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Summerland to hold Earth Week events – Summerland Review

Summerland to hold Earth Week events - Summerland Review

The municipality of Summerland is holding a number of activities for its 13th annual Earth Week celebrations, April 18 to 24.

“Summerland’s Earth Week celebrations are family events—we encourage all residents to participate as they are able,” said Mayor Toni Boot. “As 2004 Nobel Peace Prize recipient Laureate Professor Wangari Maathai described in The Story of the Hummingbird, we can all be hummingbirds: No matter how insignificant, participation and doing the best that one can, can be applied to any challenge, including healing our planet.”

Earth week activities will be happening throughout the week, including a recycling depot, community bingo cards, community story time at the library, recycling crafts and more.

Earth Week festivities will culminate with the 16th annual Earth Day Celebration on Sunday, April 24 from 10 a.m. to noon at the Summerland Wastewater Treatment Plant, 7630 Dunn St. The municipality is partnering with the Summerland Environmental Science Group and the Okanagan and Similkameen Invasive Species Society (OASISS) to host this event.

“This is the third year we are planting in this area. The purpose is to create more natural wildlife habitat around the perimeter of the treatment plant,” said Lisa Scott, local biologist and Executive Director of OASISS.

Community members are invited to participate in planting native trees, shrubs and grasses. Volunteers are asked to bring their own shovels, rakes, and a reusable water bottle. Free gardening gloves will be provided to volunteers.

For more information on all Earth Week events please visit www.summerland.ca/earthweek.

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Set for a sip? Monthly Harrisburg tasting events planned for later this week

Set for a sip? Monthly Harrisburg tasting events planned for later this week

It’s time to “sip @” again in downtown Harrisburg.

The next tastings will take place this Thursday and Friday in connection with the monthly 3rd in the Burg events.

Created by Sara Bozich, they include “sip @ 17,” featuring Pennsylvania distilleries and wineries offering tastings at 17 S. Third St. in SoMa (south of Market), and “sip @ soma” (23 S. 3rd St.) that welcomes breweries.

Bozich said recently that while her lineup for Pa. breweries is filled through the rest of the year, there are still openings for wineries and distilleries. “I hope to book more July through December,” she said. Interested producers can contact her at sara.bozich@gmail.com.

Appalachian Craft Spirits will be pouring at this week’s tasting, with Mark & Val’s Wines scheduled for May and Cristiano Winery set for June.

Mark and Val Rhodes own and operate their year-and-a-half-old winery out of their home in York, where they appear every Saturday from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. at the city’s Penn Market. Cristiano Winery, located in Mechanicsburg, opened in late 2019. It already has appeared to pour its wines at 3rd in the Burg and at one of the “sip @ 17″ events, and in addition to its June appearance will also be participating in the August Block Party.

“It’s a great way to get our product out there,” co-owner Terri Christiana said.

Mishka Vodka, based in Allentown, also has appeared this year at “sip @ 17.” Vendors use a PLCB Expo permit and can sell their products by the glass or bottle to-go. Often, they offer free samples in line with PLCB liquor code, Bozich said.

SoMa tasting

The SoMa Block Party Series will run from 7 to 10 p.m. each month starting in May on the Thursday before 3rd in the Burg.

On the beer side, here’s the list of breweries that are locked in for the remainder of 2022:

  • April – Hemauer Brewing (Mechanicsburg)
  • May – East End Brewing (Pittsburgh)
  • June – Pour Man’s Brewing (Ephrata)
  • July – GearHouse Brewing Co (Chambersburg)
  • August – Lavery Brewing Co. (Erie)
  • September – Shy Bear Brewing (Lewistown)
  • October – Mount Gretna Craft Brewery (Palmyra)
  • November – Levity Brewing (Indiana)
  • December – Tröegs Independent Brewing (Hershey)

Those already pouring this year include The Englewood, Under The Bridge Cider (Lebanon), and Rough Edges Brewing (Waynesboro).

Both “sip @ 17″ and “sip @ soma” are open during 3rd in the Burg Fridays and preceding Thursdays, from 6 to. 9 p.m. The events also feature a local artist installation. 3rd in the Burg Fridays feature live music at sip @ soma in addition to a food truck on the block.

“On July 15, we’ll be TheBurg’s featured “3rd in the Burg” location,” Bozich said.

Here the tastings schedule for the rest of the year, tied into 3rd in the Burg.

  • April 14-15
  • May 19-20*
  • June 16-17
  • July 14-15
  • Aug. 18-19
  • Sept. 15-16
  • Oct. 20-21*
  • Nov. 17-18
  • Dec. 15-16

* Thursday date coincides with SoMa Block Party; hours are 7 to 10 p.m.

