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Daily Archives: January 29, 2021
Summer Solstice Celebration Invites 2021 Theme Ideas – Santa Barbara Edhat
Posted: January 29, 2021 at 11:23 am
Source: Summer Solstice Celebration
The Summer Solstice Celebration, board of directors, staff and artists are starting to cook up festivities and programming for the annual Summer Solstice Celebration! We were there for you last year, drumming and dancing up a virtual parade and festival and we will surely be there for our community again this year for our 47th annual celebration. Times are uniquely challenging right now, and thats why we need a little Summer Solstice dose of happiness and artistic community fun. Of course we will have to be extra creative this year again to navigate 2021 festivities safely, but we have the power of art and community, so weve got this! Its time to put on your creative thinking caps and send us your theme ideas, so we can whip up some Solstice magic!
Submit your theme ideas in any of the following ways by January 29:
The theme will be announced in February and begin recruiting designs for posters and t-shirts soon after!
Stay in touch and learn more at http://www.solsticeparade.com
Want to revisit last years Summer Solstice Celebration virtual parade or artist interviews?
Visit the Summer Solstice Celebration YouTube channel at the link below to re-experience the joy!https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC7sEfn2wU_ULH1f4a5iX63Q
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There Are Two Kinds of Happy People – The Atlantic
Posted: at 11:23 am
Read: Preparing your mind for uncertain times
In contrast to hedonia, the Stoic approach is known as eudaimonia, which might be defined as a life devoted to our greatest potential in service of our highest ideals. Stoicism is characterized by the principles of naturalism and moralismchanging the things we can to make life better while also accepting the things we cant change. (The Serenity Prayer is very Stoic.) Dont demand that things happen as you wish, Epictetus wrote in The Enchiridion, but wish that they happen as they do happen, and you will go on well.
Moralism is the principle that moral virtue is to be defined and followed for its own sake. Tell yourself, first of all, what kind of man you want to be, Epictetus wrote in his Discourses, and then go ahead with what you are doing. In other words, create a code of virtuous conduct for yourself and live by it, with no loopholes for convenience.
Epicureans and Stoics are encouraged to focus their attention on different aspects of lifeand death. Epicuruss philosophy suggested that we should think intently about happiness, while for Stoics, the paradox of happiness is that to attain it, we must forget about it; with luck, happiness will come as we pursue lifes purpose. Meanwhile, Epicurus encourages us to disregard death while we are alive, and Epictetus insists that we confront it and ponder it regularly, much like the maranasati meditation in Buddhism, in which monks contemplate their own deaths and stages of decay.
Read: What good is thinking about death?
No research to date asks why some people are naturally more Epicurean and others more Stoic. No doubt there is a genetic component, given the large percentage of personality that sits encoded somewhere in our DNA. But nurture likely also plays a role: In one study, a scholar found that parents who modeled and endorsed eudaimonia had kids who engaged in eudaimonic pursuits. Meanwhile, parents who role-modeled hedonia had kids who grew up to derive pleasure primarily from this model. The implication is pretty clear: If you want children who principally pursue duty and honor, do so yourself. If instead you strive to achieve happiness by minimizing pain, your kids probably will too.
People have argued for centuries about which approach is better for happiness, but they largely talk past one another. In truth, each pursues different aspects of happiness: Epicuruss style brings pleasure and enjoyment; Epictetuss method delivers meaning and purpose. As happiness scholars note, a good blend of these things is likeliest to deliver a truly happy life. Too much of onea life of trivial enjoyment or one of grim determinationwill not produce a life well lived, as most of us see it.
The big question is, therefore, how people can manufacture a good blend in their lives between the two approaches. Here are three ideas.
