Out of This World!
Summer Cinema at the Courthouse
By Daisy Scott / VOICEJOURNEY BEYOND THE STARS, UNDER THE STARS! Uniting hundreds of families, friends, and neighbors for free community movie nights each summer, UCSB Arts & Lectures Free Summer Cinema returns to the Santa Barbara Courthouse with the theme Out of This World!
A cinematic journey through the “final frontier,” this summer’s line-up focuses on extraterrestrial life, beginning with Close Encounters of the Third Kind at 8:30pm on Friday, July 7th. Screenings will continue on Friday nights through August 25th, skipping August 4th for Fiesta.
“This year’s theme of alien movies gave us the opportunity to present a range of movies that would have broad appeal across the community,” shared Caitlin O’Hara, Director of Public Lectures & Special Initiatives, who took the lead on curating this summer’s lineup.
The full film lineup includes Alien, Mars Attacks!, The Fifth Element, J.J. Abrams’ Star Trek, Guardians of the Galaxy, and Nope
“I’m excited to bring some scary movies into the mix, some funny films, some fantastical films, some that are appropriate for younger audiences,” she continued. “It’s important to us to have something for everyone. And of course we have to consider the setting:
Is this a movie that would be fun to watch outdoors on a blowup screen with thousands of people? Not all movies are right for the setting. The alien theme just lent itself well to a good time for a lot of people.”
For 14 years, UCSB Arts & Lectures summer cinema series has defined summertime in Santa Barbara, showing black and white flicks to Hollywood blockbusters, and everything in between. Each screening attracts hundreds of community members, ranging from eager students on vacation to local families and couples.
Add engaging pre-film activities, such as costume contests, photo booths, and music sets by local DJs, and the Sunken Garden is the place to be on Friday nights for a lively atmosphere of camaraderie and summertime fun.
“We want it to be a safe space for the entire community,” said O’Hara. “It’s free, so there isn’t a barrier to who can enjoy it. People walk and ride their bikes over. There’s a great energy to each screening and the feeling that we’re there with
thousands of others from our community. People strike up conversations with their neighbors, run into folks they haven’t seen in a long time. It’s just good, wholesome fun for all.”
In preparing to curate the 2023 lineup, O’Hara reflected on movies that would be fun to share with the larger Santa Barbara community, building themes around each selection. As soon as she thought of The Fifth Element, starring Bruce Willis as a 23rd century cab driver, she knew she was onto a great theme: Out of This World!
Close Encounters of the Third Kind kicks off the series with Steven Spielberg’s iconic story of two individuals who discover they are not alone in the universe. Viewers will then bite their nails as Sigourney Weaver battles a parasitic stowaway in Alien (July 14th). Tim Burton’s Mars Attacks! (July 21st) will offer comic relief with a goofy spoof of
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Out of This World!
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classic sci-fi films.
After The Fifth Element on July 28th, screenings will break for a week during Old Spanish Days activities at the courthouse. The series returns with Star Trek (August 11th), bringing back Captain Kirk and the USS Enterprise crew to the big screen. Guardians of the Galaxy (August
18th) will have audiences dancing in their seats to the antics of an heroic squad of fugitives. Nope, Jordan Peele’s horror film set on a horse ranch under attack from flying extraterrestrial creatures, closes out the summer on August 25th.
Community members can begin setting up breathable picnic blankets and low to the ground folding chairs at noon each Friday. Attendees are welcome to pack their own picnics and snacks, or grab takeout from downtown Santa Barbara eateries.
“Montecito Bank & Trust sponsors the films year after year, and we’re so grateful for their support and investment in their community,” expressed O’Hara. “We have the best partners in the County who help us put it on every year. And beyond that, local restaurants create special menus for the films; local businesses provide raffle items; we connect with people from across the community on our various pre-show activities. It really does feel like this event brings people together on many levels.”
ART MATTERS LECTURE
Zurbarán and Murillo: Observations on 17th-century Spanish Painting from the Conservation Studio
Claire Barry
Director of Conservation Emerita, Kimbell Art Museum
thursday, july 6, 5:30–6:30pm
mary craig auditorium
Santa Barbara Museum of Art
Students and Museum Circle Members: Free
SBMA Members: $10 Non-Members: $15
Reserve or purchase tickets at the Visitor Services desks in person, by phone 805.884.6423, or online at tickets.sbma.net. For more information, visit www.sbma.net/artmatters
During the 1620s and 1630s, the Church kept Francisco de Zurbarán and his large workshop busy with commissions, well suited to his sober style. Bartolomé Murillo succeeded Zurbarán as Seville’s leading artist. He animated his engaging subjects with an uncanny narrative skill. Aspects of Murillo’s studio practice, materials and artistic intentions, revealed through close examination of the artist’s genre paintings in the conservation studio will be discussed.
Generous support for Art Matters was provided by the SBMA Women’s Board.
1130 State Street, Santa Barbara, CA
Tuesday–Sunday 11 am–5 pm Thursday 11 am–8 pm
www.sbma.net
Since 2017, Art Matters speakers have been selected, introduced, and mediated by SBMA Deputy Director & Chief Curator, Eik Kahng.
SB City Council Upholds State Street Promenade & Parklets
By Daisy Scott / VOICETHE STATE STREET PROMENADE IS HERE TO STAY. Following weeks of community debate and a five-hour meeting — two hours of which consisted solely of public comment — the Santa Barbara City Council voted 5-2 on Tuesday evening to maintain State Street’s closure to vehicular traffic and parklets for outdoor dining.
The Promenade will now continue through December 2026, or until the adoption of the State Street Master Plan, whichever comes first.
“The people I talk to, the emails I get, and the surveys are what I would call overwhelming numbers of support to keep all or much of State Street closed to cars,” said Councilmember Mike Jordan.
Mayor Randy Rowse and Councilmember Eric Friedman opposed the extension of the Promenade in its current state. Both called for a limited Promenade area spanning a few blocks instead of continuing to keep the entire 500 to 1200-block stretch closed to cars. They also voiced concerns about funding future changes for such a large Promenade.
“We don’t have a promenade right now. We have sidewalks and a big, black bike lane,” said Rowse. He added that the Promenade’s length makes it difficult for elderly residents and individuals with limited mobility to navigate State Street.
Numerous public commenters expressed similar concerns about mobility and safety, as well as the need to focus on retail as well as outdoor dining. These individuals were ultimately outnumbered by business owners, downtown employees, and community members speaking in favor of the promenade and parklets.
Brian Bosse, the City’s Public Works Downtown Team Manager, presented the results of the city’s survey regarding outdoor dining and parklets to the Council, which gained approximately 4,500 responses. Excluding business and restaurant owners, 88 percent of the 3,381 general community members said they wanted the city to explore permanent outdoor dining options.
Out of the 68 restaurant and bar owners represented, over 80 percent voiced that parklets have benefitted their business. Of the 68 retail business owners, 40 percent stated that parklets have harmed their business. However, 52 percent of this group expressed a desire for the city to explore permanent parklet options.
“Every time [this conversation] reaches this body, to me, is an opportunity to say out loud how important I believe it is for us to change the paradigm in this city to one that prioritizes and commits to robust communal life,” said Harmon. “Robust communal life in the form of our promenade, and robust communal life in the form of outdoor dining,
including parklets everywhere in our city.”
Beyond State Street, City Council unanimously approved the decision to allow parklets on private property as long as they meet necessary permit requirements.
Parklets in the public right of way off of State Street will also be remaining past their initial January 1st, 2024 expiration deadline. Per the City Council’s 6-1 vote — opposed by Mayor Rowse — the Ordinance Committee will look into the creation of a program that will guide the permanent presence of parklets throughout the city.
Councilmember Kristen Sneddon additionally called for the return of a State Street Promenade Public Interim Operations subcommittee under the Brown Act, which would allow community members to view and attend meetings.
She stated that the current State Street Promenade ad hoc committee — which includes Sneddon and Councilmembers Mike Jordan and Oscar Gutierrez — was held behind “closed doors” and therefore ineffectual in engaging the larger public in proposing, implementing, and experimenting with Promenade changes such as design guidelines.
“I don’t believe we have yet seen what we can be,” said Sneddon. “I don’t think we have really given it its full chance to blossom.”
The replacement of the ad hoc committee passed 6-1, with Mayor Rowse as the dissenting vote.
For updates on the State Street Promenade Master Plan, visit https://statestreet.santabarbaraca.gov
CALL TO ARTISTS!
Pianos on State 2023
Presenting Sponsor, Santa Barbara Bowl
PIANOS ON STATE is an interactive public art and music experience that takes place each October. We are excitedly getting ready for our 14th year in downtown Santa Barbara!
We are looking for artists living and working in Santa Barbara or Ventura to apply.
Applications are open through July 15th, 2023. Each piano becomes its own interactive piece of art as painted by local Santa Barbara artists. The pianos are displayed on designated pads along State Street for the public to play. Every year piano-painting at the Community Arts Workshop is a weekend of artists of all styles and stripes rubbing shoulders, trading tips and information, and making art together.
As a public art program, this is an opportunity for emerging and professional artists alike to showcase their work through a unique project. Individual artists and collaborative teams are both eligible, though teams must use one application.
PIANOS ON STATE is collaboratively organized by: Santa Barbara Arts Collaborative, Santa Barbara County Office of Arts and Culture, the City of Santa Barbara, Santa Barbara Education Foundation, Downtown Santa Barbara, and the Children's Creative Project.
Application deadline is July 15, 2023
Dos Pueblos Mock Trial Students Coach Their Own Way to International Championship
By Ed Zuchelli / SB Unified School DistrictWHILE MOST STUDENTS spent the end of the school year studying for finals and preparing for college, Dos Pueblos Mock Trial students decided to compete in an international competition– without any help from adult coaches.
Instead, seniors Jacob Molina, Maxfield Steele, and Edo Barel coached themselves, along with the school’s B-team that competed in a lower league.
The seniors won the Empire Premier Spring League Championship while coaching the other “JV team” to the top 25 percent of teams in the Sapphire League.
The A-team competed against 19 other schools from across the country and China.
Dos Pueblos had to compete in four preliminary trials and three single-elimination playoffs to win the Empire Premier Spring League Championship. In the open-entry Sapphire league, DP’s B-team tied for fourth, with Victoria Chen receiving an honorable mention as an attorney.
“While it’s impressive that this group of seniors took on this project during their last semester of high school, what makes it truly exceptional is that they cared enough about their teammates and the program to coach an entire additional team of less experienced mock trialers,” said coach Lisa Rothstein. “That’s the kind of unselfish commitment that makes DP Mock successful. From a coach’s perspective, it doesn’t get much better than that.”
Both teams were coached and led by seniors Edo Barel, Jacob Molina, and Maxfield Steele, who took on attorney and witness roles alongside Liam Avolio, Tobin Bohley Charlotte Choi, Amirsam Jabbari, Rachel Lenchner, and Sienna Valentine, who also received an outstanding witness award.
“The fact that when other students were at the peak of senioritis, they pulled together to bring out the best in each other and the best in their peers speaks to their character and is the best example of embracing individuality, overcoming differences, and putting the team ahead of the individual. DP Mock Trial will be left a better program from the imprint these seniors leave behind, “ said coach Christine Voss.
In the 2022-2023 school year, the Dos Pueblos Mock Trial Team finished second in California and third at Empire Baltimore. Dos Pueblos last won Empire World Championship back in 2015.
“Time and time again, the Dos Pueblos Mock Trial Team impresses us with their motivation to reach higher and higher than ever before. When I think of this generation of students and our future, I remain optimistic. The way these students stepped up to help, leaving a lasting mark on their team, is what their generation is about. We wish the seniors on the team well and look forward to seeing how they succeed after graduation,” said Dr. Hilda Maldonado, Superintendent.
Noah Boland Joins Heal the Ocean
NOAH BOLAND has joined local nonprofit Heal the Ocean as a Research Analyst. In this role, he will monitor local and state meetings, prepare meeting memos for HTO Executive Director Hillary Hauser, and prepare in-depth research reports. Boland graduated from Cal Poly, San Luis Obispo with a bachelor’s in Environmental Management and Protection, as well as an MBA in general management. Originally from Ventura, he is actively involved in the local music scene, and has co-written, co-produced, and performed on five albums. www.healtheocean.org
91st Annual Children’s Fiesta Parade Accepting Entries
CHILDREN’S FIESTA PARADE entry forms are now being accepted by the City Parks and Recreation Department for this year's parade. The parade, a longtime tradition for local families, will celebrate its 91st year on Saturday, August 5th. Each year brings new families together, alongside families who have proudly participated in the Children’s Fiesta Parade for more than five generations.