The SoMa Block Party Series will run from 7 to 10 p.m. each month starting in May on the Thursday before 3rd in the Burg. “We shut down South Third Street between Market and Chestnut and pack the streets with a live band, food trucks, beer/wine/spirits vendors, non-alcoholic beverage vendors, and more,” Bozich said.

SoMa tasting

The next two winery vendors to appear at ‘sip @ 17’ will be Mark & Val’s Wines in May and Cristiano Winery in June.

These events are free to attend and pay as you go. They do not require reservations.

Block party dates this year include May 19, June 30, July 28, Aug. 25, Sept. 29 and Oct. 20.

Any beer/wine/spirits vendors that want to join the activities should send an email to sara.bozich@gmail.com.

More:

Pa. wine producer heads into 2022 with the usual goal: Stay true to its roots

New labels, dry wines released at central Pa. winery already gearing up for its major fundraiser

Uncork PA: Episode 6 | Exploring the North Central Region

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Campus events to celebrate Earth Week 2022

The campus sustainability group announced a number of debt to celebrate Earth Week 2022. All events are free and open to the public. Registration will for events is requested by April 15th. More details about these events, and Earth Day events around the community can be found on the sustainability website. Those with question or interested in volunteering at either Carbon Summit Series event should email sustainability@boisestate.edu.

  • Campus Sustainability Tour
    2-3:30 p.m. Wednesday, April 20
    Kick off Earth Day by joining Campus Sustainability for a walking tour to check out sustainable features located on Boise State’s campus.
  • Celebrate a Sustainable Future: An Evening on Climate Solutions
    5:30-8:30 p.m. Thursday, April 21
    Doors open at 5 p.m. for dinner and seating
    Join us for an evening focused on building a sustainable future from rural to urban areas and everything in between. This Carbon Summit Series will feature Gabe Brown and David Montgomery on regenerative agriculture as climate solutions. Next, a panel of local leaders in sustainability will share their work in moving the region forward. Featuring empowering conversations over a free dinner in the Lookout Ballroom (Student Union Building), this event is open to the greater Treasure Valley community.
  • Students Are The Future: Connecting Students With Climate Education & Action
    10 a.m. – 2 p.m. Friday, April 22
    Doors open at 9:30 a.m. for coffee and seating
    This Carbon Summit Series event features industry leaders connecting academics and research to climate action and student change-makers. It is open to Boise State students and faculty, and will be held in the Imagination Lab in the Micron Business and Economics Building. If you are a student and would like a chance to share your passion, or a project you have been working on, fill out the student speaker form.
  • Arbor Day Celebration
    2-4 p.m. Friday, April 29
    Come enjoy an afternoon of tree planting and a campus trash pick-up to celebrate Arbor Day 2022 with Campus Sustainability, the City of Boise, and other campus organizations. Lead Arborist at the City of Boise, Mike Andrews will be providing three trees for the Boise State Community to plant. Coffee and donuts will be provided.
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Editors’ Picks: 17 Events for Your Art Calendar This Week, From Louise Bourgeois’s Painting at the Met to the Public Art Fund’s Party | Artnet News

Editors’ Picks: 17 Events for Your Art Calendar This Week, From Louise Bourgeois's Painting at the Met to the Public Art Fund's Party | Artnet News

Each week, we search for the most exciting and thought-provoking shows, screenings, and events, both digitally and in-person in the New York area. See our picks from around the world below. (Times are all ET unless otherwise noted.)

 

Monday, April 11–Saturday, June 11

An installation view of “Jean-Michel Basquiat: Art and Objecthood.” Courtesy: Nahmad Contemporary. Photo: Katya Kazakina.

1. “Jean-Michel Basquiat: Art and Objecthood” at Nahmad Contemporary, New York

There’s a lot to discover in this timely exhibition, curated by Basquiat scholar Dieter Buchhart. The show explores the role of found objects and unconventional materials in the artist’s short yet prolific oeuvre. A punching bag, a refrigerator, a filing cabinet, a child’s easel, wooden doors, and window framesBasquiat found all kinds of discarded and dormant items on the streets of New York and in his studio. Their transformation into works of art (some extremely expensive works of art) is exhilarating to behold, a testament to a creative process like no other. Sculpture, painting, and street art all come together in this dynamic, generous survey of 46 works. Some have appeared at auction, others come from private collections, the Basquiat estate, and Fondation Louis Vuitton. A football helmet with lumps of Basquiat’s own hair attached to it is dedicated to Andy Warhol (under the nickname “Skinny”). A punching bag, with old blood spots, is inscribed “Mary Boone,” the artist’s early dealer.

