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Weekender: It鈥檚 Hot. Cool Off in a Museum

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boopsie
Among the art you can see in the Manetti Shrem summer exhibit this weekend is Andrea Chung, Boopsie, 2008, digital collage, 10x12 in. Courtesy of the artist.

The Weekender is a regular feature of the 嘿嘿视频 Arts Blog appearing each Thursday 鈥 when weekends really need to begin. The column features stuff to do on and around the 嘿嘿视频 campus this weekend. Know of art and related events in the region? Let us know at kmnikos@ucdavis.edu

Temperatures around the region are predicted to be at or near the century mark this weekend which means only one thing. It鈥檚 a great time to go to museums where one can enjoy air conditioned comfort, art and other activities. And there鈥檚 plenty to see this weekend.

Women artists and art about women are featured at area museums Sunday

The Manetti Shrem鈥檚 summer exhibition featuring two women artists in separate shows opened June 30. If you haven鈥檛 seen it yet, Sunday afternoon is a great time since there鈥檚 a reception and opportunity to meet the artists. The exhibition is perfect for summer: sunny images combined with aquarium-like cyanotypes and water color. There are messages too.

The reception runs from 2 to 4 p.m. and includes a talk by the artists, art activities for the whole family and refreshments. And, as usual at the Manetti Shrem, it鈥檚 all free. The museum is open 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. each day for viewing all this art (some has a summer theme) this summer. The museum is closed on Mondays.

Breaking Away: 2006-2018, Susan Swartz鈥檚 museum debut on the West Coast, features new work straight from the artist鈥檚 studio. You broke the ocean in half to be here, San Diego artist Andrea Chung鈥檚 first traveling museum exhibition, highlights her inventive use of collage, printmaking and photography to explore legacies of colonialism and migration. Full story on this exhibition here. Parking, and other details: manettishrem.org/visit

Cyanotype
Chung's "Sea Change, 2017," is visible in its enormity as Manetti Shrem guests and staff practically swim through the aquarium-like work.  Cyanotypes, watercolor, hydrogen peroxide, and salt. (Courtesy of the Artist)

More about other 嘿嘿视频 related exhibits that are ongoing, read it here.

goes along with the exhibition by the same name that runs through August at the in Sacramento. This exhibition, with more than 120 works from the greatest private collection of French art in the United States, is the first to focus on the Querelle des Femmes and that process of "becoming." According to the Crocker鈥檚 description, 鈥淧aintings, drawings, and sculpture by renowned 18th-century artists such as Antoine Watteau, Fran莽ois Boucher, and Jean-Honor茅 Fragonard, as well as the lesser-known Le Prince, Cochin, Moitte, and others, trace the stages of women's lives in a society very different from our own.鈥

In the talk, guest curator Melissa Hyde will be joined by Lecturer of French & Honors Program at California State University, Sacramento, Vanessa Arnaud, for a thought-provoking conversation of women鈥檚 roles in 18th- century France and today. The exhibition runs through Aug. 19.

Oudry at Crocker
At the Crocker: Jean-Baptiste Oudry, Seated Lady in a Garden, n.d. Oil on canvas, 39 3/8 x 35 7/16 in. The Horvitz Collection.

Manetti Shrem preparator exhibits at Axis

"Yellow Bile," a large-scale figurative painting by Justin Marsh, a preparator at the Manetti Shrem Museum of Art, is part of his exhibition, The Four Humors at Axis Gallery in Sacramento. axisgallery.org. Through July.

Verge Center for the Arts is showcasing works by 嘿嘿视频 MFA students in Notebooks of a Body. Catch the Sacramento Bee's article featuring these and other attractions.  

State Fair opens this Friday, and there's art among the cows and pigs

Okay, not the coolest activity we can think of. But, there are some air-conditioned buildings, plenty of cold drinks to wash down the fried food, and there is art. All at the at Cal Expo.

After you visit all the 嘿嘿视频 mommies and babies (we are talking fair animals) and the crops, honey and anything else 嘿嘿视频 has on display, take in some of the art. You鈥檒l find that throughout the exhibition buildings you鈥檒l see photography, other visual arts and textiles in some of the "counties" exhibits. You鈥檒l even find an art quilt by yours truly, 鈥淓lvis in Memphis鈥 in the textiles area.

Yolo County鈥檚 artists and farmlands will be front and center in the Yolo County booth. The booth's theme takes its inspiration from YoloArts Art & Ag project, an artist-to-farm visit program in its 11th year.

Paintings and 3D artworks will be on display.

鈥淭he Yolo exhibit highlights local artists and how agriculture and the Yolo landscape inspire creativity and innovation,鈥 said Janice Purnell, YoloArts associate director. 鈥淭his fits in perfectly with this year鈥檚 State Fair theme of create, inspire, and innovate.鈥

Alongside the art will be some of Yolo County鈥檚 specialty farm products such as nuts, wine, olive oil, honey and fresh produce, many with labels that are works of art on their own. The burgeoning brewery business in Yolo County will also be featured with the display of a collection of 鈥済rowlers鈥 (glass jugs for draft beer) each with unique logo art.

A large (8鈥 x 12鈥) print of an original oil painting by Phil Gross of Davis will be the artistic centerpiece of a booth featuring the artwork of 23 Yolo County artists. A native of San Francisco, Gross is a 50-year Yolo County resident.

Gross
Yolo West of 89, Phil Gross, will be on display in the Yolo County exhibit at the State Fair opening this weekend.

The booth features a barn replica with art on display inside, a documentary video by Gross on YoloArts鈥 Art & Ag Project and a video of county farmlands by local videographer Mark Jones.

Artists, along with Gross and Jones, whose work will be featured in the booth are: Pat Coletti Allosso, Steve Beckley, Kenny Calhoun, Kate Childers, Danielle Collins, Matt Connors, Dee Conway, Lynne Cunningham, Trina Drotar, Rhonda Egan, Alan Fishleder, Linda S. Fitz Gibbon, Claire Haag, Laura Hanke, Sandra Jennings Jones, Diane Mohar, Philippe Plouchart, Susan Raines, Yvonne Roque, Alejandro Rubio, and Tracy J. Thomas.

The State Fair runs July 13-29 at Cal Expo, Sacramento.

Another cool activity: reading The New York Times

Some of the best art writing is of course in The New York Times. And one of my favorite Sunday afternoon activities is to hang back on my patio and read The New York Times feature sections and read about all the exhibitions I probably won't go to. But, if you don鈥檛 get the Sunday edition delivered at home, and you don't have a subscription, you have to go get one. (A potentially sweltering activity). Not if you are affiliated with 嘿嘿视频鈥he 嘿嘿视频 Library has announced an online newspaper deal as big as New York 鈥 as in The New York Times 鈥 for faculty, students, staff, researchers and clinicians on the Davis and Sacramento campuses. With an authenticated 嘿嘿视频 log-in, you can obtain a free NYTimes Pass for unlimited access to most content (i.e. not just Sundays). Find out how in this Dateline story. You must have a 嘿嘿视频 account to partake of this great offer.

Arts and Culture Podcast

Soterios Johnson, director of Humanities, Arts and Cultural Partnerships at 嘿嘿视频, gives you what鈥檚 happening in the region this week and every week in his new blog, Capital Culture List, a public service of 嘿嘿视频. You can read it (in the blog), listen to it (on the podcast), or do both. Before coming to 嘿嘿视频, Johnson worked as a journalist for 22 years at WNYC, the NPR member station in New York City. The last 14 years of that time he was the local host of NPR鈥檚 Morning Edition.

The Capital Culture List is your guide to noteworthy Arts and Culture offerings in and around Sacramento.

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