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Whats on TV tonight: Anthony Head joins Mitchell and Webb in a new episode of Back – iNews
Posted: at 11:23 am
Pick of the day: Back
10pm, Channel 4
Anthony Head rocks up at The John Barleycorn playing an ageing hedonistic dude whos long been away seeing the world and is known locally as Charismatic Mike or, as Geoff puts it: Its what you get if you splice Jesus with Clarkson. Charismatic Mike (not to be confused with uncharismatic barman Mike) holds court in the pub, to the annoyance of Andrew (Robert Webb) and the dismay of Stephen (David Mitchell), when it transpires that Mike slept with Stephens mum, Ellen. There are three potential dads, Stephen muses when its also suggested that a certain Crazy Pete might also be the father. Just like Mama Mia!.
i's TV newsletter: what you should watch next
7pm, BBC Two
Ian Hislop joins in a debate about the developments in English due to texting and Twitter, which has led to a stand-off between grammar sticklers and language radicals. The classicist also talks to Shuggie Bain author Douglas Stuart and musician Evelyn Glennie, who is deaf and communicates using touch and vibrations. Beard asks how her life has changed at a time when everyone is communicating through cold, hard screens.
8pm, Channel 4
On the other end of the spectrum to Grand Designs, George Clarke now meets Tim, who plans to make a barn out of discarded windows and old driftwood so that he can get a view of the nearby River Severn (currently blocked by a no doubt necessary flood bank) and novice builder Mandy, who is creating a retirement home in a minivan.
9pm, BBC One
Steve Edge (Benidorm, Phoenix Nights) perhaps had something more glamorous in mind when he signed up to guest in the Caribbean murder-mystery series perhaps playing the owner of a luxury villa or beachside rum shack instead of being stuck in a hospital bed next to Ralf Littles DI Neville Parker. Neville has been hospitalised with an infected sandfly bite after playing volleyball, and the nurse looking after him is found slumped over her desk. Suicide? Not on this show.
9pm, ITV
Anne Hegerty, Mark Labbett and Shaun Wallace better known to The Chase fans as the Governess, the Beast and the Dark Destroyer continue their investigation into different types of intelligence by going head-to-head with child geniuses in the UK. Along the way, they delve deeper into IQ the forthright Hegerty no fan of the tests (My father had an IQ of 161 and he was an idiot) find out about the link between emotional intelligence and creativity, and learn what sleep can reveal about intelligence.
9pm, Sky One
Harry Vanderspeegle is a small-town Colorado doctor except hes really an alien crash-landed on Earth and doing his best to fit in. Harrys no benign ET, however, quite happy to kill anyone who can discern his true identity. This lightly satisfying comic-based black comedy, a sort of Fargo meets Third Rock From The Sun, also finds Harry embroiled in a murder mystery his fish-out-water literal-mindedness fuelling much of the humour, while Alan Tudyk gives an attractive performance as an alien discovering some humanity.
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How Do We Regain Trust in Institutions? – The New York Times
Posted: at 11:23 am
MISTRUSTWhy Losing Faith in Institutions Provides the Tools to Transform ThemBy Ethan Zuckerman
In his new book, Mistrust, Ethan Zuckerman takes us on a kaleidoscopic tour of everyone from Gandhi to Bitcoin enthusiasts, Brexit voters to Black Lives Matter activists people and groups whom he calls insurrectionists because they are trying to overthrow or work around what has been a worldwide decline in social trust. Fighting this erosion from another direction are the institutionalists, those who seek to bolster trust and prevent any further crumbling.
Zuckerman, the former director of the M.I.T. Center for Civic Media, writes with the tone of a sobered-up insurrectionist whos come to see in Donald Trump, QAnon and antimask activists the dark side of a society in which all trust is lost and anything goes. Rather than liberation, Zuckerman correctly explains, this systematic distrust has proved to be a blessing for authoritarians around the world who have only further undermined traditional arbiters of truth (say, journalists) in order to open the way to their own propaganda. He offers the particularly absurdist example that in Vladimir Putins Russia, so all-encompassing is the leaders control that many Russians see the mere fact that a dissident leader like Alexey Navalny hasnt been murdered (yet) as evidence that he doesnt represent a real opposition force.
Its clear Zuckerman hasnt abandoned his insurrectionist sympathies for those trying to work outside a system they see as irreparably broken. He writes sympathetically about plainly loopy ideas like seasteading (the libertarian fantasy of building floating communities outside the reach of established states) and using the same blockchain technology that powers cryptocurrency to establish new virtual nation-states.
But he seems to find most promising those activists with more conventionally progressive politics who embrace new tactics. He offers the fascinating story of the Association for the Empowerment of Workers and Peasants in India, along with the more familiar tales of Bryan Stevenson and the success of digital activists in reshaping coverage of law enforcement.
