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The Woman Behind Your New Capsule Wardrobe Is A Scion Of One Of Retail s Most Recognisable Families
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5 Los Angeles poets on life beyond the pandemic
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April 07, 2021 at 4:14pm
Visionary media arts theorist and critic Gene Youngblood, whose prescient 1970 book
Expanded Cinema reshaped the fields of art and communications, predicted technological advances in filmmaking, and offered the first serious recognition of video and software-based works as cinematic art forms, died on April 6 in Santa Fe at the age of seventy-eight.
Born in Little Rock, Arkansas, in 1942, Youngblood spent most of the 1960s in Los Angeles variously working as a reporter and film critic for the
Los Angeles Herald-Examiner, as a reporter for KHJ-TV, and as an arts commentator for KPFK. In 1967, he was hired at $80 a week as associate editor at the
Dating in college is more difficult than ever Students have found ways to keep romance alive
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Letha Ch’ien April 7, 2021Updated: April 7, 2021, 7:44 am
Executive Director Linda Keaton works behind plexiglass at her desk at the Sonoma Valley Museum of Art on March 12. Photo: Yalonda M. James, The Chronicle
It’s hard to think of a show more perfect for a moment than “Ed Ruscha: Travel Log” at the Sonoma Valley Museum of Art. After a year of quarantine, Ruscha’s images of travel across Route 66 and mountains like the Matterhorn scratch our pent-up itch to move and see something new. Even better, it makes you appreciate the travel you’ve done before.
The show, on view till May 30, reveals the American artist exploring the idea of travel in a wide range of pieces including “word painting” lithographs, artist books, photography and prints. In artwork ranging from iconic images of the Hollywood sign and gas stations to newer lithographs, Ruscha offers not just souvenirs of travel, but something greater: the memory of travel as something to savor long