Wine Weekend – Inside Wine Santa Barbara

The not-for-profit wine tasting group Inside Wine Santa Barbara offers a Wine Weekend of activities. Join in all or one of our events! www.meetup.com/Inside-Wine-Santa-Barbara

Lutah

LUTAH explores the life of a little known architect who left a big legacy. She designed iconic buildings such as the Lobero Theatre, Vedanta Temple, and the Botanic Garden and was integral to rebuilding a damaged Santa Barbara after the 1925 earthquake. Lutah designed exquisite homes in many styles for some of Santa Barbara’s greatest philanthropists and spent hundreds of volunteer hours laying the foundation for the Santa Barbara Landmarks Commission. She did all of this as an independent woman at the turn of the 20th century.

This is the untold story of Lutah Maria Riggs.

Lutah navigated her way through the male-centric world of architecture and brought a fresh take to the established architectural styles of Southern California. From Spanish Colonial Revival to Art Deco, to Modernist and back to Traditionalism, Riggs mastered the art of experimentation. Her attention to detail, use of new materials, environmental concerns, and love of the natural landscape brought a unique and specific quality to her work. As one of her contemporaries said, “With Lutah, there was no such thing as impossible; it just took a little bit longer.”

For 60 years Lutah blazed a trail for architects and women, relying on the courage of her convictions and a hint of eccentricity. In a time when most women’s highest expectation was marriage Riggs pursued her passion and created a life of independence, an exceptional choice for a woman at that time. In addition to her buildings, Lutah also left a legacy: She was a self-made woman who boldly overcame barrier after barrier.

LUTAH offers never before seen photos and journal entries from Riggs’ personal collection, and candid interviews reveal the woman behind the drafting table. With stunning footage of some of Santa Barbara’s most iconic structures and a rare glimpse of private homes, LUTAH sheds light on true Santa Barbara treasures.

Reconstructing Slippages in Time: Between Home and Here – Ann Le

Exhibit/MCC Lounge: Mon, Jan 6th
Reception/MCC Lounge: Tues, Jan 7th, 6 PM

Ann Le has always dealt with identity, culture, family history, and the duality of becoming Vietnamese-American in her work. As layers of images are stacked upon one another, Le travels through time commenting on the idea of home, displacement, separation, and how we embrace and conquer loss. Tragic and Poetic composites are pieced together to unravel narratives which places her Vietnamese-American perspective into a contemporary landscape.

This exhibit will run from January 6th until the end of the quarter. The reception will be held Tuesday, January 7th, at 6 PM in the MCC Lounge.

contemporary art UNLOCKED

How do you “read” art? Learn to look closely and brush up on your visual literacy skills in our new series of monthly one-hour art appreciation meetup.

A Play on Birds

Join savvy global birder and photographer, Dr. Aaron Budgor on a delightful exploration of bird senses.

https://ensembletheatre.com/rental-shows/a_play_on_birds

Santa Barbara Music Club 50th Season of Free Concerts

On Saturday, January 11 at 3:00 p.m. the Santa Barbara Music Club will present another program in its popular series of beautiful classical-music concerts. Today’s program includes flutist Suzanne Duffy and pianist Kacey Link performing Ernst (Ernő) von Dohnányi’s Aria, Op. 48, No. 1, the world premiere of Katherine Saxon’s Forgotten Memories, and the Cantabile et Presto by Georges Enescu. Next, Eric Valinsky plays his Sonata No. 5, “Harsher Landscapes,” followed by Neil Di Maggio’s interpretation of the Johannes Brahms Rhapsody in E-flat, Op. 119, No 4 for piano. The program concludes with Andrea and Neil Di Maggio’s performance of Carl Reinecke’s Ballade for flute and piano. This concert will be held at First United Methodist Church, 305 E. Anapamu Street at Garden, Santa Barbara. Admission is free.

Amid the surge of Modernism, Hungarian composer Ernst (Ernő) von Dohnányi (1877–1960) distinguished himself as a paragon of Romanticism. His style remained consistent through his last opus number, which includes the Aria, Op. 48, No. 1, for flute and piano, performed this afternoon by flutist Suzanne Duffy and pianist Kacey Link. Dohnányi dedicated the Aria to the virtuoso flutist Ellie Baker, who wrote the work is “a billowing and passionate little piece brimming with romance and longing.” She continues that the work recalls the music of Brahms, a towering figure in Dohnányi’s formation as a composer.

Suzanne Duffy and Kacey Link continue with the world premiere of Katherine Saxon’s (b. 1981) Forgotten Memories. The composer offers the following words about the piece: “Memory is fallible, imprecise and changeable. Each time we draw a memory to the fore of our mind we re-remember it, changing details and forgetting others. Memories can be fabricated: childhood photographs and stories create memories of memories we have forgotten … My father’s ancestors fled the Russian Empire during the 19th century during implementation of anti-Semitic policies. Immigrants, refugees, or even, perhaps, fugitives, they changed their names like people change clothes, to hide, to blend in, to forget. Through creative forms of remembering and misremembering, this piece reflects on ideas of roots, family, loss, and how, even in the absence of memories, we imagine stories to tell us who we are.”

