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November 10, 2023
A Better View by Nathan Huff, detail
Art
See Nathan Huff 's Forest for Trees exhibition at Sullivan Goss
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La Cumbre Art Zone will be open for 3rd Friday Festivities!
Economy
27, 28
Harlan Green asks, Where's the Recession?
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Cover image courtesy of UCSB Arts & Lectures
Pink Cadillac by Felice Willat
3rd Friday Artwalk
Harbor
In This Issue
Environment
Commentary
Community News. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6, 7, 8, 13, 24
John Palminteri’s Community Voice. . . . . . . . . . . . . 16 Harlan Green: Economic Voice. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21 Community Market & Legals. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21-23 Galleries & Art Venues. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2 4 - 2 7
C a l e n d a r. . 1 7 - 1 9 Mov ies..........20
The Gift of Transition House 15
Photo by Anne Fishbein
Sigrid Toye: Harbor Voice. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15
Photo by John Palminteri
2nd Ceylon Film Fest a Wrap. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13
Photo courtesy of Transition House
Veterans Day. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12
The protective ring nets have been removed in Montecito
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Adam Grant Hidden Potential: Adam Grant
TheHidden SciencePotential: of Achieving GreaterofThings The Science Achieving Thu, Nov 16 / Arlington Theatre Moderated by Greater Things Maria Thu, Nov 16Sharapova / Arlington Theatre
(805) 893-3535 www.ArtsAndLectures.UCSB.edu (805) 893-3535 Thu, Nov 16 / Arlington Theatre
www.ArtsAndLectures.UCSB.edu David Sedaris fills the Arlington 14
VOICE Magazine cover story see page 5
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November 10, 2023
Tha nksgiving at the ranch to start
soup or salad
Choice of Seared Maine Diver Scallop Buttered Leeks, Fuyu Persimmon, White Sturgeon Caviar, Shellfish Nage Grilled Belgium White Asparagus Ibérico Ham, Six Minute Egg Croquette, Cave Aged Manchego, Circus Frisee, Spanish Sherry
Choice of Sunchoke Soup brown butter hazelnut vinaigrette, White Alba Truffles, micro celery Garden Heirloom Beet Salad Frog Hollow Farm Pears, Pumpkin Seed Brittle, Caveman Blue Cheese
Seared Wagyu Striploin Tataki Pickled Persian Cucumber, Daikon, Micro Cilantro Ranch Citrus Ponzu Sauce
entrees Choice of Honey Brined Organic Mary’s Turkey Traditional Trimmings Butter Poached Santa Barbara Spiny Lobster House Made Bloomsdale Spinach Fettuccine, Thumbelina Carrots, Confit Tomato Sweet Carrot Butter
desserts Choice of Caramel Apple Tart Cinnamon Streusel, Tahitian Vanilla Bean Gelato Traditional Pumpkin Pie Cranberry Preserves, Pepita Tuille, Sweetened Chantilly Maple Bourbon Creme Brulee Candied Pecans, Red Currant Coulis
Slow Braised Colorado Leg of Lamb Saffron Risotto, Mustard Greens, Meyer Lemon Gremolata Pomegranate Lamb Jus Hawaiian Big Eye Tuna Napa Cabbage, maitake Mushroom, Sweet Peppers, Macadamia Nuts Coconut Curry Sauce Prime Center Cut Filet of Beef Tenderloin Seared Hudson Valley Foie Gras, Fall Greens, Cipollini Onion Soubise Chanterelle Mushroom Peppercorn Sauce
250 per person kid’s menu 65 per child vegetarian menu 195 per person
thursday, november 23rd thanksgiving day from 12pm-7pm enjoy live music
San Ysidro Ranch
reservations 805.504.1967
November 10, 2023
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November 10, 2023
William Wegman: An Introduction to His Art Sunday, November 19 • 11 am William Wegman, best known for images of his Weimaraner dogs, will speak about his pioneering work in painting, drawing, photography, and video, beginning with his start in California in the 1970s. $10 SBMA Members / $15 Non-Members Free for students and teachers with valid ID
Purchase tickets at tickets.sbma.net Mary Craig Auditorium Santa Barbara Museum of Art 1130 State Street Courtesy of William Wegman
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November 10, 2023
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Local News for a Global Village | www.VoiceSB.com from the University of Michigan, completing it in less than three years, and his bachelor’s degree from Harvard University, magna cum laude with highest honors and Phi Beta Kappa honors.
UCSB Arts & Lectures
Adam Grant moderated by
Maria Sharapova Hidden Potential: The Science of Achieving Greater Things
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N A PARADIGMSHIFTING CONVERSATION, organizational psychologist and Penn Wharton School of Business professor Adam Grant will offer a new framework for raising aspirations and exceeding expectations. He’ll be joined on The Arlington Theatre’s stage by tennis champion and entrepreneur Maria Sharapova who will moderate the UCSB Arts & Lectures presentation at 7:30pm Thursday, November 16th.
Grant is the number one New York Times bestselling author of Think Again and Originals. His new book, Hidden Potential: The Science of Achieving Greater Things, explores how to build the skills and structures to achieve greater things, and how to create opportunities for those who have been overlooked. It contends that we can all improve at improving – and when opportunity doesn’t knock, there are ways to build a door.
Related Event: A related Thematic Learning Initiative event on Identifying Hidden Potential will be facilitated by Leading from Within on Friday, November 17th at 12 noon (author not present; limited space). Contact UCSB Arts & Lectures Box Office for registration at 805-895-3535. Registration is required to participate.
“Everyone has hidden potential,” he writes. “This book is about how we unlock it.” The task of helping Grant unlock the potential of his book on stage falls to his friend and fellow author Maria Sharapova. Sharapova knows something about hidden potential, as she shocked the tennis establishment with her upset victory in the 2004 Wimbledon final. At just 17 years of age, she defeated Serena Williams to earn the first of her five grand slam victories.
www.artsandlectures.ucsb.edu West Coast Premiere
Midori with
Photo of Grant by Jamey Stillings / Photo of Sharapova by Jenna Jones
A Conversation with visionary thinker
He has received awards for distinguished scholarly achievement from the Academy of Management, the American Psychological Association and the National Science Foundation, and been recognized as one of the world’s most-cited, most prolific, and most influential researchers in business and economics.
A conversation with Adam Grant, moderated by Maria Sharapova, will take place at The Arlinton Theatre at 7:30pm Thursday, November 16th
Adam Grant Adam Grant has been Wharton’s top-rated professor for seven straight years. He is a leading expert on how we can find motivation and meaning, rethink assumptions, and live more generous and creative lives. Starting out as an introvert, Grant has grown into hosting the TED podcasts Re:Thinking and WorkLife. His TED talks on languishing, original thinkers, and givers and takers have over 30 million views. He also has been recognized as one of the world’s ten most influential management thinkers and named to Fortune’s 40 under 40. Grant’s five books have sold millions of copies and been translated into 45 languages. His viral piece on languishing was the most-read New York Times article of 2021 and most shared across platforms. Grant’s newest book, Hidden Potential, was published in October 2023. In it he notes, “There’s a widely held belief that greatness is mostly born not made. That leads us to celebrate gifted students in school, natural athletes in sports, and child prodigies in music. But you don’t have to be a wunderkind to accomplish great things. My goal is to illuminate how we can all rise to achieve greater things.” Grant’s generosity, that recognizes everyone has potential, shows up in much of his work and inspires those he works with. Along the way, he has
cultivated over eight million followers on social media and shares new insights in his free monthly newsletter, GRANTED. His speaking and consulting clients include Google, the NBA, Bridgewater, and the Gates Foundation. He writes on work and psychology for The New York Times, has served on the Defense Innovation Board at the Pentagon, and has been honored as a Young Global Leader by the World Economic Forum. Grant was profiled in The New York Times Magazine cover story, Is Giving the Secret to Getting Ahead? Grant also works well with other thinkers. He curates the Next Big Idea Club along with Susan Cain, Malcolm Gladwell, and Dan Pink, handpicking two new books each quarter for subscribers and donating 100 percent of the profits to provide books for children in underresourced communities. He and his wife Allison have published a children’s picture book on generosity, The Gift Inside the Box. Grant is also the cofounder of Givitas, a knowledge collaboration platform that makes it easy to give and receive help.
His pioneering research has increased performance and reduced burnout among engineers, teachers, and salespeople, and motivated safety behaviors among doctors, nurses, and lifeguards. He is a former magician and Junior Olympic springboard diver. In Hidden Potential he advises, “You can’t tell where people will land from where they begin. With the right opportunity and motivation to learn, anyone can build the skills to achieve greater things. Potential is not a matter of where you start, but of how far you travel. We need to focus less on starting points and more on distance traveled.” Maria Sharapova Outside of tennis, Sharapova is an active founder, CEO, and business investor. She is an equity owner of Supergoop and a long time ambassador for evian. She continues to expand her business portfolio. Across all of her business ventures, Sharapova works with her partners to advise on a variety of aspects of each business — including product development, creative branding, content strategy, growth, and expansion — leveraging her experiences as a professional athlete, entrepreneur, and consumer to provide unique insights and strategic counsel. The Lead Sponsor for this event is Jillian & Pete Muller. Special thanks: Pacific Coast Business Times and 101.7 K-LITE. Thanks go to visionary partners, Lynda Weinman and Bruce Heavin, for their support of the Thematic Learning Initiative.
Grant earned his doctorate in organizational psychology Tickets are $50 / $40 / $30 General Public / UCSB Students $15 (Current student ID required). Ticket purchase includes a copy of Grant’s new book, Hidden Potential (pick up at event). For tickets call 805-893-3535 or visit www.ArtsAndLectures.UCSB.edu. Tickets are also available through the Arlington box office at 805-963-4408 and AXS (https://www.axs.com/venues/2330/arlington-theatre-santa-barbara-tickets). UCSB Arts & Lectures Community Partners the Natalie Orfalea Foundation & Lou Buglioli have provided generous support for the 2023-2024 season.
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COMMUNITY NEWS
Sustainable Table Raises Money for Explore Ecology
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HE SUSTAINABLE TABLE FUNDRAISER FOR EXPLORE ECOLOGY was nothing short of magical. Over 130 community members came together at the Cabrillo Pavilion on October 26th to support the work of Explore Ecology, a nonprofit dedicated to environmental education.
Photos courtesy of Explore Ecology
Guests enjoyed a delectable farm-to-table dinner where they gained insights into the farmers, chefs, and fishermen and women responsible for the meal’s culinary delights. Guest speakers Clara Cadwell of Tutti Frutti Farms, Glenn Fout of Lorraine Lim Catering, and Kim Selkoe of Get Hooked Seafood, all shared their experiences and Explore Ecology Development Director Melissa Brooks, Emcee commitment to sustainable Geoff Green, and Explore Ecology Executive Director Lindsay practices. The dinner served Johnson as a powerful testament to the importance of supporting local agriculture and fostering an eco-friendly food ecosystem. One of the touching moments came when teacher Katie Lopez shared stories about the Explore Ecology garden at her school, and highlighted the impact that school gardens can have on children’s lives. There wasn’t a dry eye in the crowd as she talked about a child whose love for Kale earned him the nickname of the “Kale King.” Floral Designer James Cunningham and the generous contribution of flowers and props by Hogue & Co. came together to create a lovely setting for the event that not only raised money, but raised awareness about Explore Ecology’s vital programsEnvironmental and Watershed Education, Waste Reduction, School Gardens, Art From Scrap, and the EE Makerspace. Explore Ecology Staff Genevieve Schwanbeck, Alyssa Kassner, and Veronica Lee
November 10, 2023
Rep. Carbajal Emphasizes Need for Humanitarian Pause in Gaza
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ONGRESSMAN SALUD CARBAJAL (CA24) reemphasized his call for a humanitarian pause in fighting in Gaza and other key diplomatic priorities to Secretary of State Antony Blinken as the Secretary embarks on his next diplomatic trip to Israel.
In a letter signed by Rep. Carbajal and 57 of his congressional colleagues, the lawmakers commended Secretary Blinken and President Joe Biden’s emphasis Salud Carbajal that Israel’s right to root out the terrorist responsible for the October 7th attack on its citizens and the need to protect civilian lives in the aftermath are not incompatible goals. “This conflict requires holistic U.S. leadership – addressing the grave humanitarian needs of today while working towards solutions that prioritize deescalation, dialogue, and diplomacy. We commend your dedicated efforts during this conflict, and we remain committed to continued engagement,” the lawmakers wrote. “We commend President Biden and yourself for consistently reaffirming Israel’s right to defend its citizens in the aftermath of Hamas’ horrific October 7th attack, while emphasizing the United States’ commitment to international law and the protection of Israeli and Palestinian civilians.” Over the past few weeks, Rep. Carbajal has joined his colleagues in Congress to formally condemn Hamas’ October 7th terrorist attacks, to call for swift support for both Israel’s security needs and humanitarian relief to help those being oppressed by Hamas in Gaza, and to cut off funding sources for terrorist organizations in the region. For more information, visit https://carbajal.house.gov/
Flag Football Unites SB Unified High Schools in First Season
For more information, visit ExploreEcology.org.
ROBIN GOSE, President and CEO of MOXI, has been welcomed by the Association of Science and Technology Centers (ASTC) as a members to its Board of Directors. As a board member, Gose will be instrumental in bringing these ideas to Santa Barbara, keeping MOXI on the leading edge of important cultural initiatives in the larger museum world.
Robin Gose
MOXI’s Board Chair, Andrew Winchester says, “MOXI is fortunate to have a tremendous leader in Robin. She is an inspiration for all of us at MOXI and the greater Santa Barbara community.”
Robin Gose, Ed.D. has been a science museum professional for more than 25 years; she joined the MOXI team in November 2017 during its inaugural year as Santa Barbara’s newest hands-on science museum and destination for families. She oversees the museum’s operations, finances, outreach, fundraising, and programming to ensure alignment with the organization’s mission to ignite learning through interactive experiences in science and creativity. She holds a bachelor’s degree in geography and environmental resource management from the University of Texas, Austin as well as a doctorate in educational leadership from the University of California, Los Angeles. For more information, visit www.moxi.org.
Photo courtesy of SB Unified
Robin Gose elected to ASTC Board of Directors
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HREE SANTA BARBARA UNIFIED HIGH SCHOOLS participated in the inaugural girls flag football season this fall. Santa Barbara, San Marcos, and Dos Pueblos High Schools all took part in the new competition that showcases the talent and enthusiasm of its student-athletes. Coaches and players are excited for having the opportunity to play a new sport that challenges and unites them. “It’s been amazing to see these girls go from very little to no football experience, to high-level, smart, varsity level football players,” DP coach Dough Caines said. SBHS head coach Gabe Renteria emphasized that starting from scratch is an opportunity to learn the significance of a sport. For SBHS player Carolina Esparza, the sport has shaped her ideas about competition. On Thursday, October 29th, Dos Pueblos became the first Channel League Flag Football champions winning 33-14 over Rio Mesa. As if that were not enough, on October 27th, DP also demonstrated their skill on the field by advancing to the semifinals of the LA Chargers Championship tournament. DP was also featured by NFL Network for taking part in that event. working with our leaders to know our students by name, face, and story,” said Dr. Hilda Maldonado, Superintendent.
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COMMUNITY NEWS
Pam Tanase inducted into ClaremontMudd-Scripps Hall of Fame
Sansum Clinic Recognized For 5-Star Elite Status
PAM TANASE, who helped launch one of Santa Barbara’s first coworking spaces, Workzones, was recently inducted into the Ted Ducey Claremont-Mudd-Scripps Hall of Fame at Claremont McKenna College, her alma mater.
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ANSUM CLINIC, NOW PART OF SUTTER HEALTH, has announced the achievement of 5-star ‘Elite Status’ from America’s Physician Groups (APG), the organization’s highest possible ranking as part of its 2023 Standards of Excellence™ (SOE®) survey program. This is the 11th year that APG has awarded this honor to Sansum Clinic.
