By Anonymous — Wednesday, November 12th, 2008
The perfect holiday entertainment, Little Women recounts the much-beloved story of the four March girls: Meg, Jo, Beth and Amy, as they grow to adulthood in 19th-century New England. In the Ventura College Theatre for two weekends: Dress Rehearsal Thursday November 13, 8 p.m., free, Performances: Friday and Saturday, November 14 and 15, and Thursday, Friday and Saturday, November 20, 21, and 22, all at 8 p.m., and Sunday, November 23, at 3 p.m. Tickets: General: $9, Students, VC Staff, Seniors: $7. Set in Concord Massachusetts in 1863, the March girls consider a Christmas without any presents. America is in the midst of a terrible Civil War. Their father serves the Union as an Army Chaplain in a military hospital in Washington, D.C. Their mother, with Meg and Jo’s help, struggles to make ends meet as a nurse at a local hospital. Meg tutors a wealthy family’s children; while Jo earns a small stipend caring for her cantankerous Aunt March. Younger Beth, too sick to work outside the home, tends to the housecleaning with Hannah the maid, and the youngest, Amy, with dreams of wealth and social status in mind, attempts to improve her vocabulary with curious results. The play encompasses five years in the trials and tribulations, gains and losses – emotional and material – of the March family. Through it all we experience the compassionate way they sustain each other. It is another era, another time, and another culture whose values we just might want to reconsider. For more information, contact Professor Judy Garey at 654-6400 ext. 3236 or by email at jgarey@vcccd.edu or Public Information Officer Alisa Moore at 654-6462 or asmoore@vcccd.edu. |
Southwest II by Karen L. Brown, encaustic (wax) monoprint with chine colle, (2007) will be in the Small Images Exhibit. Enlarge Photo By Anonymous — Wednesday, November 5th, 2008
VENTURA: In November and December, the Ventura College Galleries will host: |
Amistad and Malcolm X are just two of the many award winning films for which Ruth E Carter was the costume director. She will speak about her craft on Nov. 13 at Ventura College. Enlarge Photo By Anonymous — Wednesday, November 5th, 2008
VENTURA: The Ventura College Arts & Lectures Series presents FASHION FOR FILM: A Conversation with Ruth E. Carter, an African-American costume designer best known for her two Academy Award nominated films Malcolm X and Amistad, and her work with Director Spike Lee, on Thursday, November 13, 10:30 am, in the Circus Theatre (small theatre in the VC Theatre). She will bring costumes, her portfolio and present a power point on the impact of costuming on film. There is no fee for admission, and the public is invited. For additional information, please contact Professor Simon Waltzer at 654-6400 ext. 1264 or Public Information Officer Alisa Moore at 654-6462. |
By Anonymous — Wednesday, November 5th, 2008
Sunday November 9th will see the gathering of the members of the Santa Paula Society of the Arts at the R/R depot - corner of Santa Barbara and 10th St., Santa Paula. |
By Anonymous — Wednesday, November 5th, 2008
Book Signing November 21st
Did you know that the city of Ventura has streets named Jethro Tull and Crooked Palm Road, and that Anne, Kalorama and Crimea are all streets named after ships that either crashed into the Ventura wharf or went aground nearby? The personality, history and quirks of a city are contained in the names and layouts of its streets, and no one knows that better than author David W. Hill, whose new book, The Streets of Ventura, reflects 18 years of research on the city’s growth. A Ventura resident since 1932, Hill will sign copies of his book on Friday, November 21, from 12:00- 2:00 p.m. at the Museum of Ventura County, 89 S. California St. in Ventura. The edition is limited to 500 copies, and is available exclusively through the Museum store. Copies are $18.95, and can be reserved by calling 653-0323 ext 16. The unique publication contains the origins of street names as well as their recording dates (learn which streets no longer exist), an index of all tracts and subdivisions from 1869 to 2003 (the most recent recording), a history of the city from its 1866 incorporation to the present, historical maps from 1855 to 1975, and 35 pages of historical photographs. |
By Anonymous — Wednesday, November 5th, 2008
“Drawn to Water” is Kay Zetlmaier’s soulful journey reveals the artists profound relationship with the natural beauty of the sea. Working en plein air, this solo exhibit will be primarily a collection for works painted on a road trip from between Oregon and California with her companion – her standard poodle, Koko. The exhibit runs from November 11 – Dec. 6 with an opening reception on Friday, November 14 from 5 – 8 pm. |
Southwest II by Karen Brown, encaustic (wax) monoprint with chine colle (2007), is just one of the beautiful, perfect-for-gift-giving, pieces available at the Ventura College “Small Images” Exhibit beginning November 19. Enlarge Photo By Anonymous — Wednesday, October 29th, 2008
12th Annual Scholarship Fund Raiser Art Show and Sale
