Friday, March 20, 2026

Exquisite Potential: Surviving the 21st Century through Surreal Metamorphosis at The FRONT Arte Cultura

 by Patricia Frischer



Lana Moss

Exquisite Potential: Surviving the 21st Century through Surreal Metamorphosis is on view until May 9 at The FRONT Arte y Cultura in San Ysidro. This gallery space is run by Francisco Eme, a SD Art Prize recipient from 2024 and is a great community resource. This is the 19th year of the annual Día de la Mujer juried and invitational exhibition. We love to see when galleries combine both types of entries. You can see this year’s curator Ariana Torres choices clearly as she is the Assistant Curator at the Mingei International Museum. She specializes in textiles, jewelry, and cultural storytelling, focusing on Filipinx and Mexican/Chicanx narratives. The exhibition features work from over 20 international and local BIPOC women and non-binary artists from both sides of the border.

Be assured when an artist enters a juried show, it is vital to know the selector and what their special interest are. In this case, we loved the fact that there were so many artefact-like works in the show. The exhibition notes that it is drawing inspiration from the Surrealist movement and you could see that in Sarah Garcia’s furred cup or Aida Urbina’s landscapes but certainly the exhibition could not be called surreal. Yes, there is mythmaking like the strange house about hair by Helena Westra and Georgina Treviño’s platonic love swing. And fascism was brought to the fore in the embroidered warships of Aidelen Montoya.

But it appears that Torres love of objects ruled the day and we are happy with that as it was hard to choose which images to share of the many on display. Lana Moss‘s fork appears as the devil’s pitchfork. Alejandra Dueñas’s little pottery woman holds all her hopes and dreams. Isa Guadalupe Medina’s fish is a masterwork of beaded glory. Alondra Zamorano’s woodcut bull is enlivened by a frame the likes of which we have never seen. 

One thing is very true in reading the artists’ statements about their work. They are all in stages of metamorphosis. They are changing from childhood to adulthood, from the effects of society, from fear to empowerment. And yes, this potential for change is exquisite. 


Alejandra Dueñas


Georgina Treviño


Georgina Treviño - detail



Akiko Surai


Avia Rose Ramm


Sarah Garcia


Ari Bird

Ari Bird




Isa Guadalupe Medina


Isa Guadalupe Medina - detail

Kerianne Quick

Kerianne Quick - detail



Mônica Lóss


Helena Westra



Helena Westra


Aidelen Montoya


Aidelen Montoya


Alondra Zamorano



Alexandra Carter



Aida Urbina


Breanna «Nana» Rohde


Nicole Antebi


Nicole Antebi



Gallery View


Exquisite Potential: Surviving the 21st Century through Surreal Metamorphosis
The FRONT Arte Cultura
On view until May 9
Exhibition Tour/ Artist Talk, May 7th, 2026, 5 – 7 pm
147 West San Ysidro Blvd. San Ysidro, CA 92173
 Open hours: Tues – Sat 11am – 6pm
(619) 428-1115 Ext. 206  thefront@casafamiliar.org

Invited Artists
Kerianne Quick
Georgina Treviño
Aidelen Montoya
Sarah Garcia
Akiko Surai
Helena Westra
Ari Bird
Paola Capó

Open Call Artists
Aida Urbina
Alejandra Dueñas
Alexandra Carter
Alondra Zamorano
Ana Villalpando
Ana Violeta Horta
Angela Zamora
Avia Rose Ramm
Breanna «Nana» Rohde
Elizabeth Rooklidge
Gabrielle Berens
Isa Guadalupe Medina
Lana Moss
Laura Estela Huerta Ponce
Mônica Lóss
Nicole Antebi
Olivia Arreguín
Paloma Gonzalez, Unapiel
Simone Quiles
Sitoë Thiam / n-girls collective

Wednesday, March 18, 2026

A Great Show of Faith at UC San Diego

 By Lonnie Burstein Hewitt. Photos by Maurice Hewitt.

 

Faith Ringgold: Self Portrait. 2023

There’s no better way to celebrate Women’s History Month than spending some time at UCSD’s Mandeville Gallery with the current exhibition Faith Ringgold: Full Circle - The Teachings and Her Legacy.

 

 Sunflower Quilting Bee. 2023. 
Silkscreen on silk with pieced fabric border. 
(The above piece is a copy; the original is owned by Oprah Winfrey.
How to tell an original? See if it’s signed by the artist.)

Though best known for her story quilts, which moved what was formerly rated as female craftwork into the realms of fine art, this show is a chance to admire the breadth of the artistry of this Harlem-born woman who was a well-loved professor of Visual Arts at UCSD from 1976-2002.

Children’s Books

United States of Attica. Offset print. 1972. (Referencing the 1971 uprising at New York State’s Attica Prison when inmates were demanding better conditions.)