Photo courtesy of Sansum
“This is well-earned recognition and proof of our commitment to delivering exceptional healthcare and value to our community,” commented Kurt N. Ransohoff, MD, FACP, Sansum Clinic CEO & Chief Medical Officer, and former chair of the APG Board of Directors. “We are excited to build on this success alongside our new partner, Sutter Health. We look forward to enacting our joint strategy to expand local access to care in a way that keeps our patients and caregivers at the center of everything we do.”
Tanase attended Claremont McKenna from 1984 to 1988, and later joined the college as a faculty member and full-time head coach of the women’s water polo, swim, and dive teams. Her induction honors her leadership throughout this time as well as her instrumental role in leading the team to the first two Pam Tanase Southern California Intercollegiate Athletic Conference (SCIAC) championships in its history. Tanase holds a master’s in education from Claremont Graduate School and a bachelor’s degree in psychology from Claremont McKenna College.
Sansum Clinic, now part of Sutter Health, is the leading nonprofit provider of high-quality, outpatient healthcare on the Central Coast. Both Sansum and Sutter share a century-long commitment to improving the health of their communities, and have embarked upon this partnership to shape the future of healthcare for those they serve. Sansum Clinic’s 200+ highly-trained doctors and compassionate staff of 1,200+ care for more than 125,000 individual patients per year, contributing significantly to the medical quality in Santa Barbara, which has a long history of being advanced despite its small size. Sansum Clinic CEO and Chief Medical Officer Kurt N. Ransohoff, MD, FACP and Sansum Clinic Medical Director Marjorie Newman, MD
Community Invited to Thanksgiving Gatherings
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HE LOS OLIVOS COMMUNITY IS INVITED to celebrate and give thanks at two gatherings this month. On Monday, November 13th, the Santa Ynez Valley Interfaith Thanksgiving Service will take place at 6pm at Bethania Church, 603 Atterdag Road, Solvang. This service brings together diverse voices and faith traditions express shared gratitude and support.cAfter the service, a reception will follow in the parish hall with savory and sweet refreshments and for conversation among community members.
Lucid Therapeutics To Hold Grand Opening
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CLINIC DEDICATED TO IMPROVING MENTAL WELLBEING, Lucid Therapeutics will host a Grand Opening celebration for its new Santa Barbara location on Saturday, November 11th.
Photo courtesy of Lucid Therapeutics
November 10, 2023
Dedicated to advancing the understanding and application of psychedelicassisted therapies in a safe, legal, and therapeutic context, Lucid Therapeutics clinic offers ketamine-assisted therapy, an FDA-approved dissociative anesthetic that has been shown to effectively treat depression and other mental health conditions. It is currently the only legally available psychedelic drug. To RSVP for the Grant Opening https://www.eventcreate.com/e/grand-opening-lucid.
Photo courtesy of Santa Barbara Dojo
On Thanksgiving morning, November 23rd at 9am, a service at St. Mark’s-in-the-Valley welcomes all to gather in gratitude. A reception will follow in Stacy Hall. St. Mark’s-in-the-Valley Church is located at 2901 Nojoqui Avenue in Los Olivos (one block west of the downtown flagpole) and next to Mattei’s Tavern. For questions, please call 805-688-4454 or visit www.smitv.org.
Singer Jackson Gillies receives the Youth in Philanthropy Award
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INGER JACKSON GILLIES, co-producer of the Emmy Award-winning concert “Teens Sing for Santa Barbara,” will receive the Youth in Philanthropy Award from AFP Santa Barbara-Ventura Chapter on November 14th. At 24 years old, Jackson Gillies is a singer, songwriter, and musician based in Santa Barbara.
His notable achievements include co-producing and performing in the Emmy Award-winning concert “Teens Sing for Santa Barbara,” which raised over $75,000 for Unity Shoppe’s wildfire and debris flow survivor fund. Jackson’s musical prowess extends to being featured on a Kenny Loggins compilation album titled “CaliAmericana II.” Additionally, Jackson made a significant mark by reaching the top 69 on “American Idol,” with his Facebook audition amassing over 28 million views. Jackson has also made history as the first individual to deliver a TEDx talk about HS (hidradenitis suppurative) and produced and performed in the inaugural HS Awareness Concert. The event will take place at the Santa Barbara Zoo and is a unique opportunity for all to pause and reflect on the profound meaning of giving. community.afpnet.org
13th Annual Basket Brigade for Thanksgiving
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ANTA BARBARA DOJO, a leading martial arts school in the Santa Barbara community, will hold its 13th Annual Basket Brigade to collect money for Thanksgiving meals for those in need. A dedicated team of volunteers will gather to assemble and distribute the Thanksgiving baskets. Each basket will contain all the essential ingredients for a traditional Thanksgiving meal for a family of five, ensuring that families can enjoy this special holiday without the burden of financial strain. “We host the Basket Brigade event every year because it aligns with our mission to strengthening families in the Santa Barbara community,” said Master Melodee Meyer, co-Owner of Santa Barbara Dojo and the originator of the Basket Brigade at Santa Barbara Dojo. “Our goal is to bring joy and support to those who need it the most during Thanksgiving. We invite everyone to join us on November 18th and make a difference in someone’s life.” Taking place on Saturday, November 18, 2023, at 11am, the event will be held at Santa Barbara Dojo located at 122 East Gutierrez Street. To donate visit www.santabarbarbaradojo.com
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Israel’s Chance to Turn Carnage into Peace
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By Jeffrey D. Sachs October 31, 2023 | Common Dreams
SRAEL IS RUNNING OUT OF TIME to save itself—not from Hamas, which lacks the means to defeat Israel militarily, but from itself. Israel’s war crimes in Gaza, verging on the crime of genocide according to the Center for Constitutional Rights, threaten to destroy Israel’s civil, political, economic, and cultural relations with the rest of the world. There are growing calls in Israel for Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to resign immediately. A new Israeli government should seize the opportunity to turn carnage into lasting peace through diplomacy. Netanyahu is leading Israel into the same trap that the U.S. fell into after 9/11. Hamas’ goal in its heinous terrorist attack on 10/7 was to goad Israel into a long and bloody war, and to induce Israel to commit war crimes to bring on the world’s opprobrium. This is a classic political use of terror: not merely to kill, but to frighten, provoke, debase, and ultimately undermine, the foe. Al-Qaeda, the perpetrator of 9/11, goaded America’s political class to launch disastrous wars in Afghanistan, Iraq, and beyond. Jeffrey D. Sachs The result was carnage, torture by U.S. agencies and military forces, $8 trillion in debt, and the collapse of U.S. prestige and power worldwide. Hamas is similarly goading Israel into war crimes and potentially into a regionwide war. Israel’s actions are turning Israel’s friends around the world against it. Israel’s instinct is to ignore global opinion, chalking it up to anti-Semitism and believing that the U.S. has Israel’s back. Yet the U.S., weakened as it is in world affairs, can’t possibly save Israel from itself. Just look at how the U.S. is “saving” Ukraine. Ukraine is being destroyed by its pursuit of NATO membership and rejection of diplomacy, both of which have been encouraged by America’s ineffective pledge to support Ukraine militarily “for as long as it takes.” There is another deep similarity of al-Qaeda’s 9/11 and Hamas’s 10/7. Al-Qaeda was a U.S. creation that later boomeranged. By covertly funding Islamic jihadists in Afghanistan to fight the Soviet Union during the 1980s, the CIA effectively launched al-Qaeda. In the case of Hamas, Netanyahu—as is well-documented—secretly backed Hamas in order to divide and weaken the Palestinian Authority. Israelis are told by Netanyahu and his cabinet that there is no alternative to achieve security and peace other than to invade Gaza to defeat Hamas. The acquiescence of the U.S. and European governments as Israel invades Gaza conveys the message to the “Israel’s actions are Israeli people that their leaders are telling the truth: turning Israel’s friends that Hamas can be defeated around the world militarily, that the civilian deaths in Gaza are being against it.” limited by careful targeting of military operations, and that Israel is doing the only thing it can do for its own security. Yet these misguided views are perpetrated by the same political class that let Israel’s guard down in the lead-up to 10/7. Israeli leaders are seeking to cover up their blunders through the war in Gaza. The facts are these. First, while Hamas demonstrated its capacity to commit a surprise terrorist attack, the truth is that Israel let its guard down on 10/7. By bolstering its borders and its intelligence, Israel can block Hamas from a repeat attack. Nor is Israel at risk of any kind of military defeat by Hamas inside Israel, since Israel has vast military dominance. The same was true with 9/11, which was a catastrophic failure of U.S. homeland security and intelligence operations, but did not even remotely represent a threat of U.S. military defeat. This is not to say that defeating Hamas inside Gaza would be straightforward. With a major Israeli ground invasion, Hamas would have the advantage of urban guerilla warfare on its own turf, and no doubt large numbers of Israeli soldiers are likely to die in such a campaign. There is a completely different approach to Israel’s security, the one that Israel’s political class has rejected for decades, yet the only one that can deliver real peace and security. It is a political solution for Palestine, coupled with comprehensive, enforceable security arrangements for Israel. Israel sits on top of a volcano of unrest because it has long denied basic human,
economic, and political rights to the Palestinian people. Gaza has famously been described by Human Rights Watch as an open-air prison. Israel’s occupation of Palestine is tantamount to apartheid in the view of human rights groups such as Amnesty International. The UN Security Council and UN General Assembly have rightly and overwhelmingly voted resolution after resolution calling for a two-state solution, most recently on October 26, just days ago. I refer readers interested in the detailed history of this long saga to the wise and scholarly study by my esteemed colleague Professor Rashid Khalid, The Hundred Years’ War on Palestine. Historian Ian Black, in his book Enemies and Neighbors: Arabs and Jews in Palestine and Israel 1917-2017, recounts that Netanyahu, Israel’s longest-serving Prime Minister, “was not prepared to make the concessions needed to make [the two-state solution] possible.” The failure of Israel’s political class to achieve true security for Israel and justice for Palestine opens the door to a different approach. Here is how a diplomatic solution could work. The UN Security Council would commit to the disarming of militant groups, including Hamas and Islamic Jihad. Countries funding and arming these groups, notably Iran, would agree to join with the UN Security Council in defunding and demobilizing these groups as part of the peace deal. Both Saudi Arabia and Iran would establish diplomatic relations with Israel as part of the peace deal. Israel and the UN Security Council would recognize a sovereign, independent, and secure state of Palestine, with its capital in East Jerusalem, and with full membership in the United Nations. Palestine would be given sovereign control over the Muslim holy sites of East Jerusalem, including Haram al-Sharif. The five permanent powers (P5) of the UN Security Council—the U.S., Russia, China, UK, and France—all favor such a peace deal. Indeed, Biden has recently reiterated U.S. support for the two-state solution. Moreover, there is scope for favorable diplomacy among the P5. The U.S. and China will soon hold a summit of President Biden and President Xi, and there are even glimmers of behind-the-scenes diplomacy between Russia and the U.S. to sort out and end the tragic conflict in Ukraine. Iran can be brought on board to such a deal, as long as the deal includes the normalization of Iran’s diplomatic and economic relations with the E.U. and the United States. In 2015, Iran negotiated the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA) with the U.S. and European nations to end Iran’s nuclear weapons program in return for an end to Western sanctions. It was the U.S. under former President Donald Trump, not Iran, that brazenly withdrew from the JCPOA in 2018. More recently, Iran has reconciled with Saudi Arabia and joined the BRICS nations, demonstrating Iran’s interest in dynamic and creative diplomacy. The rest of the UN member states also clearly support a two-state solution. As soon as Israel embraces a comprehensive peace deal, it will garner friends worldwide, and cause a worldwide sigh of relief. If Israel swallows Netanyahu’s poison that “this is a time for war,” Israel will isolate itself from the rest of the world and pay a devastating price. Israel’s attainable objective is lasting peace and security through diplomacy. Israel’s friends, starting with the U.S., must help it choose diplomacy over war. Friends do not let friends commit crimes against humanity, much less provide them with the finances and arms to do so. www.commondreams.org/opinion/israel-gaza-peace-diplomacy
Blues Society Hosts One of the Nation’s Best Bands
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OR THE FIRST TIME SINCE 2016, Rick Estrin & The Nightcats are returning to Santa Barbara by popular demand on November 18th to the Carrillo Recreation Center at 100 E. Carrillo St. Doors open at 7pm and the music begins at 7:15pm.
Photo courtesy of Rick Estrin & the Nightcats
OPINION
November 10 2023
A favorite of Santa Barbarans, the group has won the Blues Foundation’s Blues Music Award as Band of the Year three times in the last five years. Estrin has been Rick Estrin & The Nightcats nominated innumerable times and won twice as Harmonica Player of the Year. A tight ensemble comprised of Estrin on harmonica and vocals, Kid Andersen on guitar, Lorenzo Farrell on keyboards, and D’Mar on drums, the band tours internationally and has legions of devoted fans. The group is noted not only for its musical virtuosity, but also for its danceability and its wry, hilarious sense of humor. For its first show for the SBB in almost seven years, the band is sure to play Dump That Chump and My Next Ex-Wife, among many other favorites. For tickets ($35/general, $45/VIP, $10/students with ID) visit www.SBBlues.org
November 10, 2023
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November 10, 2023
A benefit art exhibition for the Teddy Bear Cancer Foundation A benefit art exhibition for the by the Abstract Art Collective Teddy Bear Cancer Foundation Teddy Bear Cancer Foundation (TBCF), is a local nonprofit organization providing support for families battling childhood by the Abstract Art Collective cancer along the central coast, is proud to annouce a major milestone it enters its 21st year of operation. the past Teddy BearasCancer Foundation (TBCF), is a local For nonprofit two decades,TBCF has support been a beacon of hope and childhood support for organization providing for families battling families facingthe thecentral terriblecoast, journey of childhood cancer. cancer along is proud to annouce a major milestone as it its 21st yearprovides of operation. For the The Abstract Artenters Collective (AAC) exhibition andpast two decades,TBCF has been beaconartists of hope educational opportunities for aabstract onand the support central for families the terrible of childhoodprovide cancer. a forum coast of facing California. Based injourney Santa Barbara,we
for interaction between AAC members and Theartistic Abstract Art Collective (AAC) provides exhibition and the community. Above all, we champion innovation in the evereducational opportunities for abstract artists on the central . evolving world of contemporary artBarbara,we coast of California. Based in Santa provide a forum for artistic interaction between AAC members and the community. Above all, we champion innovation in the everOctober - November 30th evolving world31st of contemporary art.
Juried by Mark Ashton Hunt October 31st - November 30th Opening Juried byReception: Mark Ashton Hunt Thursday, November 2nd 5-8pm Opening Reception: Thursday, 3rd Friday November Art Walk: 2nd 5-8pm November 17th 5-8pm 3rd Friday Art Walk: November 17th 5-8pm
La Cumbre Plaza 121 S. Hope Avenue, Santa Barbara Monday-Friday 10-5 • Saturday-Sunday 1-5
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November 10, 2023
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www.sbhistorical.org
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November 10, 2023
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Veterans Day Ceremony Saturday, November 11, 2023 • 11:00 AM, sharp! Santa Barbara Cemetery, 901 Channel Drive, Santa Barbara UCSB Color Guard • Gold Coast Pipe Band Prime Time Band • Santa Barbara Choral Society Grand finale: The Condor Squadron Flyover!