Date: November 20th Opening Reception Ventura College’s Friends of the Arts is having an “Invitational and Membership” Art Exhibit and Sale to benefit the Ventura College Art Student Scholarship Fund. The “Small Images” Exhibit will run from November 19th through December 11th at Ventura College’s New Media Gallery. Guest artists this year include: Renate Collins, Gerri Johnson-Mc Millin, Tom McMillin, Marjorie Moskowitz, Sylvia Raz, Teal Rowe, Leslie Thompson, Stephen Schafer, and Sylvia Torres. The opening reception will take place Thursday, November 20 from 7-9pm at the New Media Gallery. The public is invited. There is NO admission charge. Refreshments will be served. Gallery hours are from 12 noon-4pm Monday through Friday. Opening night Reception has Free Parking on campus without a permit in the West and North lots off Loma Visa Road ONLY. Parking on campus at any other time requires a permit which may be purchased for $1.00 from the machine in front of the Administration Building off Telegraph Road. Ventura College Friends of the Arts, working with the Foundation Office, is a non- profit organization designed to raise scholarship funds for students majoring in the arts a Ventura College. Membership includes professional artists from the community, present and past faculty, and alumni from Ventura College. Any interested person is welcome to join. CONTACT: Donna Carver, PR and Marketing for Ventura Friends of the Arts “Small Images” Scholarship Fundraiser Art Show and Sale, for more information 402-0247. |
By Anonymous — Wednesday, October 22nd, 2008
VENTURA: Through November 2, the Ventura College Galleries are exhibiting: In Gallery 2: Fascination with the Exotique, curated by Art Historian Ann Bittl. Exploring Non-Western art and culture as a means of seeing the world in our era of globalization, this exhibition is an introduction to African, American Indian, Chinese, Japanese, Southeast Asian, Islamic and Pre-Columbian art as a form of cultural and social expression. The works are also for sale. In the New Media Gallery: One Book One Campus III: A Faculty and Student Collaborative Exhibit - A collection of works by Ventura College Faculty and Student artists and photographers visualizing the Orwell work, 1984, which is the subject of the 2008 One Book One Campus One Community project. Both galleries are open Monday through Friday, Noon to 4 p.m. Admission is free. Call Gallery Director Kate Martin at 648-8974 or email her at kate@katemartin.com for more information. |
By Anonymous — Wednesday, October 22nd, 2008
VENTURA: Love can be exhilarating, fickle, deceitful, all-encompassing, and drive you to do crazy things just as much today as it did 200 years ago. The Ventura College Opera and Musical Theatre (VCO&MT) takes a fresh, fun and exciting approach to the music of Mozart's famous operas including Cosi Fan Tutte, The Marriage of Figaro, The Magic Flute and Don Giovanni. Mozart in Love consists of scenes from five of Mozart's operas. These are woven in an exploration of love itself by the narration of Mozart, and he even gets into the action by playing Basilio, the trouble making music teacher, in the Marriage of Figaro scene. The script and the arrangement of the scenes were done by Director Angela Rasmussen who teaches in the music department at California Lutheran University. Partially funded by a grant from the City of San Buenaventura, VCO&MT brings the rarely performed Mozart in Love to the Ventura College Theatre for just three shows: October 31, dress rehearsal, 8 p.m., free to students. Performances are November 1, 8 p.m., and November 2, 2 p.m. Tickets: General Admission is $10, Cost for Students, Seniors and VC staff is $5. For additional information, please call Elizabeth Helms, program director at 805-654-6309, by email at kennethhelms@sbcglobal.net or online www.operaworkshop.info. CAST LIST-- MOZART IN LOVE |
By Anonymous — Wednesday, October 22nd, 2008
VENTURA: Trina Boman, a young violinist from Thousand Oaks, will solo with the Ventura College Symphony Orchestra on Saturday, October 25 at 8 p.m. Trina won the 2008 Henry Schwab Ventura County Violin Contest against three other finalists. The competition is sponsored by a grant from the Schwab Family Trust. Tickets, at $5 student, VC staff and senior, or $10 general admission, may be purchased at the Ventura College Theatre only on the evening of the concert. Ms. Boman will play Mendelssohn's Concerto for Violin and Saint Saens’ Havanaise for Violin with the Symphony. She won the contest playing the Mendelssohn composition. Both are exciting works that display the dexterity and skill of the performer. (Please see Ms. Boman’s biography below.) Mozart's 40th Symphony is one of his greatest. Written during the very last months of his life, it stands as one of the most successful symphonic compositions of all time, enlivening all the emotions. Fiesta Tropicale by Lopez rounds out the program. It is a medley of great Latino melody using all the color of the orchestra and a lively percussion back up. Also on the program is Puttin' on the Ritz featuring the nine percussionists of the Symphony. The public is invited to attend. BIO: Trina Boman Trina Boman (17), is a junior at Thousand Oaks High School. She is a student of Melissa Phelps-Beckstead. She started playing the violin when she was 4 years old as a student of Diana Ray-Goodman. Trina is a member of the Conejo Valley Youth Orchestra. CONTINUED » |
By Anonymous — Wednesday, October 22nd, 2008
Get “Stamped!” for a chance to win a gift certificate to Gallery of your choice!