Dancing on the George Washington Bridge. Silkscreen on silk. 2020. (She could see the bridge from her home in Harlem.)

Born in 1930 as Faith Willi Jones--Ringgold was the last name of her second husband--she was a painter, author, performance artist and activist who encouraged her students to include their own personal narratives in their artworks.

Change 2: Faith Ringgold’s More Than 100 Pounds Weight Loss Performance Story Quilt. Photolithography on canvas. 1988.

California Dahs. Acrylic on canvas. 1983. (Her only abstract paintings, created after the death of her mother, Willi Posey Jones, who taught her to sew and collaborated on some of her early pieces. Might these be prayer rugs? Dah was a word her first baby granddaughter--also named Faith--used to say.)


Committee to Defend the Panthers.  Serigraph. 2023.
The Black Panthers were an organization created in the mid-1966s
to challenge police brutality.

Dancing at the Louvre. Silkscreen on silk with pieced fabric border. 2023.

Somebody Stole my Broken Heart. Silkscreen. 2024.

Ultimately, Faith Ringgold returned to the east coast, where she lived in suburban Englewood, New Jersey, continued making art, and died after a long, full life in 2024.

The exhibition was curated by Mashonda Tifrere, an international curator and advocate for visual artists who has been working with UCSD for the past two years. She has also written and recorded a mindfulness-based audio tour of their Stuart Collection of outdoor public art.

Here’s a special treat: a link to the video that is part of the Ringgold exhibit.  And you’ll be able to see Mashonda in this too.  

Faith Ringgold: Full Circle - The Teachings and Her Legacy.
On view through June 2026.
Mandeville Gallery at UC San Diego, La Jolla.
Hours: Wednesday-Friday, 12-8 p.m.

 

Lonnie Burstein Hewitt is an award-winning author/lyricist/playwright who has been writing about arts and lifestyles in San Diego County for over a dozen years. You can reach her at hew2@sbcglobal.net

Sunday, March 15, 2026

Bread and Salt - Five at a time: Tatiana Ortiz-Rubio, Insite Erratic Fields, Annie Alarcon, ERRE, Anya Gallaccio

 By Patricia Frischer


A whole slew of art is now newly on view at the Bread and Salt building which hosts the Bread and Salt Galleries, The Athenaeum's Catherine and Robert Palmer Gallery, The Sculpture Garden and Quint’s One as well as Best Practice and ICE Gallery, plus many individual artists studios. 
Tatiana Ortiz-Rubio Noncompliant 

Tatiana Ortiz-Rubio's exhibition at Bread and Salt  explores how time can feel different for people with disabilities or illnesses. Sometimes, for example,  they need more time, rest, or flexibility. This idea is often called crip time.” Using paintings, drawings, installations, and a large mural, the artist shows how normal schedules and rules in society don’t always work for everyone. The artwork asks people to think about how we decide what makes a life valuable and how people spend their time.
The exhibition is called Noncompliant. The word usually signifying when someone doesn’t follow rules. Ortiz-Rubio uses it in a new way—as a positive idea about standing up for yourself and not always following unfair expectations. The goal of the show is to help viewers think about how society treats people, especially when it comes to work, care, and human worth.
Ortiz-Rubio  received her MFA from the New York Academy of Art and currently teaches drawing at the University of San Diego. Ortiz-Rubio was a 2018 IMPACT Artist-in-Residence at Bread and Salt, and this exhibition is the first time the gallery presents her work in a solo exhibition. She is the recipient of the 2026 San Diego Art Prize and will be showing with other recipient Danielle Dean and Ingrid Hernandez at the Oceanside Museum of Art in September, 2026
Tatiana Ortiz-Rubio Noncompliant  
Bread and Salt Gallery
March 14 -  May 23, 2026
 
Erratic Fields: INSITE Commonplaces, The Sedimentary Effect






detail

Anya Gallaccio, Beautiful Mindsdetail

Anya Gallaccio, Beautiful Minds

Erratic Fields is an art exhibition that looks at the nature and history of the region shared by Baja California and Southern California. It is part of a long project by INSITE called The Sedimentary Effect. Erratic Fields took about five years of research, trips, and conversations with artists, scientists, and nature experts. It is rather like a chapter within this large body of mostly conceptual projects and installations. 

The Erratic Fields exhibition curated by Andrea Torreblanca showcases these long-term projects with artists living in the area. New commissions are by artists Alex Bazán, Johnnie Chatman, Lael Corbin, Leslie García, and Archivo Familiar del Río Colorado, as well as new iterations of past projects by Mark Dion, Anya Gallaccio, Allan McCollum, Allan Sekula, Gary Simmons, and Yukinori Yanagi. We recommend watching this INSITE video of the artists speaking about their commissions. For example, Lael Corbin explained that he was able to tread lightly with the wind and experience a give and take that made him feel closer than ever to the environment. 

