Wednesday, December 21, 2022

The Stiletto Collection by Beth Smith at the Encinitas Community Center

by Patricia Frischer



Beth Smith is a self-proclaimed 'hunter and gathering of materials". These assemblages reflect that need to pick up stray objects and mull over them until they reflect her interest. But what a lot of people do not realize about Beth Smith is her absolute fascination with shoes. She has even been known to leave a pair of shoes that may be hurting her at any odd spot at the end of an evening, but mainly they seem to be a detour from her regular life as an avid supporter of textiles. 

A founder and executive director emeritus of Vision Museum of Textile Art formerly the Quilt Art Museum: Contemporary Quilts + Textiles at Liberty Station and also a previous Director of Development at the Oceanside Museum of Art, Smith is now the editor of a prestigious textile magazine Fiber Arts Now

This intriguing exhibition might be filled with quite small objects but they are worth a serious look. They are anything but obvious and instead dip deep to find the essence of a arch, a toe and a heel. These mini-wonders are true sculptures. 

My apologies to the artist for the photos I took which, because of the glass case that protects them, were a challenge to capture.  The video at the end of the blog gives you just a glimpse of all the works. 












 



Beth Smith: Stiletto Collection
Encinitas Community Center 1140 Oakcrest Park Drive, Encinitas
Showing until January 11. 2023
To purchase work: contact the artist directly at bethsmith.sd.ca@gmail.com 

Saturday, December 17, 2022

Let SDBG Light Up Your Life This Holiday Season

By Lonnie Burstein Hewitt. Photos by Maurice Hewitt 

 

Full Moon over Lightscape

The brightest initials in our area right now are SDBG—San Diego Botanic Garden—where you can stroll through an extravaganza of multicolored lights, illuminated trees and inventive installations called Lightscape. It’s a great way to spend a chilly evening this holiday season.

For the past year, Ari Novy, SDBG’s president/CEO, has been meeting with representatives of Culture Creative, a U.K.-based company that works with Sony Music to create lighting festivals—including Lightscapes individually designed for botanic gardens. And on a full-moon evening earlier this month, my husband and I were lucky enough to walk the mile-long Lightscape trail with him.

Ari Novy in the Winter Cathedral

Lightscape first appeared in the U.S. at Chicago Botanic Garden in 2019 B.C.—Before Covid—and Novy was there to see it. He was immediately interested and began talking with Culture Creative shortly after. But when the pandemic made long-term plan-making impossible, he had to wait awhile before committing to the project. 

“We needed to have a full 12 months to work out the logistics and last year we were finally ready to start,” he said. “Working with their team was great. They’re really creative; they’re all plant people, and they’re artists and tech pros too. I wanted our plants to be co-stars along with the lights, so there’s always an interplay between the plants and the lighting.” 

Neon Strings

There are 12 artful installations—Novy calls them vignettes. “It’s a play in 12 acts, with a rising and falling arc, like in storytelling.” But individual trees can also be stunning, and he says visitors have been “newly amazed” by trees that take on a whole different look with expressive lighting.

Transformed trees

“Everything is unique to our space,” he added. “So if you go to see Lightscape in Chicago, Los Angeles or Brooklyn, you’ll be seeing something else.”

His personal favorites are the Neon Tree and the “trippy” Laser Forest and he’s already beginning to think about next year’s Lightscape, which will definitely include two super-popular installations: the Winter Cathedral and the Fire Garden.

Neon Tree

One view of the Laser Forest

Fire Garden

But this year’s event isn’t over yet. Over 80,000 tickets have been sold so far, but there are more left to sell, and visitor response has been so enthusiastic that they’ve decided to extend Lightscape beyond its originally announced end date January 1, 2023. The new end date is now January 8.

Oh, yes…there’s music playing along the trail… though I’d have liked a little Bach interspersed with the pop-rock and holiday tunes. And there are food and drink concessions, but we were too involved with what we were seeing to stop for that kind of sustenance. Our personal favorites?  We shared Novy’s love of the Laser Forest, which gives an otherworldly look to the Bamboo Garden, always one of our favorite spots at SDBG. And we shared the general enchantment with the Winter Cathedral, designed by Australia-based MandyLights, whose website proclaims: “We create outstanding visual experiences.”

In fact, all of Lightscape is an outstanding visual experience, especially if you’re willing to slow down and give yourself a chance to spend time with what you see. We saw all ages enjoying themselves, even infants in strollers…and their grandparents. To sum up our experience in a word: deLIGHTful!

Poinsettias

Nova

Fire Lily

Lightscape
San Diego Botanic Garden
230 Quail Gardens Dr. Encinitas      
Now through January 8, 2023
Book timed tickets in advance at https://sdbg.org/lightscape/
Cost: $15-$29 +parking fee.
There are 3 different parking lots, so 3 different ways to start and end your walk.
Hot tip: For smaller crowds, choose an entry time after 7pm.

You may still be able to get tickets for New Year’s Eve and New Year’s Day Eve, and whatever the weather, Lightscape will shine.

