City2.org

City 2 |  Santa Barbara   |    Read Local + Write Local

Hello / account / admin / log out Sign Up / Log In
  • City 2.O Dropdown Menu
    • Sign In

    • New? Sign Up Here.

Artful Santa Barbara

by tracey

  • Blog Home
  • My Photos
  • Login
  • Register

"Nothing is funnier than unhappiness."

Posted by tracey on: Mon 8th Oct, 2012

Beckett's Endgame will be performed at McDermott-Crockett and Associates Mortuary?

Genesis West is changing it up again. The email had an exclamation point rather than my question mark and knowing this company the questions will be erased by a solid production. 

The iconic absurdist masterpiece

A day in the life of a group of decaying survivors in mysteriously hard times. A blind master who can’t stand, his servant who can’t sit, his parents who live in trashcans and his sole possession, a toy dog that’s missing a leg.

“Endgame is as grim as any classic of the modern theatre- and yet it is monstrously funny. “- Frank Rich NY Times

With: Brian Harwell, Tom Hinshaw, David M. Brainard, Julie Anne Ruggier

 

Friday October 12 to Saturday October 27, 2012

Thursdays, Fridays & Saturdays at 8:00 pm

 

McDermott-Crockett and Associates Mortuary

2020 Chapala Street

Santa Barbara

        

$25 general, $20 student

               

For tickets and information visit www.genesiswest.org

or call 805.969.5637

Categories:

Tags: sbarts, Genesis West, Samuel Beckett, Endgame, McDermott Crockett

Share  

What to do in Solvang on Saturday

Posted by tracey on: Fri 11th May, 2012

it's not wine... well, not entirely

Gather Round
Herd Animals of the Santa Ynez Valley
 
Artists Panel Discussion
Saturday May 12
4:00 pm
 
Artist inspiration, technique, Q&A.
Wine and conversation.
FREE

Susan Cobb, Suzan Hamilton-Todd, Joseph Knowles, Trish Clark Palmer, Luis Ramirez, Pat Roberts, C. Wood, and Seyburn Zorthian.
 
ELVERHØJ MUSEUM OF HISTORY & ART
1624 ELVERHOY WAY in SOLVANG
805.686.1211 / www.elverhoj.org
 

Categories:

Tags: sbarts, Elverhoj Museum, Solvang, Susan Cobb, Suzan Hamilton-Todd, Joseph Knowles, Trish Clark Palmer, Luis Ramirez, Pat Roberts, C. Wood, Seyburn Zorthian, santa ynez

Share  

Kids play Classical

Posted by tracey on: Tue 8th May, 2012

Santa Barbara is rich in classical music choices, from the Santa Barbara Symphony, Community Arts Music Association (CAMA) and Camerata Pacifica to the youngest musicians fo the Santa Barbara Strings. The Santa Barbara Strings students will play their Spring Concert at the Music Academy's Hahn Hall on Saturday. If you have kids this will be a great opportunity to introduce them to classical music. (and it's FREE)

 

 

 

from the press release:

On Saturday evening, May 12th the student musicians of Santa Barbara Strings will perform their “Storytelling with Strings Attached” Spring Concert at 7 pm in Hahn Hall at The Music Academy of the West (1070 Fairway Road in Santa Barbara).   This concert  features four different and progressive levels of string ensembles playing a variety of Classical works as well as the premiere of the “2012 Storytelling with Strings Attached” a professional orchestrated arrangement of student compositions which is performed accompanied by  student illustrations and narration.  The four ensembles performing are Toccata (ages 4 through 6), Sinfonietta (ages 7 through 14) , Intermezzo (ages 11 through 16) and the Santa Barbara Strings-MERIT Quartet.  Mary Beth Woodruff is the Artistic Director of Santa Barbara Strings.

In addition to the original composition, the concert will include works by the masters Respighi, Vivaldi, Handel, Gastoldi and Rameau.  Violin and Cello soloists selected through the winter concerto competition will be featured.  The Santa Barbara Strings-MERIT Quartet will perform the first and third movements of the Haydn Quartet Op. 77 #1.   The concert is a FREE musical gift to the community and children and families are most welcome.  A reception will follow.