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November 10, 2023
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Ceylon International Film Festival Finale
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STUNNING CULTURAL EVENT, the 2023 Ceylon International Film Festival held its unique final day at the Lobero Theatre, with films, honorees, dancing, singing, celebrations of diversity, and dignitaries from around the world. The evening began with a captivating performance by Indian singers followed by performances by Indian artists who captivated the audience with their traditional dance forms like Bharatanatyam and Kathak. The fusion of Indian classical music with contemporary beats added a modern twist to timeless art forms. The festival atmosphere reached new heights when Spanish dancers took center stage. Their passionate flamenco rhythms mingled with soul-stirring guitar solos, created an electric ambiance that had everyone on their feet. “The Ceylon International Film Festival Awards Ceremony not only provided a platform for these incredible artists to showcase their talents but also celebrated the magic of cinema itself,” said Aruni Boteju, founder and director of the CEYIFF Japan, China, and India emerged as leaders among the winners, taking home multiple awards, while Sri Lanka received the coveted Grand Prix for “The Genius Of The Place” by Afdhel Aziz. Sarthy from India was awarded Best Actor for his captivating portrayal in “Ezhuthalar.” The title of Best Actress went to Kana Shimizu from Japan for her mesmerizing performance in “Happy Ending.” In the realm of direction, Passos Zamith from Portugal claimed the Best Director Award for his work in “Me & Myself.” Meanwhile, Akira Iwamatsu’s masterpiece “Happy Ending” took home the highly acclaimed
Best Picture Award. Sri Lanka secured additional accolades throughout the night, winning awards for Best Sound Mixing by Sashin Gimahn for “Seed,” Best Production Design by Suneth Malinga for “Seeds,” and Best Editor for “The Genius Of The Place” by Vu and Hayden Blaz. There were 22 films, shorts and features, shown from ten countries: United States, Sri Lanka, China, Portugal, Spain, Syria, Tunisia, Japan, Iran and Tibet. All were selected from 350 outstanding entries.
author of 125 books in Sinhala and English.Mudalinayake Somaratne was honored for his contribution to the industry as a Producer Director, and highly acclaimed for his outstanding drama series “Muwanpalassa,” which had a record-breaking run. These exceptional individuals have not only entertained with their creative talents but also inspired countless aspiring artists to pursue their dreams. Present among the distinguished gathering at the opening and closing festivities was the former Deputy Director-General of the United Nations Dr. Nandi Jasentuliyana, who was the Keynote Speaker at the awards ceremony. Also in attendance were Mayor Randy Rowse and Mayor Protem Alejandra Gutierrez of Santa Barbara; Dean Axelrod MBA, JD, Vice President, Partnerships & Philanthropy Of Direct Relief International; and Miguel Avila, Co-President of the Santa Barbara Hispanic Chamber as well as First District Supervisor Das Williams.
Two Sri Lankan icons in the industry were honored with Lifetime Achievement Awards. Bhadraji Jayatilleka, a Producer, Director, scriptwriter, and Actor, whose latest film “A Rainy Day” screened to close the festival, was recognized for his outstanding contribution to the industry as well as his work as an artist and prolific
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November 10, 2023
David Sedaris, Irreverent Statesman
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F THE PASSAGE OF TIME MAKES ONE WISER, as it has in the case of David Sedaris, it might also make one more acidic, slightly darker, and at times even raucous and irreverant—all in a good way. One of our nation’s funniest and most prolific humorists, Sedaris pulled no punches Saturday night at the Arlington. His sly observations about the extraordinary and his sublime insight into the mundane are still there, but with a notable crunchiness in the mix. He’s a writer and performer so at ease in his element it felt less like a show and more like sitting on his porch with him as he rifles through his latest musings from scraps of paper, hotel napkins, and journals. The Arlington is the right venue for this kind of experience, a sold out audience sitting in a town square setting, there for the stories, edging closer to the fire. Sedaris is good at inviting you in, letting you get comfortable, and then challenging you with his notions and ideas. He took his time, too, warming us up for the edgy stuff with a slow burn of recent columns and oneoffs.
Photo by Jenny Lewis
By Jesse Caverly / Special to VOICE
When he started cooking, however, you knew it, with a heart warming and slightly painful story of his first love and how he broke her heart. Then, a sudden turn into a letter to Santa Claus definitely not for kids that suggested peril and violence and even a murder. Where did THAT come from? David Sesaris is an elder statesman and he knows it, even revels in it. He knows that we feel close to him, we wish to own part of him, that our reliance on his storytelling is something he can play with, and to great effect. Since we already know his personal journey towards coming into who he is, his tale of his first love raises a different kind of stakes in the telling. It serves as a flashback that fills in some of the blanks we might have assumed with our own stories. It’s as if, even though we think we know where we’re going, he enjoys cranking the wheel sideways now and again. Some might call it anarchy, but it seems to me David Sedaris is aging gracefully, and enjoys keeping us on our toes. David Sedaris was presented UCSB Arts & Lectures at the Arlington Theatre on Saturday, November 4th.
Rich@Richwilkie.com Richwilkie.com/commissions
November 10, 20231
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The Gift of Transition House
ANDERING ALONG THE HARBOR BREAKWATER on a sunny day last week I found myself stopping at the pole flying the Transition House flag. Why not, I thought to myself, take this opportunity to follow up on my promise to occasionally highlight the amazing charitable organizations in Santa Barbara who have chosen to participate in the Flag Project at the Breakwater? The flag of Transition House caught my eye because of its relevance in the world today considering the social, political, and economic challenges that confront us.
Photos courtesy of Transition House
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By Sigrid Toye / Special to VOICE
The mission of Transition House is to serve homeless families with children offering life tools and respectful, non-sectarian residential services designed to alleviate poverty and restore self-sufficiency and dignity. Questions regarding homelessness and poverty are complicated and deep rooted, none with simple answers. But Transition House has fashioned a menu of creative solutions to the cycle of poverty-based family homelessness with programs to develop the necessary tools for self-sufficiency. With the support of case managers and the assistance of staff and volunteers, parents are empowered to earn a living wage, manage money, and to develop life skills designed to secure permanent housing. Well over 70 percent of homeless families who enter the emergency shelter program succeed in transitioning into permanent housing. Quite impressive! Transition House began life in 1984 when a group of faith based organizations realized that homelessness had increased in Santa Barbara to the degree that help was urgently needed. “At the time the homeless were housed in church basements and fellowships halls, moving from one place to the other every 30 days,” shared Executive Director Kathleen Baushke. “Volunteers provided food and oversight supervision.” In 1992 assisted by government and private funding Transition House officially moved to its current location at 434 East Ortega Street. Programs were added. The capacity increased in the 1990’s to include a two additional housing locations for clients, one extending to the block behind Kathleen Baushke the offices where many of the service facilities are located. “Our latest addition came between 2020 and 2023 with the Buckley-Kelley Place, making Transition House the owner and operator of 38 units of supportive housing.”
Santa Barbara community is our support system and most enthusiastic cheerleader,” Bauschke noted. Transition House and its network of partners includes over 40 service or faith-based organizations and 900 volunteers donating their time and talents each year. Area merchants help by donating time, materials, and contributions to the agency’s efforts. Many businesses also offer meaningful employment with benefits to residents of Transition House. Long serving Transition House board member Steve Espstein summed it up. “This organization is the greatest! And now it’s a model for others who serve the homeless and the road from public service to self-sufficiency and a home.” Perhaps Transition House’s logo on its breakwater flag–a little house with an open window, the sun’s rays, and a flower in full bloom–best communicates that this organization is … The Way Home!
This article would occupy more space than its due to describe all the comprehensive services offered under the Transition House umbrella. During the last decade the organization has expanded its program offerings by developing a homelessness prevention program and an onsite evening education program aimed at developing employment skills and financial literacy. Onsite parenting classes are also offered. With the help of community partners and social service agencies, Transition House has the capacity to direct people in need to the proper resources for substance abuse and mental health, crisis lines, childcare, clothing, and food along with various shelters within the community. Understanding the complications inherent in the homeless population, Bauschke has developed partnerships in the community to provide services not offered by Transition House. “In Washington DC I saw the homeless struggle during those brutal winters … and their tragic stories touched my heart. Transition House in Santa Barbara was a volunteer spot for eight years before I joined the staff, eventually serving as Executive Director. The need is great and the generosity of the The Buckley-Kelley Place, Transition House
Sigrid Toye volunteers for the Breakwater Flag Project. She is on the board of directors of the Maritime Museum and participates in Yacht Club activities. An educational/behavior therapist, Sigrid holds a Ph.D in clinical psychology. She loves all things creative, including her two grown children who are working artists. Send Harbor tips to: Itssigrid@gmail.com SBvoice qtr page_otl.indd 1
10/31/23 7:46 PM
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November 10, 2023
On the Street
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 3RD: The unarmed Minuteman III rocket launched from Vandenberg Space Force Base at 11:59pm Tuesday had to be destroyed in flight at 12:06am over the Pacific Ocean. The Air Force Global Strike Command said there was an anomaly. No other details. Eyewitness video shows the rocket did lift off and climb into a flight path.
with John Palminteri Photos and Stories by John Palminteri / Special to VOICE
Ring Nets Gone!
File Photo by US Air Force
Rocket Launch fromVandenberg!
Witches Brew
TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 7TH: The Montecito ring nets have been removed after the nonprofit Project for Resilient Communities and the County of Santa Barbara could not come to an agreement on maintenance and annual clearing. They were installed in 2019 to catch large debris heading towards populated areas after the deadly 2018 mudflow that took 23 lives and destroyed homes. The nets were in San Ysidro, Buena Vista, and Cold Springs creeks. THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 2ND: Witches fly in for a Santa Barbara Halloween luncheon. The annual event had several tables filled at Andersen’s Restaurant and Bakery in Santa Barbara.
Conception Sentencing
TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 7TH: Sentencing is set for February 2024 for the captain of the Conception dive boat after a federal conviction of “seaman’s manslaughter” in the deaths of 34 on board. The Conception, from the Santa Barbara harbor, was off Santa Cruz Island when the fatal fire took place on September 2, 2019. Captain Jerry Boylan could get ten years in prison.
Electrical Vault Failure
SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 4TH: A 4.0 earthquake jolted Ojai in Ventura County this afternoon at 1:12pm. No major issues have been reported. It was felt into the Santa Barbara/Goleta area to the north.
Photo by KEYT
Earthquake!
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 3RD: An underground electrical vault failure threw a large section of downtown Santa Barbara into the dark, cut off signal lights, and stopped elevators Thursday about 5:25pm. The source was on De la Guerra Street in the plaza. This is the second large underground power failure in this area in recent weeks.
Safety Concerns in Isla Vista
1st Responders FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 3RD: One vehicle smoking or on fire after a crash Hwy 101 Northbound near Turnpike. Santa Barbara County Fire, CHP on it.
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 2ND: Early morning homicide in Goleta leads to one arrest. Emergency officials were called out to Carson St. off Fairview and Pine St. at 6:14am. No other details at this point. (Photo: KEYT NewsChannel 3) John Palminteri is a veteran news reporter and anchor for Newschannel 3-12 TV and both KJEE and KCLU radio in Santa Barbara/Santa Maria/Ventura. Off the air, he’s often bringing his smile and positive energy to the microphone at fundraisers and civic events. John’s social media presence has one of the largest followings in Santa Barbara, and this page has the weekly highlights. Twitter: @JohnPalminteri • Instagram: @JohnPalminteriNews • www.facebook.com/john.palminteri.5
SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 4TH: Supervisor Laura Capps recently went out with the Isla Vista Foot Patrol / Santa Barbara Sheriff’s Department to see the safety concerns in Isla Vista first hand. A student recently died in a cliff fall. Many apartments are now having ticketed “nightclub style” events. Community leaders are working on many new safety ideas including more lighting, higher fencing, and cooperation from landlords and tenants.
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November 10, 2023
In Person & Online Activities for Everyone
Science Pub: Whales in the Santa Barbara Channel
Photo courtesy of Santa Barbara Museum o fNatural History
Friday, November 10th LECTURES/MEETINGS GRANTS IN ACTION FORUM: INDEPENDENCE & INCLUSION FOR INDIVIDUALS WITH INTELLECTUAL & DEVELOPMENTAL DISABILITIES Panel discussion with local experts • Women’s Fund of SB • Marjorie Luke Theatre • Free • 2pm Fr, 11/10. CALIFORNIA ISLANDS SYMPOSIUM Hear recent work on the islands’ natural, environmental, and cultural science • Ventura Beach Marriott • $35350 • https://tinyurl.com/mr79kb6u • Mo, 11/6-11/10.
OUTDOORS
NATURE NIGHT Enjoy night walks, storytelling • SB Botanic Garden • $5-10 • www. sbbotanicgarden.org • 5-7pm Fr, 11/10.
SPECIAL EVENTS
Learn over drinks, food, and great company when the Santa Barbara Museum of Natural History hosts marine biologist Holly Lohuis for a Science Pub talk at Dargan’s Irish Pub & Restaurant from 6:30 to 8pm on Monday, November 13th. Attendance is free.
MUSIC
WILL BREMAN AND FRIENDS BIRTHDAY SHOW Soulful Americana rock • Alcazar Theatre • $15 • www.thealcazar.org • 7pm Fr, 11/10. FRANKIE GAVIN Master of the Irish Fiddle concert • Bethany Congregational Church, 556 N. Hope Ave. • $25 • https://tinyurl.com/mr3e36jj • 7-9:30pm Fr, 11/10. COMPOSER'S CONCERT Westmont musicians • Westmont College, Deane Chapel • Free • 7pm Fr, 11/10. LA DIVINA: THE ART OF MARIA CALLAS Eleni Calenos and Jana McIntyre sing Callas’ songbook • Opera SB • Lobero Theatre • $25-120 • www.lobero.org • 7:30pm Fr, 11/10.
78 YEARS OF DIVING & DISCOVERY GALA Jean-Michel Cousteau hosts a weekend of discovery • Ocean Futures Society • Opening gala at Ritz-Carlton Bacara • $500 • Tickets and add'l events: https://tinyurl.com/3xtar3h9 • 4:309pm Fr, 11/10; events through 11/12. MOSAIC MAKERS NIGHT MARKET Shop local vendors, live music • Mosaic Locale, 1131 State St. • Free • 5-9pm Fr, 11/10. JUNIOR LEAGUE OF SB GALA Dinner to celebrate the league’s work • Rosewood Miramar Beach • $350 • https://tinyurl.com/46ps7nu7 • 5-11pm Fr, 11/10.
Saturday, November 11th MUSIC
SATURDAYS ON STATE Live music with Brandon Kinalele • Paseo Nuevo, De La Guerra Place • Free • 5-7pm Sa, 11/11. CELTIC CONCERT Celtic music by Folk Orchestra of SB • El Presidio Chapel • $45 • https://folkorchestrasb.com • 4pm Sa, 11/11. SHAKEY ZIMMERMAN FOREVER YOUNG Neil Young Birthday celebration concert • Alcazar Theatre • $20-25 • www.thealcazar.org • 7pm Sa, 11/11. THE DOUBLEWIDE KINGS & THE SB SYMPHONY Playing the music of Van Morrison • Granada Theatre • $31-156 • www.granadasb.org • 7:30pm Sa, 11/11. SB MASTER CHORALE Singing Requiem and Gloria • First United Methodist Church • Free-$22 • www.sbmasterchorale.org • 7:30pm
It’s Your Library
Santa Barbara Ghost Tours Walk with Professor Julie as she shares tales of mystery and history... & meet friendly spirits... Call or text to schedule your walking tour! • 805-905-9019
STAY & PLAY • Share stories with kids • Eastside Library ~ 8:3010am Tu • Montecito Library ~ 9-10:30am Tu MUSIC & MOVEMENT • For ages 2-5 • Shoreline Park • 10:30-11am Th • Central Library ~ 10-10:30am Th. BABY AND ME • For babies 0-14 months • Central Library ~ 11-11:30am We • Eastside Library ~ Bilingual ~ 11-11:30am Th
UCSB Arts & Lectures Welcomes Robin Wall Kimmerer
LIBRARY ON THE GO State St.
