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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP;VALUE=DATE:20120210T204726Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE-TIME:20100313T170000Z
DTEND;VALUE=DATE-TIME:20100918T230000Z
UID:http://uanews.org/node/32075
URL;VALUE=URI:http://uanews.org/node/32075
LOCATION:Arizona State Museum
SUMMARY:\"Salvador Corona\: Matador to Muralist\" Exhibit
DESCRIPTION:This exhibition highlights the works of beloved Mexican-born muralist and decorative artist Salvador Corona (1895-1984). Beginning in 1919 following a career as a bullfighter\, which ended when his leg was gored\, Corona worked artistically in Mexico\, Tucson and other parts of Southern Arizona. His murals\, easel paintings and painted furniture graced (in some cases still grace) homes and businesses all over the region\, illustrating idyllic pastoral scenes of Mexico's past. This is the second exhibition in Arizona State Museum's \"2010 Year of Mexico\" bicentennial and centennial celebrations. 
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP;VALUE=DATE:20120210T204726Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE-TIME:20100401T160000Z
DTEND;VALUE=DATE-TIME:20100918T230000Z
UID:http://uanews.org/node/30780
URL;VALUE=URI:http://uanews.org/node/30780
LOCATION:Arizona State Museum
SUMMARY:\"Ice Age Arizona\: Preserving the Naco Mammoth\" Exhibit
DESCRIPTION:Arizona State Museum's mammoth bones are the world's most significant objects of their type and tell a story of a 12\,000-year-old hunt - a hunt conducted by some of the earliest people living in Arizona. Clovis points embedded in the skeleton are the earliest evidence we have for human interaction with the colossal species. Excavated over spring break in 1951 by a student team led by renowned archaeologist and then Arizona State Museum director Emil \"Doc\" Haury\, the bones were rescued from an exposed arroyo bank near Naco\, Ariz. Recent conservation study and treatment activities have rediscovered the remarkably innovative methods used by the team. As they did 50 years ago\, the osteological remains stir imaginations and inspire inquiry and that is why\, with this new temporary exhibit\, they have inspired a month-long lecture series and a site tour! 
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP;VALUE=DATE:20120210T204726Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE-TIME:20100514T160000Z
DTEND;VALUE=DATE-TIME:20110101T230000Z
UID:http://uanews.org/node/32065
URL;VALUE=URI:http://uanews.org/node/32065
LOCATION:Arizona History Museum\, 949 E. Second Street
SUMMARY:\"It Saved My Life - Civilian Conservation Corps\: Grand Canyon and Southern Arizona\, 1933-1942\" Exhibit
DESCRIPTION:   Museum hours are Monday through Saturday\, 10 a.m.-4 p.m. Admission is $5 for adults and $4 for those ages 12-18 or 60 and older. Arizona Historical Society members and children ages 11 and younger are free. Admission on the first Saturday of the month is free.  Free parking is available in the garage at the northeast corner of East Second Street  and North Euclid Avenue. Use the East Second Street entrance.  This program is made possible by the Arizona Humanities Council.
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP;VALUE=DATE:20120210T204726Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE-TIME:20100526T150000Z
DTEND;VALUE=DATE-TIME:20100817T230000Z
UID:http://uanews.org/node/31983
URL;VALUE=URI:http://uanews.org/node/31983
LOCATION:Joseph Gross Gallery
SUMMARY:\"On the Other Side of the Needle\" Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:\"On the Other Side of the Needle\" is an invitational group exhibition exploring the work of tattoo artists outside their daily practice. The exhibition highlights the duality of many contemporary tattoo artists\; hybrids of fine art institutions and an elite tattoo guild. Their respective works are aesthetically significant and defy characterization. Each artist approaches his or her thematic investigation through a range of diverse media.This exhibition presents a unique perspective on the concept\, practice and execution of fine art. \"On the Other Side of the Needle\" is an opportunity to consider what constitutes fine art and who is \"artist\" by institutional standards.Gallery hours are Monday through Friday\, 9 a.m.-5 pm. It is free to the public every day.Parking is available on Second Street\, east of Park Avenue\, or in the parking garage north of Speedway on Park Avenue.Please view our website. 