Santa Barbara Strings is a non-profit multi-tiered string orchestra education program currently training and inspiring young musicians from ages 4 through 18 through studying and performing classical repertoire from the Renaissance/Baroque era to the Modern period. 

http://www.santabarbarastrings.org/Santa_Barabra_Strings/Home.html

Categories:

Tags: sbarts, Santa Barbara Strings, music academy of the west

Share  

Public Art as a Public Good

Posted by tracey on: Wed 2nd May, 2012

One of the little-known, under-utilised and free services at UCSB is the Interdisciplinary Humanities Center's series of lectures and films by leading scholars. Often sparsely attended by students and professors these lectures can actually be attended by the public - that means you! 

This one caught my eye because I know and respect all of these artists who have a long history of work in the often contentious public art realm. 

 

 

PANEL: Public Art as a Public Good

Laurel Beckman (Art, UCSB)
Rita Ferri (Visual Arts Coordinator, Santa Barbara County Arts Commission)
Colin Gray (local artist)
Harry Reese (Art, UCSB)
Thursday, May 10 / 4:00 PM
McCune Conference Room, 6020 HSSB

Something happens when art goes public. Cultural interventions in spaces designated as belonging to the public are subject to greater and more varied kind of scrutiny than works exhibited or performed in the private sphere. Site specificity, community values, and notions of what constitutes “good art” all come into play when art goes public. This panel will examine public art in Santa Barbara as a public good precisely because it is an object of public debate.


Check out the IHC's calendar and see if there's something that appeals to you.


image: Laurel Beckman sbmoves

Categories:

Tags: sbarts, interdisciplinary humanities center, Rita Ferri, Colin Gray, Harry Reese, Laurel Beckman, public art, ucsb, santa barbara

Share  

Who says you can't get anything for free?

Posted by tracey on: Tue 10th Apr, 2012

You are invited to join Opera Santa Barbara for a free concert featuring members of our Studio Artist Program. The concert will include opera arias and duets, performed with piano accompaniment.


The concert will be held Wednesday, April 11 at 12 Noon in the McCune Founders Room at the Granada Theatre, 1214 State Street.

Categories:

Tags: sbarts, Opera Santa Barbara, Free Concert, the granada

Share  

So much To Do list Friday thru Sunday

Posted by tracey on: Thu 23rd Feb, 2012

Rafael Perea de la Cabada, Alien Heartland
Westmont College
February 23 - March 31, 2012

The Can(n)on Art Studios
Atkinson Gallery at SBCC
February 24 – March 23, 2012

Gardens & Villa w/ Crystal Antlers + House of Wolves 
Casa de la Raza
Friday, February 24, 8pm


Flights from Wonder

Santa Barbara Contemporary Arts Forum
February 26 - April 22, 2012
Opening Reception Saturday, February 25 at 6:30pm 

Pasadena to Santa Barbara at SBMA
Community Celebration
Sunday, February 26, 1-4pm 

 

image: Steven Soria at Atkinson Gallery, SBCC

Categories:

Tags: sbarts, Westmont, Rafael Perea de la Cabada, The Can(n)on Art Studios, Elizabeth Folk, James Van Arsdale, Kimberly Hahn, Zack Paul, Steven Soria, Saul Fray-Hildenbrand, Gardens & Villa, Crystal Antlers, House of Wolves, Pacific Standard Time, Santa Barbara Museum of Art, contemporary arts forum

Share  

RE:Blog Investing in Creativity

Posted by tracey on: Wed 8th Feb, 2012

A friend and I were talking the other day and noting how little support there is for artists in our community. Lots of good intentions, but no real understanding of the day-to-day needs of working artists. This post below from the createquity blog addresses just this issue. It seems to me what was true in 2003 remains so today. What do you think?

 

Investing in Creativity: The “Investing Less Time in Reading” Version

By KATHERINE GRESSEL | Published: FEBRUARY 1ST, 2012

This is a shortened version of my Arts Policy Library article on Investing in Creativity.