Parents, families, and friends create and decorate their own floats, carts, and wagons to join this foot-powered parade. No motorized or battery-operated vehicles are used. Children and parents typically dress in colorful Spanish and Mexican costumes, often bringing chickens, goats, ponies, dogs, and other small animals to add to the fun.
Parade entries can be as small or as large as desired. Whether it’s one family of three, a group of siblings and cousins, an entire neighborhood, a dance school, or a special club or group - there is room for every child in the parade and there is no cost to participate. All participating children will also receive free ice cream, generously provided by MarBorg Industries.
The community is invited to attend the parade on Saturday, August 5, starting at 10am as it makes its way along Cabrillo Boulevard from Garden Street to Calle Puerto Vallarta.
Families and groups wishing to participate must complete an online application by Friday, July 7th. Find the application and information at www.SantaBarbaraCA.gov/FiestaParade
Zoo Welcomes New Male Masai Giraffe
THEO, A THREE-YEAR-OLD MALE MASAI GIRAFFE, is the most recent member of the Santa Barbara Zoo family. Theo arrived this month from the Cincinnati Zoo and was recommended by the Association of Zoos and Aquariums (AZA) as part of the Masai giraffe Species Survival Plan (SSP). This program aims to maintain the genetic diversity of threatened and endangered species in human care.
“We are delighted to welcome Theo to our zoo,” said Dr. Julie Barnes, the Zoo’s Vice President of Animal Care & Health. “His presence will allow us to continue the important species survival work for this endangered population. Our wonderful animal care team is enjoying getting to know Theo, and we can’t wait for you all to meet him too!” www.sbzoo.org
Eva Maria Catalan Joins Santa Barbara Education Foundation Board
EVA MARIA CATALAN has joined the Santa Barbara Education Foundation’s Board of Directors. The Associate Program Director at Future Leaders of America, Catalan delivers comprehensive services to students in grades eight through 12. She also leads the Youth Wellness Coalition, a collective of community leaders in Santa Barbara. Through the coalition, she spearheads efforts to educate and prevent underage alcohol and drug usage among youth, emphasizing the importance of a healthy and safe environment. She earned her bachelor’s in Criminal Justice from CSU Chico, and an Associate of Science in Criminology from SB City College. www.santabarbaraeducation.org
Spanish Academy Opens This Summer
BEGINNING WITH SUMMER CAMPS, classes, and tutoring, Spanish Academy will open on July 3rd. The director of Spanish Academy / Espanol Para Todos, Lourdes Trujillo, said, “This will be an opportunity for beginners, intermediate, and advance students to attend Summer camps and learn Spanish”.
Trujillo is currently a Spanish Language instructor at Westmont College and Bishop Diego High School. She holds her PhD in Education from the Institute of Higher Studies in Toluca, Mexico. The camps will last six weeks and are open to all ages. Classes, tutoring, and camps will be held at 6595 Covington Way, Goleta. For more information, email Espanolparatodos805@gmail.com
SB Maritime Museum Welcomes New Board Members & President
TUCKED AWAY BY THE SANTA BARBARA HARBOR, the Santa Barbara Maritime Museum preserves the region’s maritime history. Now, three community members have joined the museum’s board, with Chuck Wilson assuming the role Board President. www.sbmm.org
DON BARTHELMESS has worked in the marine technology industry for over 45 years. He has worked in the commercial diving industry as a diver, submarine pilot, and ROV technician. Barthelmess is an emeritus professor of the Marine Diving Technology Program at SB City College. He received degrees from Florida Institute of Technology in underwater technology and a degree in occupational studies from California State University. He holds a graduate degree in educational technology from Pepperdine University. He is a past president of SBMM and the Historical Diving Society, and is part of the local volunteer team that has is developing the Deepwater Diving Monument Project statue for the Santa Barbara Harbor.
TOM ELLIOTT is a former marine and Vietnam veteran who completed commercial diving school in 1968. He also holds a designation in business management from UCLA. Working for two companies based in Santa Barbara, Elliott participated in many international projects as a diver and program logistics manager. He is the author of the book Two Years to Serve. He has volunteered at SBMM since 2012, and in 2015, he became involved with SBMM’s yacht Ranger to prepare it for the 2017 100th birthday celebration. He is a member of the museum’s exhibition installation team and the incoming chair of the Collections and Exhibits Committee.
CHAD MAKELA is the COO for Oleavicin, LLC, providing products that unlock the healing power of the olive leaf to deliver relief for several ailments. Makela is also the CMO for California Coast Naturals and a former president of Olivos Del Mar. He holds his bachelor’s degree in ethnomusicology from UC Santa Barbara. A ninth generation Santa Barbaran, Makela was selected in 2002 as a local Argonaut for the Jason Project, an expedition to the Santa Barbara Channel Islands to bring awareness to environmental issues affecting the islands. SBMM was Makela’s museum sponsor. He will serve as chair of the museum’s Marketing Committee.
CHUCK WILSON was born and raised in Santa Barbara. He earned his bachelor’s degree in public administration and planning from the University of Southern California, where he also earned a dual master’s degree in public administration and planning. Wilson is a retired city planner with 28 years of experience. He worked for the City of Mission Viejo for 25 years, serving the last 13 years as the director of community development. Wilson served for three years on the Board of Directors of the Planning Directors Association of Orange County. He joined SBMM’s Board of Directors in 2014.
Organic Soup Kitchen Awarded Congressional Award of Honor at Ribbon Cutting for New Distribution & Education Center
CONGRESSMAN SALUD CARBAJAL and his team have awarded Organic Soup Kitchen with a Congressional Award of Honor. The award was presented at the official grand opening and ribbon cutting ceremony of Organic Soup Kitchen’s new Distribution and Education Center. Also present at the ceremony were City of Santa Barbara Council Members; Kristen Sneddon, Oscar Gutierrez, and team, who recognize the importance of OSK's important work in the community.
“We are honored to receive this award,” shared Andrea Slaby, Chief Operating Officer. “Opening a second location has always been our vision, and we are thrilled to have the opportunity to expand our service and reach in the community.”
OSK’s second location at 126 Haley Street will be a hub for pick up, distribution, and education. SoupMeals will continue to be handcrafted and packaged at the organization’s kitchen facility on Anacapa Street.
Organic Soup Kitchen is committed to organic food for all. Through education, advocacy, and programs, the agency provides nutrition and food security to cancer patients, chronically ill, and low income individuals throughout Santa Barbara county. The organization has served more than one million bowls of nutrient dense SoupMeals since 2009. Learn more at: www.organicsoupkitchen.org
Danielle Maxwell Joins Teddy Bear Cancer Foundation
DANIELLE MAXWELL has been named Community Outreach Manager for the Teddy Bear Cancer Foundation. Previously, Maxwell worked in the entertainment industry, working at CBS and Fox Entertainment in Los Angeles. During this time, she continued her work as a volunteer and a non-profit advocate with area organizations, ultimately leading her to make a career change to help children and their families through TBCF.
Danielle Maxwell“The work at TBCF is life-changing for the families, and I wanted to be a part of that support,” commented Maxwell. She is currently a graduate student at Pepperdine University’s School of Public Policy. Maxwell lives in Malibu with her husband, Chris. www.teddybearcancerfoundation.org
City of Santa Barbara to Launch Education Campaign on New Promenade Regulations for Bicycle and Pedestrian Safety
TO HELP MAKE THE STATE STREET PROMENADE SAFE FOR ALL RESIDENTS, the City of Santa Barbara will be engaging in a public education campaign on the proper use of the Promenade in the coming weeks. The campaign will focus on new regulations in place for the Promenade, including bicyclists yielding to pedestrians and not endangering others.
“The goal of the City is to encourage bicyclists and pedestrians alike to enjoy the State Street Promenade safely and with consideration of others, so all can have a comfortable and enjoyable experience,” said the City in a statement.
City departments, including the Santa Barbara Police Department, Public Works, and City Attorney’s Office, will work collaboratively with the community and the County over the course of the campaign.
To read the new regulations visit https://tinyurl.com/2dpt2xnh
SB Courthouse Legacy Foundation Completes Great Arch Surface Treatment Project
JUST IN TIME FOR OLD SPANISH DAYS AND SUMMER FESTIVITIES,
the Santa Barbara County Courthouse Legacy Foundation has completed its most recent conservation project on the Sunken Garden side of the courthouse’s historic Great Arch. The project, which commenced in April, removed dark pollution and biological growth that had stained and degraded the sandstone arch, allowing the building’s original golden hues to shine.
The original wrought iron grilles and window ornamentation were also painted, in addition to the interior walls being cleaned.
“The results of the surface treatment are extraordinary”, said Angelique Davis, CLF Board President. “It’s amazing to once again see the sandstone as it appeared almost 100 years ago.”
This project follows on the heels of the CLF’s 2020 removal of a degraded coating on the Anacapa Street side of the Great Arch that was causing deterioration. The nonprofit raised the necessary funds this year for the continuation of the project on the Sunken Garden side. The project was overseen and completed by specialty conservators experienced with historic structures consistent with the Department of the Interior Standards for a National Historic Landmark.
“We are grateful for generous donations from the Outhwaite Foundation and many community supporters who made this work possible,” added Davis. “Without their generous support, we could not continue to give the Courthouse the attention and care it requires.”
Going forward, the CLF is now working to raise funds for another phase of the conservation effort which will address damage to the sandstone blocks, failed mortar joints, and loss of ornamental stone features on the Great Arch. It has already received a generous gift from the Manitou Fund and Nora McNeely Hurley & Michael Hurley, with community members invited to offer their support.
Sansum Clinic Commemorates Major Gift by Designating Urgent Care as the Naomi & Ben Bollag Pavilion
HONORING THE GENEROSITY of Naomi and Ben Bollag, Sansum Clinic unveiled a new Urgent Care sign commemorating the couple’s major gift at 215 Pesetas Lane in Santa Barbara. The unveiling took place on June 19th with members of the Bollag family, Sansum Clinic CEO & Chief Medical Officer Dr. Kurt N. Ransohoff, as well as Sansum Clinic physicians, Board of Trustees members, physicians and staff.
“Today, we celebrate the generosity of this gift and the profound impact it will have on our ability to further our mission to provide high-quality healthcare to our community,” remarked Dr. Ransohoff. “We could not do the work we do without this type of support, and we are enormously grateful to Naomi and Ben Bollag.”
The Bollag’s history of contributions to local nonprofits and organizations highlights their dedication and devotion to the Santa Barbara community.
The project’s next fundraiser, the Courthouse Legacy Foundation Fiesta Party, will be held on Saturday, August 5th in the courthouse’s historic Mural Room and outside Loggia overlooking for Noches de Ronda festivities.
“The County is immensely grateful for the most recent project of cleaning the Main Arch by the Courthouse Legacy Foundation,” said Diane Dodson Galt, County of Santa Barbara Project Manager. “The work they do in caring for our beautiful Courthouse is important in retaining the building’s character and integrity.”
Fiesta Party sponsorships and individual tickets are available at www.sbclf.org
Community Invited to Help Preserve
St. Paul AME Church
A HISTORIC LANDMARK for the City of Santa Barbara and its Black community, St. Paul AME Church is in need of a new roof. Currently, its congregation is unable to meet in the church due to extensive roof damage. Community members are invited to contribute to its giving campaign to help support the $80,000 project. To date, the project is over a quarter of the way funded. Donations can be made by presenting a check to St. Paul AME Church, 502 Olive Street, Santa Barbara 93101, or online at https://tinyurl.com/3hsnzfh9
Upcoming Community Blood Drives
July 5th, Goleta, Camino Real Marketplace, 7046 Marketplace Drive, 2–5pm
July 6th, Lompoc Valley Association of Realtors, 100 East Ocean Ave, 10am–1:30pm
July 11th, Carpinteria, SB Polo and Racket Club, 3300 Via Real, 9:30am–1pm
July 13th, Lompoc Elks, 905 E. Ocean Avenue, 1:30pm–5:30pm
July 14th, Santa Maria Fairpark, 937 South Thornburg St, 12:30pm–2:30pm
July 15th, Carpinteria, Carpinteria Lions Club, 5421 Carpinteria Avenue, 9:am – 2pm
July 18th, Santa Maria, SB County Probation, 2121 Centerpointe Parkway, 12– 4pm
July 19th, Solvang, Veteran’s Memorial Building, 1745 Mission Drive, 3:15–7:15pm
Santa Barbara’s Cultural Night Downtown
July 6th
5 to 8pm
1ST THURSDAY is an evening of art and culture in downtown Santa Barbara that takes place on the first Thursday of each month. Participating art venues offer free access to art in a fun and social environment from 5-8pm. 1st Thursday venues also provide additional attractions, such as live music, artist receptions, lectures, wine tastings, and hands-on activities. State Street also comes alive on 1st Thursday with performances and interactive activities.