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP;VALUE=DATE:20120210T204726Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20100601
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20100821
UID:http://uanews.org/node/31733
URL;VALUE=URI:http://uanews.org/node/31733
LOCATION: Main Library Special Collections
SUMMARY:\"Josias Joesler\: Tucson Architect\" Exhibit
DESCRIPTION:The University Libraries' special exhibit \"Josias Joesler\: Tucson Architect\" celebrates the eclectic vision and historical contributions of one of Tucson's most celebrated architects and marks the ongoing efforts of the library to provide electronic access to thousands of Joesler's architectural drawings and plans.  The exhibit will feature original architectural drawings\, conceptual plans and photographs of Joesler buildings. An opening lecture titled \"Josias Joesler & John W. Murphey\: An Architectural Legacy for Tucson\,\" by UA architectural scholar R. Brooks Jeffery\, will kick off the exhibit on June 1 from 7-8\:30 p.m. in the Special Collections reading room. The book \"Josias Joesler & John W. Murphey\: An Architectural Legacy for Tucson\" will also be available for purchase\, and light refreshments will be served at the lecture.  Jeffery has described Joesler as \"an architectural linguist\" who blended many contemporary and revival styles. His buildings were marked by wrought ironwork\, decorative glazed and unglazed tiles\, ceiling beams\, wall niches\, stained concrete floors\, hand-carved wooden doors and his signature \"wind flags\" which resembled weather vanes. Some of the notable structures he designed in Tucson are St. Philip's In the Hills Episcopal Church\, St. Michael and All Angels Episcopal Church\, and Broadway Village Shopping Center.The library's exhibit and creation of a digital Joesler collection was made possible by a grant from The Southwestern Foundation for Education and Historical Preservation and was developed by the University Libraries in collaboration with the College of Architecture and Landscape Architecture. The aim of the digital collection is to help preserve and maintain access to Joesler's increasingly fragile works.  See the Special Collections' summer hours schedule to plan your visit.
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP;VALUE=DATE:20120210T204726Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20100605
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20100801
UID:http://uanews.org/node/31834
URL;VALUE=URI:http://uanews.org/node/31834
LOCATION:Center for Creative Photography
SUMMARY:\"West and West\: Joe Deal\" Exhibit
DESCRIPTION:Drawing on the remarkable history of 19th-century Great Plains survey photography\, \"West and West\" was also inspired by the landscapes of Joe Deal's childhood. This series connotes the impact of human-initiated processes by asking the viewer to think historically and consider what has and has not changed in the landscape. The 21 images on view capture the full drama of the Great Plains\, spanning the area between the Mississippi River and the Rocky Mountains\, and from the Canadian provinces to the Mexican border.  Exhibit hours are 9 a.m.-5 p.m. Monday through Friday and 1-4 p.m. Saturday and Sunday. 
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP;VALUE=DATE:20120210T204726Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20100605
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20100801
UID:http://uanews.org/node/31831
URL;VALUE=URI:http://uanews.org/node/31831
LOCATION:Center for Creative Photography
SUMMARY:\"Locating Landscape\: New Strategies\, New Technologies\" Exhibit 
DESCRIPTION:Inspired by the recent revival of the influential \"New Topographics\" exhibition from 1975 - shown at the Center for Creative Photography and continuing its national and international tour - \"Locating Landscape\: New Strategies\, New Technologies\" traces the effect of newly available technologies such as GPS and Google mapping on today's landscape photography. Guest-curated by University of Arizona photography historian Kate Palmer Albers\, this exhibition includes work by Christiana Caro\, Andrew Freeman\, Frank Gohlke\, Margot Anne Kelley\, Mark Klett\, Paho Mann\, Adam Thorman and Byron Wolfe.Exhibit hours are 9 a.m.-5 p.m. Monday through Friday and 1-4 p.m. Saturday and Sunday.     