Farmer’s Market ~ 3-Villa Santa Fe ~ 9-10am Tu, 11/14 • Presidio Springs ~ 11am-12pm Tu, 11/14 • State St. Farmer’s Market ~ 3-6:30pm Tu, 11/14 • Harding School ~ 12:30-2pm We, 11/15 • Bohnett Park ~ 3:30-5pm We, 11/15 • Shoreline Park ~ 10am12pm Th, 11/16 • SB Junior High School ~ 2:30-4:30pm Th, 11/16 • Oak Park ~ 10am-12pm Fr, 11/17
READ TO A DOG • For grades 3-6 • Eastside Library ~ 3-4pm We.
Photo courtesy of UCSB Arts & Lectures
Safari Local
CAMERATA PACIFICA Brahms, Ginastera, and Dean • Hahn Hall, Music Academy • $75 • https://cameratapacifica.org • 7:30pm Fr, 11/10.
Discover how humanity can learn from our oldest teachers in nature when environmentalist, botanist, and member of the Citizen Potawatomi Nation Robin Wall Kimmerer discusses her new book, Braiding Sweetgrass: Indigenous Wisdom, Scientific Knowledge and the Teachings of Plants at UCSB Campbell Hall at 7:30pm on Tuesday, November 14th. For tickets ($10-40) visit www.artsandlectures.ucsb.edu
Sa, 11/11; 3pm 11/12. MEZCAL MARTINI Latin jazz concert • SOhO • $10-12 • www.sohosb.com • 7:30pm Sa, 11/11. ESLABON ARMADO Regional Mexican music • Arlington Theatre • $59-139 • www.arlingtontheatresb.com • 8pm Sa, 11/11.
LECTURES/MEETINGS CALIFORNIA NATIVE PLANT IRRIGATION Introductory class by horticulturist Alejandro Lemus • SB Botanic Garden • $25-40 • www.sbbotanicgarden.org • 9-10am Sa, 11/11.
OUTDOORS FSA ANNUAL PICKLEBALL TOURNAMENT Play to support local senior programs and youth mental health • Montecito Club courts • $125 • https://fsacares.org/pickleball • 8am-4pm Sa, 11/11. STAR PARTY Explore the night sky • SB Museum of Natural History • Palmer Observatory • Free • 7-10pm Sa, 11/11. RESTORATION WORK PARTY Help restore native plants at Elings Park • Elings Park, details: https://tinyurl.com/32fpwx43 • 8am-1pm Sa, 11/11.
SPECIAL EVENTS VETERANS DAY CEREMONY Speakers & flyover ceremony honoring veterans • Veterans of Foreign Wars Post 1649 & Pierre Claeyssens Veterans Fdn • SB Cemetery • Free • 11am-1pm Sa, 11/11.
Sunday, November 12th SPECIAL EVENTS
MAKING HISTORY/MAKING BLINTZES BRUNCH Tribute brunch honoring activist Dick Flacks • SB County Action Network • El Paseo Restaurant • $100 • https://tinyurl.com/yc8dmh3y • 11am-2pm Su, 11/12. COAST VILLAGE WEEK Shop special deals with local businesses all week • Coast Village Road • Free • Su, 11/12-Sa, 11/18.
LECTURES/MEETINGS
ESTATE PLANNING ESSENTIALS WORKSHOP Led by the Museum’s Planned Giving Advisory Council • SB Museum of Natural History • Free • RSVP: https://tinyurl.com/46b9sr7v • 2-4pm Su, 11/12. POETRY IN THE GARDEN Local poets read aloud from new anthology Out of the Ground: Poets Respond to Santa Barbara Botanic Garden • SB Botanic Garden • Free with admission, RSVP: www.sbbotanicgarden.org • 2:30-5pm Su, 11/12.
MUSIC
SB JAZZ SOCIETY Featuring The Idiomatiques • SOhO • $10-25 • www.sohosb.com • 1pm Su, 11/12. JAZMINE ECHO ENSEMBLE UCSB student musicians perform Chinese instruments • SB Museum of Art Family Resource Center • Free • 1pm Su, 11/12. CARILLON RECITAL Wesley Arai plays Storke Tower’s carillon • UCSB, Storke Tower • Free • 2pm Su, 11/12.
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In Person & Online Activities for Everyone
VALENCIA BARYTON PROJECT Chamber music concert • SB Museum of Art, MAry Craig Auditorium • $20-25 • www.sbma.net • 7:30pm Tu, 11/14.
OUTDOORS
MORNING BIRD WALK Explore local bird life • SB Botanic Garden • $20-30 • www.sbbotanicgarden.org • 8:30-10am Tu, 11/14.
SPECIAL EVENTS
Photo courtesy of Lobero Theatre
NATIONAL PHILANTHROPY DAY AFP Santa Barbara-Ventura Chapter honors those making a difference • SB Zoo • Register: https://tinyurl.com/ym4ajk2n • 5-7pm Tu, 11/14.
Wednesday, November 15th LECTURES/MEETINGS
Steve Hackett at the Lobero
Celebrate the 50th anniversary of Genesis’ legendary Foxtrot album when guitarist Steve Hackett performs his world-famous rock and roll at the Lobero Theatre at 8pm on Friday, November 17th. For tickets ($79-161) visit www.lobero.org
SB YOUTH SYMPHONY Free youth classical music concert • Lobero Theatre • www.lobero.org • 4pm Su, 11/12. CELTIC CONCERT Celtic music by Folk Orchestra of SB • Trinity Episcopal Church • $30 • https://folkorchestrasb.com • 4pm Su, 11/12. EL FANTASMA La Septima Vuelta Tour • Arlington Theatre • $59-119 • www.arlingtontheatresb.com • 7pm Su, 11/12.
OUTDOORS
YOGA + BREATHWORK ON THE WHARF Guided yoga by the sea • Power of Your Om • Stearns Wharf • $10-30 suggested donation • https://tinyurl.com/y6z8tjp4 • 9-10am Su, 11/12. EXPLORE ECOLOGY BEACH CLEANUP Care for the shoreline • Explore Ecology • Arroyo Burro Beach • 10am-12pm Su, 11/12. OCEAN AMBASSADOR BEACH CLEANUP Show our ocean some love • East Beach • Register: https://tinyurl.com/ypm2jnt7 • 10am-12pm Su, 11/12.
SPECIAL EVENTS
CHAUCER’S BOOK FAIR Supporting Oaks Parent Child Workshop • Chaucer’s Books • Free • 3-5pm Su, 11/12.
Monday, November 13th LECTURES/MEETINGS
SB READS: ALL HANDS ON DECK BOOK DISCUSSION Discuss All Hands on Deck by Will Sofrin • Central Library Faulkner Gallery • Free, register: https://tinyurl.com/2zshbcfb • 5:30pm Mo, 11/13. SCIENCE PUB: WHALES IN THE SANTA BARBARA CHANNEL Learn from marine biologist Holly Lohuis • SBMNH • Dargan’s Irish Pub & Restaurant • Free • 6:30-8pm Mo, 11/13.
TECHTOPIA 2023 Learn about local tech companies • LinkedIn 6410 Via Real, Carpinteria • $75-95 • https://tinyurl.com/ye2yr4sj • 3-5pm We, 11/15. JOHN STEARNS AND HIS WHARF: A SESQUICENTENNIAL CELEBRATION Talk by historian Neal Graffy • SB Historical Museum • Free-$20 • https://tinyurl.com/bdetdr5s • 5:30pm We, 11/15. MISS CHASE: SANTA BARBARA'S TRAILBLAZER Talk by author Simon Kerry • SBTHP • El Presidio Chapel • $5 suggested donation • www.sbthp.org • 6pm We, 11/15. THE MAGIC OF CENTRAL AMERICA: COSTA RICA’S BIRDS AND ECOLOGY Talk by educator/photographer Benny Isaac Jacobs-Schwartz • SB Audubon Society • Farrand Hall, SB Museum of Natural History • Free • 7:30-9pm We, 11/15.
Tuesday, November 14th
HOLISTIC NUTRITION Taught by herbalist & nutritionist Emily Sanders • Artemisia Academy • Zoom • $397 • https://tinyurl.com/2vw9nd5x • 1-5pm We 11/1-11/22.
LECTURES/MEETINGS
MUSIC
EMPOWERING AGAINST EXPLOITATION: SCAM AWARENESS Talk featuring SB DA Office • Berkshire Hathaway • Mulligan's Cafe at SB Golf Club • Free, RSVP to TerriDimond@me.com • 10:30am12pm Tu, 11/14. NAVIGATING WITH(OUT) INSTRUMENTS Reading by author traci kato-kiriyama • UCSB Multicultural Center Theater • Free • https://mcc.sa.ucsb.edu • 6pm Tu, 11/14. ROBIN WALL KIMMERER Talk by Indigenous environmentalist and botanist • UCSB Arts & Lectures • UCSB Campbell Hall • $10-40 • www.artsandlectures.ucsb.edu • 7:30pm Tu, 11/14.
ZAKIR HUSSAIN Talk and performance by worldfamous Indian drummer • UCSB Kerr Hall Studio • Free • https://tinyurl. com/26cmbyt4 • 10am We, 11/15. UCSB GAMELAN ENSEMBLE Ancient music style showcase • UCSB Music Bowl • Free • 12pm We, 11/15. WATCHHOUSE Roots concert, special guest Humbird • Lobero Theatre • $49-106 • www.lobero.org • 7:30pm We, 11/15. AS WE SPEAK Béla Fleck, Zakir Hussain, Edgar Meyer, and Rakesh Chaurasia • UCSB Arts & Lectures • UCSB Campbell Hall • $15-70 • www.artsandlectures.ucsb.edu • 8pm We, 11/15.
SB Antique, Decorative Arts, & Vintage Show & Sale Courtesy of SB Antique, Decorative Arts, & Vintage Show
Safari Local
MUSIC
November 10, 2023
Shop furniture, decor, and vintage items galore from over 50 dealers nationwide when the Santa Barbara Antique, Decorative Arts, & Vintage Show & Sale returns to Earl Warren Showgrounds from 1 to 6pm on Friday and Saturday, November 17th and 18th, and from 11am to 4pm on Sunday, November 19th. Admission is free for ages 12 and under, $5 for seniors, and $8 for adults–or $6 with discount flyer available at https://sbantiqueshow.com JAZZ CONCERT Westmont students • Westmont College, Deane Chapel • Free • 8pm We, 11/15.
SPECIAL EVENTS
ZOOLIGHTS Walk through a bright, animal-filled winter wonderland • SB Zoo • $20-22 • www.sbzoo.org/zoolights • 4:308:30pm We, 11/15, through 1/14/24. CHAUCER’S BOOK FAIR Shop to support Peabody Charter School • Chaucer’s Books • 6-8pm We, 11/15. ARTFUL AFFAIRS: SEASONS OF CHANGE AUTUMN DINNER Benefit reception & dinner • Hosted by SB Museum of Art • Limited tickets available, contact kkawaguchi@sbma. net • We, 11/15.
DANCE
LATIN NIGHTS! Community Salsa & Bachata dancing • State St. in front of Cali-forno Pizzeria • Free • 5-8pm Wed through 11/15.
Thursday, November 16th LECTURES/MEETINGS
B2B NETWORKING BREAKFAST Meet local business people • SB South Coast Chamber of Commerce • SB Zoo • $30-45 • https://tinyurl. com/4zh9u3bu • 9am Th, 11/16. THE DREAMT LAND: HOW THE INVENTION OF CALIFORNIA BECAME MIRACLE AND RUIN Talk by journalist Mark Arax • UCSB IHC, McCune Conference Room, 6020 HSSB • Free • www.ihc.ucsb.edu • 4pm Th, 11/16. FIRE SONGS: AN EVENING OF POETRY, STORIES, AND MUSIC With SB Poet Laureate Melinda Palacio • UCSB Multicultural Center Theater • Free • https://mcc.sa.ucsb. edu • 6pm Th, 11/16.
HIDDEN POTENTIAL: THE SCIENCE OF ACHIEVING GREATER THINGS Talk by author Adam Grant • UCSB Arts & Lectures • Arlington Theatre • $16-54.50 • www.artsandlectures.ucsb.edu • 7:30pm Th, 11/16.
MUSIC
SIR STEPHEN HOUGH Classical piano concert • CAMA • Lobero Theatre • $48-58 • www.lobero.org • 7:30pm Th, 11/16. ZACH NUGENT'S DEAD SET Grateful Dead tribute concert • SOhO • $22-25 • www.sohosb.com • 8:30pm Th, 11/16.
Friday, November 17th MUSIC
PIANIST DANIIL TRIFONOV Playing Mozart, Beethoven, and more • UCSB Arts & Lectures • UCSB Campbell Hall • $15-65 • www.artsandlectures.ucsb.edu • 7pm Fr, 11/17. MUSIC OF THE SPHERES Chamber Singers Concert • Westmont College, Deane Chapel • Free • 7pm Fr, 11/17. STEVE HACKETT Rock concert • Lobero Theatre • $79161 • www.lobero.org • 8pm Fr, 11/17.
SPECIAL EVENTS
SB ANTIQUE, DECORATIVE ARTS, & VINTAGE SHOW & SALE Shop over 50 dealers from across the country • Earl Warren Showgrounds • $6-8, ages 12 and under free • https:// tinyurl.com/2drxv5dx • 11-6pm Fr, 11/17 & 11/18; 11-4pm Su, 11/19. GUADALUPE COMMUNITY WORKSHOP ON AIR QUALITY • Guadalupe Boys and Girls Club • 5:30-8pm, 11/17.
November 10, 2023
19
Local News for a Global Village | www.VoiceSB.com
Whose Live Anyway?
For tickets ($74) visit www.lobero.org
TEENS
TEEN ANIME & MANGA CLUB Meet other fans • Central Library, Faulkner Gallery • Free • 4-5:30pm Fr, 11/17.
BRUCE COCKBURN Folk, rock & special guest Steve Postell • Lobero Theatre • $40-106 • www.lobero.org • 7:30pm Sa, 11/18.
UCSB Theater Presents: Hay Fever
When a novelist and his retired actress wife decide to spend a relaxing weekend getaway, only one thing can disrupt their plans — their rambunctious children! Experience an evening of family drama and wit when UCSB Theater/Dance presents Hay Fever at the UCSB Performing Arts Theater at 7:30pm on Tuesday, November 14th through the 18th, and at 2pm on November 18th and 19th. For tickets ($13-19) visit www.theaterdance.ucsb.edu
EARTHKRY
roots - reggae, soul, and rock Saturday, November 18th Jamaican • SOhO • $20-30 • www.sohosb.com • 8pm Sa, 11/18.
CHILDREN
SUPERHERO DAY Create costumes and practice superhero skills • Central Library, Faulkner Gallery • Free • 1:30-3pm Sa, 11/18.
MUSIC
DMA RECITAL Tenor Lorenzo Johnson, Jr. • UCSB Karl Geiringer Hall • Free • https:// tinyurl.com/2s43n9fy • 2pm Sa, 11/18. DMA LECTURE RECITAL Pianist Lucía Álvarez Núñez • UCSB Music 1145 • Free • https://tinyurl. com/ywp2v7p • 4pm Sa, 11/18. SATURDAYS ON STATE Live music with Neil Erickson • Paseo Nuevo, De La Guerra Place • Free • 6-8pm Sa, 11/18. RICK ESTRIN & THE NIGHTCATS Blues concert • Carrillo Recreation Center • $10-45 • https://sbblues.org • 7pm Sa, 11/18. SYMPHONIC SPECTACULARS! FEATURING TIME FOR THREE Grammy-winning trio joins the SB Symphony • Granada Theatre • $35175 • www.granadasb.org • 7:30pm Sa, 11/18 & 3pm 11/19.