Galleries, Museums, & Art Venues
1. VOICE Gallery / VOICE Magazine • 110 South Hope Av, H124 • MidSummer: Santa Barbara - Warmer breezes and colors congregate at the harbor, then visit the mountains creating impressions and abstracting reality. Sample this midsummer abundance at Voice Gallery.
2. SBIFF’s SB FILMMAKER SERIES • SBIFF Education Center, 1330 State St • This month we are featuring five short films that were made last month by 30 teenagers during SBIFF’s Film Camp. Camp was in partnership United Boys & Girls Clubs of Santa Barbara County. Campers will be at the screening to present their films. Showtimes 5:30pm, 6pm, 6:30pm & 7pm.
3. Engel & Volkers • 1323 State Street, 805342-0227 • Engel & Volkers Luxury Real Estate invites you to our Santa Barbara office. Enjoy artwork by world renowned impressionist painter James Paul Brown, wine, and tasty hors d’oeuvres. See you there!
4. Santa Barbara Fine Art • 1321 State St, 805-845-4270
• Celebrate our six year anniversary with a special live performance by professional opera singer, Alessandra Rosso Filippi, who has performed at the White House and the Kennedy Center! From 6pm - 8pm Wine and champagne will be served.
5. Art Works • 28 E. Victoria St • Blessed Assurance: This show features mixed media art pieces by artist Joe Colunga. Joe is blind so he has created mixed media art techniques that works for him including visual sheet music, textured paint, and typed braille. He has also created some 3-D sculptures.
6. CPC Gallery • 33 East Victoria St • For over 30 years David Mark Lane has used computers to help illustrate his architectural designs. His digital artwork has been called ‘painterly.’ This exhibit is a retrospective of David’s ‘digital abstractions’ - vibrant and colorful artwork presented on canvas, metal, screens, & digital projections.
7. domecil • 1221 State State, Suite 7, (805) 324-4971 • Stop by domecíl and shop the work of local artist Courtney Reilly Goodwin. Her beautiful one-of-a-kind modern ceramic pendants are inspired by the colors and textures of nature as well as the bold graphics of urban living.
8. Community Environmental Council (CEC) • 1219 State Street • Join us in celebrating the grand opening of CEC’s Environmental Hub, a state-of-the-art collaborative space designed to be an epicenter for community activism, education, entrepreneurship, media, and art. Featuring Return of the Western Monarch, a photographic exhibit and scientific road map for protecting this endangered species by resident artist Elizabeth Weber.
9. 10 West Gallery • 10 West Anapamu St • Summer Saturation explores the depth of color in the natural world and encompasses the immersive effect that art can have on the human mind, soul, and spirit. Participating Artists: Karin Aggeler, Penny Arntz, Bryson Bost, Sophie MJ Cooper, Rick Doehring, Sheldon Kaganoff, Pamela Larsson-Toscher, Dahlia Riley, Eric Saint Georges, Marlene Struss and Karen Zazon.
10. Colette Cosentino Atelier + Gallery • 11 West Anapamu St • Colette Cosentino is proud to present for the first time in Santa Barbara, the incredible work of local SoCal artist, Andy Lepe. His enchanting, modern, geometric works of art mesmerize and mystify. This is a DO NOT MISS opportunity to see and acquire this artist’s work, as his career is sure to skyrocket.
11. Sullivan Goss - An American Gallery • 11 East Anapamu St, 805-730-1460 • Sullivan Goss hosts an exhibition fundraiser for Ganna Walska Lotusland, featuring works by artists who created works specifically
Explore the big brands of the past and today through the creative lens of local artist
inspired by our beloved local institution. Also on view, Robin Gowen, and our Summer Salon
12. Santa Barbara Museum of Art • 1130 State St, 805-963-4364
• Join SBMA for Family 1st Thursday in the Family Resource Center for a Teaching Artistled activity from 5:30 to 7:30pm. Draw interior scenes in charcoal on found envelopes inspired by the exhibition The Private Universe of James Castle. Afterward, enjoy the galleries until 8pm. All free!
13. Gallery 113 • 1114 State Street, La Arcada Court #8, 805-965-6611
• Members of the Santa Barbara Art Association exhibit here. The Artist of the Month is Virginia Pierce with a show called Summer Holiday. Featured Artists: Shadi Bashiri, Mina Mokhtar Zadeh, Paula Gregoire-Jones, Rosemary Jones, Charlotte Mullich, Carol Dixon, and Lily Sanders.
14. Waterhouse Gallery • 1114 State St, La Arcada Court #9, 805-962-8885 • The gallery features figurative works, interiors, and cityscapes, by some of today’s finest nationally known local and Oak Group artists. Enjoy works by Ray Hunter, Derek Harrison. Wyllis Heaton, Camille Dellar, Ann Sanders, Thomas Van Stein, Nancy Davidson, Rick Garcia, Ellie Freudenstein, and Ralph Waterhouse.
15. The Yes Store • 1100 State St
• Join us for 1st Thursday! Enjoy snacks and beverages while checking out the work of our featured artist - Ben Harvey and his creative automotive art. Looking for a locally hand-made gift or something special for yourself? Look no further then The Yes Store. Now yearround.
16. Slice of Light Gallery • 9 W Figueroa St. • Join us at Slice of Light Gallery’s grand opening from 5-8pm. Immerse yourself in mesmerizing images of fine art photography and astrophotography while enjoying the company of fellow aficionados. Sip on refreshing drinks from our bar as you browse our captivating collection. Don’t miss this enchanting event!
17. Peter Horjus Design & Illustration • 11 West Figueroa St • Peter Horjus paints large canvases of big brands with a show entitled ICON. The fine and quality names we enjoyed in simple times to now, from CoCo Chanel to Rolex to Land Rover, etc. Pop paintings with a pop!
18. Tamsen Gallery • 911.5 State St, 805705-2208
• Please join us at Tamsen Gallery to celebrate the vibrant work of artist Robert W. Firestone. From vivid abstracts printed on glossy acrylic to geometric cityscapes laser cut from metal to dynamic portraits printed on canvas, Tamsen Gallery offers a rich visual experience in the heart of downtown Santa Barbara.
19. The Blue Owl • 5 West Canon Perdido St • The Blue Owl will present a jam on the first Thursday of each month. Hosted by guitarist Tony Ybarra, this Jam session will feature local jazz instrumentalists and vocalists. Backed by Santino Tafarella and Matt Perko, it will be a fantastic night of Jazz!
20. Santa Barbara Historical Museum • 136 East De la Guerra St, 805-966-1601
• Celebrate 99 years of Old Spanish Days Fiesta with us! As we approach the landmark 100th anniversary of Santa Barbara’s largest civic celebration, we present an exhibit of 99 images of Fiesta curated from the Museum’s
Gledhill Library archive. Enjoy local history, wine, and music. Free entry, bring a friend!
21. Elizabeth Gordon Gallery • 15 West Gutierrez St, 805-963-1157 • Join us at Elizabeth Gordon Gallery in downtown Santa Barbara on Thursday, June 1st from 5 to 8pm to enjoy wine, bites, and beautiful, artwork by America Martin, Greg Miller, Rafael Gaete, Sherri Belassen, Stanley Boydston, David Matthew King, Dan Lencioni, Richard Mann, and more of our locally loved artists.
22. Riviera Beach House • 121 State Street • Join us at the Riviera Beach House for the opening night of our new art gallery. Our debut exhibit, A Riviera Summer, kicks off the season with artwork inspired by the vibrant mood of summer as part of a series of rotating artwork curated by the Carolyn Glasoe Bailey Foundation.
Performers & Special Events
State Street Promenade Market • 800 State Street • Join us every 1st Thursday at the State Street Promenade Market (3 to 8pm) to check out great local artists and vendors, plus enjoy food from surrounding restaurants, live performances, and interactive activities.
The Cover Alls • 800 Block of State St (5-8pm) • The Cover Alls are a Santa Barbara based local cover band with a few original songs. Featuring a unique soulful, Island, and country vibe, they play everything from 80s/90s/modern era covers to Island-style Reggae, Hip Hop, Country and R&B. Come out and listen to some unique twists on classic songs. Don’t miss out on the fun and as always, bring your song requests!
TINY LIBRARIES RETURN TO STATE STREET! • Join us on for a free book exchange at six locations: State & Victoria, Anapamu, Carrillo, and Canon Perdido Street intersections. Additional chalk illustrations by Sharyn Chan and Sara Wilcox with support from I Madonnari and the SB County Arts Commission. Created by Douglas Lochner in 2019, Tiny Libraries was originally commissioned by SB County Office of Arts & Culture in partnership with The City of
Solstice Celebration Rocks Santa Barbara
GIANT TREE PUPPETS, children dressed as butterflies, and house-sized floats livened the streets during the annual Solstice Parade up Santa Barbara Street last weekend.
Cheering with enthusiasm, more than 100,000 people attended the celebration of the longest day of the year. Solstice is one of Santa Barbara’s premier Festivals. Then, folks danced to live music and explored as the air filled with the aroma of food and thousands of revelers at Alameda Park were captivated with the weekend festival.
Una Noche En Miraflores
Bringing the world together with emotion and beauty
great acclaim. In 1917, Quinito Valverde’s zarzuela, The Land of Joy. La Tierra de la Alegría, played at Park Theater for 100 nights straight. Our own Fiesta, Old Spanish Days, goes back 99 years.
The ambiance was festive. The Santa Barbara Historical Museum presented a beautiful display of antique flamenco dresses and mantones to promote Project Fiesta: 99 Years, opening on July 6th. And guitarist Alex Jordan, together with young dancers from Maria Bermudez Flamenco school, welcomed the crowd outside Hahn Hall.
Before the performance, I got to speak to multi-Grammy winning opera singer Ana María Martínez, who co-curated the night, together with Cuban pianist César Cañón. “The first part is dedicated to Latin America and the second to Spain,” she said. “We explore and celebrate how language brings us together through meaningful compositions. The Spanish-speaking world is vast. I think music serves as a great link to feel this beautiful connection.”
As soon as the show began, I found myself moved nearly to tears by the beauty of Manuel Gutierrez dancing to the guitar of Andrés Vadín. Then, after soprano Alissa Claire Goretsky and Brian Cho, on piano, accompanied by the entire cast, filled the room with the magical sound of Sí, soy yo Cecilia Valdés, by Cuban composer Gonzalo Roig, I knew it was going to be a special night.
The music continued without interruption. When Madelin Morales, mezzo-soprano, and Beatriz Batista on piano, performed María la O by Ernesto Lecuona, the emotion was palpable. After all, Morales’s parents are Cuban, like Lecuona. “The program is near and dear to me,” she said. “This repertoire is absolutely beautiful, and I am excited to be sharing a part of my culture with the Music Academy community.”
Slides by Elio Bucky with the words in both Spanish and English helped the audience follow along.
Other Latin American composers featured included Carlos Guastavino and Carlos Gardel from Argentina, María Grever and Agustín Lara from México, and Jaime León from Colombia. Lara wrote and sang many beautiful songs honoring Spain, including Granada, performed at Miraflores by three tenors, Cole McIlquham, Luke Norvell ,and Xiaoije Ji, with Yihao Zhou on piano, to great audience acclaim.
