“When We Were Colored,” a new play by Ginger Rutland, premiers this month at the Sacramento Theater Company. The play centers on her family’s experience dealing with racism, yet still finding joy and success.
A locket made featuring a mini golden spike made from the leftover casting materials of the original Golden Spike will be on display at the California State Railroad Museum
“The Roaming Eye: International Street Photography from the Ramer Collection” gives viewers a chance to adopt the guise of a flaneur wandering the streets of New York, Mexico City, Beijing, and Los Angeles.
Two auctions are coming to Witherell’s auction house, featuring works by well-known Sacramento artists like Ruth Rippon, Gregory Kondos and Jack Ogden. Both auctions will have a free preview show March 19.
Thematically, these art pieces evidence a fascination with systems and the interplay between mind and body, intellect and imagination, the tangible and the metaphorical.
The B Street Theatre production of “Doll’s House, Part 2,” directed imaginatively by Dave Pierini, is an intellectually and emotionally challenging production, staged creatively and acted thoughtfully.
D.C.-based musical comedy troupe The Capitol Steps is coming to Sacramento for one night only to perform its latest political satire at the Crest Theatre in downtown Sacramento on March 16.
The Sacramento Theatre Company debuted its version of “A Midsummer Night’s Dream” last week; shows run until March 17. The lively production shows The Bard’s comedic work can still make audiences roll with laughter.
Building a state-of-the-art theater was the route by which Folsom Lake College’s Harris Center for the Arts became a cultural mecca, hosting more than 400 events a year, including touring Broadway shows.
Sacramento artist Jake Castro shares how he uses his laser cutter to make beautiful wallets, jewelry and other accessories from wood and leather at his studio in Sacramento on Thursday, Feb. 14, 2019.
In his line of work, Castro relies on technique that goes into creating even the smallest physical things. As a muralist, designer and expert in laser-cut fabrication, he should know.
The show offers the individual works of both artists as well as “Return to Kit ‘N’ Kaboodle,” a version of the Crocker installation that was up the last four months of 2018.
Themes of struggle and hope run throughout the exhibition culminating in one of the last images in the show, “Brotherhood for Peace,” which depicts a group of men of different races embracing, an expression of Lawrence’s hopes for reconciliation and healing.
Sacramento artist Jake Castro shares how he uses his laser cutter to make beautiful wallets, jewelry and other accessories from wood and leather at his studio in Sacramento on Thursday, Feb. 14, 2019.