Location: Nahmad Contemporary, 980 Madison Avenue, New York
Price: Free
Time: Opening, 6 p.m.–8 p.m.; Tuesday–Saturday, 11 a.m.–6 p.m.

—Katya Kazakina

 

Tuesday, April 12

Rocking Chair, (1950-1953,) Charles Eames and Ray Eames. Made for the Herman Miller Furniture Company. Image courtesy the Philadelphia Show

Charles Eames and Ray Eames, Rocking Chair (1950-1953). Made for the Herman Miller Furniture Company. Image courtesy the Philadelphia Show

2. “What Is Design” at the Philadelphia Show

In this virtual conversation, Philadelphia Museum of Art assistant curators Alisa Chiles and Colin Fanning discuss how the institution deals with the complexities of a seemingly simple question: “what is design?” Highlighting examples from the museum’s collection and past exhibitions, they explore what it means to collect and display Modern and contemporary design in an art-museum context.

Price: Free with registration
Time:  5:30 p.m.

—Eileen Kinsella

 

Tuesday, April 12–Sunday, August 7

Louise Bourgeois in the studio of her apartment at 142 East 18th Street (ca. 1946). Photo ©the Easton Foundation/Licensed by VAGA at Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York.

Louise Bourgeois in the studio of her apartment at 142 East 18th Street (ca. 1946). Photo ©the Easton Foundation/Licensed by VAGA at Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York.

3. “Louise Bourgeois: Paintings” at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York

The Met celebrates the great French-American sculptor Louise Bourgeois’s under-appreciated paintings in this show of works made after her arrival in New York in 1938 and her embrace of sculpture in the late 1940s. In her first major painting show in 40 years, the museum aims to illustrate how this little-known chapter of the artist’s career contains themes and imagery that stayed with her for decades to come, informing and shaping Bourgeois’s mature work.

Location: The Met Fifth Avenue, 1000 Fifth Avenue, New York
Price: $25 general admission
Time: Sunday–Tuesday and Thursday, 10 a.m.–5 p.m.; Friday and Saturday, 10 a.m.–9 p.m.

—Sarah Cascone

 

Wednesday, April 13

 

Oscar Muñoz, El Editor Solitario (2011), still. Courtesy of the Blanton Museum of Art, the University of Texas at Austin.

Oscar Muñoz, El Editor Solitario (2011), still. Courtesy of the Blanton Museum of Art, the University of Texas at Austin.

4. “Artist-Led Tour of ‘Oscar Muñoz: Invisibilia‘” at the Blanton Museum of Art at the University of Texas in Austin

Colombian artist Oscar Muñoz gives a virtual tour of his first U.S. retrospective, “Invisibilia,” on view at the Blanton through June 5. He’ll speak with curator Vanessa Davidson about how his non-traditional photography-based work is inspired by themes of identity, political freedom, and historical subjectivity.

Price: Free with registration
Time: 1 p.m.–2 p.m.

—Sarah Cascone

 

Thursday, April 14

 

Mary Sibande, Ascension of the Purple Figure (2016). Photo courtesy of Kavi Gupta, Chicago,

Mary Sibande, Ascension of the Purple Figure (2016). Photo courtesy of Kavi Gupta, Chicago,

5. “Intersectional Forms: Curating Across Shifting Cultural Landscapes” at the Armory Show, New York

New York’s Armory Show is still a long ways off, but the September fair is already drumming up the hype with a virtual talk previewing its curated “Focus” and “Platform” sections. For the former, Carla Acevedo-Yates, curator at the Museum of Contemporary Art (MCA) Chicago, is presenting artist projects about how environmental issues relate to race and gender. In the latter, Tobias Ostrander, adjunct curator of Latin American Art at Tate, London, is showing large-scale installations and site-specific works with a theme of “Monumental Change.”

Price: Free with registration
Time: 1 p.m.

—Sarah Cascone

 

Guests playing B. Wurtz's Pistachio Toss game at the Public Art Fund 40th anniversary celebration. Courtesy of Max Lakner/BFA.

Guests playing B. Wurtz’s Pistachio Toss game at the Public Art Fund 40th anniversary celebration. Courtesy of Max Lakner/BFA.

6. “2022 PAF Party” at the Metropolitan Pavilion, New York

The Public Art Fund gala is reliably one of the most enjoyable art benefit events each year, in large part because guests can participate in interactive games and photo ops designed by artists like Farah Al Qasimi, Wyatt Kahn, and Claudia Wieser—and, if you’re lucky, you could even win an original work of art. (There will also a silent auction of donated works on offer to benefit the nonprofit.) Bold-faced names promised to be in attendance include Bachelor lead Matt James, and one of his former suitors, Kit Keenan, and her mother, fashion designed Cynthia Rowley, plus a bevy of A-list gallerists and artists such as Hank Willis Thomas.

