It's a beautiful day in the neighborhood...

AMERICAN HERO

Marion Davis Estate Docent Julia Denholm shows historic photos to World War II, Veteran Walter L. Mess, 99, at the Annenberg Community Beach House on Friday, October 12, 2012. Mess is here Fall Church, Virginia for the Office of Strategic Services (OSS) 70th Anniversary Celebration. Mess was recruited by the Office of Strategic Services (OSS) to run power boats out of Trincomalee Harbor, Ceylon (Sri Lanka). Mess and his team navigated the Indian Ocean in secret, installing operational groups on the beaches of Burma and Thailand, picking up downed Allied fliers, and running intelligence for their section of Southeast Asia, which also included ground operations. During World War II, operating behind enemy lines he rescued over 200 downed American aviators, earning a Purple Heart and more recently the OSS Distinguished Service Award.

Posted on Saturday, October 13, 2012 at 08:35PM by Registered CommenterFabian Lewkowicz | CommentsPost a Comment | EmailEmail | PrintPrint

A-1 Pumpkin Patch

Rosy Rubio, and her daughter Ariana, 2, pick pumpkins at A-1 Pumpkin Patch on Friday, October 12, 2012. A-1 Pumpkin Patch is located on the corner of Santa Monica Blvd. and 14th Street.

Posted on Friday, October 12, 2012 at 04:59PM by Registered CommenterFabian Lewkowicz | CommentsPost a Comment | EmailEmail | PrintPrint

GlideCycle

A woman test out a GlideCycle along the Santa Monica Boardwalk on Sunday, September 30, 2012. A GlideCycle is the answer to low impact running and cross training. The body unweighting technology allows for minimal stress to the joints. Because of the low impact while riding a GlideCycle, the person is able to get a great cardio workout by going faster, longer with NO pain.

Posted on Thursday, October 11, 2012 at 11:00PM by Registered CommenterFabian Lewkowicz | CommentsPost a Comment | EmailEmail | PrintPrint

Hometown Forum


Hometown Forum - Images by Fabian Lewkowicz

City Council Candidates voice their opinions on hot topics such as development, traffic, and the Santa Monica Airport as well as introduce themselves to the public during the Santa Monica Mirror’s “Hometown Forum” at Santa Monica Public Library‘s Martin Luther King Jr. Auditorium on Wednesday, Oct. 10, 2012.

Posted on Wednesday, October 10, 2012 at 09:07PM by Registered CommenterFabian Lewkowicz | CommentsPost a Comment | EmailEmail | PrintPrint

Hunger Games

Movie goers watch  the Hunger Games at  the Santa Monica Pier during  Front Porch Cinema Series on Friday, October 5, 2012.

Posted on Tuesday, October 9, 2012 at 07:22PM by Registered CommenterFabian Lewkowicz | CommentsPost a Comment | EmailEmail | PrintPrint

Lexus Santa Monica 5000

Thousands of participants run on Barnard Way during the seventh annual Lexus Santa Monica 5000 on Sunday, October 7, 2012. The race raises money for local student athletes and school sports programs with the Santa Monica-Malibu Education Foundation. They raised over $75,000.00.

Posted on Monday, October 8, 2012 at 06:08AM by Registered CommenterFabian Lewkowicz | CommentsPost a Comment | EmailEmail | PrintPrint

Abbot Kinney Festival

A crowed looks at Dustin Otterbach's repurpused metal horse sculpture during the 28th Annual Abbot Kinney Festival on Sunday, October 7, 2012.  The Abbot Kinney Festival is one of the most popular festivals in Southern California, attracting nearly 150,000 attendees each year.

Posted on Sunday, October 7, 2012 at 11:57PM by Registered CommenterFabian Lewkowicz | CommentsPost a Comment | EmailEmail | PrintPrint

BAM Fest

Art revelers drink beer while admiring Eamon Ore-Giron’s installation at the 18th Street Arts Center Gallery during the 3rd Annual Beer, Art & Music Festival (BAM Fest) on Saturday, October 6, 2012.

Bam Fest  celebrates the best of locally produced art and music in conjunction with a variety of delicious craft beers. The festival featured  35-plus breweries, 4 bands, 3 galleries, open artist studios, an artist market, and gourmet food trucks.

