Tag Archive for 'santa barbara'

Local Triathlete Wins Prestigious Competition

Lauren Capone, member of Santa Barbara-based triathlon club Elite Racing Team, took  home the gold in the women’s amateur division at the 30th annual Wildflower Long Course Triathlon on Saturday, May 5. She completed the 1.2-mile swim, 56-mile bike and 13.1-mile run in 5 hours, 4 minutes and 21 seconds.

Wildflower attracts competitors from around the world, and we’re proud to have a local girl come out on top. Lauren got her start with the Triathlon Club as a freshman at UCSB, and is now the current Ironman 70.3 World Champion in the women’s 20-24 category. After the race, she reflected, “I never felt particularly fast out there, but I felt strong, and I was able to fight my way into the lead on the run and hold it to the finish line.”

-Alex Francis

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Critically Acclaimed Artist Showcases First Western-U.S. Solo Exhibit at SBMA

Family (Devin, John, Jason, Lewis)

The local art scene will acquire a wacky new counterpart with the ingenious works of contemporary artist Brian Bress, who will make his solo exhibition debut in the Western United States in July at the Santa Barbara Museum of Art. The multimedia pieces of Interventions: Brian Bress will be on display at the museum from July 15 through September 20, 2012. Bress will also present a special additional piece based on SBMA’s 19th-century European collection that will hang in Ridley-Tree Gallery.

Interventions: Brian Bress showcases five video portraits, each with a distinctive palette and visual appeal. His works, made using flat-screen monitors, initially seem comparable to the typical photograph or illustration that depicts abstract figures. Yet Bress’s costumed figures move at a virtually indiscernible pace, intentionally created by the artist to both unsettle and intrigue viewers.

Bress hand-constructed each element for his works, using wigs, collage masks, foam rubber suits and painted costumes to adorn his masterpieces. The resulting portraits at times blend in or visibly differ, mimicking the “where’s Waldo” effect and prompting spectators to ponder about individual identity and social representation.

Cowboy (Brian led by Peter Kirby)

Bress, an up-and-coming artist known for his uniquely crafted art, received his MFA from UCLA and BFA from Rhode Island School of Design. He has exhibited his work at prestigious museums around the country, including the Institute of Contemporary Art in Philadelphia and Arthouse in Texas. His 2007 video Under Cover was part of the California Video exhibition at the Getty Museum in Los Angeles. His work has been reviewed in numerous publications, such as The New York Times and Artforum.

This exhibition speaks to the museum’s major summer exhibition, Portrayal/Betrayal, which features portraits by George Hoyningen-Huene, Richard Gordon, Steve Davis, Lola Alvarez Bravo and Natan Dvir.

The Santa Barbara Museum of Art, 1130 State St., is open Tuesday through Sunday from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. For more information about the exhibit, visit www.sbma.net or call 805/963-4364.

–Kristin Crosier

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2012-2013 City Arts Grant Applications Now Available Online

Santa Barbara County Arts Commission released new online applications for grants in three categories: Community Events and Festivals, Organizational Development, and Community Arts.

The Community Events and Festivals Grant Program is offering a grant of up to $40,000 to local nonprofits that put on events, festivals, or programs that attract tourism, enhance Santa Barbara’s culture and preferably take place in tourism’s off-season between Memorial Day 2012 and mid-May 2013.

The Organizational Development Grant Program is focused on cultivating Santa Barbara’s artistic and administrative development, stability, and vitality. This up-to-$18,000 grant is intended to help support new programs and audience-development initiatives in all artistic disciplines.

Community Arts grants of up to $6,000 are available for organizations or individual artists with projects aimed at making art more accessible to underserved communities.

There will be three Technical Assistance Workshops, mandatory for first-time applicants, throughout May, and the application deadline for all three grants is June 11. Click here for more information, or contact Linda Gardy at  gardy@co.santa-barbara.ca.us or 805/568-3990.