Location: Metropolitan Pavilion, 125 West 18th Street, New York
Price: Dinner tickets from $1,500 ($300 for young patron); $100 after party tickets
Time: Cocktails, 6:30 p.m.; dinner 8 p.m.; after party, 9:30 p.m.

—Sarah Cascone

 

Thursday, April 14–Monday, May 2

 

Renee Cox, The Self Similarity of the Selfie (2016). Courtesy of Hannah Traore Gallery, New York.

Renee Cox, The Self Similarity of the Selfie (2016). Courtesy of Hannah Traore Gallery, New York.

7. “Renee Cox: Soul Culture” at Hannah Traore Gallery, New York

Drawing on fashion photography and graphic design, as well as her own experience modeling, Renee Cox has created her own unique body of work celebrating Black women. In her first New York solo show since 2006, Cox presents fractal-like canvases that deconstruct the human body, reclaiming control of the representation of her subjects.

Location: Hannah Traore Gallery, New York
Price: Free
Time: Opening reception, Tuesday–Saturday, 10 a.m.–6 p.m.

—Sarah Cascone

 

Saturay, April 16–Friday, May 20

"Jacques Jarrige: Christ Sculpture" at Saint John the Divine Cathedral Church, New York. Photo courtesy of Saint John the Divine Cathedral Church, New York.

“Jacques Jarrige: Christ Sculpture” at Saint John the Divine Cathedral Church, New York. Photo courtesy of Saint John the Divine Cathedral Church, New York.

8. “Jacques Jarrige: Christ Sculpture” at Saint John the Divine Cathedral Church, New York

Just in time for Easter, Saint John’s is unveiling a 10-foot tall hammered aluminum sculpture in its nave, hanging 90 feet above the ground. An abstract figure of of Christ by Jacques Jarrige, the piece has been shrouded throughout Lent, but will be unveiled ahead of Saturday night’s Easter Vigil mass. The artist also has a simultaneous solo show, “Upstrokes and Downstrokes,” on view April 16 to June 24, at Valerie Goodman Gallery.

Location: Saint John the Divine Cathedral Church, New York
Price: Free
Time: Monday–Friday, 9:30 a.m.–3 p.m.; Saturday and Sunday, 9:30 a.m.–6 p.m.

—Sarah Cascone

 

Friday, April 15–Saturday, May 28

Xiao Wang, Monkey Mind, 2022 Courtesy of Deanna Evans Projects

9. “Xiao Wang: Liminal Blue” at Deanna Evans Projects, New York

Make sure to see Chinese artist Xiao Wang’s solo exhibition at Deanna Evans Projects this week. Based in Brooklyn, Wang gives his canvases a dream-like quality where vegetation in jewel-toned hues of blues and purples obscures figures, usually himself or his friends. “Depicting scenes with maximalist settings, often inspired by real-life protagonists, in obscure, minimal backgrounds, the paintings lead viewers to feel a sense of uncertainty or disorientation,” says the gallery.

Location: Deanna Evans Projects, 373 Broadway, E15, New York
Price: Free
Time: Opening Reception, Friday, 6 p.m.–8 p.m.; Wednesday–Saturday, 12 p.m.–6 p.m.

—Neha Jambhekar

 

Friday, April 15–Sunday, July 10

 Genesis P-Orridge and Lady Jaye Breyer. Photo by Laure Leber.

Genesis P-Orridge and Lady Jaye Breyer. Photo by Laure Leber.

10. “Breyer P-Orridge: We Are But One” at Pioneer Works, Brooklyn

Life partners Genesis Breyer P-Orridge (1950–2020) and Lady Jaye Breyer P-Orridge (1969–2007) get their first major posthumous presentation in the U.S. In their joint Pandrogyne project, the two spent 20 years undergoing plastic surgery with the goal of becoming a single “pandrogynous” being named Breyer P-Orridge. Blending pronouns—Genesis went by s/he and he/r—and embracing body modification, the duo defied the roles of biological sex long before the concept of gender fluidity hit the mainstream cultural discourse. The show also includes a large-scale shrine installation designed by Genesis’s daughter Genesse P-Orridge in collaboration with exhibition curator Benjamin Tischer, inspired by Breyer P-Orridge’s travels in the Himalayas and the influence that Buddhism and Eastern spirituality had on their practice.

Location: Pioneer Works, 133 Imlay Street, Brooklyn (temporary satellite location)
Price: Free
Time: Wednesday–Sunrday, 1 p.m.–8 p.m.