One of his big examples is the Black Lives Matter movement. Citing research from his former lab at M.I.T., he notes that after Michael Browns death and the protests in Ferguson, police killings of people of color were 11 times more likely to receive media coverage than deaths that preceded Browns. Media stories also became far more likely to cover a story not as an isolated incident but as part of a pattern of police violence against people of color.
Zuckermans heroes have what he calls strong internal efficacy (they believe they can do things) but low external efficacy (they think political leaders dont care about them). So they operate outside the system, pressuring retailers to change their approach to selling firearms, decentralizing institutions or shifting media coverage.
#MeToo is a different kind of movement, he writes. Sexual assault and harassment have been illegal for years, so its main demands are for changes not in law but in norms.
This feels like an unsatisfactory effort to rebrand failure as success. The social media phenomenon revealed that conduct short of assault but still deeply troubling to its victims is fairly widespread in American life. And nothing fundamentally changed no alteration to legal liability rules for employers, managers or bystanders, for example to redress that situation. I hope that norms have changed, but theres no clear evidence that they really have. Much-deserved Pulitzer Prizes were won, but crack investigative journalists exposing predators one by one is a not a viable fix.
This is where Zuckerman himself lands when considering the coronavirus pandemic and where he illustrates best the limits of the insurrectionists: Actual functioning institutions became indispensable, and couldnt simply be worked around with internal efficacy and digital savvy.
Recounting a conversation with the activist Eli Pariser, Zuckerman proclaims himself a resurrectionist who believes that we need institutions that deserve our passionate support and defense, and if the institutions we rely on now do not clear that bar, we need to demand new ones that take their place. That seems correct and sensible, though it perhaps raises the question of what the point was in introducing the dichotomy in the first place.
Zuckerman concludes his book by saying that we are likely to find that institutions fail when we no longer recognize ourselves as a single nation, when we no longer feel responsibility for or obligation to our fellow citizens.
Out of context, one could imagine that flowing from the pen of Stephen Miller as part of a denunciation of globalist preoccupation with asylum seekers and the perfidious work of the 1619 Project in tearing down our common culture. In the course of a book that praises the protests that halted Trumps zero tolerance immigration initiative and casually tosses off an endorsement of Ta-Nehisi Coatess case for reparations, Im quite sure thats not what he means. But in many respects the divide between a call for unity that can be read as nationalistic and one that can be understood as cosmopolitan is the real split in the world today.
Another way of thinking about institutional trust is precisely in terms of that divide.
Major institutions have long been led primarily by the members of an educated elite. But its only over the past generation or so that college graduates with cosmopolitan attitudes have become a large enough share of the population that educated peoples sensibilities could be a force in mass politics. Consequently, today institutional leaders face meaningful pressure often from some of the young, college-educated activists whom Zuckerman valorizes like David Hogg, fighting for gun control, and Alicia Garza of Black Lives Matter to use their power to reflect and act on those views. But when they yield, they face fierce backlash from a populist right rooted in the cultural sensibilities of older, whiter, generally less-educated people.
Meanwhile, there are those who feel caught between these worldviews: the working-class people of color who largely eschew left-wing radical chic and feel the pull of things like patriotism and traditional gender norms without wanting to hop on a right-wing bandwagon inflected with racism and indifference to the material needs of the lower class. These are precisely the people with the least direct access to media attention or the political process. They are the ones, more than the insurrectionists of left or right, that institutional leaders need to find a way to better serve if they want to preserve their power and restore their legitimacy.
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Here’s What Traveling By Hyperloop Could Look Like – Futurism
Posted: at 11:22 am
Virgin Hyperloop has released a new video showing what the experience of being shot inside a pod down a vacuum tube at breakneck speeds could one day look and feel like.
Its an ambitious vision of the future of transportation. The concept video goes through each step in the travel process, from check-in to disembarking.
The experience seems reminiscent of going to an airport to catch a plane. The interior of the shuttle, however, feels more inspired by rail travel, with wide open cabins and face-to-face seating.
The biggest difference, however, is that there are no windows except for what appears to be a generous skylight above. Thats because the magnetically levitating pod is racing through an vacuum tube at speeds of up to 760 mph.