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP;VALUE=DATE:20120210T204726Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20100619
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20101031
UID:http://uanews.org/node/32458
URL;VALUE=URI:http://uanews.org/node/32458
LOCATION:UA Museum of Art
SUMMARY:UA Museum of Art Exhibition\: \"Metropolis\" 
DESCRIPTION:The classic silent art film \"Metropolis\" will be featured as part of an exhibition of the same name at the University of Arizona Museum of Art.  Fritz Lang's iconic 1927 German film presents the future as a beautiful and frightening dystopia.  The city\, for the upper classes\, is a gorgeous pleasure dome\, where everything runs like clockwork and leisure is the occupation of most of the occupants.  Beneath the ground\, the lower classes toil away in endless drudgery\, working the huge machines that make the city run.  When discontent brings the workers to the edge of revolt\, a battle between good and evil ensues that threatens to destroy the civilization for everyone.   The exhibition \"Metropolis\" explores the themes of the film\, including labor issues\, class warfare\, architectural design\, industrial mechanization and the future.  Drawing from both the UAMA permanent collection and the fine arts collection of the Center for Creative Photography\, the exhibition presents artists grappling with the same topics presented in the film.  The artistic presentations do not always adopt the movie's viewpoints.     The museum will continuously screen the 90-minute version of the film that substantially follows the 1927 version edited by Channing Pollock for American audiences.  The original German version was considered too controversial for American consumption.    Even if you have never seen the film \"Metropolis\" you may recognize some of its widespread cultural influences - including the \"Star Wars'\" droid C-3PO based on the film's robot\, \"Blade Runner's\" Tyrell Building based on the film's New Tower of Babel\, and the film's footage in Queen's video for the song \"Radio Ga Ga.\"
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP;VALUE=DATE:20120210T204726Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20100624
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20100926
UID:http://uanews.org/node/32488
URL;VALUE=URI:http://uanews.org/node/32488
LOCATION:UA Museum of Art
SUMMARY:UA Museum of Art Exhibit -  \"Pictures of the Floating World\: Life in 19th Century Japan\"
DESCRIPTION:Beginning June 24\, the University of Arizona Museum of Art presents an exhibition of 19th century Japanese woodblock prints from the UAMA permanent collection.     In 1853\, when the Kanagawa Treaty opened Japan's ports to international trade\, the Western world caught a glimpse of the beautiful and unique culture of Japan through its exports. Europe and America were for the first time exposed to the Japanese print\, which ironically was often used as wrapping for trade items. (The opening of Japan to the West coincided with a loss of interest in the prints in Japan - hence their use as packing material.)   This uniquely Japanese art form\, while considered naive by Western standards of the time\, was revolutionary to the art world. The lack of perspective and shadow\, the flat areas of strong color and the tendency to place the main subject off-center appealed to young Western artists who incorporated these techniques into their work.  The impact of the Japanese prints can be seen in the list of artists influenced by them\, such as Bonnard\, Cassatt\, Gauguin\, Monet\, Pissarro\, Toulouse-Lautrec\, van Gogh and Whistler.  The prints were of monumental importance to the field of Western graphic design. The current exhibition focuses on woodblock prints from the 19th century and explores the printmaking process\, everyday life in pre-modern Japan and the cultural exchange that took place between Japan and the Western world.  This is the curatorial debut of Waverley Chmura under the mentorship of Lauren Rabb\, UAMA curator of art.  Waverley Chmura is a volunteer at the UAMA who graduated from Arizona State University in December 2009 with a bachelor's degree in art history and a certificate in Asian studies with an emphasis on the Japanese language. 
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP;VALUE=DATE:20120210T204726Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20100719
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20100910
UID:http://uanews.org/node/33002
URL;VALUE=URI:http://uanews.org/node/33002
LOCATION:Main Library
SUMMARY:\"Rediscover Tucson\: A Celebration of the Old Pueblo\" Exhibit
DESCRIPTION:What images come to mind when you think of Tucson? Perhaps a  combination of adobe houses\, prickly vegetation and Southwestern  warmth? More than just America's \"sunshine city\,\" Tucson offers an eclectic  mix of culture\, history\, life and adventure against a backdrop of four  breathtaking mountain ranges. Join the University Libraries in celebrating Tucson's impressive  heritage - and its 235th birthday - as we present the many faces of our  wonderful \"Old Pueblo.\" Explore the many flavors of the West and mingle  with old and new Tucson in this exciting new exhibit. Tucson celebrates its 235th birthday on Aug. 20. \"Rediscover Tucson\: A Celebration of the Old Pueblo\" is one of many  local events dedicated to celebrating Tucson's unique history\, cultural  diversity and natural wonders. Visit \"Happy Birthday Tucson\" for a  complete listing of events. 
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP;VALUE=DATE:20120210T204726Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE-TIME:20100720T130000Z
UID:http://uanews.org/node/32929
URL;VALUE=URI:http://uanews.org/node/32929
LOCATION:Arizona Health Sciences Library\, 1501 N. Campbell Ave.
