Tag Archive for 'sbseasons magazine'

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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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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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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Coastal Housing Partnership’s Inaugural Home Buying Fair

If you are even considering buying a home in Santa Barbara, don’t miss this opportunity to learn the ins and outs of today’s real estate market! On Saturday, May 19 from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Coastal Housing Partnership is hosting the inaugural Home Buying Fair at Earl Warren Showgrounds.

Geared toward helping home buyers save money and make good decisions throughout the process, the fair will feature booths from local real estate agents, lenders, home inspection firms, and residential builders. There will also be free “how-to” sessions throughout the day on key aspects of the home-buying process and local market conditions.

For more information, call 805/969-1025 or visit http://www.coastalhousing.org/home-buying-fair/index.html.

-Alex Francis

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James Hapke Prints at The Arts Fund

The Arts Fund will have a new exhibition of prints by the 2011 Individual Artists Award winner, James Hapke in the The Arts Fund Gallery from March 23- May 19. The exhibition will open with a public reception for the artist on Friday, March 23 from 5:30- 7:30 p.m.

James Hapke: Prints will present a diverse range of works on paper by Hapke. His prints communicate an honest sense of discover and self-examination. Hapke creates collographs, lithography, etchings and aquatints to uncover ideas relating to the passage of time in both the human body and the geological landscape through the use of layering images.


He was one of three artists who received The Arts Fund’s Individual Artist Award in 2011. These awards identify and reward artistic excellence in Santa Barbara County. This solo exhibition is part of the award. This event is free and open to the public.

For more information please contact The Arts Fund at 805/965-7321 or visit www.artsfundsb.org.

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Margie Grace Garden Designs on Display at Historic Greystone Estate

Congratulations to the very talented  landscape designer Margie Grace, principal of Grace Design Associates, who will have her work on display at the historic Greystone Estate in Beverly Hills as part of Maison de Luxe, a designer show house that will take place at the mansion from December 2-22.

Twenty-five nationally renowned designers were hand-selected to transform this amazing property.

“We are delighted to bring together an incredibly talented group of designers to reimagine this iconic national treasure,” said Pamela Jaccarino, VP, Editor in Chief of Luxe Interiors + Design. “Greystone Mansion served as the inspiration for Maison de Luxe, and we have created a fresh and fantastical House of Luxury. It’s a true celebration for those who are passionate about design.”

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Sustainable Seasons: Living Lightly From the Ground Up

By Sigrid Wright

Isabelle Greene could not have escaped her destiny: it was built right into her family name. Growing up as the granddaughter of the notable Arts and Crafts architect Henry Greene in the wilder, more open-space version of Pasadena, she was exposed early on to both the built environment and the natural world. Today, at the age of 77, she is an energetic champion of “sustainable landscape architecture” and continues to manage her private practice of almost 40 years.

Author Sigrid Wright (left) in conversation with Isabelle Greene. Photo by Dana Kurth.

In 2003, after decades of creating beautiful spaces for other people, Greene took on the challenge of designing a space for herself by renovating a 1948 mail order cottage in a quiet San Roque neighborhood. When she purchased the 1,100-square-foot house, it was a warren of small dark rooms with limited windows and closets. The roof had no eaves—exposing the wood to weather—and the house had sunk six inches in one corner.

The home's original (1968) floor plan. Image Courtesy of Isabelle Greene.

But she was taken with the neighborhood and had long dreamed of such a project. Greene traveled extensively to places like Holland, Norway and Japan, where small living spaces made a deep impression on her with their highly functional, dignified and elegant simplicity.

“I’ve always been so uncomfortable with huge houses—the number of people it takes to maintain them, the distance you have to walk from the kitchen to bedroom. The more human scale something is and the more aligned with what is natural, the better I feel.”

The home's current floor plan. Image courtesy of Isabelle Greene.

Renovating the cottage took two years, “one to think it through and do the plans, and one to do the work.” In the end, she virtually deconstructed the entire house; only one original stud and some joists were usable. Greene incorporated salvaged items wherever she could. She used the broken-up footings for terracing, acacia wood from a storm-fallen tree for the shelf all around the living room, a piece of old Santa Barbara pier for the mantle and a salvaged red oak door for the entry. She also added environmental technologies: solar panels, an on-demand water heater and a solar chimney that draws hot air out of the house.

While going small was her intent, it was also her challenge. During the two years between buying the property and completing the renovation, she remarried, so the space had to work for both Greene and her husband John Mealy.