To make it feel less claustrophobic, the design team is focusing on bringing the outside in. Bands of greenery and wood textures subvert the aesthetic of typical mass transit materials with something optimistic and fresh, John Barratt, CEO and president of design company Teague, which designed the pod interiors, said in a statement.
All lighting in the pod including the unassuming information displays are dynamic and adjust based on traveler activity and journey milestones, Barratt said.
Its a futuristic mode of transportation that wont begin commercial operations until at least 2030, according to Virgin.
But it has made some headway with the technology. A first passenger test of the system back in November managed to accelerate two Virgin Hyperloop execs to a speed of 107 mph in just 6.25 seconds.
It felt not that much different than accelerating in a sports car, Virgin Hyperloop co-founder and first passenger Josh Giegel told The New York Times at the time.
In the future, Virgin Hyperloop is hoping to transport thousands of passengers an hour inside large convoys of 28-passenger-capacity pods. The individual pods will be within milliseconds of each other during travel, according to the company.
The company is now trying to figure out a way to drive down costs to make it more affordable than flying. Its simple. If its not affordable, people wont use it, Jay Walder, CEO of Virgin Hyperloop, said in the statement.
Daily high-speed transport is currently not feasible for most people, but we want to change that notion, Walder said. Imagine being able to commute between cities that are currently hours apart in minutes and the endless possibilities that opens up.
READ MORE: Virgin Hyperloop outlines how it thinks journeys will actually work in 2030 [Gizmodo]
More on Virgin Hyperloop: The First-Ever Passengers Just Rode a Functional Hyperloop
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The Navy Reportedly Experimented With a "Spacetime Modification Weapon" – Futurism
Posted: at 11:22 am
Spacetime Modification Weapon
According to documents obtained by The War Zone, the US Navy performed experiments on far-fetched technologies including a spacetime modification weapon which, researchers claimed internally, could revolutionize power and propulsion systems.
The mysterious technologies were meant to take advantage of the Pais effect, patented by American aerospace engineer Salvatore Cezar Pais and which could end up pushing the boundaries of conventional science if, that is, they are ever proven to actually work.
Pais says the tech could enable a propulsion system that defies gravity, as well as even more eccentric claims. In a January 2020 correspondence with The War Zone, Pais even laid out plans for a hybrid aerospace-underwater craft that he claimed was able to engineer the fabric of our reality at the most fundamental level.
Needless to say, these dubious theoretical devices have yet to be demonstrated in any meaningful way but, at the same time, the fact that the US military is funding their development does lend them a veneer of credibility.
According to the newly obtained documents, the Navy took Paiss ideas seriously enough to pour hundreds of thousands of dollars into their development.
The spacetime modification weapon, based on a Pais patent for a Plasma Compression Fusion Device, is supposed to release extremely high energy levels and make the Hydrogen bomb seem more like a firecracker, in comparison, according to the documents.
The experiments sound inconclusive, though. The elusive Pais effect was neither observed nor disproven, according to The War Zone.
In other words, it remains unclear whether the Navy still believes Pais is onto something or whether his work is a neglected line item in the Defense Departments vast budget.
READ MORE: Navy UFO Patent Documents Talk Of Spacetime Modification Weapon, Detail Experimental Testing [The War Zone]
More on Pais effect: Navy Scientist Known For UFO-Like Tech Patents Fusion Reactor
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Study: The Moon’s Water Came From Earth’s Magnetic Field – Futurism
Posted: at 11:22 am
Splash Zone
Ever since they discovered that the Moon wasnt bone dry, scientists have been trying to figure out where all that lunar water came from.
Past guesses include bombardment by water-carrying asteroids or that solar winds blasted the Moon with ionized molecules that eventually formed water. But it turns out the moisture may have actually come from the Earths magnetosphere, according to research that was recently accepted for publication by the journal Astrophysical Journal Letters. The study actually aligns with the solar wind hypothesis, but explains how that lunar water keeps being replenished instead of evaporating away a dynamic system that could have implications for the future of human exploration on our planets natural satellite.
