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DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20240716T183000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20240716T213000
DTSTAMP:20260620T203532
CREATED:20240606T215708Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240607T200156Z
UID:10000363-1721154600-1721165400@calhum.org
SUMMARY:RIVERSIDE—How Does the Inland Empire Strike Back Against Hate?
DESCRIPTION:Graphic courtesy of Zócalo Public Square \nRIVERSIDE—In the 1920s\, Southern California’s Inland Empire was a bucolic place\, dotted with small towns set amid orange groves. It was also a growing outpost for the Ku Klux Klan\, whose members subjected the region’s minority residents to exclusion\, harassment\, and violence in following decades. Today\, antisemitic\, anti-Muslim\, anti-Black\, anti-Latino\, anti-Asian\, and anti-LGBTQ movements persist\, with hate crimes again on the rise\, alongside a new generation of domestic extremist groups. \nThe Inland Empire exemplifies an ongoing tension between hate and resistance\, harboring grassroots movements that have banned lessons about race in public schools at the same time as it celebrates the opening of the Cheech Marin Center for Chicano Art & Culture. This duality makes the region a perfect place to grapple with the history of hate in California\, and understand past and present efforts to strike back and fight for justice. Can the region’s battles against discrimination chart a path forward for the rest of the state\, and nation? \nZócalo and California Humanities welcome California State Assemblymember Corey A. Jackson\, Mapping Black California project director Candice Mays\, and ACLU SoCal Senior Policy Advocate and Organizer Luis Nolasco to discuss hate’s impact on the Inland Empire\, and highlight efforts to resist. \nZócalo invites our in-person audience to continue the conversation with our speakers and each other at a post-event reception with complimentary small bites and beverages. \nWhere: UCR Arts | 3824 Main St\, Riverside\, CA 92501 + Streaming online\nWhen: Tuesday\, July 16\, 2024 | 6:30 pm PT \n*This event is co-presented with California Humanities as part of the National Endowment for the Humanities’s United We Stand initiative. \nTo RSVP for in-person and streaming\, see: zps.la/IE
URL:https://calhum.org/event/riverside-how-does-the-inland-empire-strike-back-against-hate/
LOCATION:UCR Arts\, 3824 Main St\, Riverside\, CA\, 92501
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://calhum.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/06/07.16_Inland-Empire-Strike-Program_Webpage-Asset-1.png
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20240517T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20240517T210000
DTSTAMP:20260620T203532
CREATED:20240429T235920Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240430T000636Z
UID:10000311-1715972400-1715979600@calhum.org
SUMMARY:RIVERSIDE—HOLLYWOOD CHINESE Screening
DESCRIPTION:RIVERSIDE—Hollywood Chinese is a captivating revelation on a little-known chapter of cinema: the Chinese in American feature films. From the first Chinese American film produced in 1917\, to Ang Lee’s triumphant Brokeback Mountain nine decades later\, Hollywood Chinese brings together a fascinating portrait of actors\, directors\, writers\, and iconic images to show how the Chinese have been imagined in movies\, and how filmmakers have and continue to navigate an industry that was often ignorant about race\, but at times paradoxically receptive. \nHollywood Chinese is produced\, directed\, written and edited by Academy Award® nominee and triple Sundance award-winning filmmaker\, Arthur Dong (Licensed to Kill\, Coming Out Under Fire\, Forbidden City\, U.S.A.)\, and presents eleven of the industry’s most accomplished Chinese and Chinese American film artists who share personal accounts of working in film. Ang Lee\, Wayne Wang\, Joan Chen\, David Henry Hwang\, Justin Lin\, B.D. Wong\, Nancy Kwan\, Tsai Chin\, Lisa Lu\, James Hong\, and Amy Tan are among the storytellers who have wrestled with being the “other” in Hollywood. \nFree admission and Q&A with filmmaker Arthur Dong. \nWhere: UCR Arts\, 3824 & 3834 Main Street\, Riverside\, CA 92501\nWhen: 7 pm\, May 17\, 2024 \nFor details\, see: ucrarts.ucr.edu/films/hollywood-chinese/