Investing in Creativity: A Study of the Support Structures for U.S. Artists (2003), an Urban Institute publication authored by Maria-Rosario Jackson, Florence Kabwasa-Green, Daniel Swenson, Joaquin Herranz, Jr., Kadija Ferryman, Caron Atlas, Eric Wallner, and Carole Rosenstein, sheds light on the economic and employment situation of individual artists in the United States following the cessation of NEA funding to individual artists in 1995.  The report reflected several years of research, which included interviews with artists with arts leaders in nine cities, a national poll on attitudes towards artists, and expansion and analysis of a new NYFA Source database, in partnership with the New York Foundation for the Arts (NYFA).

Investing distinguishes itself by “providing a new and comprehensive framework for analysis and action, which views the support structure for artists in the United States as a system made up of six key dimensions of the environment in which an artist works:”

  1. Validation: The ascription of value to what artists do.

  2. Demand/markets: Society’s appetite for artists and what they do, and the markets that translate this appetite into financial compensation.

  3. Material supports: Access to the financial and physical resources artists need for their work: employment, insurance and similar benefits, awards, space, equipment, and materials.

  4. Training and professional development: Conventional and lifelong learning opportunities.

  5. Communities and networks: Inward connections to other artists and people in the cultural sector; outward connections to people not primarily in the cultural sector.

  6. Information: Data sources about artists and for artists.

This is a helpful framework for further research on artists’ conditions in any given region, and also marked a new understanding that it is not be enough to simply restore cuts to funding for artists.

Some especially salient findings and recommendations in the report are as follows:

  1. Individual artists are undervalued by society, in comparison to art itself. Artists’ societal contributions are not well understood, documented, or publicized—but if they were, it might be easier to make the case for allocating resources to individual artists.

  2. Individual artists feel overshadowed and neglected by large urban institutions, and are frequently left out of arts-based urban planning initiatives.

  3. There is a perceived inequality of opportunities for artists (such as exhibitions or awards programs) based on factors such as race/ethnicity, and art form.

  4. An artist’s career spans multiple markets and disciplines: this is especially important when assessing artists’ needs.

  5. Many artists face the economic uncertainties of irregular employment, lack of health insurance, and lack of affordable work or living space.

  6. Training in the practical side of working in the arts, and in specialized or hybrid fields like arts education/community work, is limited. Training should be expanded and diversified.

  7. Grants and awards need to be more accessible, equitable, and relevant for artists. An “information clearinghouse” with data on resources, and the capacity to support further research, would be helpful.

  8. Various arts organizations, arts councils, and artist networks are meeting some of these artists’ needs described above, but these organizations need strengthening.

  9. It is also important to cultivate stronger networks of people from both arts and non-arts fields advocating for artists’ needs.

Investing was commissioned by the Ford Foundation and supported by consortium of 37 other funders, some of whom were committed to acting upon the findings of the research. Therefore, the study is notable for having led directly to the development of several concrete initiatives to increase support for artists:

  1. A new NYFA Source online database allowing artists and other users to access customized, up-to-the-minute information on awards in all arts disciplines 24 hours a day

  2. The Leveraging Investments in Creativity (LINC) initiative, a ten-year national initiative to improve the conditions for artists working in all disciplines. LINC funds, researches, and aggregates information about three core areas identified as key artist needs in the report: Creative Communities, Artist Space, and Health Insurance for Artists.

  3. Investing is also cited in the development of the United States Artists (USA)grant making program, which gives unrestricted $50,000 grants to artists in all disciplines.   

Investing in Creativity did raise several critical questions for me: first of all, whether it is problematic to build a case for increased support for individual artists so heavily on the idea that artists benefit society, when there was little research to back up this claim.  I also believe that Investing pinpoints many challenges in the employment system for artists, yet never suggests that an entirely new system is needed. Instead, the implication is that conditions for artists can be improved through better information-gathering, networking, and training.

Whether or not the fundamental situation for artists has changed significantly since this report’s publication, Investing at least paves the way for more dramatic changes by suggesting ways in which the existing nonprofit sector can be better equipped to meet artists’ needs.

Original Post: http://createquity.com/2012/02/investing-in-creativity-the-investing-less-time-in-reading-version.html

image by Cara StHillaire via Creative Commons license

Categories:

Tags: sbarts, artists, Investing in Creativity, createquity, Katherine Gressel

Share  

NECTAR this Saturday at Yoga Soup

Posted by tracey on: Fri 6th Jan, 2012

This regular event features some wonderful Santa Barbara artists. On Saturday you can see E. Bonnie Lewis reprise Freda, channeling her late grandmother. Molly Hahn, children's book author and artist will also be there premiering her new ukelele tunes. 