The idea that lunar water comes at least in part from solar winds is now pretty widely accepted among experts in the field, according to a UCLA press release on the study. But models suggest that those same solar winds should actually evaporate half of the Moons water on a roughly monthly basis, coinciding with the full moon.
But the new analysis shows that the lunar water doesnt actually vanish. Instead, its replenished by planetary magnetic winds, created by the interactions between solar winds and the Earths magnetic field, that blast the Moon with even more ionized particles.
Its a fascinating and almost poetic revelation that the Earth helps supply its natural satellite with water. But aside from abstract scientific awe, learning about the impacts of Earths magnetosphere could help space agencies better protect astronauts from cosmic radiation, according to the press release.
And, its worth noting, water is turning out to be abundant on other worlds and figuring out how it arrived at the Moon can help us figure out what happened on distant planets as well.
READ MORE: First evidence that water can be created on the lunar surface by Earths magnetosphere [UCLA Earth, Planetary, and Space Sciences]
More on lunar water: NASAs Big Moon Surprise Is That Lunar Soil Contains Water
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GM Commits to Ending Sales of Gas-Powered Cars by 2035 – Futurism
Posted: at 11:22 am
Hard Deadline
General Motors, the largest legacy automaker in the United States, announced on Thursday that it plans to stop selling all gasoline or diesel-powered cars, pickup trucks, and SUVs by the year 2035.
Its a huge commitment for an automaker, especially because the vast majority of GMs sales currently come from gas-burning cars rather than electric vehicles, Axios reports. In GMs case, success will depend on rapidly improving and ramping up production for electric vehicles. And for everyone else, seeing that increased attention on zero-emission transportation is great news for the future of our planet.
GMs CEO Mary Barra specifically announced that the company aims to be carbon neutral by 2040. And given that 75 percent of its emissions come from vehicle tailpipes, according to Axios, ceasing gas-burning car sales seems like a reasonable place to start.
General Motors plans to be carbon neutral by 2040 which means removing emissions from all our products, including every vehicle we produce, and all of our global operations in the next twenty years, Barra wrote on LinkedIn.
GMs decision is particularly significant because most of the deadlines to stop selling gas-burning cars have been set by governments, like the state of California banning new gas-powered car sales by 2035 or President Bidens call to electrify all federally-owned vehicles.
Now that the call is coming from the automotive industry itself especially one of the largest companies in the industry its possible that we could finally start to see some real momentum in the push to decarbonize the ways we get from point A to B.
READ MORE: GM plans to end sales of gasoline powered cars by 2035 [Axios]
More on electric cars: California Is Banning All Sales of New Gas-Powered Cars in Just 15 Years
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WHO Team Hits the Streets to Investigate COVID Origins in China – Futurism
Posted: at 11:22 am
The investigators dispatched to China by the World Health Organization to investigate the coronaviruss origins are finally getting to work.
Two weeks after entering the country which was a whole can of worms in itself the team has emerged from the Wuhan hotel where it quarantined, the Associated Press reports. Now, finally, thescientists can get to work and try to figure out where, when, and how the COVID-19 outbreak first began.
For now, the teams plans are being kept under wraps, according to the AP. However, there are some locations the team will likely visit, including the Wuhan seafood market where the outbreak is widely believed to have originated and the mine shaft 1,000 miles away where scientists found the closest known relative to the coronavirus SARS-CoV-2.
But the trajectory and ultimate outcome of the investigation still relies heavily on Chinas cooperation. As the AP notes, top officials have been reluctant to allow access to anything that might result in criticism against how China handled the coronavirus, especially during the earliest months as it grew from a local outbreak to a full-blown pandemic.
Wherever they end up going, the goal is to collect samples from key locations in and around Wuhan to try and eventually piece together COVID-19s history.
If history is any example, though, it will likely be years before we know how and when the coronavirus first began infecting people if we ever get a satisfying answer. Tracking down the origins of SARS, for example, took decades, and scientists still arent positive where Ebola came from. But that said, the formal beginning of the investigation is a crucial first step toward getting some answers.
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Getty grants fund science-themed 2024 ‘Pacific Standard Time’ – Los Angeles Times
Posted: at 11:22 am
Indigenous futurism. Narrative medicine. Cyberpunk and digital dystopias. Soil contamination. Environmentally sustainable mega-cities.