First Fridays Ventura continues with a variety of exhibits and receptions for the public to attend. Every participating gallery/studio will have yellow balloons out front – so follow the balloons for an art-filled evening. Get “stamped” from five participating galleries and be entered into a drawing to win a gift certificate to a gallery of your choice! Bell Arts Factory –Bell Arts Factory - Visit our resident artists in their open studios. Their jewelry, paintings, ceramics, stained glass and other art pieces provide unique gift-giving opportunities. The Community Room will be exhibiting scenic oil paintings by Hilda Kilpatrick, photography of Ventura by Linda F. Peterson, watercolors by Rex Kochel, and photography by Brooks student Stacy LaMascus. Our Tool Room Gallery will be transformed by artists Sarah Kalvin and Alicia Morris Soto into a chapel-like setting dedicated to honoring Dia de los Muertos. Sarah will exhibit ceremonial garments from Chiapas, Mexico, along with photos from past celebrations. Alicia will create an "ofrenda" or altar where community members are invited to bring offerings for the souls that have touched their lives. The Gallery will be open 5-9 p.m. October 31 through November 2, and on 1st Friday, November 7th. Bell Arts Factory 432 N. Ventura Ave. Ventura 805.258.1160 www.BellArtsFactory.com Buenaventura Gallery – “The Human Adventure” is inspired by Jablonski’s never-ending fascination with the reactions of people to conditions of life. The facial expression and body language that show these reactions are the subject matter of her exhibit. The exhibit runs through Nov. 9. Closing reception during First Friday Gallery Crawl. Buenaventura Gallery 700 E. Santa Clara St., Ventura 805.648.1235 www.BuenaventuraGallery.org Discovery Gallery – Ventura County Potters’ Guild “Burnt Earth” juried exhibit at the Discovery Gallery from November 7 through December 3, 2008. The juror is Susan Gerrard from The Museum of Ventura County. Opening reception Friday, November 7 from 5 – 7 pm. The Ventura County Potters’ Guild was founded in 1957 to promote the art and craft of ceramics in the community and to provide a forum for local potters to share their experiences and knowledge of clay. This knowledge is passed on through guest speaker presentations, member's show and tell, informative newsletter, workshops, shows, sales and a library that features both books and videos. The Guild is comprised of professional and recreational potters and ceramists; instructors from local high schools and colleges; as well as people simply interested in ceramics in and around the Ventura County area. Discovery Gallery (inside the Ventura Visitors Bureau) 101 S. California St., Ventura. 805.648.1235 www.BuenaventuraGallery.org CONTINUED » |
By Anonymous — Wednesday, October 15th, 2008
Rancho Camulos
“Ramona Days” - OCTOBER 18, 2008, 10:00 AM – 4:00 PM SUGGESTED TOPICS FOR FEATURES Rancho Camulos Museum Contact Information |
By Anonymous — Wednesday, October 15th, 2008
Applications due November 7, 2008
"Rock the Oaks" is back! The ninth annual concert featuring local bands performing for Conejo Valley teens will be held at the Thousand Oaks Civic Arts Plaza’s Janet & Ray Scherr Forum Theatre at 7:30 pm on February 27, 2009. "Rock the Oaks 9," sponsored by the Thousand Oaks Civic Arts Plaza Foundation, offers local bands a chance to showcase their original music. Application deadline for "Rock the Oaks 9" is 5:00 p.m., Friday, November 7, 2008. Bands can obtain an application from: · The City of Thousand Oaks website, www.toaks.org · Information Desk, 2nd second level of City Hall · Civic Arts Plaza Box Office, 3rd level of City Hall · Or at the Fabulous Thousand Oaks Teen Center The Thousand Oaks Youth Commission is looking for four local bands to perform 30 minutes each of original music at the concert. All musical styles/genres will be considered, and there are no age limitations. The Youth Commission will review applications and demo tapes or CDs to determine audition candidates following the application deadline. Call (805) 449-2743 or (805) 449-2788 or e-mail YouthCommission@toaks.org for additional information. |
By Anonymous — Wednesday, October 15th, 2008
at the City of Santa Paula’s California Oil Museum