Mark Dion’s house installation Dion rebuilt a small research-style house based on one he made near the Tijuana Estuary. Visitors can go inside and learn about birds and wildlife that live in the border wetlands.

A machine that builds a mountain – One artwork uses a machine that slowly piles up material to form a small “mountain.” It shows how landscapes can change over time and how humans also reshape the land.

San Andreas Fault monitoring artwork – A piece uses sonar or radar technology to track earthquakes in real time along the San Andreas Fault. It reminds visitors that the land in California is always moving beneath our feet.

Photography about trade and factories – Work inspired by photographer Allan Sekula explores how shipping, factories in Baja California, and global trade affect people, the ocean, and the environment.

Sculptures, drawings, and films by several artists show things like dust storms, wind, migration routes, and desert landscapes, helping people think about how nature and human activity mix together in the Californias.

The artists explored places like deserts, volcanoes, dunes, and coastlines to understand how natural forces—such as earthquakes, winds, droughts, and animal migration—shape the land and the people who live there. The exhibition shows that the U.S.–Mexico border region is really one connected environment, even though it is divided by politics. The show helps visitors think about how nature, history, and politics are all connected, and how even small events in nature can have big effects on the world around us. The next book in the series will be published shortly. 

Erratic Fields: INSITE Commonplaces, The Sedimentary Effect
Produced by INSITE - Art Practices in the Public Sphere
Athenaeum Art Center at Bread and Salt Building
Mar 14  to June 28, 2026

Annie Alarcon: Forms of Devotion
Annie Alarcon

Annie Alarcon

Annie Alarcon

Annie Alarcon

Annie Alarcon



Small delicate engraved porcelain vessels created by Annie Alarcon are hanging  separately, no chance of touching, each one inspired by ancient Greek perfume bottles.  Annie Alarcón makes us wonder what they are holding.  We all know how a scent can bring back a memory in a very strong, even emotional way. And one holds a bottle, gently, and applies the potion to your pulse points. It is a very intimate act, almost a ritual of preparation.
But there are other containers in the show, ones on the wall that are spilling out light, large heavy pots with natural botanicals placed on top, and tiny discs that look like flattened doll dishes.
One amphora stands out as somewhere in-between with the written words, “What once was held.”   Amphoras have pointed bottoms and were usually used for storing oil or wine. They last for years and years and were used for shipping as they could be stacked between other cargo. Sediment settled at the bottom and it was easy to tip this shape for pouring. These art works might not be meant for use, but they symbolize a lasting place to carry and keep safe whatever is important to us.  
Annie Alarcon: Forms of Devotion
Athenaeum Catherine and Robert Palmer Gallery
March 14–May 7, 2026

Marcos Ramírez ERRE’s  The Prisoner
Marcos Ramírez ERRE’s  The Prisoner

Marcos Ramírez ERRE’s  The Prisoner
detail reflection on the ground


“Utopia is imprisoned, come help us free it!” -ERRE
Marcos Ramírez ERRE’s sculpture, The Prisoner, stands eight feet tall, composed of a central concrete tower with mirrored letters spelling “UTOPIA,” enclosed in a rusted iron cage. It is viewable from Julian Ave in the Gallery Sculpture Garden in front of Best Practice. ERRE is a previous SD Art Prize recipient and has a long history of work with words with a focus on the US-Mexico border region. 
Marcos Ramírez ERREThe Prisoner
Bread and Salk Sculpture Garden
From March 14, 2026
Bread and Salk Sculpture Garden
From March 14, 2026

Anya Gallaccio’s When Black is Burned 
Anya Gallaccio’s When Black is Burned 



Quint Gallery is showing Anya Gallaccio’s When Black is Burned at the ONE space at Bread and Salt. The artwork is a large wall sculpture made from obsidian, a shiny black glass that forms when hot lava cools very quickly during a volcanic eruption. The artist cut and polished this stone so it is reflective like a mirror. (see video above) This sculpture is different from some of her other artworks that slowly change or disappear over time. Instead, obsidian forms over a very long time in nature, so the piece connects to the slow processes of the Earth.
Another project by Gallaccio called Beautiful Minds is being shown in the Insite project, Erractic Fields.  In that project she uses a 3-D clay printer to create versions of Devils Tower. And there is more work by Anya Gallaccio at Quint Gallery in La Jolla until May 23
Anya Gallaccio: When Black is Burned
Quint ONE at Bread and Salt
March 14 to April 25, 2026

Bread & Salt 
1955 Julian Avenue, San Diego, 92113
Hours:Tuesday – Saturday 11 am – 4 pm
Please check with individual galleries for opening days and hours. 

Best Practice 
was unfortunately not open during the afternoon of my visit. Their exhibition A Unifying Force: The Art of Revision San Diego is on view until April 18. ICE Gallery (Michael James Armstrong withThomas DeMello) was also not open.