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DESCRIPTION:Please join us for a walking tour of artwork curated and created by current 
 and previous participants of Intersection’s Leadership Training Program. 
 We will meet at Intersection for the Arts at 12pm and walk to participating 
 locations. The Regeneration Art Walk will include paintings, photographs, 
 installations, sculpture, video and dance. This multi-location exhibition 
 set in the windows of local businesses explores regeneration as an integral 
 aspect of growth in our personal lives and the lives of our communities. 
 The storefronts and city streets remind us that sharing our art in public 
 spaces helps to enliven communities.\n \nArtists explore the theme of 
 regeneration through the lens of personal fashion, image, and identity. It 
 is woven into sexual histories; experienced within the renewal of spirit 
 and one's kinesthetic relationship with nature; taken to cosmic realms 
 where Mother Nature and technology collide; and used to question what 
 happens to the human body and one's perception of it when it is revamped 
 and reconstituted into virtual form.\n           \nThe guided art walk on 
 Aug 28th will allow the community an opportunity to hear about each 
 artist’s creative process and response to the theme of regeneration. Much 
 of the work will stay in the storefronts in the weeks preceding and 
 following the art walk, allowing a larger number of people to see the show. 
 As emerging leaders in the arts, current and previous interns are uniquely 
 situated to explore how art can be used to facilitate regeneration in their 
 personal lives, the lives of their communities, and within their continuing 
 work as arts advocates.\n \nParticipating artists and locations 
 include:\nDaria Kaufman, Intersection for the Arts (446 
 Valencia)\nSaluzdina Banderas, Muddy Waters (521 Valencia)\nMegan R. Orr, 
 Ellsworth William Scott Architect (871 Valencia)\nAna Bedolla, Paxton Gate 
 (824 Valencia)\nBianca Ana Chavez, Modern Times Books (888 
 Valencia)\nRhonda Pagnozzi, Dog Eared Books (900 Valencia)\nAngela Dix, 
 Five and Diamond (510 Valencia)\n \nNow in our 45th year, Intersection for 
 the Arts has activated space and time for people to come together to 
 imagine new cultural experiments that aim to transform our world. Today, 
 Intersection pursues innovative models and strategies in order to assert 
 the role that cultural space plays in building and re-building community. 
 In fact, Intersection's work has always kept ever-evolving notions of 
 "community" at its core. With the shifting dynamics of technology, time, 
 audiences, and social space, Intersection for the Arts seeks ways of 
 forging deeper and more relevant connections. We believe that art can 
 animate and engage community and neighborhood spaces like nothing else.\n 
 \nThe Intersection Leadership Training Program is a year-round, highly 
 regarded internship program with competitive enrollment. The program aims 
 to address the needs of emerging artists and arts leaders by providing 
 opportunities in career building, professional development and hands-on 
 experience. It offers comprehensive six-month internships including 
 hands-on participation in producing, administering and promoting 
 multidisciplinary arts activities. This program is designed to offer those 
 passionate about the arts the opportunity to become a key member of the 
 Intersection team.\n \nEvent:                      Regeneration: 
 Intersection for the Arts Intern Artwalk 2010\nDate:                        
 August 28, 2010           \nTime:                       12pm\nCost:         
                FREE\nLocation:                 Intersection for the Arts, 
 446 Valencia St. (and participating stores in the Mission District)\n \nAll 
 ages welcome, wheelchair accessible entrance at 446 Valencia St.\n \nARTIST 
 BIOS\nAna Bedolla is originally from Michoacan, Mexico and currently 
 working towards her BFA in Sculpture at the Academy of Art University. Her 
 body of work consists of installation art using ceramic, live plants, wax 
 and mixed media. Ana's work is highly influenced by nature’s 
 understanding of complexity and its undeniable ability to regenerate. She 
 has shown her work at the Academy of Art University Gallery, Intersection 
 for the Arts, Good Vibrations Gallery and California Conference for the 
 Advancement of Art (CCACA).\n \nAngela Dix was born and raised in 
 Independence, Missouri. Throughout her childhood she acquired an affinity 
 towards the arts, which then motivated her move to Kansas City, a city that 
 plays host to a modest, but thriving art scene. There she attended a junior 
 college and studied fashion. To further her knowledge and fuel her passion 
 of fashion design, Angela moved to San Francisco to attend the Fashion 
 Institute of Design and Merchandising (FIDM). After graduating and 
 traveling, in 2008 she co-founded fACTION, a collective of 6 women who 
 develop fashion events that fuse design, performance, action, and social 
 change. These women have partnered with organizations like Darfur Peace and 
 Development, Pride at Work, Mujeres Unidas y Activas, and other non-profits 
 focused on supporting women’s rights. In 2009 she co-founded Suki Tawdry, 
 a performance art collective that uses its many crafts such as video, 
 dance, sound, and fashion design to create layered performance pieces. 