The Ag Art Alliance is proud to announce the winners of the “Art About Agriculture” art exhibit which will run through November 16th at the City of Santa Paula’s California Oil Museum, 1001 E. Main Street in historic downtown Santa Paula. The winner of the prestigious Limoneira purchase award is Hilda Kilpatrick for her “Fillmore Fields”. First place went to Suz Rawn for her “Lemon Gourd”, Second place went to Gail Pidduck for her “In the Carrots” and third place went to “Hayday” by Roger Conrad. There are six honorable mentions: “South Mountain and Strawberry Fields” by Susan Petty, “Ventura Ag Patterns” by Bill Dewey, “Parsley Harvest” by Robert Diehl, “Artichoke” by Gail Faulkner, “Vase I” by Nate Pidduck and “Afternoon Patrol with Oranges” by John Fielder. The purpose of the exhibit is to promote Art About Agriculture by exploring all the facets of agriculture from workers to water, from machinery to soil and to the food that goes on our plates. Art About Agriculture features art by 35 artists working in both two and three dimensional media who create art that in some way draws its inspiration from our agricultural heritage and/or contemporary agriculture. That inspiration includes, but is not limited to, depictions of rural landscape, farm animals, farm products, rural life, and art that in a more abstract way deals with issues and ideas related to agriculture. The Ag Art Alliance was formed in 2007 by Gail Pidduck and John Nichols. Jennifer Heighton joined them recently. For more information on the exhibit and future activities visit www.agartalliance.com. WHAT: Ag Art Alliance 2nd Annual Exhibit “Art About Agriculture” |
By Anonymous — Wednesday, October 15th, 2008
Fillmore’s annual art walk is growing! In its new incarnation as the Fillmore ArtHarvest, artists and performers will take to the streets, creating a festival atmosphere to showcase both local and regional talent. Beginning at 3:00 p.m. on Saturday, October 25, 2008, downtown Fillmore merchants and artists will transform Central Avenue between Main and Sespe Avenues into a pedestrian-friendly art space for all to enjoy. Downtown businesses will also be opening their doors to sponsor fine artists, potters, sculptors, photographers, gourd artists and jewelers. There will be multiple opportunities for guests to meander in and out of Concurrent with the fine arts displays is the Chalk Art Festival and a hands-on art center. Chalk artists are invited to demonstrate their talents on the beautifully laid out sidewalks in front of the Fillmore Just across the railroad tracks at the corner of Central and Main, all are invited to enter a hands on art space with booths offering art activities for only a dollar each. Kids and adults can learn how to weave “God’s Eyes” or create a bashura banner among other activities. Musicians will be performing at multiple locations up and down Central to add to the festive atmosphere. Performers will be announced at a later time. One way or another, all guests can go home with beautiful artistic works, music CDs, tasty, local foods and goods, and with having had a satisfying, small-town “Fillmore experience.” Sponsored by the Fillmore Downtown Merchants Association. |
By Anonymous — Wednesday, October 8th, 2008
Nov. 1st - Downtown Ventura Alive with Several Festivities! Between the Museum of Ventura County’s 8th annual Día de los Muertos (Day of the Dead) Community Celebration, and Danza Mexica Cuauhtemoc’s 5th annual traditional Día de los Muertos Aztec event, downtown Ventura is the perfect place to bring the family on Saturday, November 1. Both events are free. This year, the museum’s most popular event is being held November 1 from 12:00 –3:00 p.m. at the Albinger Museum, 113 East Main Street, next to Mission San Buenaventura. The celebration includes traditional folk craft projects, face painting, and music by Mariachi Costa de Oro. Families can try their hand at decorating sugar skulls and masks, or make papel picado banners, papier-mâché butterflies, and paper flowers or skeletons. There will also be 12:30 and 2:15 p.m. performances of ceremonial Mexican songs on traditional instruments made by students at the Vita Art Center. Ofrendas (altars to honor the dead), created by local schools, artists, and community groups, are on display October 31 through November 7, at the Museum of Ventura County’s 89 S. California Street site, also in downtown Ventura. Danza Mexica Cuauhtemoc’s Día de los Muertos Aztec event is also being held Saturday, November 1, in downtown Ventura’s’ Mission Park on Main Street, across from the Albinger Museum, from 1:00 – 8:00 p.m. It includes live entertainment, musical and dance groups, a Mexican mercado, authentic traditional Aztec dance performances, and ceremonial processions. Danza Mexica Cuauhtemoc