OUTDOORS
BUILDING HABITAT IN YOUR HOME GARDEN Hands-on class • SB Botanic Garden • $25-40 • www.sbbotanicgarden.org • 8:30-10:30am Sa, 11/18. NATURE WALKS AT ELINGS PARK Explore local plants and bugs • Elings Park • Free • Details: https://tinyurl. com/4mtats3z • 9am Sa, 11/18. BLIND FITNESS BEACH WALK AND RUN Fitness opportunity for blind and low-vision individuals • Meet in front of Cabrillo Pavilion • Free, RSVP to brianna@blindfitness.org • 9:3011:30am Sa, 11/18.
SPECIAL EVENTS
FARMER & THE FLEA Shop local vendors • El Presidio • Free • 10am-4pm Sa, 11/18. CLIMATE CHANGE AWARENESS EXPO A family-friendly day of learning and activities • MOXI • Included with admission • 10am-2pm Sa, 11/18.
fix pain
sports • trigger point • deep tissue • pregnancy • Swedish
sports massage
Gabriela Radu, CMT 805-453-1139 v.gabriela@yahoo.com
specializing in injuries, sports and repetitive motion
Sunday, November 19th CHILDREN
AUDITIONS FOR METEOR SHOWER Audition for this Steve Martin play • Ojai Art Center Theater • Learn more: www.ojaiact.org • 7-10pm Su, 11/12 & 11/13. HAY FEVER A novelist and retired actress attempt to have a quiet, family weekend • UCSB Theater/Dance • UCSB Performing Arts Theater • $13-19 • www.theaterdance.ucsb.edu • 7:30pm Tu, 11/14-11/18; 2pm 11/18-11/19. MMMBETH Silly spin on Shakespeare’s tragedy • SBJHS Performing Arts Club • Marjorie Luke Theatre • $5-10 • www.luketheatre.org • 7pm Th, 11/16 & 11/17.
UCSB Arts & Lectures to present Daniil Trifonov
CHAUCER’S BOOK SIGNING Children's author Mike Bender, The Most Serious Fart • Chaucer’s Books • Free • 3pm Su, 11/19.
COMEDY
WHOSE LIVE ANYWAY? Live improv comedy show • Lobero Theatre • $74 • www.lobero.org • 7:30pm Su, 11/19 & 11/20.
MUSIC
PRIME TIME BAND CONCERT Big band music • San Marcos High School auditorium • Free • 2pm Su, 11/19. STUDENT CARILLON RECITAL Free, outdoor concert • UCSB Storke Tower • 2pm Su, 11/19. SCHUBERTIADE I Baritone Ben Lowe and pianist Robert Cassidy • St. Mark’s-in-the-Valley • $25-50, students free • https://tinyurl. com/5n93shey • 4pm Su, 11/19. OMAR VELASCO–WITH ELENA SHELTON Rock & indie concert • Alcazar Theatre • $25 • www.thealcazar.org • 7-10pm Su, 11/19. STRING CHAMBER CONCERT Westmont students • Westmont College, Deane Chapel • Free • 7pm Su, 11/19.
Photo courtesy of UCSB Arts & Lectures
Side-splitting laughter will fill the Lobero Theatre when Ryan Stiles and Greg Proops of ABC’s Whose Line Is It Anyway?, joined by Jeff B. Davis and Joel Murray, perform an improvisational comedy show like no other at 7:30pm on Sunday and Monday, November 19th and 20th.
Courtesy of UCSB Theater/Dance
Photo courtesy of www.Lobero.org
OnSTAGE
G
RAMMY AWARD-WINNING PIANIST DANIIL TRIFONOV is a solo artist, champion of the concerto repertoire, chamber and vocal collaborator and composer. Combining consummate technique with rare sensitivity and depth, his performances are a perpetual source of wonder to audiences and critics alike. He won the Grammy Award for Best Instrumental Solo Album of 2018 with Transcendental, the Liszt collection that marked his third title as an exclusive Deutsche Grammophon artist.
Trifonov’s Deutsche Grammophon discography includes the Grammy-nominated live recording of his Carnegie recital debut; Chopin Evocations; Silver Age, for which he received Opus Klassik’s Instrumentalist of the Year/Piano award; the bestselling, Grammynominated double album Bach: The Art of Life; and three volumes of Rachmaninoff works with the Philadelphia Orchestra and Yannick Nézet-Séguin A First Prize and Grand Prix winner of Moscow’s Tchaikovsky Competition, He will be bringing a new solo program of Rameau, Mozart, Mendelssohn and Beethoven to Santa Barbara. For tickets call (805) 893-3535 or go online at www.ArtsAndLectures.UCSB.edu
20
Local News for a Global Village | www.VoiceSB.com
November 10, 2023
The Salt on Our Skin
Official Website: ArlingtonTheatreSB.com
Fri 1/26: 7:30pm: Mon 2/19: 8pm: Wed 2/21: 7:30pm: Thu 2/22: 7:30pm: Herb Alpert & Colter Wall Abraham Verghese Brian Regan Lani H all
Coming Friday THE MARVELS
Sun 3/10: 4:00pm: The Rat Pack Advance Previews: 11/16
JOURNEY TO THE BETHLEHEM HOLDOVERS
Metro • Fiesta • Camino Fairview ITS A WONDERFUL KNIFE SNEAK
Paseo Nuevo
HUNGER GAMES
Camino THANKSGIVING
TROLLS BAND TOGEHTER
Fiesta
Fiesta
Special Events
Paseo Nuevo
CWC DOCS: FEELS GOOD MAN Documentary on cartoonist Matt Furie’s character Pepe the Frog, Q&A with director Arthur Jones and producer Giorgio Angelini • UCSB Carsey-Wolf Center Pollock Theater • Free, register: www.carseywolf.ucsb.edu • 7pm Tu, 11/14.
RENAISSANCE: A
DOLLY PARTON FILM BY BEYONCÉ ROCKSTAR GLOBAL LISTEN Starting 11/30 EVENT 11/15
Fiesta • Fairview NEXT GOAL WINS
PEEK
WISH 11/18 Fiesta • Camino
Fri 4/19: 8pm: Antionio Sanchez Birdman Live!
Courtesy of Santa Barbara Maritime Museum
Sat 11/11: 8pm: Sun 11/12: 8pm: Thu 11/16: 7:30pm: Eslabon Armado El Fantasma Adam Grant
ILLUMINATE FILM FESTIVAL Screening of The Monk and the Gun • Hahn Hall, Music Academy • Starting $88 • www.musicacademy.org • 4pm Tu, 11/14.
Camino Paseo Nuevo AMERICA’S FAMILY 11/19 Fiesta
Explore the ongoing efforts of local Indigenous communities to celebrate and reclaim their connection to the coast when the Santa Barbara Maritime Museum hosts a special preview screening of the documentary The Salt on Our Skin at 7pm on Thursday, November 16th. A panel discussion with speakers from the Chumash Community and Mission Cahuilla Tribe will follow. For tickets (Free-$20) visit www.sbmm.org
THE SALT ON OUR SKIN Special preview screening of this short film on coastline Indigenous communities • SB Maritime Museum • Free-$20 • www.sbmm.org • 7pm Th, 11/16.
Schedule subject to change. Please visit metrotheatres.com for theater updates. Thank you. Features and Showtimes for Nov 10-16, 2023 * = Subject to Restrictions on “SILVER MVP PASSES; and No Passes”
www.metrotheatres.com
FA I R V I E W
METRO 4
225 N FAIRVIEW AVE GOLETA 805-683-3800
618 STATE STREET SANTA BARBARA 805-965-7684
Journey to Bethlehem* (PG): Fri, Mon-Thur: 4:30, 7:30. Sat/Sun: 2:00, 4:30, 7:30. Killers of the Flower Moon (R): Fri, Mon-Thur: 3:15, 7:00. Sat/Sun: 1:45, 3:15, 7:00. After Death (PG13): Fri-Wed: 7:20. Trolls Band Together* (PG): Thur: 2:05, 4:25, 6:45.
CAMINO REAL 7040 MARKETPLACE DR GOLETA 805-688-4140
The Marvels* (PG13): Fri/Sat: 11:45, 12:30, 1:20, 2:20, 3:05, 3:55, 4:55/3D, 5:40, 6:30, 7:30, 8:15, 9:05, 10:05. Sun: 11:45, 12:30, 1:20, 2:20, 3:05,3:55, 4:55/3D, 5:40, 6:30, 7:30, 8:15, 9:05. Mon-Wed: 2:20, 3:05,3:55, 4:55/3D, 5:40, 6:30, 7:30, 8:15.Thur: 2:20, 3:05, 4:55, 5:40, 7:30, 8:15. Five Nights at Freddys (PG13): Fri/Sat: 1:40, 4:20, 7:00, 9:40. Sun: 12:00, 2:40, 5:20, 8:00. Mon-Wed: 2:40, 5:20, 8:00. Thur: 2:40, 5:20, 8:00. Priscilla (R): Fri/Sat: 1:00, 3:50, 6:40, 9:30. 11:30, 2:15, 5:00, 7:45. Mon-Thur: 2:15, 5:00, 7:45. Taylor Swift | The Eras Tour* (NR): Fri-Sun: 12:10, 3:45, 7:15. The Hunger Games* (PG13): Thur: 3:45, 5:30, 7:15, 9:00
HITCHCOCK 371 South Hitchcock Way SANTA BARBARA 805-682-6512
Priscilla (R): Fri-Thur: 3:45, 7:30. Killers of the Flower Moon (R): Fri-Thur: 3:15, 6:30.
ARLINGTON 1317 STATE STREET SANTA BARBARA 805-963-9580
Taylor Swift | The Eras Tour* (NR): Fri: 4:00, 7:30.
The Marvels* (PG13): Fri/Sat: 1:20, 2:40, 4:00, 5:20, 6:40, 8:00, 9:20. Sun: 1:20, 2:40, 4:00, 5:20, 6:40, 8:00. Mon-Thur: 4:00, 5:20, 6:40, 8:00. · The Marsh King’s Daughter (R): Fri-Sun: 3:45. Mon-Wed: 5:00, 7:45. Taylor Swift | The Eras Tour* (NR): Fri-Sun: 1:10, 4:45, 6:30. The Exorcist: Believer (R): Fri-Sun: 8:15. Mon-Wed: 5:30, 8:15. The Hunger Games* (PG13): Thur: 3:00, 4:45, 6:30, 8:15.
NOV 10 - 16
916 STATE STREET SANTA BARBARA 805-963-0455
NORTH S.B. COUNTY THEATRES Movie Listings for 11/09/23-11/15/23
Journey to Bethlehem* (PG): Fri-Sun: 1:55, 4:25, 7:00.Mon-Thur: 4:25, 7:00. It’s a Wonderful Knife (R): Fri-Sun: 1:20, 3:35, 5:55, 8:15.Mon-Wed: 5:55, 8:15. Thur: 5:55. Paw Patrol (G): Fri-Sun: 4:15. Mon-Wed: 4:15. Radical (PG13): Fri-Sun: 1:40, 4:35, 7:30. Mon-Thur: 4:35, 7:30. Five Nights at Freddys (PG13): Fri-Sun: 1:30, 2:40, 5:20, 8:00. Mon-Wed: 5:20, 8:00. Thur: 2:40, 5:20, 8:00. After Death (PG13): Fri-Wed: 6:45. Trolls Band Together* (PG): Thur: 2:30, 5:00, 7:20. Thanksgiving* (R): Thur: 8:15.
REEL DEAL (FIRST SHOW EVERY DAY AT MOVIES LOMPOC): $7.50 • (805) 736-1558 / 736-0146 ALL SCREENS NOW PRESENTED IN DOLBY DIGITAL PROJECTION AND DOLBY DIGITAL SOUND! MASTER CARD • VISA • DISCOVER FIVE NIGHTS AT FREDDYS -PG13-
THU 4-7:00 | FRI 2:00-4-7:00 SAT-SUN 11-2:00-4-7:00 | MON-TUE-WED 4-7:00
KILLERS OF THE FLOWER MOON -RTHU 6:00 | FRI-SAT-SUN 2:00-6:00 MON-TUE-WED 6:00
THE MARVELS -PG13-
THU 4-6:00-7:00 | FRI 2:00-3-4:00-6:00-7:00 SAT-SUN 11-1:00-2:00-3-4-6:00-7:00 MON-TUE-WED 4-6:00-7:00
PA S E O N U E V O The Holdovers* (R): Fri-Sun: 1:45, 4:45, 7:45. Mon-Thur: 4:45, 7:45. Killers of the Flower Moon (R): Fri-Sun: 12:45, 3:45, 7:20. Mon-Thur: 3:45, 7:20. Priscilla (R): Fri-Sun: 1:00, 4:30, 8:00. Mon-Thur: 4:30, 8:00. What Happened Later (R): Fri-Sun: 2:00, 5:00, 7:30. Mon-Tue: 5:00, 7:30. Thur: 5:00. Dolly Parton Rockstar (NR): Wed: 7:30. Next Goal Wins* (PG13): Thur: 7:30.
MOVIE NIGHT AND TALK BACK WITH GRACE FISHER Screening of the documentary Amazing Grace and post-film discussion • Grace Fisher Foundation Inclusive Arts Clubhouse • Free, suggested $10 donation • 6:30pm Fr, 11/17.
Let’s Go To The M O V I E S
F I E S TA 5
8 WEST DE LA GUERRA STREET SANTA BARBARA 805-965-7451
CWC GLOBAL: CORAZÓN AZUL Screening of sci-fi drama, Q&A with director/producer Miguel Coyula and actor/producer Lynn Cruz • UCSB Carsey-Wolf Center Pollock Theater • Free, register: www.carseywolf.ucsb.edu • 7pm Th, 11/16.
All Screens Now Presented In Dolby Digital Projection and Dolby Digital Sound!
Fri, Sat, Sun: 1:00pm, 4:15pm, 7:30pm https://sbiffriviera.com/ Mon, Thurs: 12:00pm, 3:15pm Tues, Wed: 1:00pm, 4:15pm, 7:30pm
SBIFFRIVIERA.COM
www.playingtoday.com
Read this week’s issue of VOICE Magazine at
www.VoiceSB.com
November 10, 2023
21
Local News for a Global Village | www.VoiceSB.com
Where’s the Recession? Part II By Harlan Green, Special to VOICE
W
E WILL HAVE TO WAIT LONGER for a recession. October’s Jobs report showed even the unsettled labor strikes didn’t make much of a dent in the labor market. The usual suspects—leisure activities, healthcare, and a booming construction industry gave the most boost to hiring, but new government jobs were one third of the total 150,00 nonfarm payroll jobs created. The loss of 33,000 in manufacturing was largely due to the UAW strikes, said the BLS.
Economic VOICE By Harlan Green
The financial markets are loving the slowdown in hiring. Even the past two months were adjusted lower in the report. The change in total nonfarm payroll employment for August was revised down by 62,000, from +227,000 to +165,000, and the change for September was revised down by 39,000, from +336,000 to +297,000.
The Fed likes the report because since their recent lows in April the jobs market is softening. The unemployment rate is up by 0.5 percentage point and there are 849,000 more unemployed persons. Yet calls for an imminent recession are still in the air. Why still? Firstly, it takes months, sometimes more than one year to call a recession, because a downturn must be long enough that there is a prolonged decline in demand from consumers as well as employers. Most of the pessimists are taking the Fed’s word that they will keep rates high enough until they reach the two percent inflation target. What if that takes another year? Then all bets are off on when a recession might happen. And this month’s jobs report can’t be taken too seriously on what might happen next because of the ongoing labor strikes, including by SAG-AFTRA’s 130,000 members. And NPR reports, “Altogether, there have been 312 strikes involving roughly 453,000 workers so far in 2023, compared with 180 strikes involving 43,700 workers over the same period two years ago, according to data by Johnnie Kallas, a PhD candidate at Cornell University’s School of Industrial and Labor Relations, and the project director of the ILR Labor Action Tracker.” Putting most of the striking workers back to work could bring the unemployment rate back down, and the higher wages could goose the inflation rate again.
