives in need of marketing & branding support or guidance.

MON, Sept. 1, 2020
12:00 p.m.

WORLD ART NEWS
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There Are Only 37 Possible Stories, According to This 1919 Manual for Screenwriters

- open culture

- artnet news

 

Working in Isolation: Irene Abraham


By Cathy Breslaw
August 23, 2020

Most artists work in relative isolation.  Our collective art practices and the creative process demands it. It goes against the human urge to congregate and socialize. Still, we persevere as the ‘call to create’ nudges us.  We then deliberately make space – intellectually, emotionally and physically for the act of creation. We move forward quietly, with intention and faith in the process. Never have artists been more aware of isolation than time now spent alone in this Corona Virus pandemic environment. It is not our choice, but as artists we are familiar and in some ways ahead of the game in our familiarity and relative comfort with loneliness of self -containment. This “Working In Isolation” series aims to highlight how artists are adapting and how their work has evolved as a result of the pandemic. Read more articles in this series HERE.
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San Diego artist Irene Abraham creates abstract paintings and drawings. Here, she talks about how isolation has motivated her to revisit her completed works and to “mend and revise” them as well as a push toward experimentation.  She also discusses the importance of social connection to artist friends and ties to the art community as a whole.

1) How has your work shifted during the pandemic? Has it been a change in the process of your creating art? The mediums you use? The themes or concepts you are thinking about?

I work in my home studio, so being sequestered at home has not shifted where I do my work.  While I am continuing with my main practice of painting and drawing, I have also been taking time to look through old sketch-books and re-organize my work space. 

I have also been taking old paintings and “mending” and revising them, or even totally covering them up and starting over.  It is a glorious feeling when I get to the point where I think I have finally resolved a painting.

Since I have fewer outside events now, I have also been able to expand my art-making and do more experimentation with new techniques.  I have been doing a lot of sketching while on Zoom meetings and also trying out some sculpture projects using a 3-D printer.

Certainly the political situation in combination with the pandemic has had at least a subliminal affect on the art I am producing.   Maybe my unconscious use of darker hues in my painting “Intermission” reflects these concerns. 

.. (...Continued)

UPCOMING EVENTS:
Financial support is provided by the City of San Diego
BE AN ARTS ADVOCATE! LEARN. GROW. CONNECT

       

     

  

 
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