SUMMARY:Arizona Health Sciences Library Art Exhibit \"Bodyscapes\" 
DESCRIPTION:The Arizona Health Sciences Center Library art exhibit\, \"Bodyscapes\,\" will feature images from vintage anatomy texts.   It is an exhibit of collages by Tucson artist Nikki Westra.   Westra has reassembled illustrations from discarded\, vintage anatomy books into collages that encourage viewers to see them as transformed new images. Using books that range from 70 to 140 years old\, she reinterprets the graphics\, giving them new life.  *The AHS Library exhibit is a sampling of Westra's complete \"Bodyscapes\" show that will open Oct. 10 at the Etherton Temple Gallery.  The schedule for this exhibit is\: Sunday-Thursday\, 7 a.m.-9\:30 p.m Friday-Saturday\, 7 a.m.-7p.m. For further information\, please contact the AHSC Office of Public Affairs\, 520-626-7301. Or contact Mary Riordan\, 520-626-3510\, mriordan@ahsl.arizona.edu\, or José Solórzano\, 520-626-2738\, joses@email.arizona.edu.
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP;VALUE=DATE:20120210T204726Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE-TIME:20100802T150000Z
DTEND;VALUE=DATE-TIME:20100818T230000Z
UID:http://uanews.org/node/32921
URL;VALUE=URI:http://uanews.org/node/32921
LOCATION:Lionel Rombach Gallery
SUMMARY:\"Amigos en el Jardin ... Friends in the Garden\" Exhibit
DESCRIPTION:Photography and video made by preschool children in the Homes and  Dreams Room at Ochoa School. Reception and artist talk Aug.13\, 3\:30-5 p.m.Fotografía y video realizado por los niños en edad preescolar en Salón de Esperanzas y Sueños en la Escuela Ochoa. Artista de conversación y de recepción 13 de agosto 3\:30-5 p.m.Artwork created by\:Robert Comstock  Juliana Guzman  Julian Harrison  Anuhar Hernandez  Roberto Higuera  Bella Leyva Keyla Lord Kiara Monreal Ethel Reyes Clarissa Smith Omar Soto Gavino Toro Daisy Trevizo Adrian Ureta  Matthew Valenzuela Mario Vasquez This exhibition made possible by the School of Art Professional Faculty  Development Endowment and the Division of Art and Visual Culture  Education. With gratitude to Paula McPheeters\, Pauline Baker\, Agripina  Reyes\, Julisa Laguna\, Heidi Aranda\, Ochoa School\, the Tucson Unified School District and the Tucson  Children's Project.Esta exposición posible gracias a la Escuela de Arte Fundación de Desarrollo Profesional\, y la División de Arte y Cultura Visual Educación. Con especial agradecimiento a Paula McPheeters\, Pauline Baker\, Agripina Reyes\, Julisa Laguna\, Heidi Aranda\, Escuela Ochoa\, TUSD\, y el Proyecto Niños de Tucson.
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP;VALUE=DATE:20120210T204726Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE-TIME:20100802T150000Z
DTEND;VALUE=DATE-TIME:20100825T230000Z
UID:http://uanews.org/node/32966
URL;VALUE=URI:http://uanews.org/node/32966
LOCATION:Graduate Gallery\, School of Art
SUMMARY:\"Front Seat View\" Exhibit by Aimee Leon
DESCRIPTION:The psychology of American consumerism is a unique and interesting phenomenon that can be cataloged and analyzed by examining waste. \"Front Seat View\" is an investigation of our environmental surroundings as it reflects how people do not wish to live\, and the choices they make in order to change their status quo.  Aimee Leon photographs discarded couches as signifiers of culture and socio-economic status. The couches become glorified detritus with character\; their display on the front steps of their former owners allows the public an insight to where and from whom they came. Many times the couches resonate with the construction in the location it was discarded. The sofas sit idly by on curbs and sidewalks\, as homeowners and passers-by ignore their presence sometimes for months. This discard affects our residential environment\, our aesthetic value\, and our sense of upkeep disturbing the sense of norm in a regulated urban environment. Gallery hours are by appointment. Contact the artist at leona1@email.arizona.edu The Graduate Gallery is located in the Visual Arts Graduate Research Lab on the northwest corner of Fremont Ave and Mabel Street. It is free to the public.Please view our website.