—Sarah Cascone

 

Saturday, April 16

 

Jordan Belson, Untitled (ca. 1970). Photo courtesy of Matthew Marks, New York.

Jordan Belson, Untitled (ca. 1970). Photo courtesy of Matthew Marks, New York.

11. “Jordan Belson: An Evening of Film, Audio, and Visual Rarities” at Anthology Film Archives, New York

Anthology Film Archives presents six rarely-screened short films by Jordan Belson (1926–2011), an important figure in 20th-century avant-garde cinema. The evening is timed to the artist’s current solo show of never-before-seen 1970s torn-paper collages at New York’s Matthew Marks Gallery (through April 23). Some of these abstract landscapes were inspired by the view out of his window of San Francisco Bay and the surrounding hills. Other, more otherworldly examples actually served as backdrops in INFINITY (1979) and APOLLO (1982), two of the films included in the program.

Location: Anthology Film Archives, Maya Deren Theater, 32 2nd Avenue, New York
Price: $12 general admission
Time: 7:30 p.m.

—Sarah Cascone

 

Through Saturday, April 16

 

Kay WalkingStick, Eastern Slope (2017). Courtesy of Hales New York.

Kay WalkingStick, Eastern Slope (2017). Courtesy of Hales New York.

12. “Kay WalkingStick: Mountains/Canyons/Clouds” at Hales Galley, New York

In her first show with Hales Gallery, Kay WalkingStick presents paintings of the North American landscape made over the last decade, inspired by her own sense of connection to the earth as well as researching the Native American histories of each scenic vista. Each view is overlaid with Indigenous designs, some taken from the archives of the Smithsonian’s National Museum of the American Indian.

Location: Hales New York, 547 West 20th Street, New York
Price: Free
Time: Tuesday–Saturday, 10 a.m.–6 p.m.

—Sarah Cascone

Installation view of “De Kooning/Shiraga” at Mnuchin Gallery, New York, in collaboration with Fergus McCaffrey. ©2022 the Willem de Kooning Foundation/Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York; Estate of Kazuo Shiraga. Photo by Nico Gilmore.

Installation view of “De Kooning/Shiraga” at Mnuchin Gallery, New York, in collaboration with Fergus McCaffrey. ©2022 the Willem de Kooning Foundation/Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York; Estate of Kazuo Shiraga. Photo by Nico Gilmore.

13. “De Kooning/Shiraga” at Mnuchin Gallery, New York

It’s hard to believe that Mnuchin’s collaboration with Fergus McCaffrey gallery represents the first exhibition solely dedicated to the works of New York’s Abstract Expressionist Willem de Kooning (1904-1997) and Japan’s Gutai master Kazuo Shiraga (1924–2008). The formal affinity between these two artists’ gestural bravado is so striking and visceral, you can’t help but wonder: What took so long? For the lovers of abstract painting, there’s probably no better exhibition in town at the moment. Run, don’t walk to catch it before it closes.

Location: Mnuchin Gallery, 45 East 78th Street, New York
Price: Free
Time: Tuesday–Saturday, 11 a.m.–6 p.m.

—Katya Kazakina

 

PhoebeNewYork, New York, New York (2022). Photo by Eileen Kinsella

PhoebeNewYork, New York, New York (2022). Photo by Eileen Kinsella.

14. “New York on Paper” at West Chelsea Contemporary Gallery, New York

PhoebeNewYork, an alter ego character for artist Libby Schoettle, is a highlight of the “New York on Paper” show that ends this Saturday. The character first appeared in collages created with found objects, such as vintage photographs, magazine pages, clothing, old books, record covers, and the occasional Pop art element.

Schoettle is drawn to materials that have been owned and handled by others, and that will remain intact over time (or not). From the streets of New York to Philadelphia, Los Angeles, London, and Berlin, Schoettle reveals her own vulnerability, raw emotions, and witty observations through PhoebeNewYork‘s dark and funny explorations. The striking images are accompanied by thought-provoking bursts of text.

Location: West Chelsea Contemporary, 231 Tenth Ave, New York
Price: Free
Time: Monday-Wednesday 10 a.m.–6 p.m.; Thursday 10 a.m.-8 p.m.; Friday and Saturday 10 a.m.-6 p.m.; Sunday 12-6 p.m.

—Eileen Kinsella

 

Through Sunday, April 17

 

Marcy Hermansader, Shall My Heart Become a Tree (2019). Photo courtesy of Mother Gallery, New York.

Marcy Hermansader, Shall My Heart Become a Tree (2019). Photo courtesy of Mother Gallery, New York.