“In a small house, you use every inch. I measured and re-measured, because virtually everything in the house had to be custom-shoehorned in. I had to calculate every detail—like how far the warmth of the fireplace would reach to the couch, and then how big that sitting area could be.”

She removed almost all of the interior walls in the house, using discreet lighting and other techniques to create a kitchen, dining area and sitting areas out of one generously sized room. A small functional office is tucked into a wide hallway, and a music/reading nook transforms into a cozy guest room with the pull of a curtain.

In the back of the house are a surprisingly spacious bathroom and a laundry room that offers the only place where Greene and Mealy keep personal belongings separate; all other parts of the house are communal. In the bedroom, six French doors open to the expansive back garden.

Given that her first love is the outdoors, it’s no surprise that the garden is the focal point of the house. In some ways, it is the largest and most impressive room, with the interior spaces designed to draw the eye to it. She converted the badly sloped deep lot into a gently terraced space filled with hundreds of experimental plants as well as berry vines, fruit trees and an oversized vegetable garden. Ironically, although she’s a lifelong plant lover and started her career as a botanist, Greene never seriously grew edibles before. “Now we’ve become backyard farmers. Our yard provides 90 percent of our produce.”

Merging two households into a small home after a lifetime of acquiring things was challenging at first. The family furnishings that both had accumulated went to John’s children and grandchildren, with only beloved objects making the cut.

“It’s so easy to get things attached to your lives,” she says. “But here, anytime we contemplate bringing something into the house, we have to think where it will go. In the instances when I find myself in a store, I really don’t have that feeling of desire or consumer lust for those things. There is a daily discipline to living in a small space that feels nice and tidy.”

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Oreana Winery Fundraiser For Alzheimer’s

davidjdiamant.com

Enjoy a delicious glass of red blended wine from Oreana Winery while raising funds for research of Alzheimer’s. Since November is Alzheimer’s Awareness month, award-winning local winery, Oreana has decided to donate 10% of its new blended “Tilly” wine sales to the local Central Coast Alzheimer’s Association chapter starting November 1.

The savory blend received its name from winemaker Christian Garvin to honor his grandmother who passed away from the disease. Alzheimer’s Disease is a devastating one without a current cure, so funding research is necessary to find one. On Friday, November 18, from 7-9 p.m. at Oreana Winery, there will be a tasting of the 60% Sangiovese and 40% Cabernet Sauvignon Italian style wine, “Tilly,” to help fight this terminal disease.

Oreana Winery is located at 205 Anacapa St. The tasting party is free to attend and open to those 21 and older as wines will be sold by the glass. For more information or questions contact Oreana Winery at 805-962-5857 or email at <oreanawinery.com>.

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Talking Vertical With Sideways Scribe Rex Pickett

By Leslie Dinaberg

When it hit the big screen in 2004, the film Sideways changed Santa Barbara wine country‘s fortunes forever, increasing the cachet of our region’s winemakers—particularly those who make pinot noir—as well as considerably boosting their coffers.

For the author of the film’s source material, a semi-autobiographical novel of the same name, the post-Sideways trajectory has been a bit bumpier.

Vertical and Sideways Author Rex Pickett. Courtesy Photo

“People think I’m rich,” says Rex Pickett, affably chatting on the phone with me from his one-bedroom apartment in Santa Monica. “I live a modest life … I made less than 100 grand off of that book.” Though he did make more from selling the film rights, the novel was still unpublished when the movie was about to come out and Pickett says he was pressured by the movie studio (Fox Searchlight) to sell the rights for just $5,000, a decision he regrets today.

“If I had waited and rolled the dice when that movie came out, I’ve been told by numerous publishing agents that it would have gone for a million bucks. Had I just said no to five grand—and I almost did.”

The road to publication for his newest novel, Vertical, was not much smoother the second time around. Originally sold to Knopf, where his editor told him, “if you had that ending, we will not publish your novel,” Pickett decided to retain his creative vision and go it on his own, ultimately finding an investor and creating Loose Gravel Press.

A wildly entertaining and surprisingly poignant sequel to Sideways, Vertical takes place seven years later. Miles, like Pickett, has written a novel that has been made into a wildly successful movie, and the movie has changed his life.

His best friend Jack is divorced, with a kid and a career on the skids. Meanwhile Miles’s mom has suffered a stroke that’s left her wheelchair-bound and desperately wanting to go live with her sister in Wisconsin.

They trio set off, along with mom’s pot-smoking Filipina caretaker Joy and her high-spirited Yorkie, on an ill-advised road trip from San Diego to Oregon’s Willamette Valley, where Miles is master of ceremonies of the International Pinot Noir Festival.