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So, who really knows where we might land next year? Harlan Green © 2023 Follow Harlan Green on Twitter: https://twitter.com/HarlanGreen Harlan Green has been the 16-year Editor-Publisher of PopularEconomics.com, a weekly syndicated financial wire service. He writes a Popular Economics Weekly Blog. He is an economic forecaster and teacher of real estate finance with 30-years experience as a banker and mortgage broker. To reach Harlan call (805)452-7696 or email editor@populareconomics.com.
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Local News for a Global Village | www.VoiceSB.com
November 10, 2023
VOICE Magazine • Community Market • LEGAL NOTICES Experience you can count on!
CHRIS AGNOLI (805) 682-4304
chris@suncoastrealestate.com www.chrisagnoli.com
LEGAL NOTICES ORDER TO SHOW CAUSE FOR CHANGE OF NAME CASE NUMBER: 23CV04292. Petitioner: Bola Ibrahim Malek filed a petition with this court for a decree changing names as follows: PRESENT NAME: Bola Ibrahim Malek to proposed name Bola Samir Ibrahim Malek. THE COURT ORDERS that all persons interested in this matter appear before this court at the hearing indicated below to show cause, if any, why the petition for change of name should not be granted. Any person objecting to the name changes described above must file a written objection that includes the reasons for the objection at least two court days before the matter is scheduled to be heard and must appear at the hearing to show cause why the petition should not be granted. If no written objection is timely filed, the court may grant the petition without a hearing. NOTICE OF HEARING: Date: 12/8/2023; Time: 10:00 am; Dept.: 4; ROOM: [ ] other (specify): at the: SUPERIOR COURT OF CALIFORNIA, COUNTY OF SANTA BARBARA, 1100 Anacapa Street, Santa Barbara, CA 93101 (To appear remotely, check in advance of the hearing for information about how to do so on the courts website. To find your courts website, go to www.courts.ca.gov/find-my-court.htm.) 3 a. [X] A copy of this Order to Show Cause shall be published at least once each week for four successive weeks before the date set for hearing on the petition in a newspaper of general circulation: [ ] (for resident of this county) printed in this county: VOICE MAGAZINE. Date: 10/09/2023 /s/: Donna D. Geck, Judge of the Superior Court. Legal #23CV04292 Pub Dates: October 20, 27, November 3, 10, 2023 ORDER TO SHOW CAUSE FOR CHANGE OF NAME CASE NUMBER: 23CV04589. Petitioner: Kyra Pelz-Walsh filed a petition with this court for a decree changing names as follows: PRESENT NAME: Kyra Pelz-Walsh to proposed name Kyra Pelz Curran. THE COURT ORDERS that all persons interested in this matter appear before this court at the hearing indicated below to show cause, if any, why the petition for change of name should not be granted. Any person objecting to the name changes described above must file a written objection that includes the reasons for the objection at least two court days before the matter is scheduled to be heard and must appear at the hearing to show cause why the petition should not be granted. If no written objection is timely filed, the court may grant the petition without a hearing. NOTICE OF HEARING: Date: 12/15/2023; Time: 10:00 am; Dept.: 4; ROOM: [ ] other (specify): at the: SUPERIOR COURT OF CALIFORNIA, COUNTY OF SANTA BARBARA, 1100 Anacapa Street, Santa Barbara, CA 93101 (To appear remotely, check in advance of the hearing for information about how to do so on the courts website. To find your courts website, go to www.courts.ca.gov/find-my-court.htm.) 3 a. [X] A copy of this Order to Show Cause shall be published at least once each week for four successive weeks before the date set for hearing on the petition in a newspaper of general circulation: [x] (for resident of this county) printed in this county: VOICE MAGAZINE. Date: 10/26/2023 /s/: Donna D. Geck, Judge of the Superior Court. Legal #23CV04589 Pub Dates: November 3, 10, 17, 24, 2023 ORDER TO SHOW CAUSE FOR CHANGE OF NAME CASE NUMBER: 23CV03904. Petitioner: Gracie Diane Rodriguez filed a petition with this court for a decree changing names as follows: PRESENT NAME: Gracie Diane Rodriguez to proposed name Gracie Diane Aguilar. THE COURT ORDERS that all persons interested in this matter appear before this court at the hearing indicated below to show cause, if any, why the petition for change of name should not be granted. Any person objecting to the name changes described above must file a written objection that includes the reasons for the objection at least two court days before the matter is scheduled to be heard and must appear at the hearing to show cause why the petition should not be granted. If no written objection is timely filed, the court may grant the petition without a hearing. NOTICE OF HEARING: Date: 12/13/2023; Time: 10:00 am; Dept.: 3; ROOM: [ ] other (specify): at the: SUPERIOR COURT OF CALIFORNIA, COUNTY OF SANTA BARBARA, 1100 Anacapa Street, Santa Barbara, CA 93101 (To appear remotely, check in advance of the hearing for information about how to do so on the courts website. To find your courts website, go to www.courts.ca.gov/find-my-court.htm.) 3 a. [X] A copy of this Order to Show Cause shall be published at least once each week for four successive weeks before the date set for hearing on the petition in a newspaper of general circulation: [x] (for resident of this county) printed in this county: VOICE MAGAZINE. Date: 10/20/2023 /s/: Thomas P. Anderle, Judge of the Superior Court. Legal #23CV03904 Pub Dates: October 27, November 3, 10, 17, 2023
ORDER TO SHOW CAUSE FOR CHANGE OF NAME CASE NUMBER: 23CV04247. Petitioner: Israel Alexis Neva-Gonzalez filed a petition with this court for a decree changing names as follows: PRESENT NAME: Israel Alexis NevaGonzalez to proposed name Israel Ezekiel Gonzalez. THE COURT ORDERS that all persons interested in this matter appear before this court at the hearing indicated below to show cause, if any, why the petition for change of name should not be granted. Any person objecting to the name changes described above must file a written objection that includes the reasons for the objection at least two court days before the matter is scheduled to be heard and must appear at the hearing to show cause why the petition should not be granted. If no written objection is timely filed, the court may grant the petition without a hearing. NOTICE OF HEARING: Date: 12/4/2023; Time: 10:00 am; Dept.: 5; ROOM: [ ] other (specify): at the: SUPERIOR COURT OF CALIFORNIA, COUNTY OF SANTA BARBARA, 1100 Anacapa Street, Santa Barbara, CA 93101 (To appear remotely, check in advance of the hearing for information about how to do so on the courts website. To find your courts website, go to www.courts.ca.gov/find-my-court.htm.) 3 a. [X] A copy of this Order to Show Cause shall be published at least once each week for four successive weeks before the date set for hearing on the petition in a newspaper of general circulation: [x] (for resident of this county) printed in this county: VOICE MAGAZINE. Date: 10/10/2023 /s/: Colleen K. Sterne, Judge of the Superior Court. Legal #23CV04247 Pub Dates: October 27, November 3, 10, 17, 2023 ORDER TO SHOW CAUSE FOR CHANGE OF NAME CASE NUMBER: 23CV04208. Petitioner: Ivy Iveel Davaadorj filed a petition with this court for a decree changing names as follows: PRESENT NAME: Ivy Iveel Davaadorj to proposed name Ivy Iveel Otgonbat. THE COURT ORDERS that all persons interested in this matter appear before this court at the hearing indicated below to show cause, if any, why the petition for change of name should not be granted. Any person objecting to the name changes described above must file a written objection that includes the reasons for the objection at least two court days before the matter is scheduled to be heard and must appear at the hearing to show cause why the petition should not be granted. If no written objection is timely filed, the court may grant the petition without a hearing. NOTICE OF HEARING: Date: 12/4/2023; Time: 10:00 am; Dept.: 5; ROOM: [ ] other (specify): at the: SUPERIOR COURT OF CALIFORNIA, COUNTY OF SANTA BARBARA, 1100 Anacapa Street, Santa Barbara, CA 93101 (To appear remotely, check in advance of the hearing for information about how to do so on the courts website. To find your courts website, go to www.courts.ca.gov/find-my-court.htm.) 3 a. [X] A copy of this Order to Show Cause shall be published at least once each week for four successive weeks before the date set for hearing on the petition in a newspaper of general circulation: [ ] (for resident of this county) printed in this county: VOICE MAGAZINE. Date: 10/09/2023 /s/: Colleen K. Sterne, Judge of the Superior Court. Legal #23CV04208 Pub Dates: October 20, 27, November 3, 10, 2023
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME S TAT E M E N T : T h e f o l l o w i n g Corporation/Limited Liability Company is doing business as JUNIPER ON 4TH at 478 4th Place, Solvang, CA 93463. CNPRKV1, LLC at 20351 Irvine Avenue Suite C6, Newport Beach, CA 92660. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara on September 25, 2023. This statement expires five years from the date it was filed in the office of the County Clerk. I hereby certify that this is a correct copy of the original statement on file in my office. Joseph E. Holland, County Clerk (SEAL). FBN No. 2023-0002298. Published October 27, November 3, 10, 17, 2023.
The Multi-family Investment Specialist
STEVE GOLIS sgolis@radiusgroup.com www.radiusgroup.com
805-879-9606 CA Lic. 00772218
Cascade Capital (805) 688-9697
Legal Notices Run your legal notice in VOICE Magazine Fictitious Business Name • Alcohol License • Summons • Name Change • Petition to Administer Estate • Trustee Sale • Public Entities For information & rates:
Publisher@VoiceSB.com
Fast Private Lending 1st & 2nd Trust Deeds Commercial ~ Land Mixed Use ~ Multifamily No Tax Returns Simple Documentation No Minimum Credit
www.neilsteadman.com CalBRE License #00461906
Commemorative Tree Plaques... Great Gifts & Great Memories Designate a tree as a tribute to a family member or friend.
Santa Barbara Beautiful has funded more than 13,000 street trees in Santa Barbara! Find out more at www.SBBeautiful.org
For more information visit: www.sbbeautiful.org/commemorativetrees.html
Santa Barbara Beautiful is a 501 (c) 3. Donations may be tax deductible. TAX ID: 23-7055360
November 10, 2023
23
Local News for a Global Village | www.VoiceSB.com
VOICE Magazine • Community Market • LEGAL NOTICES
Insertion Date: Print: 11.10.23 - 6.89” times 5 columns = $143.31 Digital included 11.8.23 • Kris Ahrens Public Works Notice Inviting Bids
3.
3.1 License. This Project requires a valid California contractor’s license for the following classification(s): Class A.
HOT SLUDGE RECIRCULATION PROJECT AT EL ESTERO WATER RESOURCE CENTER Bid No. 5016 1. Bid Submission. The City of Santa Barbara (“City”) will accept electronic bids for its Hot Sludge Recirculation Project at El Estero Water Resource Center (“Project”), by or before Thursday, December 7, 2023, at 3:00 p.m., through its PlanetBids portal. Bidders must be registered on the City of Santa Barbara’s PlanetBids portal in order to submit a Bid proposal and to receive addendum notifications. Each bidder is responsible for making certain that its Bid Proposal is actually submitted/uploaded with sufficient time to be received by PlanetBids prior to the bid opening date and time. Large files may take more time to be submitted/ uploaded to PlanetBids, so plan accordingly... The receiving time on the PlanetBids server will be the governing time for acceptability of bids. Telegraphic, telephonic, hardcopy, and facsimile bids will not be accepted. If any Addendum issued by City is not acknowledged online by the Bidder, the PlanetBids System will prevent the Bidder from submitting a Bid Proposal. Bidders are responsible for obtaining all addenda from City’s PlanetBids portal. Bid results and awards will be available on PlanetBids. 2.
Project Information. 2.1 Location and Description. The Project is located at 520 E. Yanonali Street, Santa Barbara, CA, and is described as follows:
License and Registration Requirements.
3.2 DIR Registration. City may not accept a Bid Proposal from or enter into the Contract with a bidder, without proof that the bidder is registered with the California Department of Industrial Relations (“DIR”) to perform public work pursuant to Labor Code § 1725.5, subject to limited legal exceptions. 4. Contract Documents. The plans, specifications, bid forms and contract documents for the Project, and any addenda thereto (“Contract Documents”) may be downloaded from City’s website at: http://www.planetbids. com/portal/portal.cfm?CompanyID=29959 5. Bid Security. The Bid Proposal must be accompanied by bid security of 5% of the maximum bid amount, in the form of a cashier’s or certified check made payable to City, or a bid bond executed by a surety licensed to do business in the State of California on the Bid Bond form included with the Contract Documents. The bid security must guarantee that within ten days after City issues the Notice of Award, the successful bidder will execute the Contract and submit the payment and performance bonds, insurance certificates and endorsements, and any other submittals required by the Contract Documents and as specified in the Notice of Award. 6.
The work involves piping modifications to existing Digester Sludge Transfer Pumps, installation of new pressure switches, pressure transmitters, and flow meter, all associated electrical and instrumentation work, and all associated demolition work for the above items. 2.2 Time for Final Completion. The Project must be fully completed within 150 calendar days from the start date set forth in the Notice to Proceed. City anticipates that the Work will begin on or about 45 calendar days from the bid date, but the anticipated start date is provided solely for convenience and is neither certain nor binding. 2.3 Estimated Cost. The estimated construction cost is $325,000.
Prevailing Wage Requirements. 6.1 General. Pursuant to California Labor Code § 1720 et seq., this Project is subject to the prevailing wage requirements applicable to the locality in which the Work is to be performed for each craft, classification or type of worker needed to perform the Work, including employer payments for health and welfare, pension, vacation, apprenticeship and similar purposes. 6.2 Rates. The prevailing rates are on file with City and are available online at http://www.dir.ca.gov/DLSR. Each Contractor and Subcontractor must pay no less than the specified rates to all workers employed to work on the Project. The schedule of per diem wages is based upon a working day of eight hours. The rate for holiday and overtime work must be at least time and one-half. 6.3 Compliance. The Contract will be subject to compliance monitoring and enforcement by the DIR, under Labor Code § 1771.4.
7. Performance and Payment Bonds. The successful bidder will be required to provide performance and payment bonds, each for 100% of the Contract Price, as further specified in the Contract Documents. 8. Substitution of Securities. Substitution of appropriate securities in lieu of retention amounts from progress payments is permitted under Public Contract Code § 22300. 9. Subcontractor List. Each Subcontractor must be registered with the DIR to perform work on public projects. Each bidder must submit a completed Subcontractor List form with its Bid Proposal, including the name, location of the place of business, California contractor license number, DIR registration number, and percentage of the Work to be performed (based on the base bid price) for each Subcontractor that will perform Work or service or fabricate or install Work for the prime contractor in excess of one-half of 1% of the bid price, using the Subcontractor List form included with the Contract Documents. 10. Instructions to Bidders. All bidders should carefully review the Instructions to Bidders for more detailed information before submitting a Bid Proposal. The definitions provided in Article 1 of the General Conditions apply to all of the Contract Documents, as defined therein, including this Notice Inviting Bids. 11. Bidders’ Conference. A bidders’ conference will be held on Thursday, November 16, 2023 at 9:00 a.m., at the following location: 520 E. Yanonali St. Santa Barbara, CA 93103 to acquaint all prospective bidders with the Contract Documents and the Worksite. The bidders’ conference is not mandatory. 12. Specific Brands. Pursuant to referenced provision(s) of Public Contract Code § 3400(c), City has found that the following specific brands are required for the following material(s), product(s), thing(s), or service(s), and no substitutions will be considered or accepted: Item: Required brand: Plug Valves DeZurik Magnetic Flowmeters Rosemount Pressure Transmitters Rosemount
Reference: Section 3400 (c)(2) Section 3400 (c)(2) Section 3400 (c)(2)
11/3/2023 ���������������������������������������� ������������������������� Date: ����������������������� By: ______________________________ ________________ for for ���������or����������r�����r�����������r�� William Hornung, General Service Manager
Publication Date: 11.10.2023 END OF NOTICE INVITING BIDS
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DESIGN & CONSTRUCTION 50 + Years Experience - Local 35+ Years
Helping people find homes that match their lifestyles.