Duffy and Link conclude their set with the Cantabile et Presto by Romanian composer Georges Enescu (1881–1955), who, by all standards, was a prodigy. His musical pursuits brought him to Paris in 1894—at age 16—and he studied with Massenet and Fauré. Despite his young age, critics considered his music mature. Ten years later, Enescu became a member of the examining committee at the Conservatoire de Paris, and he composed challenging works for students to perform at their juries. Among them was the Cantabile et Presto. The work allows the performers to explore the expressive sonorities and challenges of the instruments in the former movement and virtuosity in the latter movement.

Of Eric Valinsky’s Piano Sonata No. 5, “Harsher Landscapes,” the composer writes: “Harsher Landscapes is dedicated to Clay Taliaferro, who originally commissioned the work in 1979 for a dance he choreographed for the Davis Center Dancers. It was revised and expanded twice, finally in 1983 to produce a concert version. This concert version was choreographed by Lizabeth Skalski for the New American Ballet Ensemble in New York. The piece is in one movement, made up of several small sections, some of which recur, and most of which cover the tonal areas of E major and minor as well as the relative keys of G major and minor. Out of the small sections, three major sections may be discerned: an opening waltz-like section; a slow, meditative section; and a final section, virtuosic and fast, during which the waltz returns. I often think of how at the Music Club we promote our “concerts of beautiful classical music.” I’d like to think that this piece has its moments of beauty, but in all, it portrays a pretty harsh, nasty landscape, perhaps evocative of an intense, passionate relationship gone wrong—which I believe was the unspoken intent of the original choreographer.”

Pianist Neil Di Maggio continues with the Rhapsody in E-flat, Op. 119, No 4, by Johannes Brahms (1833–1897). Brahms composed the work in 1893, towards the end of his life, and grouped it with a set of three additional miniatures. The “Rhapsody” therefore belongs to the Klavierstücke, Op. 119—the last set of solo piano works in the composer’s catalog. In the “Rhapsody,” Brahms conveys brightness, joy, and ebullience while exploring a five-bar phrasing structure. The second section contrasts with the first by way of a slower, tender mood. For all the optimism of the piece, however, the piece ends in the parallel E-flat minor. It comes as quite a dark, almost shocking turn.

The prolific German composer Carl Reinecke (1824–1910) gained the admiration of several towering figures in Western art music circles, namely Brahms, Liszt, Mendelssohn, and Schumann. Although the Ballade for Flute and Piano, Op. 288 has not received the acclaim as other works in his oeuvre, it bears the distinction of being his final composition. He wrote the Ballade in 1908 at the age of 84. Like several composers within this afternoon’s program, Reinecke was steeped in the musical world’s inexorable move towards modernity. Yet works like the Ballade, as Andrea and Neil Di Maggio show, demonstrate the notion that several composers held fast to the Romantic idiom.

Santa Barbara Music Club concerts are free to the public, and display a wonderful diversity of historical musical periods and compositional styles, including beloved masterworks and exciting new and seldom-heard repertoire. Of the series, the Santa Barbara Independent exclaimed: "A beautiful day, a beautiful room, beautiful music ... who could ask for more?" and Gerald Carpenter in Noozhawk.com declared, "Every Santa Barbara Music Club concert that I have ever attended has been a sensory joy as well as a consciousness expansion."

A valued cultural resource in the community since 1969, the Music Club's mission is threefold:

(1) Presentation of an annual series of concerts, free to the public.

(2) Aiding and encouraging musical education by the disbursement of scholarships to talented local music students.

(3) Presentation of community outreach activities, including bringing great music to residents of area retirement homes.

For information on this or other Santa Barbara Music Club programs and performing artists, visit SBMusicClub.org.

Armchair Travel Lecture: Victoria Lautman “Subterranean Ghosts: The Vanishing Stepwells of India”

India’s palaces, forts, temples, and tombs are on every tourist itinerary and in every guidebook. But the country’s magnificent subterranean Stepwells remain largely unknown both within and outside the country. These unique water-harvesting structures—marvels of architecture, engineering, and art—proliferated throughout the subcontinent for over a millennium but eventually faded into oblivion by the 19th century.

Journalist Victoria Lautman has spent years documenting hundreds of the subterranean structures through articles and photographs, and her landmark book, "The Vanishing Stepwells of India," was published in 2017 (Merrell Publishers, London). In this lecture, Victoria will trace the fascinating history, variety, and current state of India’s least-known edifices.

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