-Alex Francis

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Dan Levin Exhibit at Lola Extended

"3 Alarm Hairdo"

Are you bummed that you weren’t able to check out Dan Levin’s innovative Mischievous Allegory II works of art? Well now you can rejoice, because the show at Lola Boutique, 1221 State St., has been extended to May 31.

Mischievous Allegory II features recent and past work by Levin, who is known for incorporating discarded man-made artifacts (or, what many of us know as trash) into his pieces. He primarily uses items collected from beaches, streams, mountains and deserts, then redesigns them as an artwork with materials that otherwise would not have interacted.

Lola Boutique is a high-end re-sale clothing store that sells highly selective merchandise, affordable basics, accessories and jewelry to match the signature Santa Barbara style. In addition to the recently opened location at the back of Victoria Court, there is a second Lola Boutique in Carpinteria.

For more information about Dan Levin’s work, visit www.danlevin.com. To learn more about the show, call 805/845-5322.

–Kristin Crosier

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Santa Barbara Writers Transform Real Life into Theatrical Pleasures for “3″

Don’t miss “3”–three short plays in one evening–produced by Dramatic Women and written by three writers with deep Santa Barbara roots.

Rod Lathim

Rod Lathim (featured in Santa Barbara Seasons’ Spring Issue), is a 5th generation Santa Barbaran and will straddle the line of the “here” and the “hereafter” in Unfinished Business, as he explores the transition from one world to the next. Catherine Cole, a veteran of UCSB’s Theater & Dance department, will recount a story of unforeseen loss and separation in Always. Together while local playwright Ellen Anderson delves into a telling account of recent widowhood in Wabi Sabi Underground.

These short plays were inspired by much of the writers’ own experiences. Lathim, no stranger to the theatre or playwriting, directed The Boys Next Door, which was the debut production at Center Stage Theater in 1980. His new short play, Unfinished Business, is based on the journal he kept before his mother died. The entries, as well as the play, focuses on the spirit entities that appeared to help his mother in her transition through the messages they shared. “It is often not comfortable in our culture to talk about some of the things that happen on a spiritual level around the time of death…Unfinished Business deals with death in a very hopeful and uplifting manner,” says Lathim.

Cole, who teaches at UC Berkeley, also writes books about Africa, human rights, and performance.  Her works are often about life’s journeys, as seen in her play Out On a Limb, also produced by Dramatic Women, and a touring dance theater piece Five Foot Feat. She says of Always.Together, “it is my most compact piece yet: a solo performance. With poetic language and lean staging, it is a short tale about a big story, a creative answer to the well-worn question, ‘What happened to you?’”

 

 

Anderson, a recent widow of Dramatic Women’s founder and playwright Bob Potter (1934-2010), reflects on Wabi Sabi Underground,  “I’ve never been much on writing plays based on my own life, but widowhood altered the way I look at the world, and although this play is not directly autobiographical, it is wildly different from my 17 previous plays. It’s dark, reclusive, and introspective. The challenges of widowhood changed who I am as a writer.”

Performances are scheduled at Center Stage Theater for May 24-26 at 8:00 p.m. and May 27 at 2:00 p.m.  For more information or to purchase tickets, visit www.centerstagetheater.org

–Colleen Lai

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Enchanting Phoebe Brunner Landscapes on Exhibit at Easton Gallery

"Force Field" by Phoebe Brunner

Renowned contemporary artist Phoebe Brunner will showcase her latest masterpieces at the Easton Gallery in Santa Barbara, with a reception opening the exhibit on Friday, May 11 from 6 to 8 p.m. The show runs from May 11 to June 15, and will also feature an Artist Talk on May 13 at 2 p.m.

Brunner’s latest collection consists of oil paintings celebrating some of nature’s most picturesque scenes. Sloping hills, swelling waves and swirling clouds compose Brunner’s paintings at the Easton Gallery exhibit. Her exceptional blending techniques and precisely selected palettes create multi-dimensional compositions that bring these magical landscapes to life. Brunner uniquely selects and arranges the colors within her paintings so that each work of art stands out.