By Isaac Hernández de Lipa, © 2023 / Special to VOICEAS
A SPANIARD EMIGRÉE IN SANTA BARBARA, I was thrilled to attend a concert honoring the culture of my motherland and proud of the fact that artists from all over the world would sing in my first language. It was no surprise that the concert was sold out. Enthusiasm for Spanish song and dance in the U.S. goes back more than a hundred years. In 1916, Enrique Granados’s Goyescas opened at the Metropolitan Opera of New York, to
, or zelle
For info call 435-881-7122 or email: espanolparatodos805@gmail.com
The Spanish segment began with a touching rendition of Isaac Albéniz’s Asturias, where Vadín’s guitar beautifully conversed with Gutiérrez’s zapateado and dance. Another favorite was Ruberto Chapí’s Guajiras from La Revoltosa, with Zhou on piano and mezzo-soprano Tivoli Treloar mixing song and dance, with choreography by Gutiérrez. “This event was so much fun,” she said. “Our performances are usually so serious.”
Other Spanish composers honored were Pablo Sorozábal, José Serrano, Amadeo Vives, Pablo Luna, and Reveriano Soutullo, whose Zambra from La leyenda del beso concluded the evening, with Meghan Rhoades on piano and soprano Margaret Tigue leading the whole cast accompaniment (even the piano fellows joined in on percussion) to a standing ovation. Tonight at Miraflores, nationalities don’t matter. We all speak the same language: the language of music.
LEHRER VOCAL INSTITUTE
For eight summer weeks, 26 vocal institute fellows and 10 studio artists coming from as far away as China, Russia, South Korea, Scotland, Colombia, Canada, and many parts of the United States take over the Music Academy to be part of the Lehrer Vocal Institute, where they receive instruction from expert teaching artists and mentor participants. Una Noche en Miraflores is the first of several Summer performances by these fellows in the newlyrenovated Hahn Hall. After one day of rest, the fellows started working on “Cabaret: 1979”, coming July 27th and July 29th at Hahn Hall.
www.MusicAcademy.org
Pierre Claeyssens Veterans Foundation
4th of July Concert starring the Prime Time Band
CELEBRATE AND HONOR INDEPENDENCE DAY, with a free concert at the Sunken Gardens, hosted by the Pierre Claeyssens Veterans Foundation. The concert will feature Santa Barbara’s beloved The Prime Time Band, Vandenberg Space Force Base Honor Guard, and a special performance by Hula Anyone. The concert will take place on Tuesday, July 4, 2023 at 5:00 PM at the Santa Barbara County Courthouse Gardens, 1100 Anacapa St.
“We are excited to gather with our friends, family and neighbors to celebrate 4th of July and remember all of those who have fought and continue fighting for our freedom and this wonderful country,” said VFW Lifetime Member and PCVF co-founder Lt. John Blankenship (USN, former).
SB Courthouse Sunken Gardens Concert
The program features patriotic classics, pop tunes, and family favorites including ‘Captain America March’ (from the Marvel film, Captain America), ‘Silverado’ (from the film 1985), ‘Shut up and Dance’ (2014 hit made popular by Walk the Moon), Eighties Flashback ('Thriller', 'Time After Time', 'Eye of the Tiger', 'Up Where You Belong', 'You Give Love a Bad Name'), and Leonard Cohen's ‘Hallelujah’. Local hula dance studio, Hula Anyone, will be dancing to "Eighties Flashback" and ‘America the Beautiful’. Guests are encouraged to arrive early to claim a spot on the grass, as well as bring a picnic, blanket and low beach chairs for this annual free concert. To learn more, please visit https://www.pcvf.org/4t-of-july-concert.
Pierre Claeyssens Veterans Foundation is committed to honoring the men and women who have served in uniform at any time. PCVF does this by supporting veterans and active duty members, and related partner organizations, in Santa Barbara and Ventura counties, as well as preserving military history and legacy. The Foundation works to uphold Pierre Claeyssens’s vision that those who have served are “Never Forgotten.” PCVF is funded entirely by private donations. For more information, visit www.pcvf.org
Celebrating the 4th!
Santa Barbara
4th of July Pancake Breakfast • Fuel up for a day of 4th activities while supporting Noah’s Anchorage Youth Shelter at St. Andrew's Presbyterian Church’s pancake breakfast! Tickets are $10, 8am to 10am.
Fourth of July on Stearns Wharf • Spend a sunny day at the beach with live music, face painting, and shopping before a fireworks show at 9pm!
Fireworks!
By Sigrid Toye, Special to VOICEWHAT A HAPPY SURPRISE! Santa Barbara's sunny weather has returned and the sun is shinning on preparations for the upcoming July 4th festivities in our town, especially the Grand Finale, the Independence Day fireworks display, that takes place over the Santa Barbara waterfront.
The City proudly announced the return of the annual Fourth of July Celebration. Hosted by the Waterfront and Parks and Recreation Departments, this year's celebration will transform Santa Barbara’s waterfront into a full day of family-friendly activities on Tuesday, July 4th.
“Huge thanks goes to Parks and Recreation, Police, Fire, and Public Works for the time and effort that goes into such a special community event,” commented Mike Wiltshire, Director of the Waterfront Department. “Although the Waterfront plays a big role with funding and setup, this is a collaborative effort. Being that the Fourth is on a Tuesday, we anticipate the beaches will be crowded throughout the weekend with people enjoying the weather and the Waterfront. Be safe and enjoy the fun!”
The event will include a stage on the sands of West Beach with a full lineup of free live music and dance performances sponsored by the PARC Foundation. The programing starts at 12 noon and ends at 8:45pm with an array of entertainment. The closures of State Street, from Gutierrez Street to Cabrillo Boulevard, and Cabrillo Boulevard from Castillo Street to Calle Cesar Chavez, will allow crowds to take the celebration to the streets starting at 6pm.
The day will conclude with a 20-minute fireworks display, presented by Garden State Fireworks and sponsored by the City’s Waterfront Department. Fireworks will launch from West Beach starting at approximately 9pm. The show will be simulcast on local radio station KjEE (92.9 FM) and live-streamed on KEYT.com, both longtime media partners of this community event.
4th of July Concert • Relax in the Courthouse Sunken Garden while the Prime Time Band plays a medley of patriotic and pop tunes. Presented by the Pierre Claeyssens Veterans Foundation at 5pm.
Canary Cookout on the Roof! • Sip and savor while enjoying a rooftop view of the fireworks show at the Kimpton Canary Hotel from 6pm to 10pm. Tickets are $10: https://tinyurl.com/5dra6y7v
Independence Day Weekend at El Encanto, A Belmond Hotel • On Monday, July 3rd: Children’s lawn games and face painting | 2-4pm • BBQ Buffet featuring live entertainment | 4-9pm • $65 adults | $45 chn (6-12) • On July 4th, enjoy a perfect view of the Santa Barbara Fireworks poolside or on Pacific Lawn | 9pm • Beverages available for purchase at the bar • Tu, 7/4.
Goleta • 49th Annual Old Fashioned 4th of July • Fun for the whole family awaits from 11am to 4pm at Rancho La Patera & Stow House, including tractor rides, live music, local vendors, and more. Tickets $5-10.
Carpinteria • Carpinteria Independence Parade • Cheer on community organizations with festive floats and music when this cherished tradition returns to Linden Ave. at 3:30pm!
Montecito • Village 4th • A full day of activities! Enjoy a pancake breakfast at 7:30am at at Firehouse #1, 595 San Ysidro Rd, before heading over to Manning Park for the Village Roadshow at 11:30am and live music and festivities from 12:30pm to 2pm.
Lompoc • Fourth of July Family Celebration • Kids and adults alike will delight in carnival games, pony rides, and more at 4pm at the North Avenue Baptist Church, 1523 West North Ave.
Free!
4th of July Concert
TUESDAY, JULY 4, 2023 5:00 PM
Santa Barbara Courthouse Sunken Gardens, 1100 Anacapa St, Santa Barbara
Arrive early to claim your spot on the grass; Bring your picnic, blanket, and low beach chairs for this annual concert featuring Vandenberg Space Force Base Honor guard, The Prime Time Band, and Polynesian dancers from Hula Anyone. Enjoy pop tunes, family favorites and patriotic classics!
Sunscreen and hats are recommended.
Featured Lender of the Month ~ Meet Peter
As the third generation in his family in the lending business in Santa Barbara, Peter developed a passion for real estate from an early age. He has carried on the tradition with 13 years as a commercial and residential real estate appraiser and 24 years as a mortgage broker. He currently serves as the Managing Broker for Paragon Mortgage Group and its sister company Trinity Financial Services. He is an expert in all types of residential lending as well as private investor loans for unique circumstances. First time buyers as well as seasoned investors benefit from Peter’s extensive experience, depth of knowledge, and his professionalism.
Peter can be reached at: 805-881-3752.
Public Fireworks Shows Remain Safest Way to Celebrate this 4th of July
Community Leaders Discuss Illegal Sidewalk Vendor Issues
THURSDAY, JUNE 27TH: A packed Santa Barbara meeting brings out city and county officials who are trying to stop illegal sidewalk vendors that impact local small businesses. The Hispanic Chamber of Commerce and small owners, including food truck owners speak out.
The permit fee for street vendors is $29. Vendors practicing without permits have
sparked frustration among food trucks and other local businesses. Food safety and fire violations have been found at sites where out of town vendors have set up.
Some criminal cites have been issued but it’s been difficult to trace the popups back to specific owners. Several individuals working at the unpermitted vendor locations state that since they do not own the business, they cannot be held accountable.
Visit https://tinyurl.com/yt7c2ref
Fire Season Begins in Santa Barbara
TUESDAY, JUNE 27TH: The sales of safe and sane fireworks begin and warnings about risks, fires, and the potential for injuries are out. According to fire officials, safe and sane fireworks must be used in the community where they were purchased - not brought to another city.
Several large community shows are set
for July 4th. One will be the Santa Barbara West Beach show at 9pm.
“It sounds harsh but what we are really trying to do is help folks understand that a vast majority of the accidents that occur - traumatic injuries, or fires that start with fireworks, are really preventable,” said Santa Barbara City Fire Marshal Ryan DiGiulio.
For more, visit https://tinyurl.com/4y29bumj
Thousands Attend Santa Barbara Summer Solstice Parade
FRIDAY, JUNE 23RD: Friday a structure fire in the 700 East Block of Carpinteria St. brought out The Santa Barbara City Fire Department with three fire engines, one truck company and a Battalion Chief to the scene. The first arriving engine company reported heavy smoke and fire from a storage structure
with nearby exposures. Two additional fire engines, a hazardous materials/light and air unit from the Santa Barbara City Fire Department and a Battalion Chief from the Montecito Fire Protection District responded. Firefighters attacked aggressively and reported the fire out within 45 minutes. No victims were located and no injuries were reported. The cause of the fire is under investigation.
THURSDAY, JUNE 22ND: Santa Ynez Valley fire, Hwy 246 near Gainey vineyards. Mostly grass with some oak trees and vineyards. Santa Barbara Co. Fire on it. Light winds. No structures lost. One chopper is up. No fixed wing. Cause is under investigation.
TUESDAY, JUNE 27TH: On this date in 1990, I was with other reporters standing in 70 mile-an-hour down canyon winds reporting from the front lines of the Painted Cave fire. The temperature got to 109 degrees. About 500 homes and businesses in the Goleta area were lost (just outside of Santa Barbara). One person died.
SATURDAY, JUNE 24TH: The Santa Barbara Summer Solstice Parade was an amazing event of creativity, dancing and wacky creations. A huge crowd lined Santa Barbara St. and ended up for a day of music, food and community spirit at Alameda Park. There are countless photos and memories.
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
In Person & Online Activities for Everyone Safari Local
In Person & Online Activities for Everyone
Safari Local
City College Lot 3 • Free • 3pm Su.
SPECIAL EVENTS
MUJERES MAKERS MARKET
Shop local women-owned businesses • El Presidio • Free • 10am-4pm Su, 7/2.
GLITTER BRUNCH
Hosted by Vivian Storm & Angel
D’Mon • Wildcat Lounge • $5 • https://glitterbrunch.com • Brunch
11am-3pm, Show 12:30pm, Sun.
Monday
•
July 3rd
LECTURES | MEETINGS | WORKSHOPS
PARLIAMO! ITALIAN CONVERSATION
All levels • Arnoldi’s Cafe, 600 Garden St. • http://parliamo.yolasite.com • Free • 5-7pm Mon.
Tuesday • July 4th
SPECIAL EVENTS
4TH OF JULY PANCAKE BREAKFAST
For Noah’s Anchorage Youth Shelter
• St. Andrews Presbyterian Church, 4575 Auhay Dr. • $10 • 8-10am Tu, 7/4.