URL:https://calhum.org/event/riverside-hollywood-chinese-screening/
LOCATION:UCR Arts\, 3824 Main St\, Riverside\, CA\, 92501
CATEGORIES:California Documentary Project
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://calhum.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/04/Flyer-Hollywood-Chinese-CAM.jpg
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20240510T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20240510T190000
DTSTAMP:20260620T203532
CREATED:20240430T000559Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240430T000644Z
UID:10000310-1715367600-1715367600@calhum.org
SUMMARY:RIVERSIDE—FOREVER\, CHINATOWN Screening
DESCRIPTION:RIVERSIDE—Join director James Q. Chan for a free screening of FOREVER\, CHINATOWN\, a documentary about unknown\, self-taught 81-year-old artist Frank Wong who has spent the past four decades recreating his fading memories by building romantic\, extraordinarily detailed miniature models of the San Francisco Chinatown rooms of his youth. \nThis film takes the journey of one individual and maps it to a rapidly changing urban neighborhood from 1940s to present day. A meditation on memory\, community\, and preserving one’s own legacy\, Frank‘s three-dimensional miniature dioramas become rare portals into a historic neighborhood and a window to the artist’s filtered and romanticized memories and emotional struggles. \nFree admission and Q&A with filmmaker James Q. Chan! \nWhere: UCR ARTS\, 3824 & 3834 Main Street\, Riverside\, CA 92501\nWhen: Friday\, May 10\, 2024 at 7 PM (PT) \nFor details\, see: ucrarts.ucr.edu/films/forever-chinatown/
URL:https://calhum.org/event/riverside-forever-chinatown-screening/
LOCATION:UCR Arts\, 3824 Main St\, Riverside\, CA\, 92501
CATEGORIES:California Documentary Project
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://calhum.org/wp-content/uploads/2022/07/Forever-Chinatown.jpg
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20240330T150000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20240330T160000
DTSTAMP:20260620T203532
CREATED:20240314T163219Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240314T163247Z
UID:10000250-1711810800-1711814400@calhum.org
SUMMARY:UCR ARTS at Riverside—Partner Screening of DELANO MANONGS
DESCRIPTION:Caption: Still of Filipino farm labor organizer Larry Itliong from film The Delano Manongs: Forgotten Heroes of the United Farmworkers Union. \nUCR ARTS—On March 30\, join UCR ARTS in Riverside for an afternoon screening of DELANO MANONGS (2014). This free event includes an introduction from filmmaker Marissa Aroy. \nSynopsis: THE DELANO MANONGS tells the story of farm labor organizer Larry Itliong and a group of Filipino farm workers who instigated one of the American farm labor movement’s finest hours – The Delano Grape Strike of 1965 that brought about the creation of the United Farm Workers Union (UFW). While the movement is known for Cesar Chavez’s leadership and considered a Chicano movement\, Filipinos played a pivotal role. Filipino labor organizer\, Larry Itliong\, a cigar-chomping union veteran\, organized a group of 1500 Filipinos to strike against the grape growers of Delano\, California\, beginning a collaboration between Filipinos\, Chicanos and other ethnic workers that would go on for years. \nSaturday\, March 30\, 2024 |  3 pm \n3824 + 3834 Main Street\nRiverside\, CA 92501 \nFree admission! Reserve your free ticket here. \n*A film admission ticket gives you access to the film screening and complimentary admission to all UCR ARTS exhibitions during your visit. Please note: most galleries close at 5 PM. For a list of current exhibitions\, please click here. \nThis event is presented in partnership with California Humanities\, with support from the National Endowment for the Arts. \nThis film is supported by a California Documentary Project grant.