15. “Marcy Hermansader: Shall My Heart Become a Tree” at Mother Gallery, New York

Marcy Hermansader’s first solo show at Mother Gallery includes both recent works and pieces from the late 1980s. Across the years, the seven paintings share a dark fairy tale vibe. “Fragments from postcards act as windows into other realities—specific moments of time and place that can serve as source and center,” Hermansader says in her artist statement. “Leaves may appear jewel-like in colored pencil, painted thick or thin with gouache or acrylic, embossed with a hard pencil in tiny patterns, or dotted with fingertips dipped in paint.”

Location: Mother Gallery, 368 Broadway #415, New York
Price: Free
Time: Opening reception, 12 p.m.–6 p.m.; Wednesday–Saturday, 12 p.m.–6 p.m.

—Nan Stewert

 

Through Monday, April 18

One of the cases from Yuji Agematsu, zip:01.01.20 . . .12:31.20 (2020). Photo by Ben Davis.

One of the cases from Yuji Agematsu, zip:01.01.20 . . .12:31.20 (2020). Photo by Ben Davis.

16. “Greater New York” at MoMA PS1, Queens

This weekend is your last chance to see the fifth edition of “Greater New York,” highlighting the work of New York City artists, including Yuji Agematsu’s tiny sculptures made of trash collected on the city streets in 2020. Each piece—one for each day of the year—is a delicate arrangement placed inside the cellophane wrapper of a cigarette carton, highlighting the unexpected beauty to be found even in our unwanted refuse.

Location: MoMA PS1, 22-25 Jackson Avenue, Queens
Price: $10 suggested admission, free for New Yorkers
Time: Opening reception, 12 p.m.–6 p.m.; Wednesday–Saturday, 12 p.m.–6 p.m.

—Sarah Cascone

 

Through Tuesday, April 19

 

Fernando Botero, Sphinx at 14th Street Square, New York. Photo courtesy of David Benrimon Fine Art.

Fernando Botero, Sphinx at 14th Street Square, New York. Photo courtesy of David Benrimon Fine Art.

17. “Fernando Botero: Sphinx” at 14th Street Square, New York

David Benrimon Fine Art is celebrating Fernando Botero’s 90th birthday with a show at its East 57th Street gallery, plus a public art installation in the Meatpacking District of a bronze sphinx in his signature larger-than-life style.

Location: 14th Street Square, New York
Price: Free
Time: On view daily at all times

—Tanner West

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Charleston County’s outreach events start Monday for national community development week

Charleston County’s outreach events start Monday for national community development week

CHARLESTON, S.C. (WCSC) – Monday is the start of national community development week and Charleston County has outreach events planned all over the county.

The Charleston Community Development Department will be in all corners of the county to provide information about their partners and the programs they have available.

Housing, legal services, and workshops like homeowner conservation, are just a few of the programs the community can sign up for at this week’s events.

Chelsea Diedrich, with the Charleston Community Development Department, says they’re looking to get these services into the rural pockets in the county.

This year the department received roughly $2.5 million dollars from the urban entitlement funds. This amount is a projection from previous years.

Through grant programs like this, they provide money to several local nonprofits in the community to help establish programs that benefit the community.

The home investment partnerships program for example provides access to over 650 local jurisdictions to create safe, sanitary, and affordable housing communities.

“This urban entitlement funding has offered allocations to over 20 nonprofits and we are excited to see the work they’ll be able to do in the coming program year,” Diedrich says.

Charleston County Council recently approved the Community Development Department’s annual action plan which lays out recommended allocation for the coming program year.

The community can weigh in on the approved action plan until May 5th by calling (843)202-6960 or emailing Program Administrator Chelsea Diedrich at cdiedrich@charlestoncounty.org.

Community Development Week 2022 schedule can be found here.

Copyright 2022 WCSC. All rights reserved.

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CBS airs CMT awards and Advertising Research Foundation hosts event: The Week Ahead

CBS airs CMT awards and Advertising Research Foundation hosts event: The Week Ahead

April 13

Bed Bath & Beyond reports fourth-quarter results. The beleaguered chain has been struggling to turn itself around, but improvement has been difficult as the brand now also faces rising prices and supply chain issues. In its most recent quarter, Bed Bath & Beyond reported a 28% decline in net sales to $1.9 billion. The retailer recently said it would be working with Kroger on a combined e-commerce experience. 

Don’t miss the latest news. Sign up for Ad Age newsletters here.

April 14

The Association of National Advertisers begins its four-part Agile Marketing course. The virtual workshop is open to marketers at any level who are interested in learning about how to adapt to change and get more done faster.

April 15

“Fantastic Beasts: The Secrets of Dumbledore,” the third installment of the Fantastic Beasts movie franchise, hits U.S. theaters today.