49TH ANNUAL OLD FASHIONED
4TH OF JULY
Concerts in the Park
A weekly treat in the hot summer months, Concerts in the Park return to Chase Palm Park's Great Meadow from 6pm to 7:30pm on Wednesday, July 6th with a free concert by area rock band Paradise Kings. Jam along each Wednesday night in July to a different local band, including The Molly Ringwald Project on July 13th; Captain Cardiac and the Coronaries on July 20th; and Mezcal Martini on July 27th.
Friday • June 30th
COMEDY
TREVOR WALLACE
Stand-up comedy show • Lobero Theatre • $30.50-76.50 • www.lobero.org • 7pm Fr, 7/30.
A NIGHT OF LAUGHTER
An improv comedy show • Alcazar Theatre • $12 • www.thealcazar.org • 7-9pm Fr, 6/30.
MUSIC
HAWAII'S JOHN CRUZ
Acoustic Hawaiian music • SOhO • $3035 • www.sohosb.com • 7pm Fr, 6/30.
OUTDOORS
2023 SEMANA NAUTICA
Tournaments for tennis, swim, etc. • Schedule: https://semananautica.com • Through Su, 6/9.
SPECIAL EVENTS
TEEN SUMMER NIGHTS
Free arts and sports activities for teens 12-17 • SB Parks & Rec • Westside Boys and Girls Club (602 W. Anapamu St.) and Bohnett Park • 5-8pm Fr, through 7/7.
Saturday
CHILDREN
•
July 1st
MAKANA IS A GIFT
Picture book reading & family activities
Free Summer Safety & Fun!
Swim, run, and play - with safety in mind - by attending Cottage Health's Free Summer Safety and Fun Event! Hosted at Ortega Park & Pool from 10am to 2pm on Saturday, July 1st, the day will let kids explore a bike safety obstacle course, swim with lifeguards on duty, explore a fire truck and police car, and more. Plus, parents can enjoy special deals on helmets and learn car seat information!
www.1millioncups.com/santabarbara
• 9-10am We.
LE CERCLE FRANÇAIS
French conversation, all levels • Arnoldi’s Cafe, 600 Olive St. • http://sbfrenchgroup.yolasite.com • Free • 5-7pm We.
MUSIC
DOWNTOWN LIVE
Free concert by The Natalie Espinoza
Tractor rides, live music, vendors, and more • Rancho La Patera & Stow House • $5-10 • 11am-4pm Tu, 7/4.
VILLAGE 4TH ROAD SHOW 2023
Festive motorcade • Montecito Assn • Route: https://tinyurl.com/3evrnfmv • 11:30am Tu, 7/4.
FOURTH OF JULY ON STEARNS WHARF
• SB Maritime Museum patio • Free, RSVP: www.sbmm.org • 1pm Sa, 7/1.
DANCE
SALSA NIGHT with ME Sabor • SOhO • $18-25 • www.sohosb.com • 9pm Sa, 7/1.
MUSIC
OSMO VÄNSKÄ CONDUCTS
Academy Festival Orchestra plays Bernstein & Holst • Granada Theatre • $61-106 • www.granadasb.org • 7:30pm Sa, 7/1.
OUTDOORS
ARCHITECTURAL WALKING TOURS
With Architectural Fdn of SB • meet SB City Hall on Sa; Central Library Anapamu St. entrance on Su • Suggested $10 cash donation • www.afsb.org • 10am Sa & Sun.
RANCHO LA PATERA & STOW HOUSE
Take a tour • www.goletahistory.org • 11am to 2pm weekends.
SPECIAL EVENTS
FREE SUMMER SAFETY & FUN EVENT
Enjoy children’s activities with fun safety tips • Cottage Health’s Trauma Services • Ortega Park • Free • 10am2pm Sa, 7/1.
Sunday • July 2nd
OUTDOORS SB ROLLERS Rollerskate with
Live music, face painting, shopping, and a fireworks show! • Stearns Wharf
• Free • 12pm, fireworks 9pm Tu, 7/4.
SANTA BARBARA FARMERS MARKET
Fresh, local produce & treats • 600, 700, & 800 blocks of State St • 3-7pm Tu.
CARPINTERIA INDEPENDENCE PARADE
Festive community parade • Linden Ave
• Free • 3:30pm Tu, 7/4.
FOURTH OF JULY FAMILY CELEBRATION
Carnival games, pony rides, and more • North Avenue Baptist Church, 1523 West North Ave., Lompoc • Free • 4pm Tu, 7/4.
4TH OF JULY CONCERT
Prime Time Band plays patriotic classics and more • Pierre Claeyssens Veterans Fdn • SB Courthouse • Free • 5pm Tu, 7/4.
CANARY COOKOUT ON THE ROOF!
Watch rooftop fireworks • Kimpton
Canary Hotel • $10 • https://tinyurl. com/5dra6y7v • 6-10pm Tu, 7/4.
Wednesday •
CHILDREN
July 5th
LUNCH AT THE LIBRARY
Free, nutritious meal for kids and teens • Faulkner Gallery, Central Library • 11:30am-12:30pm We.
LECTURES | MEETINGS | WORKSHOPS
1 MILLION CUPS
Network with entrepreneurs • Free •
Trio • Downtown SB • 1028 State St. • 6-8pm We, through 7/26.
OUTDOORS
WELL-BEING WEDNESDAY
Guided meditation, sound healing, and garden walk • Ganna Walska Lotusland
• $40-75 • www.lotusland.org • 9:3011:30am We, 7/5.
HIKE ARROYO HONDO PRESERVE
Mon & Wed, 12:30-3pm and the first & third weekends, Sat & Sun 10am12:30pm and 12:30pm-3pm. Free • https://tinyurl.com/ya3pgxge
SPECIAL EVENTS
SB NATIONAL HORSE SHOW
Multi-breed horse show • Earl Warren Showgrounds • Entry fees/schedule: https://tinyurl.com/p4ze6ay • All day We, 7/5 through 7/8.
WHARF WEDNESDAY
Free rock concert by Double Wide Kings, vendor deals, & treats • Stearns Wharf • 6-8pm We, 7/5.
Thursday • July 6th
CHILDREN
BILINGUAL SONGS AND STORIES
For kids ages 0-5 • Eastside Library • Free • 11-11:30am Th.
LECTURES | MEETINGS | WORKSHOPS
ENGLISH CONVERSATION GROUP
Practice naturally • Eastside Library • Free • 1-2pm Th.
KNIT 'N' NEEDLE
Knit and embroider with others • Montecito Library • Free • 2-3:30pm Th.
CRAFTERNOONS:
All ages craft workshop • Art From Scrap, 302 E. Cota St. • $8 • https://tinyurl.com/4xp8vtud • 3:305pm Th.
OBSERVATIONS ON 17TH-CENTURY SPANISH PAINTING
Art Matters Lecture by Claire Barry, Kimbell Art Museum • SB Museum of Art, Mary Craig Aud.• Free-$15 • www.sbma.net • 5:30-6:30pm Th, 7/6.
CHAUCER’S BOOK SIGNING
With local author Elayne Klasson, The Earthquake Child • Chaucer’s Books • Free • 6pm Th, 7/6.
pain sports
Safari Local
In Person & Online Activities for Everyone
Asian American Film Series
Dive into the history of the Asian communities that called Santa Barbara's Presidio area home when the SB Trust for Historic Preservation presents its 2023 Asian American Film Series. At 6pm each Friday in July, the Alhecama Theatre will host a free screening of a film celebrating Asian Americans' culture and shared past.
Join on July 7th for a screening of Alternative Facts: The Lies of Executive Order 9066, followed by a Q&A with director Jon Osaki.
OPEN MIC
Tell Your Cat Tails • Cat Mewseum, 506 State St • Free, call 805-886-2135 for more info • Sign-ups at 6pm, 6:309pm Th, 7/6, 7/7, 7/8.
MUSIC
OnSTAGE
NUNSENSE
Wacky comedy about the Little Sisters of Hoboken • Ojai Art Center Theater • $25-30 • www.ojaiact.org • 6/30 ~ 7/23.
DISNEY’S 101 DALMATIANS
Student production • Rubicon Theatre • www.rubicontheatre.org • 2pm & 5pm Sa, 7/1.
BRIGHT STAR
Bluegrass and a family saga meet in this musical • PCPA • Solvang Festival Theater • Starting at $25 • www.pcpa.org • 8pm Fr, 7/7, through 7/23.
EMMA
Romantic misadventures and matchmaking in Highbury • PCPA • Solvang Festival Theater • Starting at $25 • www.pcpa.org • Through 7/2.
CONCERTS IN THE PARK
Free rock and blues concert by Paradise Kings • Chase Palm Park, Great Meadow • 6-7:30pm Th, 7/6.
SPECIAL EVENTS
OPENING OF PROJECT FIESTA!
99 YEARS!
Discover Fiesta’s history • SB Historical Museum • Free • 4:30pm members, 5-7pm general Th, 7/6.
Friday • July 7th
DANCE
END OF SUMMER INTENSIVE PROGRAM
State Street Ballet student showcase • Center Stage Theater • $13-26 • www.centerstagetheater.org • 2pm & 5pm Fr, 7/7.
LECTURES | MEETINGS | WORKSHOPS
THE FORMATION OF THE FIRST STARS IN THE UNIVERSE
Free talk by UCLA researcher Sahil Hegde • SB Museum of Natural
History, Fleischmann Auditorium • 7:30-9pm Fr, 7/7.
MUSIC
FUNK OF JULY!
Dance party with DJ Darla Bea and Area 51 • La Lieff/We Want the Funk Patio, 210 Gray Ave • $20 • https://tinyurl.com/3xpbfav9 • 6-10pm Fr, 7/7.
NEIL YOUNG - COASTAL TOUR
Folk rock concert with special guest Chris Pierce • SB Bowl • $84.50-284.50 • www.sbbowl.com • 7pm Fr, 7/7.
Saturday • July 8th
COMEDY
GABRIEL "FLUFFY" IGLESIAS
Comedy show • SB Bowl • $40.50$120.50 • www.sbbowl.com • 7pm Sa, 7/8.
DANCE
PETER AND THE WOLF
By the Goleta School of Ballet • Center Stage Theater • $18-23 • www. centerstagetheater.org • 7pm Sa, 7/8.
LECTURES | MEETINGS | WORKSHOPS
LOCAL HISTORY TALK: THE LITTLE BOOK OF MONTECITO ACTORS
Local author Steven Gilbar discusses actors born pre-1975 who have called Montecito home • Montecito Library • Free • 1-2pm Sa, 7/8.
OUTDOORS
DESIGNING WITH WATER WISE NATIVE PLANTS
Billy Goodnick discusses sustainable gardening • SB Botanic Garden • $30-45 • www.sbbotanicgarden.org • 8:30-11:30am Sa, 7/8.
SUMMER TWILIGHT TOUR
An evening stroll at Lotusland • Free-$75 • www.lotusland.org • 4:306:30pm Sa, 7/8.
STAR PARTY
Explore the night sky • Palmer Observatory, SB Museum of Natural History • Free • 8:30-10pm Sa, 7/8.
Sunday • July 9th
OUTDOORS
BEACH CLEANUP
Care for our ocean • Explore Ecology • Arroyo Burro Beach • Free • 10am12pm Su, 7/9.
It’s Your Library • Es Tu Biblioteca
MUSIC ACADEMY:
PLanning a Visit to the Music Academy?