URL:https://calhum.org/event/ucr-arts-partner-screening-delano-manongs/
LOCATION:UCR Arts\, 3824 Main St\, Riverside\, CA\, 92501
CATEGORIES:California Documentary Project
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://calhum.org/wp-content/uploads/2017/07/delano_manongs_enews.jpg
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20240323T150000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20240323T165000
DTSTAMP:20260620T203532
CREATED:20240304T222959Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240304T222959Z
UID:10000248-1711206000-1711212600@calhum.org
SUMMARY:UCR ARTS at Riverside—Partner Screening of EXPOSING MUYBRIDGE
DESCRIPTION:Caption: Actor Gary Oldman in a still from EXPOSING MUYBRIDGE. \nUCR ARTS—On March 23\, join UCR ARTS in Riverside for an afternoon screening of EXPOSING MUYBRIDGE (2021). This free event includes a post-film Q&A with filmmaker Marc Shaffer. \nSynopsis: Few figures have played so seminal a role in our moving picture storytelling culture as the revolutionary 19th-century photographer Eadweard Muybridge. At the behest of his patron\, the railroad baron Leland Stanford\, Muybridge produced unprecedented images of running horses\, instantly transforming the camera into a machine of unmatched powers of perception and persuasion and setting the course for the development of cinema. \nBefore his motion photography breakthrough\, Muybridge produced one of the most celebrated early landscape catalogues of the American West. He made the first photographs of winemaking in Northern California\, produced the first photographs of native Tlingit people and of Southeast Alaska\, was the fourth to photograph Yosemite\, the first to be hired by the US government to photograph an Indian War (The Modoc War in Northern California)\, and his photographs of Central America are widely considered the most important early images of the region. \nMischievous\, resilient\, deceitful\, proud — Muybridge was a complicated man\, and his personal story is as melodramatic as his professional one is distinguished\, imbued with ambition and success\, loss and betrayal\, even the cold-blooded killing of a romantic rival. \n“The machine cannot lie\,” Leland Stanford declared of Muybridge’s horse-in-motion images. But what about the photographer? \nExposing Muybridge reveals long-buried secrets hiding in Muybridge’s photographs that force us to ask\, can we truly believe what we see in a photograph? \nFar from a relic of the past\, then\, Muybridge marks a beginning of “now\,” his work catalyzing much of our modern culture\, inspiring cutting-edge artists\, scientists\, and innovators\, people who continue to reshape how we interpret and experience our world. \nSaturday\, March 23\, 2024 |  3 pm \n3824 + 3834 Main Street\nRiverside\, CA 92501 \nFree admission! Reserve your free ticket here. \n*A film admission ticket gives you access to the film screening and complimentary admission to all UCR ARTS exhibitions during your visit. Please note: most galleries close at 5 PM. For a list of current exhibitions\, please click here. \nThis event is presented in partnership with California Humanities\, with support from the National Endowment for the Arts. \nThis film is supported by a California Documentary Project grant.
URL:https://calhum.org/event/ucr-arts-at-riverside-partner-screening-of-exposing-muybridge/
LOCATION:UCR Arts\, 3824 Main St\, Riverside\, CA\, 92501
CATEGORIES:California Documentary Project
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://calhum.org/wp-content/uploads/2022/07/exposing_muybridge_key_still-e1650052267107-2.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20240316T150000
DTEND;TZID=America/Los_Angeles:20240316T173000
DTSTAMP:20260620T203532
CREATED:20240304T221831Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240304T223139Z
UID:10000247-1710601200-1710610200@calhum.org
SUMMARY:UCR ARTS at Riverside—Partner Screening of DOROTHEA LANGE: GRAB A HUNK OF LIGHTNING
DESCRIPTION:Caption: Photographer Dorothea Lange pictured in Texas\, circa 1934. \nUCR ARTS—On March 16\, join UCR ARTS in Riverside for an afternoon screening of DOROTHEA LANGE: GRAB A HUNK OF LIGHTNING (2014). This free event includes a post-film Q&A with filmmaker Dyanna Taylor. \nSynopsis: Explore\, through her granddaughter’s eyes\, the life story of Dorothea Lange\, the photographer who captured the iconic image ‘Migrant Mother’. Never-seen-before photos\, film footage\, interviews\, family memories\, and journals reveal the artist who challenged America to know itself. \nLange’s enduring images document five turbulent decades of American history\, including the Great Depression\, the Dust Bowl\, World War II Japanese American Internment camps\, and early environmentalism. Yet few know the story\, struggles\, and profound body of work of the woman behind the camera.  Award winning cinematographer Dyanna Taylor\, Lange’s granddaughter\, directs and narrates this intimate documentary as it explores Lange’s life\, probes the nature of her muses – two great men and the camera itself – and her uncompromising vision. Taylor\, who learned to see the visual world at her grandmother’s feet\, weaves Lange’s preparations for her career retrospective at New York’s MoMA into a universal story of a woman’s struggle to live a creative life. \nSaturday\, March 16\, 2024 |  3 pm \n3824 + 3834 Main Street\nRiverside\, CA 92501 \nFree admission! Reserve your free ticket here. \n*A film admission ticket gives you access to the film screening and complimentary admission to all UCR ARTS exhibitions during your visit. Please note: most galleries close at 5 PM. For a list of current exhibitions\, please click here. \nThis event is presented in partnership with California Humanities\, with support from the National Endowment for the Arts. \nThis film is supported by a California Documentary Project grant.
URL:https://calhum.org/event/ucr-arts-at-riverside-partner-screening-of-dorothea-lange-grab-a-hunk-of-lightning/
LOCATION:UCR Arts\, 3824 Main St\, Riverside\, CA\, 92501
CATEGORIES:California Documentary Project
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://calhum.org/wp-content/uploads/2022/07/dorothea_lange_blog_picture_enews-1.jpg
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