April 16-17

Easter Sunday is here. According to Numerator, 64% of consumers intend to gather with family and friends this year, up from 42% in 2021.

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Three events in notable week show partisan path of Congress

Three events in notable week show partisan path of Congress

WASHINGTON – A milestone Supreme Court confirmation that endured a flawed process. The collapse of a bipartisan compromise for more pandemic funds. The departure of a stalwart of the dwindling band of moderate House Republicans.

Party-line fights on Capitol Hill are as old as the republic, and they routinely escalate as elections approach. Yet three events from a notable week illustrate how Congress’ near- and long-term paths point toward intensifying partisanship.

Congress Intensifying Politics

Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., talks with reporters at the Capitol in Washington on Tuesday. J. Scott Applewhite/Associated Press, file

THE SENATE’S SUPREME COURT BATTLE

Democrats rejoiced Thursday when the Senate by 53-47 confirmed Ketanji Brown Jackson as the first Black female justice. They crowed about a bipartisan stamp of approval from the trio of Republicans who supported it: Sens. Susan Collins of Maine, Lisa Murkowski of Alaska and Mitt Romney of Utah.

Yet by historical standards, the three opposition party votes were paltry and underscored the recent trend of Supreme Court confirmations becoming loyalty tests on party ideology. That’s a departure from a decades-long norm when senators might dislike a nominee’s judicial philosophy but defer to a president’s pick, barring a disqualifying revelation.

Murkowski said her support for Jackson was partly “rejection of the corrosive politicization” of how both parties consider Supreme Court nominations, which “is growing worse and more detached from reality by the year.”

Republicans said they would treat Jackson respectfully, and many did. Their questions and criticisms of her were pointed and partisan, with Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., saying “the Senate views itself as a co-partner in this process” with the president.

Yet some potential 2024 GOP presidential contenders seemed to use Jackson’s confirmation to woo hard-right support. Sens. Ted Cruz, R-Texas, and Josh Hawley, R-Mo., misleadingly accused her of being unusually lenient on child pornography offenders. Sen. Tom Cotton, R-Ark., suggested she might have defended Nazis at the Nuremburg trials after World War II, before she was born.

Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Richard Durbin, D-Ill., said some Republicans “went overboard, as far as I’m concerned, to the extreme,” reflecting “the reality of politics on Capitol Hill.” Cotton was “fundamentally unfair, but that is his tradition,” said Durbin.

SUPREME COURT BATTLES PAST

Senate approval of high court nominees by voice vote, without bothering to hold roll calls, was standard for most of the 20th century. Conservative Antonin Scalia sailed into the Supreme Court by 98-0 in 1986, while liberal Ruth Bader Ginsburg won 96-3 approval seven years later.

There were bitter fights. Democrats blocked conservative Robert Bork’s nomination in 1987 and unsuccessfully opposed Clarence Thomas’ ascension in 1991 after he was accused of sexual harassment.

Hard feelings intensified in early 2016. McConnell, then majority leader, blocked the Senate from even considering President Barack Obama’s pick of Merrick Garland to replace the deceased Scalia. McConnell cited the presidential election nearly nine months away, infuriating Democrats.

Donald Trump was elected and ultimately filled three vacancies over near-unanimous Democratic opposition.

Democrats opposed Brett Kavanaugh after he was accused of sexually assaulting a woman decades earlier, which he denied. They voted solidly against Amy Coney Barrett after Trump and McConnell rushed through her nomination when a vacancy occurred just weeks before Election Day 2020, a sprint Democrats called hypocritical.

COVID SPENDING FIGHT

Senators from both parties agreed to a $10 billion COVID-19 package Monday that President Biden wants for more therapeutics, vaccines and tests. With BA.2, the new omicron variant, washing across the country, it seemed poised for congressional approval.

Hours later, bargainers led by Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., and Sen. Mitt Romney, R-Utah, seemed blindsided when their compromise was derailed. Republicans wanted to add an extension of an expiring crackdown on migrants crossing the Mexican border that Trump imposed in 2020, citing the pandemic’s public health threat.

Many Republicans were skeptical that more COVID-19 money was necessary. But their demand for an immigration amendment transformed a fight over how much more to spend on a disease that’s killed 980,000 people in the U.S. into a battle over border security, tailor-made for GOP political campaigns ahead.

Immigration divides Democrats, and Republicans believe the issue can further solidify their chances of winning congressional control in November’s elections. Playing defense, Schumer postponed debate on the COVID-19 bill.

Democrats deserved some blame for being outmaneuvered. House Democrats shot down a $15 billion agreement in March, rejecting compromise budget savings to pay for it.