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP;VALUE=DATE:20120210T204726Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE-TIME:20100817T150000Z
DTEND;VALUE=DATE-TIME:20101008T223000Z
UID:http://uanews.org/node/33441
URL;VALUE=URI:http://uanews.org/node/33441
LOCATION:Campus Christian Center\, 715 N. Park Ave.
SUMMARY:Art Exhibit featuring Neal Galloway
DESCRIPTION:Neal Galloway is an artist and graphic designer working and living in Tucson. He earned his bachelor's degree in art and in music from the University of Tulsa. This year he is beginning the Master of Fine Arts program at the University of Arizona.    Galloway is extremely interested in the way space is confined and defined in an image. Walls\, floors and ceilings help define an interior space\, just as trees\, clouds\, roads and architecture define the edges of an outside space. He explores this dynamic through drawings\, paintings and collages. Painting holds particular tactile and symbolic significance for him. He's interested in the connection forged with painters in centuries past by such a historic medium. The patience that this medium demands is rewarding\, and the layers of paint represent\, and literally hold in them\, the time invested in the works themselves.     Galloway exaggerates subtle color differences between objects and surfaces in his paintings. He is entranced by the way the light from a window or lamp pushes color across a wall\, driving the darker tones back to the corners and out toward the edges and heightening the sense of perspective. This kind of play between and within the colors of his paintings gives them a unique and subdued energy. Galloway has indicated that he finds particular inspiration in the paintings of Euan Uglow\, Rackstraw Downes and Edward Hopper.    In his collages he enjoys playing with perspective by creating believable spaces that recede in three dimensions but that also contain a sort of visual dissonance within the image fueled by the 'just off' placement of a chair or rug.    Subtlety and mystery are essential artistic qualities and Galloway  seeks both in his paintings\, drawings and collages.
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP;VALUE=DATE:20120210T204726Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE-TIME:20100823T180000Z
DTEND;VALUE=DATE-TIME:20100928T000000Z
UID:http://uanews.org/node/33360
URL;VALUE=URI:http://uanews.org/node/33360
LOCATION:Union Gallery
SUMMARY:\"Monumental Ideas in Miniature Books\" Exhibit
DESCRIPTION:    Artworks of monumental physical scale are overwhelming. The diminutive viewer is confronted and consumed by the gigantic. Presented with the miniature\, the viewer\, no longer assigned to the passive role\, could instead devour the work\, taking it into his or her soul. The miniature invites the viewer into a personal and intimate relationship. With attention drawn to the significance of the seemingly insignificant\, the momentousness of the miniscule is magnified thus instilling monumental value. This exhibit is free to the public.  
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP;VALUE=DATE:20120210T204726Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE-TIME:20100823T150000Z
DTEND;VALUE=DATE-TIME:20100901T230000Z
UID:http://uanews.org/node/33316
URL;VALUE=URI:http://uanews.org/node/33316
LOCATION:Lionel Rombach Gallery
SUMMARY:\"All Sorts of Faces\" Exhibit
DESCRIPTION:\"All Sorts of Faces\" is the culmination of work created in the ART 462E and 562E courses during Summer Sessions I and II at the University of Arizona. The projects range from traditional books and broadsides to mixed-media installations and interactive mail art. The gallery is open Monday through Friday. The Joseph Gross and Lionel Rombach Galleries are located on the UA campus between the Museum of Art  and the Center for Creative Photography. Parking is available on Second Street\, east of Park Avenue or in the parking garage north of Speedway on Park Avenue.Please view our website listed below.