 

$12 at the door. A portion of the proceeds benefit Transition House.

Yoga Soup, 28 Parker Way, SB

Categories:

Tags: sblifestyle, Drama Dogs, Molly Hahn, nectar, yoga soup

Share  

Adam Silverman @ Cabana Home through Jan 14

Posted by tracey on: Tue 27th Dec, 2011

You may remember when Santa Barbara was home to the excellent gallery run by Edward Cella.  Edward has moved his gallery to L.A. (Wilshire Blvd if you're going) but has kept up an exhibition schedule here in Santa Barbara. Currently you can see Adam Silverman's New Pots at Cabana Home. It's up through January 14. 

The exhibition presents a new collection of hand thrown pots with explosive, experimental glazes that epitomizes Silverman’s distinctive aesthetic connecting ancient and modern sensibilities. 

The deceptively and modestly, self-described potter is widely recognized for his experimental glazes that are developed and refined through a series of extensive tests.  Each pot is enveloped by richly glazed textures of ashy scars and mottled lava-like surfaces.  In some cases, Silverman grinds down their surfaces to expose the bubbles and lacy patterns underneath revealing the chemical process of fire reacting to the minerality of the glazes and clay.  This new body of work engages the viewer through an experimental journey of process and time, trekking through traditional and personal, improvisational techniques that are a counterpoint with the vessel’s highly considered, modernist inspired silhouettes.  Each work bridges the past and present simultaneously in one artefact.



Categories:

Tags: sblifestyle, Adam Silverman, Edward Cella, Cabana Home

Share  

Headless Household tonight at Center Stage

Posted by tracey on: Mon 28th Nov, 2011

If you haven't seen them you are missing out. One of the best traditions in Santa Barbara with amazing musicians.  They play tonight at Center Stage Theater!

www.householdink.com

 

Categories:

Tags: sblifestyle, Headless Household

Share  

Support your local artists!

Posted by tracey on: Mon 15th Aug, 2011

You have three opportunities to support Santa Barbara arts this week, a little something for everyone.

1. Tuesday, the Santa Barbara Tequila Harvest Festival benefits the Santa Barbara Dance Institute.  6:30 pm at the Santa Barbara Tennis Club.

2. Thursday, you can support the AMASS Gallery II, a project spearheaded by the folks at Stateside Magazine, by having a drink at the Sportsman.

3. On Saturday, Art from Scrap will have their annunal fundraiser One Night Stand. With the purchase of a ticket, you will take home an work by one of the donating artists -- the catch is you won't know who the artist is until you choose!  With work from 203 artists including Yoko Ono, Jeff Bridges, John Nava, Mary Heebner, Jane Callister... you will go home with something special, guaranteed!

No excuses! Get out there and support your local artists. With tequila, cocktails and fabulous art to be had for a song, you'll have a great time doing it.

Categories:

Tags: Art from Scrap, Santa Barbara Dance Institute, AMASS Gallery, sblifestyle, Santa Barbara Tequila Harvest Festival

Share  

Mobile Post: Jonathan Fox talks about Victoria Hall renovation

Posted by tracey on: Mon 6th Jun, 2011

For the members of the Performing Arts League.

New seating, expanded lobby, technical improvements -- and will be available for use by other theater and dance companies too.

It's going to be a great addition to Santa Barbara's performing arts community!

www.ensembletheatre.com

www.sbstage.org

Categories:

Tags: sblifestyle, Performing Arts League, performing arts santa barbara, Ensemble theatre

Share  

Mobile Post: World Cafe by Santa Barbara Dance Institute

Posted by tracey on: Sun 15th May, 2011

Most people on stage at The Marjorie Luke Theater ever!  A great show and a great program.  www.sbdi.org

Categories:

Tags: sblifestyle, Santa Barbara Dance Institute

Share  

ReBlog: Art is what we call...

Posted by tracey on: Fri 18th Feb, 2011

the thing an artist does.