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

Saturday, November 12, 2022

Cog•nate Collective, Tianquitzli: Portraits of the Market at Institute of Contemporary Art North

by Patricia Frischer


Amy Sanchez Arteaga & Misael Diaz

Cog•nate Collective’s is Amy Sanchez Arteaga & Misael Diaz and they are real people who get ideas, which they play off each other and put into their art practice. One of the ideas that interested them was Pleiades AKA the Seven Sisters in Greek mythology, who were the seven daughters of Atlas, a Titan who held up the sky, and the oceanid Pleione, protectress of sailing. This constellation is a star cluster which means they were born at the same time from a large cloud of gas and dust. In the Aztec culture Pleiades is known as Tianquitzli. In the USA (and around the world) there are many street and farm markets called Seven Sisters.


detail

So, the exhibition at the ICA is all about street markets and how they are meeting places and centers of negotiation, places to try new experiences in food and consumption of all types. At these markets, Cog•nate Collective found an artist sharing a stand with his family who sells clothing. He does commissioned portraits, and so Amy and Misael asked him to make portraits from photos they have been gathering of various markets those in including Tijuana. These portrait of market stands are a big part of this show. But it is the intervention into the market place that is a central job of Cog•nate Collective

At the market, Cog•nate Collective found themselves drawn to mirrors and starting purchasing them. They then photographed various people holding the mirror often pointing up to the sky in the direction of the constellation Tianquitzli (The Seven Sisters). The markets, the mirror, the drawings all become portals for us to enter a dialogue about  another sister culture.

MICA trailer

Parked outside the front door is the small trailer (Mobile Institute for Citizenship and Art, MICA) that is the depository for all sorts of documentation of interactions by this team. It is also  a place of gathering and a library.  It has traveled with them over the last ten years to paths unknown to them, but eventually revealed to us all.  

Cog•nate Collective at ICA San Diego North Education Pavilion
Until Jan 29, 2023
1550 S. El Camino Real, Encinitas, 92024
For more info: 7604366611  info@icasandiego.org

Free Reception and artist talk on Nov 19, 2023 
 https://icasandiego.ticketing.veevartapp.com/tickets/view/list/cognate-collective-opening-reception-and-artist-talk


NOTE: Cog•nate Collective is one of the four recipients of the SD Art Prize at Central Library Art Gallery  until Jan. 7th, 2023.Presented by San Diego Visual Arts Network and curated by Chi Essary
Alida CervantesAngélica EscotoCarlos Castro Arias, Cog • nate Collective
SD Art Prize Catalog 2022

Monday, October 31, 2022

Breaking Ground in Encinitas for the Arts + Day of the Dead

 by Patricia Frischer


It was a great day for Encinitas on October 28 when we celebrated the symbolic ground breaking for the renovation of the Pacific View Art Center.  The center is due to open to the public in 2024. The renovation contract went to Conan Construction Inc. for $4.56 million and a 20 percent contingency fund. Plus $800,00 will go to Kleinfelder Construction Services to manage and inspect the construction project. Photos: Patricia Frischer

Shovels and hardhats to the ready

Sand sculpture creation

Visual arts represented. Dog paying rapt attention
to Mayor Blakespear's remarks

One, two three...Hurrah!

Danny Salzhandler, Ecninitas Mayor Catherine Blakespear,
Naimeh Woodward (Encinitas Friends of the Arts), Councilman Tony Kranz

Mayor Blakespear and her Aunt Rosemary KimBal,
ardent Pacific View Art Center Supporters

The next day was another successful Day of the Dead, Dia de los Muertos, celebration at the Encinitas Community Center orchestrated, produced and sponsored by the Encinitas Friends of the Arts with Naimeh Woodward leading the charge with lots of city, county and private donations and tons of volunteers.  Photos for this event by John Campbell. 

Community Ofrenda


Callejeros de Encinitas Car Club

Super face painting

Aztec Dancers 

Stage performances by Ballet Folklórico de San Dieguito, Ballet Folklórico Rancho Buena Vista High School, Mariachi Nuevo San Diego, Mariachi Estado de Oro

Tissue flowers, sugar skulls making and art displays abound

Safe broadcast of all the performances outside and food trucks. 


 

Saturday, October 29, 2022

Unfolding: Allied Craftsman at James Alan Rose Art Gallery at Francis Park School

by Patricia Frischer



Irène de Watteville I love to absorb the absurd.

 
Clay, metal, fibers, wood, glass, paper are the materials but the craftsmen and craftswomen turn these medium into art. This was a first visit to the little gem of a gallery, the James Alan rose Gallery at the Francis Parker School. We were greatly impressed with the campus and the facilities of the art department…a university quality for a high school. So it is especially important for the students of the school to see the work by the best of our best crafts artists in San Diego. A visit to the Allied Craftsmen website will give you a deeper dive into the artists in this exhibition and we decided to let them speak for themselves. 

There are many others in this show, so please, experience this space for yourself. Some of it was just too difficult for us to photograph at the crowded opening.  It is to the right of the entrance to the campus. 


Irène de Watteville

Irène de Watteville

Irène de Watteville

Cheryl Tall  “My desire for the harmonious existence of human beings with nature is represented by figures that become a refuge for birds and animals

Cheryl Tall 

Cheryl Tall 

Kathleen Mitchell “I can walk into a glassblowing studio anywhere in the world and know how to communicate. Glass is a visual language. It could be a nod or a gesture and you know your job."

Kathleen Mitchell

Wendy Maruyama If a viewer can take away or gain something new from something I have made, then I feel that I have succeeded.

Gail Schneider I am a woman who grew up next to the Hudson River and the Catskill mountains, a world that has always called to me to enter into a lure of risk.

Ross Stockwell Wood is a naturally beautiful material. So a wood carver’s job is to invent forms that are at least as interesting as the wood itself.


Ellen Fager “A good pot is like a tree or a stone, individual and inevitable.

Ellen Fager

Viviana Lombrozo Art helps us to expand our understanding of our fellow humans, our world, and ourselves


A wee shout out to the clever foodist that arranged these lovely platters. They are artist themselves. 



Our dear friend Irene de Watteville is a new member of this group and we noticed how pleased she was to be included. 


Unfolding: Allied Craftsmen
James Allen Rose Gallery at Francis Parker School
6501 Linda Vista Road, SD 92111
Opening Hours M-F 8am - 4pm
or by appt email 
Jaclyn Enck  at jenck@francisparker.org
Showing until Dec 9, 2022