Along the way they stop in Santa Barbara’s Wine County, revisiting the Hitching Post (where his mom drinks my favorite Alma Rosa Chardonnay) and catching up with Miles’ old girlfriend Maya and the Foxen Winery tasting room along the way.

Pickett knows the landscape well, witnessing firsthand the impact that Sideways has had on the local wine regions since he first began visiting Santa Barbara County in 1990 on a series of golf trips to escape his life in Los Angeles.

“When I wrote Sideways I was broke, I was nothing, I had nothing. I should have just killed myself,” he says.

The new book, Vertical, “goes to a deeper place than Sideways, there’s no question about it. But you have to also understand too, the truth of the matter is I had no one looking over my shoulder with Sideways, so I could just let it all hang out. I knew that Sideways has millions of fans. I get it every day, even seven years later. It’s huge that thing and can you imagine, you feel a certain responsibility, and you feel that you owe a debt in a way to the characters. But if you embark on a sequel thinking about that, you are going to end up with some low common denominator type of novel.”

At just over 400 pages and delving into some pretty intense subject matter (alcoholism, impotence and assisted suicide, to start), Vertical definitely doesn’t pander to the least common denominator.

The level of depth in the novel was quite intentional, but Pickett acknowledges he took a commercial risk.

“People who are reading it are really loving it; a lot of people are in tears actually.

I don’t think they expect the story to go where it goes, but it’s hard to get people to read a book that is 150,000 words, which is long for a book. Just 20-30 years ago that would have been considered an average size novel but by today’s standards it’s considered a long novel,” he says.

“I get asked a lot of questions about ‘what’s your next novel’ and I say there isn’t going to be one. … There’s a kind of way of reading which I term deep immersive reading, and it’s very simply you turn off your computer, you turn off your web-based phone and you turn off your TV and you sit in the chair and you read. And that kind of reading is unfortunately kind of going away,” says Pickett.

Disenchanted with people’s reading habits and the book business, Pickett says he is turning his energy to writing an HBO series set in the wine world of Napa Valley. “It’s about a famous wine critic who suffers from social anxiety disorder so acutely that he has to have a psychiatric service dog. So it’s funny, but it’s also going to be a real kind of insider look at the wine world and what it is all about.”

In addition, he is working on a theatrical play of Sideways, which he expects to premiere at the Ruskin Group Theatre Co. in Santa Monica in early 2012. “It’s a definite 100% go. It’s not like, ‘yeah I wrote a script and I got Johnny Depp attached.’ This is a definite go,” says Pickett, who just hired Amelia Mulkey to direct. “And here’s the wonderful thing; I’m so excited about the whole thing.”

Meanwhile he also has Vertical to market and will be signing books at this weekend’s 25th annual Santa Barbara Concours d’Elegance, to be held at the Santa Barbara Polo & Racquet Club.

“For me, Vertical is even more personal than Sideways. The overindulgence in wine which caught up with me during Sideways—and I went through a tough decade. Suddenly you have success, you don’t have kids you don’t have a wife and you have money. And worse, you wrote a book that deifies somebody who is passionate about wine and a lot of it, and suddenly everybody wants to give me wine and more wine and expensive wine. Pretty soon you become like Miles in Vertical. For me the most powerful thing is when he does sober up, it becomes a very raw emotional journey with him and his mother. … These books are very personal to me.”

For more information about Rex Pickett and Vertical visit http://rexpickett.com/.

Author’s Note: If Pickett looks anything like his author photo, he is probably the only person in Hollywood history to have a fatter, less handsome version of himself in his movie doppelganger. Not that I don’t love Paul Giamatti, but I look forward to seeing who they cast in the play.

 

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Let’s Talk Dance With Brian Brooks

Come meet choreographer Brian Brooks this weekend at Muddy Waters at 2 p.m.

Brian Brooks Moving Company will be in town this spring for a DANCEworks residency in collaboration with Lobero Theatre, but he’s coming into town on Saturday, October 22 to introduce himself to the dance community with a Q & A about his career, the company his plans for the upcoming residency in Santa Barbara.

His minimalist works and infused with a delightful sense of whimsy and the company is well known for live performances that incorporate video, animation, visual art, music and sound design. Expect his month-long residency to be full of fun and surprises. Come get the scoop at this free event on Saturday at 2 p.m. at Muddy Waters Coffee House, 508 E. Haley St. Please RSVP to Dianne at dianne.summerdance@gmail.com.

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