From instrumental and vocal masterclasses to Guest Artist recitals to concerts featuring the entire Music Academy Festival Orchestra, the Music Academy offers the best in classical music. Discover it for yourself at www.musicacademy.org
Friday • June 30th
SOLO PIANO COMPETITION • Hahn Hall, 11am-5:15pm Intermission: 1-2:30pm
OBOE MASTERCLASS • Xiomara Mass
• Lehmann Hall, 1:30pm
PICNIC CONCERT #1 • Hahn Hall, 7:30pm
Saturday • July 1st
MEET THE CONDUCTOR • Meet Osmo Vänskä at Sullivan Goss, 6pm
ACADEMY FESTIVAL ORCHESTRA • Osmo Vänskä Conducts The Planets and a Jessie Montgomery West Coast Premiere • Granada Theatre, 7:30pm
Monday • July 3rd
COLLABORATIVE PIANO MASTERCLASS • Jonathan Feldman
• Lehmann Hall • 1:30pm
PERCUSSION MASTERCLASS • Michael Werner • Hahn Hall • 3:30pm
TROMBONE & TUBA MASTERCLASS
• Mark H. Lawrence • Weinman Hall • 3:30pm
TEACHING ARTISTS SHOWCASE: MOZART & RACHMANINOFF • Hahn Hall • 7:30pm
Wednesday • July 5th
CELLO MASTERCLASS • Alan Stepansky • Lehmann Hall • 1:30pm
DOUBLE BASS MASTERCLASS • Nico Abondolo • Weinmann Hall • 3:30pm
CHAMBER NIGHT #2: MOZART, POULENC & RAVEL • Lehmann Hall • 7:30pm
Thursday • July 6th
BASSOON MASTERCLASS • Dennis Michel • Weinmann Hall • 1:30pm
VIOLIN MASTERCLASS • David Chan • Lehmann Hall • 1:30pm
CRITICS ROUNDTABLE WITH ALEX ROSS • With Joshua Kosman, San Francisco Chronicle and Carolina Miranda, Los Angeles Times • Hahn Hall • 3:30pm
X2: MOZART’S CLARINET QUINTET • Hahn Hall • 7:30pm
Friday • July 7th
LEHRER VOCAL INSTITUTE STUDIO ARTISTS SHOWCASE • Lehmann Hall • 1:30pm
VIOLA MASTERCLASS • Richard O’Neill • Weinman Hall • 1:30pm
SOLO PIANO MASTERCLASS • Jeremy Denk • Hahn Hall • 3:30pm
PICNIC CONCERT #2 • Jeremy Denk • Hahn Hall • 7:30pm
Saturday • July 8th
MEET THE CONDUCTOR: ANTHONY PARNTHER • Kuehn Court • 6-7pm
ACADEMY FESTIVAL ORCHESTRA: SHOSTAKOVICH & SUITE FROM PSYCHO • Conductor Anthony Parnther • Hahn Hall • 7:30pm
Lessons Learned From 1970s
By Harlan Green, Special to VOICEMUCH TALK HAS BEEN MADE OF WHAT CHAIRMAN
POWELL AND U.S. FED officials say they learned from the inflation spiral of the 1970s – e.g., keep employees’ wages from rising too fast, since they are that part of the inflation equation the Fed can control.
That is, by raising interest rates the Fed hopes to pressure employers to restrain hiring practices and wage hikes by making it more expensive.
always dependable providers, and geopolitical events like wars and pandemics create major scarcities, as has happened since 2020.
The below St. Louis Fed (FRED) graph dating from 1950 shows how successful the Fed’s main monetary policy has been of suppressing wages to keep inflation moderate.
By Harlan GreenBut the problem is Fed economists know that many other factors affect inflation - corporations inhibit competition with monopolistic practices, supply-chains are not
Wages and salaries rose on average five to ten percent annually until 1980, when Paul Volcker began his reign as Federal Reserve Chairman. Employees’ incomes then began the long descent to averaging less than five percent since.
Inflation was tamed, the inflation battle was won, but at what cost? Did it make most Americans better off? No. There were a series of recessions culminating in the Great Recession of 2017-19 in which they lost a greater share of total wealth generated by their employers.
The picture is startling in this next popular graph (right).
Income disparities are now so pronounced that America’s richest one percent of households (middle line in graph) averaged more than 84 times as much income as the bottom 20 percent in 2019, according to the Congressional
Budget Office. Americans in the top 0.01 percent (top line) tower stunningly higher. With average household income of $43 million, they bring in 1,807 times more income than the bottom 20 percent.
Of course, globalization and the lowering of trade barriers that moved higher paying wages overseas have been the orthodox explanations for why workers lost such a share of the wealth pie. But lost in the discussions was the Fed’s monetary hand of quickly raising interest rates when inflation heated up and dropping them when a recession resulted.
That has been the Fed’s pattern since the Volcker era. Keep inflation down at all costs, even if it harms employment. Yet we know since the pandemic that war and COVID-19 scarcities have been most responsible for the sudden inflation spike.
The post-pandemic era has therefore created new opportunities with the need to rebuild the U.S. economy since the pandemic. $Trillions are being spent in a ‘new’ New Deal era of governments coming to the rescue as they did in the 1930s.
The result is a fully employed American economy with rising wages and salaries for years to come—unless the Fed attempts once again to tamp down this activity with its
outdated policy goals.
It could right the imbalance that has always benefited employers in the name of price stability since the 1980s by allowing its mandate of maximum employment to continue by restraining further rate hikes.
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.
ASIAN AMERICAN FILM SERIES
Screening of Alternative Facts: The Lies of Executive Order 9066; Q&A with director Jon Osaki • Alhecama Theatre • Free-$5 suggested donation • 6pm Fr, 7/7.
CLOSE ENCOUNTERS OF THE THIRD KIND
Experience Spielberg’s extraterrestrial blockbuster under the stars • UCSB Arts & Lectures • SB Courthouse Sunken Gardens • Free • 8:30pm Fr, 7/7.
METRO SUMMER KIDS MOVIES
Enjoy family-friendly favorites at Fiesta 5 Theatre and Camino Real Cinemas • $2 • 10am We at Fiesta 5; 10am Th at Camino Real.
Let’s Go To The M O V I E
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
Santa Barbara Mortgage Interest Rates
To place your classified ad, email advertising@VoiceSB.com
Insertion Date: Print: 6.30.23 - 11.42” times two columns
LEGAL NOTICES
Digital included 6.28.23
NOTICE OF PUBLICATIONS ON APPLICATIONS REGARDING PROVISIONS OF TITLE 28 AND/OR 30 OF THE MUNICIPAL CODE OF THE CITY OF SANTA BARBARA (SBMC)
The Secretary of the Planning Commission has set a public hearing for Thursday, July 13, 2023 beginning at 1:00 p.m. in the City Council Chambers, City Hall, 735 Anacapa Street.
On Thursday, July 6, 2023, an Agenda with all items to be heard on Thursday, July 13, 2023 will be posted on the outdoor bulletin board at City Hall, 735 Anacapa Street, and online at SantaBarbaraCA.gov/PC. Agendas, Minutes, and Staff Reports are also accessible online at SantaBarbaraCA.gov/PC.
TELEVISION COVERAGE: This meeting will be broadcast live on City TV-Channel 18 and online at SantaBarbaraCA.gov/CityTV. See SantaBarbaraCA.gov/ CityTVProgramGuide for a rebroadcast schedule. An archived video of this meeting will be available at SantaBarbaraCA.gov/PCVideos.
WRITTEN PUBLIC COMMENT: Public comments may be submitted via email to PCSecretary@SantaBarbaraCA.gov before the beginning of the Meeting. All public comments submitted via email will be provided to the Commission and will become part of the public record. You may also submit written correspondence via US Postal Service (USPS) addressed to PC Secretary, PO Box 1990, Santa Barbara, CA 93102-1990. However, please be advised, correspondence sent via USPS may not be received in time to process prior to the meeting and email submissions are highly encouraged. Please note that the Commission may not have time to review written comments received after 4:30 p.m. the Tuesday before the meeting.
All public comment that is received before 4:30 p.m. the Tuesday before the meeting will be published on the City’s website at SantaBarbaraCA.gov/PC. Comments provided via USPS or e-mail will be converted to a PDF before being posted on the City’s website. Note: comments will be published online the way they are received and without redaction of personal identifying information; including but not limited to phone number, home address, and email address. Only submit information that you wish to make available publicly.
APPEALS: Decisions of the Planning Commission may be appealed to the City Council. For further information and guidelines on how to appeal a decision to City Council, please contact the City Clerk’s office at Clerk@SantaBarbaraCA. gov as soon as possible. Appeals may be filed in person at the City Clerk’s office at City Hall or in writing via email to Clerk@SantaBarbaraCA.gov and by first class mail postage prepaid within 10 calendar days of the meeting at which the Commission took action or rendered its decision. Appeals and associated fee postmarked after the 10th calendar day will not be accepted.
NOTE TO INTERESTED PARTIES: Only those persons who participate through public comment either orally or in writing on an item on this Agenda have standing to appeal the decision. Grounds for appeal are limited to those issues raised either orally or in written correspondence delivered to the review body at, or prior to, the public hearing.
AMERICANS WITH DISABILITIES ACT: If you need services or staff assistance to attend or participate in this meeting, please contact the City Administrator’s Office at (805) 5645305. If possible, notification at least 48 hours prior to the meeting will usually enable the City to make reasonable arrangements. Specialized services, such as sign language interpretation or documents in Braille, may require additional lead time to arrange.
• 42 Helena Ave
Assessor’s Parcel Number: 033-112-007
Zoning Designation: OC/S-D-3 (Ocean-Oriented Commercial/ Coastal Overlay)
Application Number: PLN2023-00154 Filing Date: April 25, 2023
Applicant / Owner: Kevin Moore / Henry Courtemanche
Project Description: Proposal for a new bar with outdoor seating.
• 125 & 145 S. Calle Cesar Chavez and 110 & 114 S. Quarantina St.
Assessor’s Parcel Number: 017-113-038
Zoning Designation: M-1/S-D-3 (Light Manufacturing/Coastal Overlay)
Application Number: PLN2020-00582 Filing Date: December 2, 2020
Applicant / Owner: John Cuykendall / Derek Carlson, Marborg
Project Description: Industrial Storage Yard, Landscaping, Wetland Restoration
• 932 De La Vina St
Assessor’s Parcel Number: 039-313-001
Zoning Designation: C-G (Commercial General)
Application Number: PRE2023-00028
Applicant / Owner: Craig Minus, CAM Land Use & Development, INC. / Double P, LLC
Project Description: Demo & construct 4-story 22-unit residential apartment complex.
ORDER TO SHOW CAUSE FOR CHANGE OF NAME CASE NUMBER: 23CV02190
1. Petitioner: Samantha Kay Valdovinos filed a petition with this court for a decree changing names as follows: PRESENT NAME: SAMANTHA KAY VALDOVINOS to proposed name SAMANTHA KAY TRUJILLO. 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: 07/26/2023; 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-mycourt.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: 05/30/2023 /s/: Thomas P. Anderle, Judge of the Superior Court. Legal #23CV02190 Pub Dates: June 9, 16, 23, 30, 2023
insertion dates: 6/30, 7/7, 14, 2023 6.14”
SUPERIOR COURT OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA COUNTY OF SANTA BARBARA ANACAPA DIVISION
In the Matter of the ) CASE No. 23PR00264
THE KING LLIVING TRUSTED DATED MARCH 20, 1997 )
ORDER CONFIRMING TRUST ASSETS
[Judge COLLEEN K. STERNE
Petitioner, EVERETT H. KING , as successor trustee of THE KING LIVING TRUST DATED MARCH 20, 1997 (the “trust”), having filed her PETITION FOR ORDER CONFIRMING TRUST ASSETS, and said petition having come regularly on for hearing on August 17, 2023, in Department 5 of the above-entitled court, the Honorable COLLEEN K. STERNE, Judge, presiding, the court finds that notice of hearing of the petition has been regularly given as prescribed by law, and good cause appearing therefor:
IT IS ORDERED AND ADJUDGED THAT:
1. THE KING LIVING TRUST DATED MARCH 20, 1997, is valid.
2. Settlor, BASCOM H. KING passed away on May 04, 2022, in Santa Barbara, Santa Barbara County, California, while domiciled therein.
3. Upon the death of settlor, the provisions of the entire trust became irrevocable.
4. EVERETT H. KING is the current successor trustee of said trust.
5. The following assets is an asset of said trust, and is subject to the management, control, administration, and disposition by EVERETT H. KING, as successor trustee of said trust:
A. Wells Fargo Account: Money Market
Primary Acct. # 3036902553
Balance: $227,787.11 in 2022
B. Wells Fargo Checking Account
Primary Acct. # 979267044
Balance: $2,963.64 in 2022
DATED: _________________
COLLEEN K. STERNE Judge of the Superior Court
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT: The following Corporation/Limited Liability Company is/are doing business as SANTA CRUZ MARKET at 5757 Hollister Ave, Goleta, CA 93117. SANTA BARBARA MARKET CORP at 1217 Honeysuckle Ave, Ventura, CA 93004. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara on June 1, 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. 20230001391. Published June 16, 23, 30, July 7, 2023.