 Currently she is working on her new line MYSDIX with business partner 
 Gideon Newell.\n \nBianca Ana Chavez sees painting, gardening, and dance as 
 a way to empty the body to make space to be moved by an image or connection 
 with the earth. She has shown her paintings at The Mission Cultural Center 
 for Latino Arts, Ong King Art Center, and with The N.I.C.E. Project. She 
 has tended the earth on Mount Le'ahi, The Beatrice Krauss Hawaiian 
 Ethnobotanical Garden at Lyon Arboretum, an indigo farm in Japan, Green 
 Gulch Farm, Inkland, and El Jardin Secreto/The Secret Garden. Her 
 fascination with dance has lead her to train with Lori Ohtani, Yoshito 
 Ohno, Dairakudakan, Shinichi and Dana Iova-koga, and Sherwood Chen. Despite 
 being a 'non-dancer,' she has performed with Lori Ohtani's Tangentz 
 Performance Group and Terre Unite Parker's Experiments in the Environment 
 Lab. As an intern at Intersection for the Arts she is developing skills in 
 arts administration so that she can work with and for artists to ensure all 
 communities have access to the creative process.\n \nMegan Orr was born and 
 raised in Richmond, California. Since her family was extremely financially 
 strapped, her and her siblings entertained each other with their 
 imaginations. Drawing made her feel good about her uniqueness. Her 
 interpretation of something was allowed to be different; she was not 
 scolded for it. In 2006, while discovering digital storytelling and the 
 language of cinema, she was studying sociology and the ins and outs of 
 globalization. Distraught by the immense amount of horrific wars and 
 pollution that the United States has befallen onto the rest of the world, 
 she found herself truly wanting to capture the insanity of capitalist 
 ideology and consumerism. In 2009, Megan graduated with honors from the 
 University of California, Santa Cruz with a B.A. in Film and Digital Media 
 and a minor in Sociology. By combining these two disciplines, the 
 concentration of her film studies has been on production with a special 
 interest in documentary filmmaking. For three years now she has been an 
 Associate Video Editor for The Muse, an independently produced documentary 
 periodical that focuses on the creative process and social sustainability. 
 The creative moment is life sustaining (become part of the dialogue and 
 visit their blog: ideaculture.wordpress.com). The city of San Francisco is 
 relatively a new home for her; its spontaneity and beauty continues to 
 inspire her.\n \nSaluzdina Banderas is a photographer who works and attends 
 high school in San Francisco. As a young artist she tries to explore 
 different aspects of the art world - from taking dance classes to doing 
 intern programs through California Lawyers for the Arts. Selling her first 
 photo at the age of 17, she hopes to create a career in art. Born and 
 raised in the Mission District of San Francisco, Saluzdina attends City 
 Arts and Tech High School where her journey as an artist started to 
 flourish. From painting to filming in school, Saluzdina developed an 
 addiction to the visual art world. From the age of 13 she has been involved 
 in art programs such as Loco Bloco Drumming and Dance program where she 
 developed dance, drumming, acting, and writing skills, but as she grew she 
 wanted to explore other aspects besides performing, so Saluzdina took a 
 backstage approach - from taking sewing classes with Turning Heads Sewing 
 and Fashion to doing backstage management with Loco Bloco Performing 
 Ensemble. It wasn't till Saluzdina was in her 2nd year of high school that 
 she found that her passion was through a camera lens. Hoping to attend a 
 four-year college, Saluzdina is an active teen artist on the rise to 
 fame.\n \nDaria Kaufman is a dancer, choreographer, and dance writer. Since 
 obtaining her M.F.A. in Dance Performance and Choreography from Mills 
 College in 2008, Daria has continued to perform and collaborate with 
 artists in the fields of dance, performance art, video, sound design, and 
 fashion. She has performed at YBCA, the de Young Museum, Counterpulse (in 
 SFIAF), Cellspace, Climate Theater (in the POW! POW! Action Art Festival), 
 and the Subterranean Arthouse. Her endeavors in the performance world have 
 led her to work with many local artists, including Jose Navarrete, Debby 
 Kajiyama, Amy Lewis, Kamau Patton, and fACTION. In January 2009, Daria 
 co-founded the interdisciplinary performance collective Suki Tawdry, which 
 has since performed in the Bay Area, Vancouver, and Berlin. In addition, 
 her Master's thesis dance, architext, was televised on KQED Spark: SF Arts 
 Alive! in August 2008. Daria was recently accepted into ODC's Pilot Program 
 and will be presenting her choreography at the new ODC Theater in December 
 2010.\n \nRhonda Pagnozzi has worked in the field of Child and Family 
 Psychology and dabbled in art for 14 years. She has finally begun to fully 
 immerse herself in the art world. Psychology, however, remains a focal 
 point in her work. She enjoys breaking things down, analyzing them, and 
 piecing them back together, in the hopes of revealing something new.\n\n 
 https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2010/07/29/18654943.php
SUMMARY:Regeneration: Intersection for the Arts Intern Artwalk 2010
LOCATION:The Artwalk will begin at Intersection for the Arts (446 Valencia Street) 
 and continue to participating stores in the Mission District.
URL:https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2010/07/29/18654943.php
DTSTART:20100828T190000Z
DTEND:20100829T010000Z
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