Updated on February 20, 2021 at 5:23 pm
Laurie Scavo
People wear their fanciest frocks, suits, and outfits while visiting The Happiest Place on Earth
A two-day expo at the Disneyland Hotel also connects vintage fans with clothes, accessories, vendors, and more
The event, which is not affiliated with Disneyland, has blossomed at other Southern California spots, including LA Opera
EVER STROLLED BY SLEEPING BEAUTY S CASTLE. and seen someone spinning in a pinafore, or carrying a parasol, or rocking a seersucker suit? You might think, at first glance, that we re describing what a Fantasyland character might wear, the sort of fairy-tale-ish togs that have oodles of extra oomph. But oomph is extra d at Disneyland Resort when Dapper Day arrives, as it regularly has over the last several years. The fashionable, twice-a-year festivity, which is not affiliated with the Anaheim theme parks, is all about encouraging people to wear their vintage finery, a favorite ensemble, or something else
The L.A. River plan acknowledges the problem of displacement, but its solutions won't go far enough, fast enough to ensure that it benefits the surrounding working-class communities.
Tang Teaching Museum receives expansive gift from Michael and Sirje Gold
Steve Roden, The Silent World (Four Shadows), 2004, oil, acrylic on canvas, 72 x 66 x 1 1/2 inches, Tang Teaching Museum collection, Gift of Michael O. Gold and Sirje Helder Gold in memory of their beloved son Maximilian Arnold Gold, 2020.22.12.
SARATOGA SPRINGS, NY
.-The Frances Young Tang Teaching Museum and Art Gallery at Skidmore College has received a gift of 24 contemporary artworks from the collection of Michael O. and Sirje Helder Gold. The gift includes works created in the 1990s and 2000s by a diverse group of leading and emerging artists, including Louise Bourgeois, Sean Duffy, Naomi Fisher, Iva Gueorguieva, Michelle Grabner, Carol Hepper, Steve Roden, Jonathan Seliger, Glen Seator, George Stoll, Beverly Semmes, and Barbara Takenaga.
The L.A. River plan acknowledges the problem of displacement, but its solutions won't go far enough, fast enough to ensure that it benefits the surrounding working-class communities.
DHAHRAN: The King Abdul Aziz Center for World Culture (Ithra) has marked the opening of its museum’s inaugural exhibitions on Tuesday and Wednesday. The opening was part of Tanween, Ithra’s creativity season, a 17-day event that explores creativity in art, music, film, theater, science, literature, cultural heritage and entrepreneurship. Ali Al-Mutairi, director of Ithra, said the museum is an essential part of Ithra, and an important supporter of achieving the center’s goals. The museum seeks to spread knowledge, help in cross-culture interaction and sponsor national content through attracting visitors to the exhibitions and the varied interactive performances.