It's not the medium or the oil or the price or whether it hangs on a wall or you eat it. What matters, what makes it art, is that the person who made it overcame the resistance, ignored the voice of doubt and made something worth making. Something risky. Something human.

Art is not in the eye of the beholder. It's in the soul of the artist.

--Seth Godin

 

image: Miwa Matreyek at Contemporary Arts Forum by Monika Molnar-Metzenthin

(Miwa will be at CAF again March 3 - don't miss it!)

Categories:

Tags: sblifestyle, contemporary arts forum, seth godin

Share  

ReBlog: 11 Ways To Love The Arts Everyday

Posted by tracey on: Mon 14th Feb, 2011

1. Locate the nearest artist. Give that artist a hug. (not one of those awkward half-hugs, but a really good one)

 

2. Buy some art from an artist whose work you enjoy. It feels really great, trust me.

 

3. Make some art. Paint, draw, make up a little dance to your favorite song, write a song, make a mini puppet show with your kids, write a poem, take 20 pictures of something that fascinates you, tell someone a really good story, make a sculpture out of something - anything, do an impromptu performance art piece for a friend or loved one by pretending to be 5 different inanimate objects in 5 minutes, do anything you desire that expresses your talents to yourself and/or the world.

 

4. Give someone else a work of art. Maybe it's the piece you bought, maybe it's the art you made.

 

5. Urge Members of Congress to Support the National Endowment for the Arts.

 

6. Support your nearest arts advocacy group/organization.  

 

7. Make a donation to one of your favorite arts organizations or artists.

 

8. Share a story of an arts experience that was meaningful to you or someone you know.

 

9. Declare your love and support for the arts through your social media (Facebook, Twitter, blog, etc.) For example, get the full size version of "I Heart Art because..." Print it out, fill it out, snap a picture, and post it.

 

10. Make a point, everyday, to recognize how the arts make your life and community richer and then share your unique passion and perspective with others.

 

11. Share this list. Add to this list. Make your own list.

 

Labels: advice, art collecting, art love

 

# posted by Noah @ 2:21 PM  http://blog.springboardforthearts.org/2011/02/11-ways-to-love-arts-everyday-1.html

Categories:

Tags: sblifestyle

Share  

← Previous 1 2 Next →

About

Small living the art-full life in the sleepy seaside village of Santa Barbara

Categories

  • Santa Barbara Museum of Art
  • Santa Barbara Beautiful
  • Santa Barbara Artists
  • Santa Barbara Arts Community
  • Contemporary Arts Forum
  • Stuff
  • Arts & Lectures
  • Santa Barbara International Film Festival
  • Shows
  • Concerts

Support Comes From

Supply Room | Santa Barbara Become a Paralegal - UCSB Extension StoneYard Building Materials | Santa Barbara City2.0 Shirts On Balance - Santa Barbara Fitness Free Santa Barbara Blogs

Archives

  • November 2012
  • October 2012
  • September 2012
  • August 2012
  • July 2012
  • June 2012
  • May 2012
  • April 2012
  • March 2012
  • February 2012
  • January 2012
  • December 2011
  • November 2011
  • October 2011
  • September 2011
  • August 2011
  • July 2011
  • June 2011
  • May 2011
  • April 2011
  • March 2011
  • February 2011
  • January 2011
  • December 2010
  • November 2010
  • October 2010
  • September 2010

Blogroll (links)

  • on Twitter
  • Santa Barbara Museum of Art
  • Santa Barbara Performing Arts League
  • Contemporary Arts Forum
  • Arts Journal
  • ARTINFO

Adsense

This Blog is part of a Santa Barbara Blog Network hosted by City2. Here are some links to some of the other stuff City2 does:

  • Local News Aggregation
  • Local List of Bloggers
  • Local Mobile Photos
  • Sign Up!

Most Commented Posts by this Blogger:

  • Mobile Post: Save the Waves Film Festival
  • Mobile Post: Dia de los Muertos @ SBMA
  • "Nothing is funnier than unhappiness."
  • Mobile Post: SBMA officially open every Thursday night for free!
  • Santa Barbara artist is "Net Artist You Should Know"
Copyright © 2009 by | C200 Blog Designed By GV Back To Top