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Page 21 - சான் பிரான்சிஸ்கோ கலை நிறுவனம் News Today : Breaking News, Live Updates & Top Stories | Vimarsana

Symphony of shape and color: IAIA exhibit a retrospective of 60 years of art by Linda Lomahaftewa

.... .... .... .... .... .... .... .... .... .... .... .... .... .... .... .... .... .... Linda Lomahaftewa’s bold Hopi landscapes unite the ancient world with the contemporary in a symphony of shape and color. “The Moving Land: 60+ Years of Art by Linda Lomahaftewa,” featuring 70 paintings and works on paper, is open at Santa Fe’s IAIA Museum of Contemporary Native Arts. The exhibition runs through July 17. Linda Lomahaftewa, “Healing Prayers for a Pandemic Universe (detail),” mixed-media, 2020, 8-by-10 inches. (Courtesy of The Iaia Museum Of Contemporary Native Arts) Best known for her prints, the show marks Lomahaftewa’s first solo exhibition in a retrospective spanning her career from high school to retirement. “We have works from when she was 15 years old,” said Lara Evans, guest curator and associate professor of art history. “In the beginning, she was experimenting with Abstract Expressionism. Then she breaks out into the aesthetic of explosive mark-ma

Forced out : Inside the conservative Facebook group cheerleading a California exodus

Forced out : Inside a conservative Facebook group helping drive the California exodus FacebookTwitterEmail Terry Gilliam has been fed up with California for a long time. The 52-year-old, who has lived in the East Bay suburbs for decades and has worked in real estate for much of that time, told SFGATE that he s been displeased with the state, its liberal politics and its leaders, going all the way back to former Gov. Gray Davis. When he first founded Leaving California in 2018, he envisioned it as a place to commiserate about current affairs in his home state. I knew I wasn t the only person who felt this way, who wasn t happy with the way things are going, and there s no end in sight, he said and in an aside, he pointed to the California state legislature possessing Democratic supermajorities, in his view for the foreseeable future, as a reason why.

SPLIT-LEVEL SATISFACTION

Photo by Winona Barton Ballentine Sun floods into Oldenburger and Smykowski’s kitchen,even on winter days. The thriving wall garden adds layers ofgreen to the beige-on-white design. Oldenburger found twoof the Vernor Panton chairs by Vitra at a vintage shop andmatched them with a round table and pillar pedestal base.The wall pots and hanging lamp are both by West Elm. “I dolove plants,” she says. “I try to have live plants throughoutthe house and encourage my clients to also.” Megan Oldenburger has mastered the art of not breaking the mold rather, instead, redesigning it. The founder of Dichotomy Interiors, Oldenburger has spent a decade taking the Hudson Valley s outdated Colonials, worn-out farmhouses, and funky, falling apart hand-built homes, as well as myriad other vernaculars, and transforming them into livable, flowing, th

Put your feet up with our pick of the week s TV

ON DEMAND Kid Cosmic (Netflix, from Tuesday) The brainchild of Emmy-winning animation expert Craig McCracken, who has previously worked on the likes of The Powerpuff Girls and Dexter s Laboratory. At the centre of the story is a little boy who lives with his free-spirited Grandpa in a desert town. The youngster longs to become a hero, and thinks he s found a way of making it happen when he finds some magical stones in a wrecked spaceship. He and his friends set out to use them against an alien invasion, but matters don t go to plan. Firefly Lane (Netflix, from Wed)

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