These and other topics will be explored in Pacific Standard Time: Art x Science x L.A. in 2024. The Getty Foundation announced Wednesday the 45 Southern California cultural and educational institutions that will collectively receive more than $5 million in exhibition research grants. Pacific Standard Time: Art x Science x L.A. will include dozens of concurrent exhibitions as well as performances, publications and other programming, all exploring the intersection of art and science.
The funding comes at a critical time when most of these cultural institutions have been closed for 10 months, resulting in unprecedented financial challenges. In November, the American Alliance of Museums released a survey reporting that nearly a third of museums in the U.S. were concerned about permanent closure within 12 months should they not receive additional financial relief.
It feels like a very important moment to us, Getty Foundation Director Joan Weinstein said. Being part of PST is also being part of a community. And in this current crisis were not going to have a resilient community without this network of museums, large and small, working together.
Csar Garca-Alvarez, director of the Central-Alameda art space the Mistake Room, said in Wednesdays announcement that the Gettys pandemic-era support allows institutions like ours to take on major projects that not only encourage us to think big but also gift us opportunities to build meaningful community partnerships for the future.
The grant recipient projects sound both far reaching and specific to our time, exploring sci-fi-like ideas about artificial intelligence, space exploration and biomedical technologies along with more urgent issues such as social justice, climate crises and global health and medicine.
Boyle Heights-based Self-Help Graphics & Art received $110,000 for Sinks: Places We Call Home, exploring how industrial waste and soil contamination affect communities of color. Artists Beatriz Jaramillo and Maru Garcia will deep-dive into the local landscape, working with Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County scientists and Self-Help Graphics to investigate the effects of practices at nearby manufacturing sites. The project will include community participation and virtual reality elements.
Also exploring pollution, climate crisis and environmental justice: the Hammer Museum in Westwood received $215,000 for Breath(e): Towards Climate and Social Justice. The museum will bring together contemporary artists and activists along with scientists, architects and designers to probe the effects of pollution and other environmental issues on underserved communities who have been subject to various forms of discrimination. It also explores proposed solutions for saving our planet.
Most people know George Washington Carver as an agricultural scientist. Fewer know that he was also an artist who created weavings and still-life paintings using sustainable materials from the Earth such as dyes and paints made from clay and peanuts. The intersection of Carvers science and art and its effect on contemporary artists is the subject of the Exposition Park-based California African American Museums exhibition, World Without End: The George Washington Carver Project, for which the museum received $120,000.
Concept art for Planet City, SCI-Arcs Pacific Standard Time: Art x Science x L.A exhibition in 2024.
(Liam Young; VFX supervision by Alexey Marfin)
How to squeeze the worlds population into one, super-dense megalopolis in order to regenerate the globes natural resources? Thats the topic of the Southern California Institute of Architectures Planet City, which received $100,000. The downtown L.A. school will present the work of artists, futurists and scholars and will showcase a model of its futuristic city as well as an interactive video game transporting visitors there.
Its no surprise, in the midst of a pandemic, that the Mistake Room is mulling ideas about global health and medicine. It received $110,000 for Bodies, No Longer Ours, which will present more than a dozen international artists exploring the world of narrative medicine and how visual art can be used to explore and better understand illness and healing.
The Autry Museum of the American West in Griffith Park received $175,000 for two exhibitions. Out of Site: Survey Science and the Hidden West questions the relationship between visual imaging technologies and the Western lands they illuminate or erase. Indigenous Futures, or How to Survive and Thrive After the Apocalypse presents artworks that reflect a commingling of science fiction and Native cultures. It aims to challenge historical myths from films such as Star Wars and Avatar while assessing the very real impact of colonization, including environmental degradation and toxic stereotypes.
The USC Libraries ONE Archives will present Sexual Science and the Imagi-nation, for which it received $100,000. The exhibition will present illustrated magazines, paintings, drawings and costumes from the genres of science fiction fandom and the occult, from the late 30s through the 50s, exploring their importance to American LGBTQ history.