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT: The following Corporation / Limited Liability Company is/are doing business as HIMELSEIN GOLD REFINERY; SANTA BARBARA JEWELRY; SYSTEMS INDUSTRIES; HIMELSEIN, INC; HIMELSEIN DIAMONDS; HIMELSEIN GROUP at 1129 State Street Suite 6, Santa Barbara, CA 93101.
NATIONAL PACIFIC CORPORATION at 1129 State Street Suite 6, Santa Barbara, CA 93101. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara on May 30, 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. 2023-0001370. Published June 9, 16, 23, 30, 2023.
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT: The following Corporation/Limited Liability Company is/are doing business as SANTA CRUZ MARKET at 324 W Montecito St, Santa Barbara, CA 93101. SANTA BARBARA MARKET CORP at 1217 Honeysuckle Ave, Ventura, CA 93004. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara on June 1, 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. 2023-0001390. Published June 16, 23, 30, July 7, 2023.
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT: The following Corporation/Limited Liability Company is/are doing business as DEEP CLEAN CREW at 800 South Broadway Suite 208, Santa Maria, CA 93454. ADIANT FACILITY SUPPORT INC at 800 South Broadway Suite 208, Santa Maria, CA 93454. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara on May 15, 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. 2023-0001271. Published June 16, 23, 30, July 7, 2023.
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT: The following Corporation / Limited Liability Company is/are doing business as SANTA BARBARA LOAN & JEWELRY; PAWN SHOP OF SANTA BARBARA at 136 East Victoria Street, Santa Barbara, CA 93101. NATIONAL PACIFIC CORPORATION at 1129 State Street Suite 6, Santa Barbara, CA 93101. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara on May 30, 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. 2023-0001369. Published June 9, 16, 23, 30, 2023.
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT: The following Person / Persons is/are doing business as BRIX REALTY GROUP at 18872 MacArthur Blvd, Suite 330, Irvine, CA 92612. JOSEPH S ECKHOFF at 110 S Ammons St, Lakewood, CO 80226. This statement was filed with the County Clerk of Santa Barbara on June 7, 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. 2023-0001450. Published June 16, 23, 30, July 7, 2023.
Music Academy Festival Orchestra
All Berlioz program–Beauty & the Beast!
Reviewby
ADaniel Kepl / VOICE LCHEMY, WITCHES, CAULDRONS, DEATHBY
EXECUTION,summer nights both sanguine and otherwise; a Julia Childs masterpiece of sweet and savory sounds stirred up last Saturday’s Academy Festival Orchestra program at the Granada Theatre. Featuring the Music Academy’s Lehrer Vocal Institute co-chair, mezzo-soprano Sasha Cooke, in a radiant performance of the composer’s 1841 song cycle Les Nuits d’été (Summer Nights) Op. 7 and concluding – how could it have been otherwise? - with Berlioz’ 1830 hallucinogenic opium trip, Symphonie fantastique, Op. 14, the concert left the audience spellbound and punch drunk. A glorious night!
French conductor Stéphane Denève chaired the first Festival Orchestra concert of the 2023 Music Academy summer season with, well, aplomb. Perhaps it was the maestro’s atavistic kinship with the stunningly curated allHector Berlioz program Saturday that added a certain delicious insouciance to his manner? Maybe it was the professional performance level of this season’s Music Academy fellows, gathered from around the world for their first rehearsals just days ago, that lit the flame of inspiration?
No matter. Maestro Denève offered his orchestra colleagues a masterclass in meticulous conductorial nuance and subtlety. Even the thrilling execution and witches sabbath movements of the Symphonie fantastique grazed the lower depths of orchestral color and the upper reaches of sonic apocalypse with an ever-present collective sense of taste and forbearance. How French! The orchestra delivered sound imagery to match each of Denève’s dynamic shadings, emotional sighs, and explosive sound bombs. Berlioz’ many-splendored chimeras came to life like vivid holograms from distant worlds.
Two-time GRAMMY Award-winning mezzo-soprano Sasha Cooke, a 2002 Music Academy graduate, is enjoying her first summer season as Co-Director of the Academy’s Lehrer Vocal Institute. Her public performance debut in the new position last Saturday was sublime for its understatement. Maestro Denève, acutely aware the original version of Berlioz’ song cycle Les nuits d’été (1841) was for soloist and piano, reigned in the dynamics of the composer’s later orchestrations (1843, 1856) last Saturday, creating a performance so hushed, reverent, and mystical, the full house at the Granada fell profoundly silent through the entirety of the six song cycle to poems from La comédie de la mort (The Comedy of Death) by Théophile Gautier (1811-1872) –Villanelle (When the new season comes); Le spectre de la rose (The spectre of the rose); Sur les lagunes: Lamento (On the lagoons); Absence; Au cimetière: Clair de lune (In the cemetary); and L’ile inconnue (The unknowable isle).
A template of Berlioz’ utterly unique orchestrating genius, Les Nuits are masterpieces of restraint, never covering the soloist, particularly in the lower reaches of the mezzo range. Maestro Denève brought the orchestra to a kind of meditative calm, the occasional swirls and currents in the darker poems controlled
by the sensibility of the conductor’s body signals. Understanding his duty to the original concept (piano), Denève coaxed colors from Berlioz’ orchestrations that were complex yet gossamer, distant, feather light. Cooke’s voice, sustained gently by her collaborators, was a balm of unstrained thus beautifully shaped, pure mezzo-soprano heaven.
As if making up for the restraints conditional to an artistically satisfying performance of Les nuits, the after-intermission performance of Berlioz’ Symphonie fantastique, while beautifully crafted and shaped with elegance and refinement throughout, nevertheless gave everybody in the room what they wanted, a Music Academy E-ticket to glory! Conducting the massive five movement Épisode de la vie d’un artiste with a combination of intense focus on dynamic nuance and rubato (the first three movements) and flat out “off with their heads” fun – March to the Scaffold and Dream of a Witches’ Sabbath, Denève seemed pleased to show off this summer’s new batch of orchestral chops. Fabulous ensemble string cohesion that was lush and articulate; punchy winds capable apparently, of just about anything; a brass section to take home to mom; and a percussion battery capable of marching on Moscow. Wow!
Daniel Kepl has been writing music, theatre, and dance reviews or Santa Barbara publications since he was a teenager. His professional expertise is as an orchestra conductor.
For more reviews by Daniel Kepl visit: www.performingartsreview.net
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Silk Oak
Grevillea robusta
By David Gress / Special to VOICETHE SILK OAK IS PERHAPS THE ODDESTLOOKING BUT MOST AMAZING TREE to be grown in our community. When its canopy is covered with flowers - which are colored bright orange, yellow, and red and are quite curiously shaped - it is a tree that demands a second or third look, being both strangely weird and uniquely stunning. Because of its attraction as an ornamental specimen tree for landscaping and because it is so well suited to the climate of the central California coast, it has been planted in the Santa Barbara area since the late 1800s.
Its flowering begins in April and can continue into July, depending on the weather. The flowers form in “racemes” (a cluster with separate flowers attached to and evenly spaced along a central stem), which appear at the ends of short, leafless, branches.
Each raceme contains two or more horizontal flowers (5- to 6-inches in length). The flowers are “perfect,” in that each flower contains both female parts and male parts. As with other proteas, the flowers do not have petals but, instead, have two rows of brightly colored orange-yellow carpels (female flower parts) curled up on 1-inch styles. The carpels gradually uncurl and straighten out reaching skyward, until they resemble the stiff bristles of an upwardfacing hairbrush – I told you they are curiously shaped! The anthers (male flower parts) emerge from the orange-yellow perianth at the bottom of the flower.
The flowers produce copious amounts of nectar that is eagerly
enjoyed by visiting bees and birds who act as pollinators. Pollinated flowers produce fruits that are brown, boat-shaped, follicles (½ inch long) on 1-inch stalks. Each follicle contains two dull-brown flat seeds; each seed is surrounded by a papery wing, which aids in its dispersal in the wind.
The canopy is covered with fern-like, pinnatelycompound, leaves (4- to 10-inches long and 4- to 6-inches wide), each with 11 to 31 lanceolate-shaped leaflets with up to four lobes at the ends; this leaf shape development gives the leaves a delightfully lacy texture. In the spring, the tree will shed a large number of older leaves, just before the appearance of flowers followed by the emergence of new leaves.
The gray-brown bark is hard and furrowed, often with a lace-like pattern. The trunk is normally single and straight.
It is a medium- to large-sized tree that can reach over 100 feet in its native habitat - but usually only attains 40 to 60 feet in our local growing conditions. It is fast-growing, with a narrow pyramidal form when young and a broad oval crown at maturity.
Silk Oak is endemic to limited areas in Australia’s coast in southern Queensland and northern New South Wales, in subtropical and dry rainforests.
In its homeland, Silk Oak is harvested for its rotresistant wood, which is used for fine carpentry and in the manufacture of furniture, cabinets, fences, and musical instruments.
Native stands of Silk Oak are now legally protected in Australia, due to deep concerns over the dwindling of native tree populations - the result of centuries of over harvesting. Fortunately, Silk Oak is not
threatened with worldwide extinction, because, in addition to its use as an ornamental in urban landscapes, it is being planted in large numbers in commercial tree plantations and for use in agroforestry.
It is now found in all the mild climates of the world. In wetter climates, it can be an invasive species; however, in our Mediterranean climate, this has not been a problem.
Silk Oak’s common name is a bit of a misnomer, because it is not even closely related to true oaks, which are in the genus Quercus in the Fagacea Family. Actually, Silk Oak is the largest tree in the genus Protea in the Proteaceae Family; this Family first appeared over 200 million years ago!
The common name of “Silk Oak” is sometimes thought to be in reference to its soft foliage. In Australia, its other common name is “Silky Oak;” this latter name is said to relate to the silky-smooth texture of its milled wood that is similar in color and hardness to true oak wood.
Whatever its common names, its botanical name is Grevillea robusta. The genus name, Grevillea, honors Charles Francis Greville (17491809), a member of the British House of Commons and a co-founder of the Royal Horticultural Society. The specific epithet, robusta, is a Latin word meaning “strong” or “robust”.
Silk Oak is very easy to grow, being very adaptable to various types of soil - but it does best in deep, welldrained, loam soils. Once established, it tolerates drought well but will thrive with regular irrigation during dry periods. It is remarkably resistant to insect pests and diseases. When young, it is frost sensitive; within a few years, it can tolerate temperatures down to 18 degrees F. It can be propagated by seeds and by cuttings. Seeds should be collected when fresh and soaked for 24 hours before planting. From planting out, it can take two to four months to germinate and up to six years before flowering.
Both beautiful and utilitarian, Silk Oak can be planted as either an interesting ornamental tree or as a protective windbreak.
Note: It does have rather brittle branches - these will require some regular pruning on mature trees to avoid wind damage. Care should also be taken to avoid the contact dermatitis that can result from the handling of its flowers and/or sap. The main consideration for its use in the landscape is to provide sufficient room for its size at maturity. It basically grows too large for smaller residential lots, so it is better suited for planting in parks and other larger parcels.
The characteristics that make Silk Oak an excellent ornamental tree include its dazzling floral display, its luxurious evergreen foliage, and its rapid growth. These outstanding qualities have earned it the prestigious Royal Horticultural Society’s Award of Garden Merit. Despite its few drawbacks, Silk Oak adds interest and beauty to parks, estates, and streets.
Mature Silk Oaks can be seen in several locations in our community as street trees: in the 1200 block of Anacapa Street; in the 1400 block of Garden Street; in the 2900 block of Las Positas Road (along the municipal golf course); and, in the 3000 block of Eucalyptus Hill Road. There is a magnificent specimen on Arguello Road. A large tree stands near the front of Mission Santa Barbara, and 2 in Willowglen Park. They are very prominent on the sides of Highway 101 at Mission, Carrillo, Arrellaga, and Castillo Streets.
Tree-of-the-Month articles are sponsored by SB Beautiful, www.sbbeautiful.org
An Exploration of Whimsy B
OOKED as “An Exploration of Whimsy,” a new exhibition, Imaginings, will open at the Gallery Los Olivos on July 1st with an opening reception on July 2nd, 1 to 3pm. Featuring two Santa Barbara artists, Cathy Quiel and Carol Simon, the exhibit reflects their multiple interpretations whimsy and will be on view through July 30th.