KATHRYN SWEENEY
Broker Associate • (805) 331-4100 www.kathrynsweeneysb.com
Santa Barbara Mortgage Interest Rates
Contact your local loan agent or mortgage broker for current rates: DRAPER & KRAMER MORTGAGE CORP. Please call for current rates: Russell Story, 805-895-8831 PARAGON MORTGAGE GROUP Please call for current rates: 805-899-1390 HOMEBRIDGE FINANCIAL SERVICES Please call for current rates: Erik Taiji, 805-895-8233, NMLS #322481
• Floor Leveling • Quality Remodeling • Foundation Replacements • Foundation Repairs • Earthquake Retrofitting • Retaining Walls • French Drains - Waterproofing • Site Drainage Systems • Underpinnings - Caissons • Structural Correction Work • Concrete Driveways • Virtual Building Inspections
805.698.4318
William J. Dalziel Lic#B311003 – Bonded & Insured
BillJDalziel@gmail.com
www.idareproductions.com
MONTECITO BANK & TRUST Please call for current rates: 805-963-7511 • Coastal Housing Partnership Member SB MORTGAGE GROUP Simar Gulati, 805-403-9679 U.S. BANK Please call for current rates: Teri Gauthier, 805-565-4571 • Coastal Housing Partnership Member
Helping people find homes that match their lifestyles.
Rates are supplied by participating institutions prior to publishing deadline and are deemed reliable. They do not constitute a commitment to lend and are not guaranteed. For more information and additional loan types and rates, consumers should contact the lender of their choice. CASA Santa Barbara cannot guarantee the accuracy and availability of quoted rates. All quotes are based on total points including loan. Rates are effective as of 11/8/2023. ** Annual percentage rate subject to change after loan closing.
KATHRYN SWEENEY Broker Associate
Commemorative Tree Plaques Make Great Gifts! Dedicate a tree as a tribute to a family member or friend.
For more info visit: www.sbbeautiful.org
Santa Barbara Beautiful is a 501 (c) 3. Donations may be tax deductible. TAX ID: 23-7055360
To place your classified ad, email advertising@VoiceSB.com
Read this week’s issue of VOICE Magazine at www.VoiceSB.com Includes all ads with live links
24
Local News for a Global Village | www.VoiceSB.com
November 10, 2023
Kids Draw Architecture Calendar Exhibition and Party
T
HE ARCHITECTURAL FOUNDATION OF SANTA BARBARA is holding the Kids Draw Architecture KDA Calendar Exhibition & Party to recognize and celebrate the 2024 KDA calendar artists and their families.
The Largest Consignment Store on the Central Coast Taking Single Items to Whole Estates
These 2024 calendar drawings, produced by artists ranging from two to 94 years old, depict the beautiful and historic El Presidio de Santa Bárbara. These original drawings will be on exhibition at the AFSB Gallery from November 12 to December 31, 2023. The 2024 KDA Calendars are available for purchase at the AFSB office, local bookstores Chaucer’s and Book Den, and at El Presidio de Santa Bárbara gift store and the Santa Barbara Museum of Art gift store. www.afsb.org
Grace Fisher Winter Music Showcase
Consign for a Cause Benefits your favorite Santa Barbara Charity
Louis John Boutique Instagram:@louisofmontecito
Designer fashion consignments, estate wardrobes and assessments
This year, Grace Fisher is thrilled to bring together a more diverse lineup than ever of artistic talent yet, including the Santa Barbara Folk Orchestra, Jackson Gillies, Chris Fossek, and original art and music by Grace Fisher.
Photos courtesy of Grace Fisher Foundation
T
HE GRACE FISHER FOUNDATION’S 6th Annual Winter Music Showcase will take place on Sunday, December 10th, at the Granada Theatre. This showcase has become a favorite local music tradition that celebrates music, dance, and art from some of the best local performers from Santa Barbara.
“I’m honored that so many talented musicians return each year to perform in this special concert, which helps raise money to support access to the arts for all,” shared Fisher. “Music brings people and community together, and that has always been my goal for this event. We hope to inspire and enlighten audiences, and can’t wait to share it with you!”
ConsignmentsByMMD.com
805-770-7715
info@movingmissdaisy.com
3845 State St, La Cumbre Plaza
Open 11a-5p Closed Tuesday
(Lower Level Former Sears)
Legacy Arts Santa Barbara and Santa Barbara Visual Artists presents an
Exhibition of Featured Artists
This year’s festive program features a range of genres from modern to classical to folk and of course some holiday favorites! This year’s event will also showcase dance, featuring Selena Valencia from Flamenco Santa Barbara. The Grace Fisher Foundation exists to connect children living with disabilities to music, art, dance, and other forms of artistic expression in order to provide an accessible space for community inclusion, education, creation, and self-discovery. www.gracefisherfoundation.org
November 1 - December 30, 2023 3rd Friday, November 17 Reception 5 PM - 8 PM 1st Thursday, December 7 Reception 5 PM - 8 PM 3rd Friday, December 15 Reception 5 PM - 8 PM Legacy Gallery Days/Hours Wednesday - Sunday 3 PM - 8 PM 1230 State Street, Santa Barbara CA 93101
November 10, 2023
25
Local News for a Global Village | www.VoiceSB.com
Sullivan Goss: An American Gallery
Climbing into Nathan Huff ’s
Forest For The Trees W By Kerry Methner / VOICE
ITH A VISUAL LANGUAGE ALL ITS OWN, Nathan Huff ’s third solo exhibition at Sullivan Goss is now open. Many will remember the ladders, small boats, and oaks that populated his earlier works. They return again, though subtly changed, evoking even more clearly earthly transience and a pull to the ethereal realms.
Offering space for quiet reflection, wonder, and fancy, Huff ’s recurring evocative metaphors reflect moments with his young daughters or time spent tending the two miles of hiking paths that meander through oaks at Westmont College. Those moments build connection and are grounding in the midst of change. Huff ’s connection to the physical world and respect for nature shows up in his careful analogue depictions where he arranges the falling leaves in his paintings and captures them individually. “I have always had this arc in my practice about suspension and looking at something from as many different angles as possible. So you could throw it up and walk around it in slow motion,” Huff explained as he began to reflect on his practice and Forest for the Trees. “I have been thinking about rootedness, and trees going into the ground, and then this kind of temporal movement, and horizontal locations as well.” He continued, “So the boats are kind of a stand in for people, that flow across environments. And so, that’s kind of the motif... it’s like climbing and flowing... it’s an intersection between spirit and my own aspirational hopes and pathos, at the same time...That’s often the bigger thoughts there and then I just really enjoy walking through the landscape...”
Arranging Stars by Nathan Huff
Some of Huff ’s favorite trees become iconic in his work and appear in several of the paintings, with their familiar crooks and sharp bends becoming scaffolding for a new iteration and exploration. Boats and ladders that appear are created from tree limbs the artist has found or been gifted, with rungs painstakingly carved and placed. The boats are each unique, as perhaps the journey of the individuals they stand in for, sometimes alone, sometimes meeting, and sometimes moving through each other. Often ladders are reaching for the sky or stars. Intersections by Nathan Huff
Rich vivid color lifts the mood of the body of work even in the face of cut down trees. In Glow, ladders take the place of missing trunks and branches, dancing to reach the sky. Globes of light shine brightly among them.
Rhythms and Currents by Nathan Huff
At the center of the exhibition is a ceiling to almost the floor installation that Huff designed to offer a sense of being among the trees. And there are his small hand constructed wooden ladders inside. “I thought of the experience of running through trees, the experience of dappled light. I have long had a fascination and love of different trees,” he recalled. Warmly familiar and at the same time mysterious, inviting, and even mythic, somehow we are depicted here in this group of works, and what is revealed is somehow our story, too. Now is your chance to experience it. The exhibition will be on view through December 18th. Nathan Huff earned an MFA in Drawing and Painting from CSU Long Beach and a BA in art education from Azusa Pacific University. In 2013, he moved to Santa Barbara to accept a position as Assistant Professor of Art at Westmont College where he quickly became known as one of the most exciting young artists in town. Huff’s installations have been featured in solo exhibitions at UCR Culver and Sweeney Galleries (Riverside), Los Angeles at D.E.N. Contemporary (West Hollywood), Minthorne Gallery (Oregon), Gallerie View (Salambo, Tunisia), group exhibitions at JK Gallery (Culver City), Lotusland (Santa Barbara), Westmont Ridley Tree Museum of Art (Santa Barbara), and the Angels Gate Cultural Center (San Pedro, CA). Glow by Nathan Huff
The gallery is located at 11 East Anapamu St.
www.SullivanGoss.com A Sudden Gust (after Hokusai, Jeff Wall) by Nathan Huff
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A rt | A rte
Local News for a Global Village | www.VoiceSB.com COLETTE COSENTINO ATELIER + GALLERY: 11 W Anapamu St • By Appt • www.colettecosentino.com CORRIDAN GALLERY: California Sojourns by Karen Fedderson ~ Dec 23 • 125 N Milpas • We-Sa 11-6 • 805-966-7939 • www.corridan-gallery.com
GALLERIES • STUDIOS • MUSEUMS • PUBLIC PLACES
CPC GALLERY: By appt • 36 E Victoria St • Gallery@CPCSB.org CYPRESS GALLERY: Critters – Real And Imagined ~ Nov 26 • 119 E Cypress Av, Lompoc • Sat & Sun 1-4 • 805-737-1129 • www.lompocart.org ELIZABETH GORDON GALLERY: Emerging artists from around the country • 15 W Gutierrez • 805-963-1157 • Tu-Sat 11–5 • www.elizabethgordongallery.com EL PRESIDIO DE SANTA BÁRBARA: Nihonmachi Revisited; Memorias y Facturas • 123 E Canon Perdido St • Th-Sun 11-4 • www.sbthp.org
Evening Glow - Douglas Preserve Original Oil Painting by
Ralph Waterhouse Waterhouse Gallery La Arcada at State & Figueroa Santa Barbara, CA 93101 805-962-8885 www.waterhousegallery.com
10 WEST GALLERY: Carte Blanche ~ Nov 12 • 10 W Anapamu • Wed-Mon 11-5 • 805-770-7711 • www.10westgallery.com ARCHITECTURAL FDN GALLERY: Kids Draw Architecture ~ Opens 11/12 • 229 E Victoria • 805-9656307 • www.afsb.org ART, DESIGN & ARCHITECTURE MUSEUM: Sandy Rodriguez — Unfolding Histories: 200 Years of Resistance ~ Mar 3, ‘24; Please, Come In… ~ Dec17 • Sat-Sun 12-5 • www.museum.ucsb.edu
Legacy
Dorothy Churchill Johnson and Tony Gwilliam
Brian Woolford
Illuminations Gallery La Cumbre Center for Creative Arts La Cumbre PLaza
ART FROM SCRAP GALLERY: 302 E Cota St • 805-884-0459 • www.exploreecology.org/art-from-scrap • We 11-4; Th 11-5; Fr, Sat 11-4 THE ARTS FUND: Nuanced Peoples: Exploring Latinx Identities ~ Nov 10; Celebrating 30 years of Arts Mentorships ~ opens Nov 17 • La Cumbre Plaza, 120 S Hope Av • Wed-Sun 11-5; www.artsfundsb.org • 805-233-3395
118 Gray Ave., SB, CA 93101
FAULKNER GALLERY: WEST: Jean Morrison Phillips; MAIN: Adaptation: Santa Barbara Fiber Arts Guild ~ November • 40 E Anapamu St • 805-962-7653 GALLERY 113: SB Art Assn • 1114 State St, #8, La Arcada Ct • 805-9656611 • Mo-Sa 11-5; Sun 1-5 • www.gallery113sb.com
KATHRYNE DESIGNS: Local Artists, Ruth Ellen Hoag • 1225 Coast Village Rd, A • M-Sa 10-5; Su 11-5 • 805-565-4700 LA CUMBRE CENTER FOR CREATIVE ARTS: Three Multi-Artist Galleries at La Cumbre Plaza - Elevate, Fine Line, and Illuminations Galleries • TuesSun noon-5 • www.lcccasb.com LEGACY ARTS SANTA BARBARA: SB Visual Artists Holiday Exhibit • Art, Music, Legacy • 1230 State St• www.CreateLegacyMusic.com LOMPOC LIBRARY GROSSMAN GALLERY: 501 E North Av, Lompoc • 805-588-3459. LYNDA FAIRLY CARPINTERIA ARTS CENTER: Small Town Big Appetite~ Nov 19 • Thu-Su 12-4 • 865 Linden Av • 805-684-7789 • www.carpinteriaartscenter.org
ATKINSON GALLERY: New Landscapes I ~ Dec 8 • M-Th 11-5; Fr 11-3 • http://gallery.sbcc.edu BELLA ROSA GALLERIES: 1103-A State St • 11-5 daily • 805-966-1707
GANNA WALSKA LOTUSLAND: 805.969.9990 • www.lotusland.org
MAUNE CONTEMPORARY: Piscinas by Esteban Ocampo-Giraldo • 1309 State St • Tu-Su 11-5 & By appt • 805-8692524 • www.maune.com
CASA DE LA GUERRA: Haas Adobe Watercolors • $5/Free • 15 East De la Guerra St • Th-Sun 12-4 • www.sbthp.org/casadelaguerra
GOLETA VALLEY LIBRARY: 500 N. Fairview Ave • Tu-Thu: 10-7pm; Fri & Sa 10-5:30pm; Su 1-5pm • www.TheGoletaValleyArtAssociation.org
MOXI, THE WOLF MUSEUM: Exploration + Innovation • Daily 10-5 • 805-770-5000 • 125 State St • www.moxi.org
HELENA MASON ART GALLERY:
MUSEUM OF CONTEMPORARY ART SANTA BARBARA: Cameron Patricia Downey: Orchid Blues ~ Dec 23 • 653 Paseo Nuevo • www.mcasantabarbara.org
CHANNING PEAKE GALLERY: Sunshine on Tuesdays • 1st fl, 105 E Anacapa St • 805-568-3994
Silo118 Through November 25
ELVERHØJ MUSEUM: Looking Back: Tokyo, Gibraltar, Berlin & Sperlonga: Paintings by Glen Rubsamen ~ Nov 18 • 1624 Elverhoy Way, Solvang • 805-686-1211 • Th-Mo 11-5 • www.elverhoj.org
RUTH ELLEN HOAG www.ruthellenhoag.com @ruthellenhoag 805-689-0858 ~inquire for studio classes~
GALLERY LOS OLIVOS: Britt Friedman and Gerry Winant - Points Of View”~ Nov 30 • Thu-Mo 10-5 • 805-688-7517 • www.gallerylosolivos.com
CASA DOLORES: Candelario Medrano: the surrealist folk genius; Bandera Ware / traditional outfits ~ ongoing; La Devoción de los Altares en el Día de los Muertos ~ Nov 15 • 1023 Bath St • www.casadolores.org
