I’m
David L. Coddon,
and here’s your guide to all things essential in San Diego’s arts and culture this week.
It’s appropriate that
Ziggy Marley’s first show of 2021 performing with his entire band behind him will be at the
Belly Up Tavern in Solana Beach.
“I grew up there,” said Marley. “As a teenager and as an adult, for me it’s a special place.”
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Tickets for this livestreaming concert, which begins tonight at 6:30, are $20.
The son of reggae legend Bob Marley has been busy, even with live performances in front of audiences on the shelf for now. He collaborated with Colombian reggaeton singer Maluma on a single called “Tonika” for Maluma’s album “7 Dias en Jamaica,” and Paramount Pictures has announced that Marley, along with his mother Rita and sister Cedella, will be co-producers of a new Bob Marley biopic.
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(Photo by Spencer Grant)
University of California Television (UCTV) is making a host of videos available on its website during this period of social distancing. Among them, with descriptions courtesy of UCTV (text written by UCTV staff):
“How We Learn Vs. How We Think We Learn”: There are negative associations with the word “forget,” and we often envision ourselves as striving not to forget things. But according to Robert Bjork, Distinguished Research Professor in the UCLA Department of Psychology, forgetting is actually an important component of learning and memory. In his words, “Forgetting, rather than undoing learning, enables learning and focuses remembering.” Bjork maintains that humans misunderstand our system of remembering and forgetting as it relates to learning. Consequently, the decisions we make about managing our own learning are not optimal. Additionally, we grapple with societal assumptions and attitudes that actually reinforce behaviors counterproductiv
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I’m
David L. Coddon,
and here’s your guide to all things essential in San Diego’s arts and culture this week.
The Los Angeles of the ‘60s was fertile ground for the evolution of rock ‘n’ roll, film and pop art. At the same time, on Tamarind Avenue in Hollywood, a workshop under the leadership of printmaker June Wayne was pumping new life into the forgotten craft of lithography. Artists from other disciplines would enjoy residencies at the Tamarind Lithography Workshop, producing works that expanded their creativity and revived printmaking.
Four of them Anni Albers, Ruth Asawa, Gego and Louise Nevelson are highlighted in a
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