Carol Simon, a life-long musician, translates and transforms her love of music into works of art. Her version of whimsy comes in the form of oil paintings, most of which are inspired by European landscapes. Her muse, however, is the majestic hues and views provided by the Santa Barbara mountains. Simon will share a series of dreamy landscape and still life oils.
Cathy Quiel will contribute her vibrant, yet tender watercolors, all celebrating “the juiciness and glorious beauty of color.” Also included will be her new series of doodles entitled Pareidolia, (a psychological phenomenon that causes people to see patterns in random stimulus).
Gallery Los Olivos was founded in 1992 and is owned by an incorporated group of over forty (40) members from Santa Barbara, San Luis Obispo, and Ventura counties. The gallery is located at 2920 Grand Avenue in Los Olivos, CA, telephone (805) 688-7517. Artist members operate the gallery which is open daily 10:00 to 5:00. Information on the gallery and current exhibitions can be found at www.GalleryLosOlivos.com.
10 WEST GALLERY: Summer
Saturation ~ July 16 • 10 W
Anapamu • Wed-Mon 11-5 • 805770-7711 • www.10westgallery.com
ARCHITECTURAL FDN GALLERY: A Natural Curiosity by Nadya Brown ~ Aug 12 • 229 E Victoria • 805-9656307 • www.afsb.org
ART, DESIGN & ARCHITECTURE
MUSEUM: Sandy Rodriguez — Unfolding Histories: 200 Years of Resistance ~March 3 • www.museum.ucsb.edu
ART FROM SCRAP GALLERY: 302 E Cota St • We 11-4; Th 11-5; Fr, Sat 11-4 • 805-884-0459 • www.exploreecology.org/art-from-scrap
THE ARTS FUND: Never One Without the Other • La Cumbre Plaza, 120 S Hope Av • Su-Thu 11-6; Fri, Sa 11-7 • www.artsfundsb.org • 805-233-3395
ATKINSON GALLERY: Closed for summer • http://gallery.sbcc.edu
BELLA ROSA GALLERIES: 1103-A State St • 11-5 daily • 805-966-1707
CASA DE LA GUERRA: Haas Adobe Watercolors • $5/Free • 15 East De la Guerra St • Th-Sun 12-4 • www.sbthp.org/casadelaguerra
CASA DOLORES: Candelario
Medrano: the surrealist folk genius ~ Aug 22 • Bandera Ware / traditional outfits ~ ongoing • 1023 Bath St • www.casadolores.org
CHANNING PEAKE GALLERY: Sunshine on Tuesdays • 1st fl, 105 E Anacapa St • 805-568-3994
CLAY STUDIO GALLERY: 10-4pm
Daily • Work by members of the Makers Market • 1351 Holiday Hill Rd • 805-565-CLAY • www.claystudiosb.org
CORRIDAN GALLERY: A Summer Group: Elliott Ciampi’s Koi pond
painting meditations ~ July • 125 N Milpas • We-Sa 11-6 • 805-966-7939 • www.corridan-gallery.com
CPC GALLERY: Garden of Pixels | David Mark Lane ~ July • By appt. • 36 E Victoria St. • joyce@cpcsb.org
CYPRESS GALLERY: California Pathways by Kristine Kelly ~ Jul 2 • 119 E Cypress Av, Lompoc • Sat & Sun 1-4 • 805-737-1129 • www.lompocart.org
EL PRESIDIO DE SANTA BÁRBARA: Nihonmachi Revisited; Memorias y Facturas • 123 E Canon Perdido St • Th-Sun 11-4 • www.sbthp.org
ELVERHØJ MUSEUM: Music is Love: Photographs from Henry Diltz / Tribute to David Crosby ~ Aug 31 • 1624 Elverhoy Way, Solvang • 805686-1211 • Th-Mo 11-5 • www.elverhoj.org
FAULKNER GALLERY: Channel City Camera Club (main)~ Jul 5-29; Kathy McGill - Snapshots and Studies (west) ~ Jul 5-29 • 40 E Anapamu St • 805-962-7653
GALLERY 113: SB Art Assn, Denise Carey: It’s Not All Black & White Featured Artist ~ Jun 29 • 1114 State St, #8, La Arcada Ct • 805965-6611 • Mo-Sa 11-5; Sun 1-5 • www.gallery113sb.com
GALLERY LOS OLIVOS: Vicki Andersen & Neil AnderssonShades Of Light ~ Jun 30 • Thu-Mo 10-5 • 805-688-7517 • www.gallerylosolivos.com
GANNA WALSKA LOTUSLAND: 805.969.9990 • www.lotusland.org
GOLETA VALLEY LIBRARY: 500 N. Fairview Ave • Tu-Thu: 10-7pm; Fri & Sa 10-5:30pm; Su 1-5pm • www.TheGoletaValleyArtAssociation.org
HELENA MASON ART GALLERY: Work by Pedro De La Cruz • 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
KATHRYNE DESIGNS: Local Artists • 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
LOMPOC LIBRARY GROSSMAN
GALLERY: 501 E North Av, Lompoc • 805-588-3459.
LYNDA FAIRLY CARPINTERIA ARTS
CENTER: Summer Bounty ~ Aug 6
• Thu-Su 12-4 • 865 Linden Av • 805-684-7789 • www.carpinteriaartscenter.org
MARCIA BURTT GALLERY: Bill
Dewey: Delta and Watershed ~ Aug 13 • 517 Laguna St • Th-Su 1-5 • 805-962-5588 • www.artlacuna.com
MAUNE CONTEMPORARY: Tom Wesselmann, Ross Bleckner, Donald Baechler • 1309 State St • Tu-Su 11-5 & By appt • 805-869-2524 • www.maune.com
MOXI, THE WOLF MUSEUM: Exploration + Innovation • Daily 10-5 • 805-770-5000 • 125 State St • www.moxi.org
MUSEUM OF CONTEMPORARY ART
SANTA BARBARA: Sarah Rosalena: Pointing Star; Diego Melgoza and Marisa de la Peña; David Horvitz: Seaea ~ Jul 30 • 653 Paseo Nuevo.
MUSEUM OF SENSORY & MOVEMENT
EXPERIENCES: La Cumbre Plaza, 120 S. Hope Av #F119 • www.seehearmove.com
MY PET RAM: • 16 Helena Av • FriSun noon-7pm • 805-637-1424 • www.mypetram.com
OLD MISSION SANTA BARBARA: Michelangelo’s Sistine Chapel, The Exhibition ~ Sept 4 • 22o1 Laguna St • www.sboldmission.org
PALM LOFT GALLERY: 410 Palm Av, Loft A1, Carp • By Appt • 805-6849700 • www.Palmloft.com
PEREGRINE GALLERIES: Early California and American paintings; fine vintage jewelry • 1133 Coast Village Rd • 805-252-9659 • www.Peregrine.shop
PORTICO GALLERY: Open Daily • 1235 Coast Village Rd • 805-7298454 • www.porticofinearts.com
RED BARN GALLERY (AT UCSB): The Museum of Nothing - Part A ~ July 5; Part B opens July 6, 4-7pm & by appt • king@theaterdance. ucsb • adjoining bus circle middle of campus.
Evening Glow - Douglas Preserve Original Oil Painting by Ralph Waterhouse
Waterhouse
SANTA BARBARA ART WORKS: Artists with disabilities programs, virtual exhibits • 805-260-6705 • www.sbartworks.org
SANTA BARBARA FINE ART: Premiere SB landscape artists & renowned sculptor Bud Bottoms • 1321 State St • Tu-Sa 12-6 & By Appt • 805-845-4270 • www.santabarbarafineart.com
SB BOTANIC GARDEN: At the Edge • 1212 Mission Canyon Rd • 10-5 daily • 805-682-4726 • www.sbbg.org
SB HISTORICAL MUSEUM: Clarence Mattei: Portrait of a Community ~ Sept 17; Project Fiesta! 99 Years! ~ opens July 6 • 136 E De la Guerra • Thu 12-5, Fri 12-7; Sat 12-5 • 805966-1601 • www.sbhistorical.org
SB MARITIME MUSEUM: Dan Merkel: The Lure of Lighthouses and Dancing Waves ~ Aug 27; 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 • 805-962-8404 • www.SBMM.org
Art Events Eventos de Arte
SB MUSEUM OF ART: Inside/Outside ~ Feb 18, 2024; The Private Universe of James Castle ~ Jun 25-Sep 17; 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: Drawn by a Lady: Early Women Illustrators ~ July 2; Butterflies Alive! ~ Sept 4; Mineral exhibition ~ 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: AQUATIC Annual Jury Competition ~ Jul 5 • 10-6 daily • 2375 Foothill Rd • 805-682-4722 • www.2ndfridaysart.com
SILO 118: Adam Licsko & Brian Kuhlmann ~ July 4 • 118 Gray St • 12-5 Th-Sa/by appt • www.silo118.com
SULLIVAN GOSS: Robin Gowen: Last Shadow & First Light; The Summer Salon ~ Jul 24; Where The Wild Things Grow in collaboration with Lotusland ~ Jul 24 • 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: www.library.ucsb.edu
VOICE GALLERY: Abstract Is Everything! An Abstract Art Collective exhibition ~ Jun 29 • La Cumbre Plaza H-124 • 10-5:30 M-F; 1-6 Sa & Su • 805-965-6448
WATERHOUSE GALLERY MONTECITO: Rick Delanty & Ray Hunter & 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: 805-565-6162 • Mo-Fr 10-4; Sat 11-5 • www.westmont.edu/museum
WILDLING MUSEUM: Bird’s Eye View: Four Perspectives ~ Sept 4 • 1511 B Mission Dr, Solvang • www.wildlingmuseum.org
ARTS & CRAFT FAIRE • Shop locally made jewelry, art, ceramics, and more • Lynda Fairly Carpinteria Arts Center • Free • 10am-4pm Sa, 7/1.
1ST THURSDAY • Art & culture evening at nearly two dozen locations... For details, check out pages 12 & 13 in VOICE or visit www.downtownsb.org • 5-8 pm Thurs, 7/6.
SB ARTS & CRAFTS SHOW • Local artists & artisans • 236 E. Cabrillo Blvd., SB • 10am-5pm Sundays.
CARPINTERIA CREATIVE ARTS • Shop locally made pottery, beach art, cards, jewelry, and sewn articles • 8th St & Linden Av, Carpinteria • Free • 2:306 Thursdays.
Send your art openings, receptions, and events to Editor@VoiceSB.com to be included in this free listing.
Envía tus inauguraciones de arte, recepciones, y eventos a Editor@VoiceSB.com para ser incluido en este listado gratuito.
Commemorative Tree Plaques... Great Gifts & Great Memories
Designate
Abstract is Everything
June 1st - June 29th, 2023
Closing Reception: 5-8pm, Thursday, June 29th
Paintings, Photography & Sculptures by Santa Barbara local artists:
Karin Aggeler • Sophia Beccue • Pamela Benham •
Cody Cammbell • Denise Carey • Merith Cosden •
Jillian Critelli • Lee Anne Dollison • Thore Edgren •
Tricia Evenson • Mary Freericks • Piri Friedman • Karen
Frishman • Bay Hallowell • Barbara Cronin Hershberg
• Ruth Ellen Hoag • Carolyn Hubbs • Holly Hungett •
Mary Ince • Pamela Kaganoff • Janice Lober • Martha
Inman Lorch • Laurie MacMillan • Cynthia Martin • A.
Michael Marzolla • Patrick McGinnis • Jo Merit • Eve
Mero • Anette Power • Manuel Reyes-Otalora • Sarah
Reynolds • Joan Rosenberg-Dent • Andrea Roy • Nurit
Ruckenstein • Eric Saint Georges • Kathi Scarminach
• Mary Kolada Scott • Marlise Senzamici • Ashley
Shellhause • Kerrie Smith • Marlene Struss • Carol
Talley • Wanda Venturelli • Iben Vestergaard • Susan
Vodonick • Lawrene Wallin • Ken Weintrub • Elaine
Wilson • Joyce Wilson • Sara Yerkes • Karen Zazon
Juried by Jane Callister
Professor of Art UCSB & Contemporary Artist
Castels 3 by Nurit Ruckenstein - 1st Place Cymbidium Fecunda Elixir, by Kerrie Smith - 3rd Place