is dedicated to preserving and promoting understanding of Mexica/Azteca culture, history, traditions, ceremonies and dances. The tradition of Día de los Muertos honors the dead who are said to come back to walk among the living on November 1 and 2. Colorful ofrendas are built to honor departed relatives and friends, and include objects they enjoyed in their lifetimes. Humorous skulls (calaveras), and skeletons blithely going about worldly business are the dominant symbols of the holiday. Día de los Muertos has roots in pre-Columbian as well as Catholic religious beliefs. Celebrated in many parts of Mexico and Latin America, Día de los Muertos is now popular in the United States among Latinos and non-Latinos alike. |
By Anonymous — Wednesday, October 1st, 2008
Ojai artist Dianne Bennett reuses found metal to create the small painted retablos and assemblages on exhibit and for purchase at the Museum of Ventura County during Ventura’s Harvest 08 ArtWalk weekend. Meet the museum’s ArtWalk artist on Saturday, October 18, from 1:00 - 7:00 pm, and on Sunday, October 19, from 12:00 - 4:00 p.m., at the Museum of Ventura County, 89 South California Street, near the corner of California and Santa Clara Streets in downtown Ventura. Bennett often creates her pieces by reusing discarded materials. She describes her works as devotional objects that venerate the natural world, inspired by painted láminas and devotional art of Mexico, India and Asia, as well as by popular art of other cultures. Bennett is also one of the artists featured in the museum’s invitational exhibition Between Heaven and Earth: Entre Cielo y Tierra, running through November 30. Linocuts and woodblock prints by the internationally known Artemio Rodriguez are also on museum exhibition during that same time. For further information call Museum of Ventura County at (805) 653-0323 or go to http://www.venturamuseum.org. |
By Anonymous — Wednesday, October 1st, 2008
As part of a series of events celebrating “The Big Read,” a community-wide reading initiative, the E. P. Foster Library in Ventura will present Alice Greenfield McGrath, on Wednesday, October 8, 2008 at 6:30 p.m. in the Elizabeth R. Topping Room at the E.P. Foster Library in downtown Ventura. |
By Anonymous — Wednesday, October 1st, 2008
Author Amada Irma Pérez leads a discussion of the award winning bestseller Bless Me Ultima, at the Museum of Ventura County on Saturday, October 11 at 2:00 p.m. The book by Rudolfo Anaya is a coming-of-age novel of a young boy in New Mexico in the 1940s, and was chosen by the City of Ventura to be read by the community during October’s Ventura Big Read. A resident of Ventura, author Pérez has been a bilingual educator, literacy consultant and presenter for more than twenty-five years. Her teaching experience includes kindergarten through university, and her bilingual children’s books are designed to encourage multicultural understanding. Her first book, My Very Own Room/Mi Propio Cuartito, won the Tomás Rivera Children’s Book Award and is given to every newborn in San Antonio, Texas through the Library Foundation‘s “Born to Read” program. Her second book, My Diary from Here to There/Mi Diario De Aquí Hasta Alla, won the Pura Belpre Honor Book Award. Her most recent publication is Nana's Big Surprise/Nana, Que Sorpresa. Perez’s event at the museum is one of several associated with Ventura Big Read .The Ventura Cultural Affairs Division, in partnership with the Ventura County Library, was selected by the National Endowment for the Arts to take part in the Big Read, an initiative in which an entire community is encouraged to read the same book at the same time and participate in discussions on its themes. For more information, go to www.cityofventura.net/bigread. The Museum of Ventura County is located at 89 S. California Street in Ventura. |
By Anonymous — Wednesday, October 1st, 2008
October 11 & 12, 2008 with a full array of Scottish/Celtic activities for you to enjoy. Join us 9 am to 5 pm each day for Bagpipe Bands, Highland Dancers and Heavy Athletics with competitions in each arena. Several stages will be filled with your favorite Celtic entertainers from Alex Beaton to Celtic Spring--and a special extended day of music by the Wicked Tinkers on the Celtic Rock Stage Saturday night! Shop our 50+ Vendors for Holiday giving and enjoy authentic food and drink from the British Isles--including haggis! Much more information on the Games website www.Seaside-Games.com and don't forget that AMTRAK stops at our front gate! |