Known for being the first Craft Beer Festival in Santa Monica, this year’s attendance reached capacity with 1,500 atendees. Santa Monica resident and owner of Santa Monica Pizza Kitchen, Kaveh Karimi, says, “BAM Fest is probably my favorite event of the year. It brings a community together and truly helps a great cause.”

This year 18th Street teameded up with LA craft beer industry veteran Martin Svab (formerly of Stone Brewing Co. & Naja’s Place) to help facilitate the beer side of the festival. Participating craft breweries ranged from big to small, including the popular and larger Sierra Nevada Brewing and Ballast Point Brewing Company to the smaller but equally great Angel City, Monkish and Beachwood Brewing. From cool-fermented lagers to warm-fermented ales, the craft beer offerings at 18th Street’s Beer, Art and Music Festival offereded a range of styles for tasting enjoyment. For the beer connoisseur, this year BAM Fest showcased unique and unreleased beers on tap, including a rare Smog City barrel-aged beer. This year included a Duvel-Moortgat Brewery tent featuring a number of the Flemish family’s Belgian-style beers. And for those who was  not as fond of beer there was an area to sample some of Southern California’s finest wines as well as home brewed sodas by Pacific Gravity Home Brewers Club. Just as any artist painstakingly toils over each detail of a masterpiece, today’s craft brewer goes to great lengths to produce unique, award-winning works of art. With the marriage of beer, art and music, BAM Fest has brewed a one-of-a-kind fundraising event.

The music line up for BAM Fest was just as diverse as the beer samples. From the addictive rock & roll sounds rooted in rural blues, early country, and Appalachian folk music of “The Americans,” to the sultry vocals, feminist chicana lyrics and powerful Japanese Taiko drums of “Lysa Flores and East L.A. Taiko” the featured music at 18th Street’s festival made the attendees groove. The Los Angeles-based trio, “American Bloomers,” is founded on authentic pop music that is steeped in classic rock and folk harmonies, while “The Dustbowl Revival” mix a spicy roots cocktail with their dance-inducing live sets that merge old school bluegrass, swamp-gospel, jug-band, jump blues and the hot swing of the 1930's. Between band sets, artist and DJ, “Freshair”  fused an array of musical styles and  kept the crowd jamming.’

BAM Fest attendees also got the special opportunity to explore a dynamic installation of new work by 18th Street’s Lab Artist, Eamon Ore-Giron. Incorporating sculpture, video, painting, music and performance Ore-Giron references the alternate guitar tuning scale E-B-G-D-B-G unique to the Central Andes, by likening this indigenous Spanish musical scale with the merger of folk, pop, historical and conceptual references throughout his interdisciplinary artworks. Themes of tourism, revolution, design, and public sculpture are at play in the works, while formal questions about the relationship between functional sculpture and introspective form are explored. In addition, artworks are available for purchase at an artist marketplace organized by past 18th Street Artist Fellow, Ana Guajardo, and the resident artists who live, work and create daily at 18th Street open their studios for attendees to experience works in progress.

The bold and flavorful authentic Mexican dishes by the Border Grill Truck or the sublime banh mi and Vietnamese tacos from the Nom Nom Truck were featured at the event. The  half-pound “maneater” sized burger from Baby’s Badass Burgers or a family-farmed pork bratwurst or spicy “hot” dog with signature Devil Sauce from Let’s Be Frank Was a big hit.  Fresh Brothers Pizza offered complimentary pizza samples.

18th Street Arts Center’s mission is to provoke public dialogue through contemporary art making. We value art-making as an essential component of a vibrant, just and healthy society. 18th Street provides a hub for contemporary art through two program areas: 1) A three-tiered Residency Program that fosters inter-cultural collaboration and dialogue and 2) A Public Events and Presenting Program that focuses on engaging the public and revealing the art-making process through exhibitions, events, talks, publications and other opportunities. Our Residency Program supports artists in three ways: Short-term residencies, for national and international visiting artists who live at 18th Street for 1-6 months; Medium-term residencies, of 3 years to advance California artists’ careers; and Long-term residencies that mentor Californian artists and ‘anchor’ organizations.

 

 

Posted on Sunday, October 7, 2012 at 11:00PM by Registered CommenterFabian Lewkowicz | CommentsPost a Comment | EmailEmail | PrintPrint