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP;VALUE=DATE:20120210T204726Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE-TIME:20100827T150000Z
DTEND;VALUE=DATE-TIME:20101112T000000Z
UID:http://uanews.org/node/33273
URL;VALUE=URI:http://uanews.org/node/33273
LOCATION:Joseph Gross Gallery
SUMMARY:Gregory Euclide\: \"Real\, Natural\, and Unsustainable\" Exhibit
DESCRIPTION:Gregory Euclide's work explores the manner in which we experience nature and how these encounters are tied to the cultural practice of fabricating landscapes as idealized constructs. His recent compositions are a series of sculptural \"captures\" made by pouring paint or liquid adherent over the natural environment. Euclide uses the complexity and interconnectedness of the environment as the content and conceptual framework for his art. In \"Real\, Natural\, and Unsustainable\,\" Euclide will explore the Tucson landscape\, building ethereal\, bucolic topographies to provide an explorable vignette of our local surroundings. His work is a manifestation of the tension between our desires to engage\, preserve and sustain the natural world and the demands our lifestyles place upon the environment.Euclide's work has been shown in exhibitions at the Minnesota Museum of American Art\, White Walls\, San Francisco\, and the Massachusetts Museum of Contemporary Art. He recently completed his installation\, \"Because There's There\, Here is Just Fine\" for the Biennial of the Americas held in Denver\, Colo. The gallery is open Monday through Friday and this exhibit is free to the public everyday. The Joseph Gross and Lionel Rombach Galleries are located on the University of Arizona campus between the Museum of Art and the Center for Creative Photography. Parking is available on Second Street\, east of Park Avenue\, or in the parking garage north of Speedway on Park Avenue. For further  questions please visit our website below.
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP;VALUE=DATE:20120210T204726Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE-TIME:20100807T190000Z
DTEND;VALUE=DATE-TIME:20100807T210000Z
UID:http://uanews.org/node/33065
URL;VALUE=URI:http://uanews.org/node/33065
LOCATION:Arizona History Museum\, 949 E. Second St.
SUMMARY:Tucson's Birthday Events at the Arizona Historical Society
DESCRIPTION:The Arizona Historical Society is celebrating Tucson's birthday in August.   \"Exhibiting History\:  Teens Celebrate Tucson's Past\,\" is being presented by our teen curators. This event is free of charge and includes birthday cake and beverages. 
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP;VALUE=DATE:20120210T204726Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE-TIME:20100813T213000Z
DTEND;VALUE=DATE-TIME:20100813T230000Z
UID:http://uanews.org/node/33025
URL;VALUE=URI:http://uanews.org/node/33025
LOCATION:Lionel Rombach Gallery
SUMMARY:\"Amigos en el Jardin ... Friends in the Garden\" Reception and Artist Talk
DESCRIPTION:Photography and video made by preschool children in  the Homes and  Dreams Room at Ochoa School. Fotografía y video realizado  por los niños en edad preescolar en Salón de Esperanzas y Sueños en la  Escuela Ochoa. Artwork created by\:Robert Comstock  Juliana  Guzman  Julian Harrison  Anuhar Hernandez  Roberto  Higuera  Bella Leyva Keyla  Lord Kiara Monreal Ethel  Reyes Clarissa Smith Omar  Soto Gavino Toro Daisy  Trevizo Adrian Ureta  Matthew  Valenzuela Mario Vasquez This exhibition made possible by  the School of Art Professional Faculty  Development Endowment and the  Division of Art and Visual Culture  Education. With gratitude to Paula  McPheeters\, Pauline Baker\, Agripina  Reyes\, Julisa Laguna\, Heidi Aranda\,  Ochoa School\, the Tucson Unified School District and the Tucson   Children's Project.Esta exposición posible gracias a la  Escuela de Arte Fundación de Desarrollo Profesional\, y la División de  Arte y Cultura Visual Educación. Con especial agradecimiento a Paula  McPheeters\, Pauline Baker\, Agripina Reyes\, Julisa Laguna\, Heidi Aranda\,  Escuela Ochoa\, TUSD\, y el Proyecto Niños de Tucson.
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTAMP;VALUE=DATE:20120210T204726Z
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE-TIME:20100826T210000Z
DTEND;VALUE=DATE-TIME:20100826T230000Z
UID:http://uanews.org/node/33382
URL;VALUE=URI:http://uanews.org/node/33382
LOCATION:Lionel Rombach Gallery
SUMMARY:\"All Sorts of Faces\" Exhibit Reception 
DESCRIPTION:\"All Sorts of Faces\" is the culmination of work created in the ART 462E and 562E courses during Summer Sessions I and II at the University of Arizona. The projects range from traditional books and broadsides to mixed-media installations and interactive mail art. The Joseph Gross and Lionel Rombach Galleries are located on the UA campus between the Museum of Art and the Center for Creative Photography. Parking is available on Second Street\, east of Park Avenue or in the parking garage north of Speedway on Park Avenue.Please view our website listed below.
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