Suits: David #1, 48x36 inches
November 10, 2023
CLAY STUDIO GALLERY: Digital Handcraft ~ Nov 14 • 1351 Holiday Hill Rd • 805-565-CLAY • 10-4pm Daily • www.claystudiosb.org
LightWorks by Rod Lathim; A Slice of Life by Bob Hernandez ~ Dec 24 • 48 Helena Av • 2-6pm, Fri-Sat • www.helenamasonartgallery.com JAMES MAIN FINE ART: 19th & 20th Fine art & antiques • 27 E De La Guerra St • Tu-Sa 12-5 • Appt Suggested • 805-962-8347 KARPELES MANUSCRIPT LIBRARY & MUSEUM: 21 W Anapamu • Tu-Su 10-4 • 805-962-5322 • https://karpeles.com/museums/sb.php
MARCIA BURTT GALLERY: 517 Laguna St • Th-Su 1-5 • 805-9625588 • www.artlacuna.com
JO MERIT
Modernist Artist www.jomerit.com JoMeritModern@gmail.com 10 West Gallery PATRICIA CLARKE STUDIO: 410 Palm Av, Carpinteria • By Appt • www. patriciaclarkestudio.com • 805-452-7739 PEREGRINE GALLERIES: Early California and American paintings; fine vintage jewelry • 1133 Coast Village Rd • 805-252-9659 • www.Peregrine.shop PETER HORJUS DESIGN: Icon by Peter Horjus ~ ongoing • 11 W Figueroa St • www. peterhorjus.com PORTICO GALLERY: Open Daily • 1235 Coast Village Rd • 805-7298454 • www.porticofinearts.com RED BARN GALLERY (AT UCSB): By appt • king@theaterdance.ucsb • near bus circle middle of campus. SANTA BARBARA ART WORKS: Artists with disabilities programs, virtual exhibits • 805-260-6705 • www.sbartworks.org SANTA BARBARA FINE ART: SB landscapes & sculptor Bud Bottoms • 1321 State St • Tu-Sa 12-6 & By Appt • 805-845-4270 • www.santabarbarafineart.com
MUSEUM OF SENSORY & MOVEMENT EXPERIENCES: La Cumbre Plaza, 120 S. Hope Av #F119 • www.seehearmove.com MY PET RAM: Paper Moon • 16 Helena Av • Fri-Sun noon-7pm • 805-637-1424 • www.mypetram.com PALM LOFT GALLERY: 410 Palm Av, Loft A1, Carp • By Appt • 805-6849700 • www.Palmloft.com
Kerry Methner
www.TheTouchofStone.com 805-570-2011 • VOICE Gallery
November 10, 2023 SB BOTANIC GARDEN: Depth of Field: Botanical Photography Through the Low-key Lens • 1212 Mission Canyon Rd • 10-5 daily • 805-6824726 • www.sbbg.org SB HISTORICAL MUSEUM: California Missions by Edwin Deakin ~ Feb 18, ‘24 • 136 E De la Guerra • Thu 12-5, Fri 12-7; Sat 12-5 • 805-9661601 • www.sbhistorical.org SB MARITIME MUSEUM: The Chumash, Whaling, Commercial Diving, Surfing, Shipwrecks, First Order Fresnel Lens, and Santa Barbara Lighthouse Women Keepers ~ Ongoing • 113 Harbor Way, Ste 190 • Thu-Su 10-5 • 805-9628404 • www.SBMM.org SB MUSEUM OF ART: Inside/Outside ~ Feb 18, 2024; Shape, Ground, Shadow: The Photographs of Ellsworth Kelly ~ Jan 14; Flowers on a River: The Art of Chinese Flower-and-Bird Painting ~ Jan 14; From Copper Plate to Collotype ~ Jan 14; Portrait of Mexico Today; Highlights of East Asian Art - Ongoing • Tu-Su, 11-5; Thu, 11-8 • www.sbma.net • 805-963-4364 SB MUSEUM OF NATURAL HISTORY: Voyages of Discovery: Natural History Exploration ~ March 10; Mineral exhibition & Prehistoric Forest: Discover Dinosaurs in the Wild ~ ongoing • Wed-Sun 10-5 • 2559 Puesta del Sol • www.sbnature.org SANTA BARBARA SEA CENTER: Dive In: Our Changing Channel ~ Ongoing • Daily 10-5 • 805-682-4711 • 211 Stearns Wharf • www.sbnature.org SANTA BARBARA TENNIS CLUB: Cannibal’s Redux ~ Nov 29 • 10-6 daily • 2375 Foothill Rd • 805-682-4722 • www.2ndfridaysart.com SLICE OF LIGHT GALLERY: Earth & Space Fine Art Photography • 9 W Figueroa St • Mon-Fri 10-5 • 805-354-5552 • www.sliceoflight.com
Forest For The Trees ~ Dec 18 • 11 E Anapamu St • 805-730-1460 • www.sullivangoss.com SUSAN QUINLAN DOLL & TEDDY BEAR MUSEUM: 122 W. Canon Perdido • Fr-Sa 11-4; Su-Th by appt • 805-687-4623 • www.quinlanmuseum.com SYV HISTORICAL MUSEUM & CARRIAGE HOUSE: Art Of The Western Saddle • 3596 Sagunto St, Santa Ynez • Sa, Su 12-4 • 805-688-7889 • www.santaynezmuseum.org TAMSEN GALLERY: Work by Robert W. Firestone • 911.5 State St, 805-705-2208 • www.tamsengallery.com UCSB LIBRARY: “Cultura Cura: 50 Years of Self Help Graphics in East LA ~ June 21 • www.library.ucsb.edu
WATERHOUSE GALLERY MONTECITO: Notable CA & National Artists • 1187 Coast Village Rd • 11-5 Mon-Sun • 805-962-8885 • www.waterhousegallery.com WATERHOUSE GALLERY SB: Notable CA & National Artists • La Arcada Ct, 1114 State St, #9 • 11-5 Mon-Sat • 805-962-8885 • www.waterhousegallery.com WESTMONT RIDLEY-TREE MUSEUM OF ART: Straddling Circumference…The Art of Linda Ekstrom ~ Nov 11 • 805-565-6162 • Mo-Fr 10-4; Sat 11-5 • www.westmont.edu/museum WILDLING MUSEUM: Message in a Bottle | Elizabeth Criss ~ February 24; CA National Parks: Stories of Water ~ Feb 19 • 1511 B Mission Dr, Solvang • www.wildlingmuseum.org ARTISTS: SEE YOUR WORK HERE!
SULLIVAN GOSS: Susan Mcdonnell: Radiant Realm ~ Dec 2 • Fall Salon ~ Nov 27; Inga Guzyte: The Decks Were Stacked; Nathan Huff:
To find out more, email Publisher@VoiceSB.com
ARTIST TALK @ THE ARTS FUND • Nuanced Peoples: Exploring Latinx Identities • La Cumbre Plaza • Free • 6pm Fr, 11/10. ARCHITECTURAL FDN OF SB KDA CALENDAR EXHIBIT RECEPTION • recognize and celebrate 2024 KDA calendar artists • 1-3pm Su, 11/12. SB PRINTMAKERS POP-UP PRINT SALE • View and shop handmade prints by local artists • Community Arts Center, 631 Garden St. • Free • 4-6pm Fr, 11/10; 10am4pm Sa, 11/11; 12-4pm Su, 11/12. STUDIO SUNDAY • Community watercolor painting workshop • SB Museum of Art Family Resource Center • Free • 1:304:30pm Su, 11/12.
La Cumbre Arts Zone
L
75 Artists at One Address Celebrating Four Years!
A CUMBRE PLAZA IS IN THE MIDST OF A TRANSFORMATION. There are now over 75 artists showing their creations in custom, contemporary spaces. Visitors can find the work of painters, photographers, and sculptors spread among a number of art venues, amidst long-time favorite destination retail locals. The LCCCA was the first arts group to arrive four years ago this month. The collaborative of 24 artists took a chance on the then under-occupied shopping center and committed to three vacant spaces. “Mall management was skeptical about a rag tag bunch of artists,” Mike Cregan, their entrepreneurial leader recalled. “They must have wondered if we would be painting the sidewalks. If we would fit in? Most importantly, could we pay the rent?”
VOICE GALLERY: Imaginings: Abstract Art Collective ~ Nov 30 • La Cumbre Plaza H-124 • 10-5:30 M-F; 1-5 Sa & Su • 805-965-6448 • www.voicesb.art
SILO 118: Legacy: Tony Gwilliam and Dorothy Churchill Johnson ~ Nov 25 • 118 Gray St • Th-Sa 12-5/by appt • www.silo118.com
Art Events Eventos de Arte
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Join VOICE Magazine’s
Print & Virtual Gallery!
Four years later, they’re celebrating another anniversary! On Friday, November Zami - Body Painter 17th, from 5 to 8pm, La Cumbre Plaza will come alive for an all ages, whole family birthday party! Enjoy The Bubble Guy, dancing by State Street Ballet and Nomad Tango, live music including Argentinian tango, as well as body painting, video projections, and other surprises. LCCCA’s fine portrait photographer Kenji will be on hand with mini-portrait sessions, and visitors can try their own artistic hand on a large canvas for a group painting.
Signature by Marlynn Daggett
The Grace Fisher Foundation will have art table crafts and a photo scavenger hunt. Voice Gallery will opening its doors for a reception featuring Imaginings by the Abstract Art Collective that benefits The Teddy Bear Cancer Foundation. The Arts Fund Gallery will host an exhibition Celebrating 30 Years of Teen Arts Mentorships, and the Museum of Sensory & Movement Experiences will offer tours of their interactives. As always at 3rd Friday events, Wine and snacks will be available in each gallery.
LA CUMBRE PLAZA 3RD FRIDAY ART WALK • Explore local galleries while enjoying music, dance, mini-portrait sessions • 4th Anniversary LCCCA, 1st Anniversary VOICE Gallery • La Cumbre Plaza • Free • 5-8pm Fr, 11/17. READY TO HANG 2023 • Pop-up show and sale of local artists’ ready-to-hang work • Community Arts Workshop • Free • Private Artists’ Party: 6-9pm Fr, 11/17; Public Sale: 6-9pm Sa, 11/18. WATERHOUSE GALLERY 39TH ANNIVERSARY EXHIBITION • Live painting demonstrations with 7 local artists • Waterhouse Gallery, La Arcada Ct, SB • Free • 1-4pm Sa, 11/18. SB ARTS & CRAFTS SHOW • Local artists & artisans • 236 E. Cabrillo Blvd. • 10am-5pm Sun. CARPINTERIA CREATIVE ARTS • Shop locally made pottery, beach art, cards, jewelry, and sewn articles • 8th St & Linden Av • Free • 2:30 - 6pm Thu.
“Where else can you see this much art at one address?”
Patrick McGinnis Teddy Bear in Imaginings by the Abstract Art Collective, benefitting the Teddy Bear Cancer Foundation
at VOICE Gallery La Cumbre Plaza patprime@earthlink.net
Pink Cadillac by Felice Willat
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November 10, 2023
Unmet Transit Needs Listening Session
Visit us virtually anytime during the two-hour listening session
4 p.m. to 6 p.m. Wednesday, December 6, 2023 Stop by for 5 minutes (or more) to share how bus systems, dial-a-ride, and paratransit services can better meet your needs in Santa Barbara County.
ZOOM Webinar:
Webinar ID: 880 7526 7493; Passcode: 715185 Telephone: (669) 900-9128 Servicio de interpretación al español disponible. SBCAG is committed to providing access and reasonable accommodations for this meeting. Accommodation requests should be made by Monday, December 4 at (805) 961-8900, or comment@sbcag.org
Can't Attend the Virtual Listening Session? Take a survey or write to SBCAG by December 15, 2023 Online Survey www.surveymonkey.com/r/SBCAG_TNA Write 260 North San Antonio Rd, Suite B; Santa Barbara, CA 93110; or comment@sbcag.org
November 10, 2023
Local News for a Global Village | www.VoiceSB.com
Necesidades de transporte no satisfechas Sesión de Escucha
Visítenos virtualmente en cualquier momento las dos horas de esta sesión de escucha
4 p.m. a 6 p.m. miércoles, 6 de diciembre, 2023 Pase por 5 minutos (o más) para compartir cómo los sistemas de autobús, dial-a-ride (llamar por el paseo) y los servicios de paratránsito pueden satisfacer mejor sus necesidades en el condado de Santa Bárbara.
Seminario Web ZOOM:
Identificación del Seminario: 880 7526 7493; Contraseña: 715185 Teléfono: (669) 900-9128 Servicio de interpretación al español disponible. SBCAG se compromete a facilitar el acceso y las adaptaciones razonables para esta reunión. Las solicitudes de adaptación deben hacerse antes del lunes 4 de diciembre al (805) 961-8900, o comment@sbcag.org
¿No puede asistir a esta sesión de escucha virtual? Realice una encuesta o escriba a SBCAG antes del 15 de diciembre de 2023 Encuesta en línea www.surveymonkey.com/r/TNA_ESP Escriba 260 North San Antonio Rd, Suite B; Santa Barbara, CA 93110; o comment@sbcag.org
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November 10, 2023
November 10, 2023
Local News for a Global Village | www.VoiceSB.com
West Coast Premiere
American Railroad Silkroad Ensemble with Rhiannon Giddens
Thu, Nov 9 / 8 PM / Granada Theatre Tickets start at $35 / $19 UCSB students
“Silkroad has people from all over, and that’s what makes it such a great group to represent the American story, because that’s what the American story is. We are world music.” – Rhiannon Giddens Under the leadership of Pulitzer Prize-winner Rhiannon Giddens, the Silkroad Ensemble embarks on a new initiative, American Railroad, that reflects the profound impact of the railroad and the immigrant communities that built it on the cultural fabric of North America.
Major Sponsor: Jody & John Arnhold Supporting Sponsors: Mary Becker and Barbara Stupay Justice for All Lead Sponsors: Marcy Carsey, Connie Frank & Evan Thompson, Eva & Yoel Haller, Dick Wolf, and Zegar Family Foundation
Special Thanks:
(805) 893-3535 | www.ArtsAndLectures.UCSB.edu Granada event tickets can also be purchased at: (805) 899-2222 | www.GranadaSB.org
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Sees Candies•Chipolte•Backyard Bowls
75 Artists
Bristol Farms
•
•
t
at one address
5-8pm on 3rd Friday, November 17th!
•
u Also La Cumbre Plaza offers Ping Pong, Corn Hole, and childrens’ games.
u Barbie’s Pet Salon
Buddhist u Center
t Fine Line Gallery
• •
Illuminations Gallery t Crimson Holiday t
Studio IIX Pilates u
u And what about dinner out?
u Pottery Barn
Lure
Girl Scouts u J. JILL u u Visit the Grace Fisher Foundation's Inclusive Arts Starbucks Clubhouse and learn about CoLab u their programs. Islands Burgers u See the new Arts
Fund Gallery exhibit: Nuanced Peoples: Exploring Latinx Identities
Galleries
Open Late
u MACY’S
u Visit LCCCA’s three galleries, Illuminations, Elevate, and Fine Line. Meet with their artists and discover their creative processes. u See the new Imaginings exhibition by the Abstract Art Collective benefitting the Teddy Bear Cancer Foundation at VOICE Gallery... Discover paintings, collage, prints, sculpture, photography... a wide range of media.
November 10, 2023
u BoHoJo
u Talbots Gallery t &VOICE Magazine
t
VOICE Gallery offers work by local and area artists in a range of mediums. This month the Abstract Art Collective is presenting: Imaginings with sculpture, prints, mixed media, ceramics, oil, aryclic, and watercolor - H
u Yves Delorme
t Elevate Gallery u Chico’s
u Phoenix Salon
t Arts Fund & Sensory Museum
t Grace Fisher Foundation
William Sonoma u
u Star Cycle u Dream World
Phoenix Salon u
u Word of Life
Miss Daisy u u Opera SB Costume Shop
Furniture Gallery u
u Massage Envy u Medicare Resource Center
See Pali’s Cosmic Mushroom
GALLERIES t OF THE
4th Anniversary of LCCCA!
Fine Line Gallery - H Elevate Gallery - F Illuminations Gallery - E 24 artists in three gallery/studios
Free Parking State St & Hope Ave