And in glaringly tone-deaf political timing, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention announced April 1, just as bargainers were completing their latest compromise, that the Trump-era immigration curbs would lapse May 23.

That gave Republicans an irresistible political gift to pursue.

A MODERATE’S FAREWELL

Rep. Fred Upton, R-Mich., announced his retirement Tuesday. He’s the fourth of the 10 House Republicans who voted to impeach Trump last year to say they won’t seek re-election.

Upton attributed his departure to running in a new district, but that didn’t stop Trump from proclaiming: “UPTON QUITS! 4 down and 6 to go.” The House impeached Trump over his incitement of supporters who attacked the Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021, but the GOP-run Senate acquitted him.

Now in his 18th term, Upton’s departure subtracts another moderate from a GOP that’s shifted rightward in recent years, particularly when it comes to showing fealty to Trump.

The pro-business Upton, 68, was a driving force on one law spurring pharmaceutical development and has worked with Democrats on legislation affecting energy and the auto industry. His bipartisan work and affability placed him in the ever-smaller group of Republicans who draw Democrats’ praise.

“To him, bipartisan and compromise are not forbidden words,” said Rep. Debbie Dingell, D-Mich.

PARTY DIFFERENCES, THEN AND NOW

Pitched battles are now habitual over bills financing federal agencies and extending the government’s borrowing authority. When those disputes are resolved and federal shutdowns and defaults averted, lawmakers hail as triumphs what is their most rudimentary task – keeping government functioning.

Despite the divisions over COVID-19 money and Jackson, there has also been cooperation.

Congress overwhelmingly voted Thursday to ban Russian oil and downgrade trade relations with that country following its invasion of Ukraine. There’s progress on bipartisan trade and technology legislation, and a bipartisan $1 trillion infrastructure measure became law last year.


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Daffodil Dash events start next week

Daffodil Dash events start next week


The 2022 Daffodil Dash starts next week and will once again be virtual.

This is the second year in a row where the fundraiser took place on an online platform because of the COVID-19 pandemic.

According to volunteer Kelsey Campbell, the events taking place this year are an online auction and a map of two routes that community members can walk, run or bike

The events will be taking place from April 14 until April 24..

She said that she decided to participate in the fundraiser because the charity reaches her on a personal level.

“It’s something that’s really close to my own heart. Our family has been affected by cancer and I know a lot of others have as well so, it’s really important and we’ve personally seen the effects of cancer research,” Campbell said.

She added that last year’s event was successful even though it was different from things they’ve done in the past.

“It was amazing how much our community came out to support us and the silent auction and we have switched up a little bit this year with the event,” Campbell said.

She said that she is hopeful the community will come out to join the volunteers for the daffodil dash.

According to Campbell, the goal for fundraising this year is $10,000 but more money is raised during each event.

She said last year even with a virtual event $40,000 was raised.

As of Friday (April 8), over $850 has been raised.

Campbell added that she is hopeful that next year an in person event can occur.

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European Public Health Week 2022: Health throughout the life course

WHO/Europe virtual press briefing: Humanitarian emergency in Ukraine and the wider region

Join European Public Health Week 2022

16-20 May 2022 – online and across Europe and Central Asia

The 2022 European Public Health Week (EUPHW) will take place from 16-20 May 2022. Every year, WHO/Europe supports the European Public Health Association (EUPHA) with the EUPHW campaign, by promoting the themes, providing key messages and organizing EUPHW-related events.

The theme for this year’s EUPHW is ‘Health throughout the life course’, with each campaign day focusing on a different topic:

  • Monday 16 May: A healthy and health-literate youth
  • Tuesday 17 May: Vaccination as a key prevention strategy
  • Wednesday 18 May: Climate change affects our health
  • Thursday 19 May: No health without mental health
  • Friday 20 May: Building resilient health systems.

The European Public Health Week (EUPHW) aims to:

  • Make the case for public health and a more inclusive society across Europe
  • Raise awareness and amplify existing messages on five specific public health themes, in line with key organizations at the European level
  • Create trust and innovative means of collaboration among all professionals, contributing to public health at local, national, regional and European levels.

How you can get involved

  1. You can host an event. Whether you are an institution, a health professional or an ordinary citizen interested in one of this year’s five EUPHW themes, you may organize your own event(s) on one or more days of the week. If you need help setting up your event, please contact: euphacommunications@eupha.org
  2. You can help share information about the week and its five themes. Use the media toolkit to disseminate public health messaging and promote any EUPHW event – see the link below.
  3. You can participate in an event. By joining EUPHW events and activities, you are contributing to the success of event hosts! Click the link below to search for your favourite events and mark your calendars.

For more information, see the EUPHW 2022 website at the link below.