"Wild Wave" by Phoebe Brunner

Phoebe Brunner has had other solo exhibitions at the Elverhoj Museum in Solvang, the Rovzar Gallery in Seattle, the Hespe Gallery in San Francisco and numerous other locations throughout California. She has also participated in selected group exhibitions, the latest of which included Edge: Santa Barbara County Artists Respond at Channing Peake Gallery, A View From Here: A Group Exhibition of Contemporary Landscapes and Cityscapes in Los Angeles and the Berkus Family Collection at California Polytechnic State University, San Luis Obispo.

Brunner studied at the California Institute of the Arts (Chouinard), Universidad de Guadalajara, Otis College of Art and Design and UC Santa Barbara. She was the recipient of the John E. Profant Foundation for the Arts Individual Visual Artist Grant in 2002 and the Gold Award from the Art of California Magazine in 1992.

The Easton Gallery, 557 Hot Springs Rd., has featured contemporary landscape artists for 20 years. Recent shows have included works by Whitney Brooks Abbott, Chris Chapman, Tom Henderson and Bjorn Rye. The Gallery is open weekends from 1 to 5 p.m. and by appointment at 805/969-5781. For more information or to view the entire exhibit online, visit www.eastongallery.com.

–Kristin Crosier

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Joyful Musical Benefit for Santa Barbara Children’s Chorus

A chorus of a cappella and jazz musicians come together last night to support the Santa Barbara Children’s Chorus and what a joyful noise it was! The walls of the Marjorie Luke Theatre–named after a favorite theater teacher, which is itself a powerful testament to the importance of arts education–seemed to resonate with a shared loved of song, as musicians of all ages came together to support the youth chorus and further its goal of bringing music education and vocal training to children throughout the county.

VocalMotion, UCSB’s all-female a cappella group, opened the show with a sassy rendition of It’s Raining Men, keeping an upbeat mood throughout their set, which segued nicely into UCSB’s highly-entertaining, all-male a capella group, Brothas From Otha Mothas. BFOM, as they like to be called, did an unforgettable cover of Lady Gaga’s Bad Romance, along with several other radio-friendly tunes.

Ellen Rockne, founder of Santa Barbara Wonder Choir, also performed, along with Santa Barbara Jazz Collective and Pacific Sound Chorus, the award-winning tri-county barbershop quartet style group which also performed doo wop, jazz and contemporary classics to delight the crowd.

In addition, the Naked Voices, UCSB’s co-ed–and first and oldest–a cappella group also came out to support the young members of the Santa Barbara Children’s Chorus, a music education and performing group designed to provide children ages 8-14 with the opportunity for musical training and performing in a fun and challenging environment.

The finale was definitely a highlight, as members of all of the groups came together to perform an original song, It’s Up to You and Me, which the VocalMotion performers had workshopped with the Santa Barbara Children’s Chorus kids.

In addition to its performing group and upcoming summer camp, the nonprofit Santa Barbara Children’s Chorus will soon launch a vocal music program reaching several hundred students in local elementary schools and providing a music education curriculum and instruction to schools that cannot afford their own programs.  For more information click here.

–Leslie Dinaberg

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Environmental Education for the Next Generation hosts “Investing in Our Youth” Gala and Auction

Join Environmental Education for the Next Generation (EENG) at the premiere “Investing in Our Youth” Gala & Auction on May 13 from 4 to 8 p.m. at Chase Palm Park Plaza. The event will feature a speech by assemblymember Das Williams and a live auction emceed by Geoff Green, executive director of Fund for Santa Barbara.

EENG was founded in 2009 by a group of UCSB undergraduates who saw a gap in children’s education and took the initiative to fill it. The up-and-coming organization sends teams of college-student volunteers out to first and second grade classrooms for an eight-week course designed to impart the importance of sustainability and empower the younger generation to take action. What started with five environmentally minded UCSB students and 25 second graders at Isla Vista Elementary School has now evolved into hundreds of college kids teaching more than 2,300 elementary school children throughout California.