This being Los Angeles, the influence of science on cinema was not overlooked: The Mid-Wilshire Academy Museum of Motion Pictures, which is planning a Sept. 30 opening, received $200,000 for two exhibitions. One will explore filmmakers experiments with color particularly innovations made by women in both the silent film era and the late 20th to early 21st centuries. The other presents storyboards, costumes and immersive digital components to plumb the history and influence of cyberpunk, a sci-fi subgenre, on film from the 80s to today.
George Lucas $1 billion Lucas Museum of Narrative Art, which aims to complete construction of its Exposition Park building this year, received $100,000 for an exhibition that explores how art, including TV and film, comic books and avant-garde painting, has shaped our understanding of human evolution from 1850 to the present.
That such a well-funded museum would apply for a grant was not a consideration for the Getty, Weinstein said.
Were trying to fund all the good projects, period, she said. And I think the Lucas Museum will be important. Its about bringing them into the PST community and working with others, especially the small museums.
The Getty will announce a second round of grants in about two years to support the logistical execution of PST exhibitions and programming.
The newest PST, Weinstein said, offers a really unique opportunity to take up some really urgent scientific issues that intersect in so many ways with social issues. And doing it through the lens of art gives us new possibilities for imagining different solutions.
Plus, its such a great SoCal topic because of the history of science in this region. The museums really seized the topics and made it their own.
Heres the full list of grant recipients:
Academy Museum of Motion Pictures (for two exhibitions), Mid-Wilshire: $200,000
Armory Center for the Arts, Pasadena: $100,000
ArtCenter College of Design, Pasadena: $110,000
Autry Museum of the American West (for two exhibitions), Griffith Park: $175,000
The Broad, L.A.: $90,000
California African American Museum, L.A.: $120,000
California Institute of Technology, Pasadena: $83,000
California State University Dominguez Hills University Art Gallery, Carson: $100,000
Center for Land Use Interpretation, Palms: $70,000
Craft Contemporary, Mid-Wilshire: $73,000
Fathomers, Burbank: $115,000
Fowler Museum at UCLA, Westwood: $110,000
Fulcrum Arts, Pasadena: $100,000
Hammer Museum, Westwood: $215,000
Huntington Library, Art Museum, and Botanical Gardens (for three exhibitions), San Marino: $275,000
Institute of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles, L.A.: $120,000
Los Angeles County Museum of Art (presenting four exhibitions, three of which are grant supported), Mid-Wilshire: $335,000
Laguna Art Museum, Laguna Beach: $100,000
La Jolla Historical Society, La Jolla: $100,000
Library Foundation of Los Angeles and L.A. Public Library, L.A.: $90,000
Los Angeles Contemporary Exhibitions, Hollywood: $100,000
Los Angeles Filmforum, Hollywood: $85,000
Lucas Museum of Narrative Art, Exposition Park: $100,000
Mingei International Museum, San Diego: $100,000
The Mistake Room, Central-Alameda: $110,000
Museum of Contemporary Art, L.A.: $175,000
Museum of Contemporary Art San Diego, San Diego: $120,000
Museum of Jurassic Technology, Palms: $50,000
Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County (for two exhibitions), Exposition Park: $180,000
ONE Archives at the USC Libraries, University Park: $100,000
Orange County Museum of Art, Santa Ana: $100,000
The San Diego Museum of Art, San Diego: $120,000
Atkinson Gallery at Santa Barbara City College, Santa Barbara: $100,000
Southern California Institute of Architecture, L.A.: $100,000
Self-Help Graphics & Art, Boyle Heights: $110,000
Skirball Cultural Center, Brentwood: $90,000
UC Irvine Beall Center for Art + Technology, Irvine: $100,000
UCLA Art | Sci Center, Westwood: $90,000
UCLA Center for Medieval and Renaissance Studies, Westwood: $100,000
UCLA Film & Television Archive and UCLA Cinema & Media Studies Program, Westwood: $120,000
UCLA School of the Arts and Architecture, Westwood: $110,000
UCR ARTS: California Museum of Photography at UC Riverside, Riverside: $110,000
UC San Diego Institute of Arts and Humanities, La Jolla: $120,000
Vincent Price Art Museum at East Los Angeles College, Monterey Park: $110,000
The Wende Museum, Culver City: $100,000
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Getty grants fund science-themed 2024 'Pacific Standard Time' - Los Angeles Times
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