With live music, a live auction and an open bar, this event promises to provide a very enjoyable Mother’s Day. For more information, contact Vanessa Duenas at vanessaduenas@eeng.org or click here.

-Alex Francis

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Preliminary Details Publicized for 2013 Ojai Music Festival

Amid preparations for this year’s Ojai Music Festival, celebrated choreographer Mark Morris was recently announced as the selected Music Director for the 2013 weekend of music making and festivities. The four-day festival will take place from June 6 through 9, 2013, and feature collaborations with the Mark Morris Dance Group, The Bad Plus, Emanuel Ax, Yoko Nozaki and The American String Quartet.

The 67th festival will continue its tradition of artistic creativity with an array of concerts, special events, films and talks. Morris, the first dancer and choreographer to become Music Director, will highlight American artistic colleagues and music by Lou Harrison, Henry Cowell, John Cage, Charles Ives and John Luther Adams, among others.

Festival highlights include a two-part dance performance from the Mark Morris Dance Group, an evening of social dancing led by Morris, a two piano recital by Emanuel Ax and Yoko Nozaki and a performance of an original rendition of Stravinsky’s The Rite of Spring by The Bad Plus.

Morris has performed with the dance companies of Lar Lubovitch, Hannah Kahn, Laura Dean, Eliot Feld and the Koleda Balkan Dance Ensemble. He has created works for the San Francisco Ballet, produced operas for The Metropolitan Opera and New York City Opera, and he formed the Mark Morris Dance Group in 1980. Morris is the recipient of numerous recognitions of his artistic contributions, including a MacArthur Fellowship and the esteemed Leonard Bernstein Lifetime Achievement Award for the Elevation of Music in Society.

The Ojai North! Festival will also be returning in 2013, where Ojai artists and programs visit the University of California, Berkeley campus from June 11-13. Ojai North! is part of an in-residency project to bring Ojai Music Festival programming to a broader audience.

The Ojai Music Festival has brought creative artists and engaged audiences to the Ojai Valley for four days of exceptional music each year since 1947. This year’s Ojai Music Festival, led by Musical Director Leif Ove Andsnes, will take place from June 7-10 and showcase performances by the Norwegian Chamber Orchestra, Christianne Stotijn, Reinbert De Leeuw and Martin Fröst.

For more information about the festival or to purchase tickets, call the box office at 805/646-2053 or visit www.ojaifestival.org.

–Kristin Crosier

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Works From Artistic Journey to Be Displayed at Meisel Gallery

Artwork by Cathy Quiel

Local art enthusiasts will enjoy checking out La Bella Italia, the newest exhibition at Cottage Rehabilitation Hospital that showcases the works of 25 artists from California, Nevada, Colorado and Finland. The latest exhibit to visit the Harris and Fredda Meisel Gallery of Art opens with a reception on May 11 from 5 to 7 p.m., serving wine courtesy of Fess Parker Winery and hors d’oeuvres.

The featured painters created their pieces during an artistic journey led by renowned watercolorist Cathy Quiel in May of 2011. The La Bella Italia works are resplendent with rich Italian colors and striking contrasts of darkness and light that capture the emotions of the artists’ journeys. La Bella Italia represents the most recent selection of healing arts in an effort to bring brightly colored displays and inspiration to the hospital environment.

Cathy Quiel, who teaches at Santa Barbara City College, is notorious for expertly applying pigments and producing vivid paintings. In addition to teaching workshops around the world, she has been a guest lecturer at the Riverside Art Museum and Muckenthaler Museum. Qiuel is also a published artist with work featured in The American Artist, Artist’s and Montecito Magazines.

La Bella Italia will continue to be on display through the month of May until August 5 at the Meisel Gallery. Gallery hours are Monday through Friday 9 a.m. to 9 p.m., and weekends from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.

For a complete list of the artists or to learn more information, call 805/687-7444 or click here.

–Kristin Crosier

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