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PRODID:-//Davis Cemetery District &amp; Arboretum - ECPv4.6.21//NONSGML v1.0//EN
CALSCALE:GREGORIAN
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X-WR-CALNAME:Davis Cemetery District &amp; Arboretum
X-ORIGINAL-URL:https://daviscemetery.org
X-WR-CALDESC:Events for Davis Cemetery District &amp; Arboretum
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20220301
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20220401
DTSTAMP:20260510T220623
CREATED:20220311T181516Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220311T181516Z
UID:4124-1646092800-1648771199@daviscemetery.org
SUMMARY:Jennifer Nachmanoff Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:“Hearts to Hold” Statement:\nIn the summer of 2020\, Davis ceramic artist Jennifer Nachmanoff began forming tiny clay hearts in response to the lives lost to the Covid-19 pandemic. At that point\, the count was around 10\,000 lives lost in California alone.  Something was needed to hold the hearts\, so Nachmanoff formed a vessel in the shape of a spikey covid molecule. Thus began a project\, the Hearts to Hold project\, that is ongoing and currently comprises over 8 vessels\, holding over 80\,000 tiny hearts\, and representing the 80\,000 plus lives lost to the pandemic in California to date. Describing the process of making the hearts\, Nachmanoff says\, “What started as a sacred meditation has sadly become a daily routine. If I could\, I’d make hearts for all the lives lost and all the lives affected.”\n\nAccording to Nachmanoff\, this tactile representation of the collective experience of loss is intended to generate an emotional response that numbers alone fail to generate. Prior to its residency at the Davis Cemetery Gallery was on display at the Pence Gallery in conjunction with that gallery’s “2020” exhibit.  Visitors are offered several prompts and invited to reflect on loss and resilience and to attach their written reflections to the artwork\, becoming a part of the project. The written responses will be collected and shared at a community event at the cemetery later this spring. Plans are also afoot for the Hearts to Hold project to tour various venues\, including senior residences\, hospitals\, and schools\, offering the people living and working in those locations a chance to reflect and participate. Says Nachmanoff\, “I hope people find the project cathartic; that it helps our community to remember and heal\, and then move forward.”\n\n   \n
URL:https://daviscemetery.org/event/jennifer-nachmanoff-exhibition/
CATEGORIES:Gallery 1855
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20220303
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20220401
DTSTAMP:20260510T220623
CREATED:20220118T172255Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220118T172255Z
UID:4080-1646265600-1648771199@daviscemetery.org
SUMMARY:Terry Holter Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:Artist Statement \nDelta Views \nThe Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta region is an approximately 1100 square mile area. It forms a triangle extending from Sacramento to the north\, dropping on its east side through Stockton down to Tracy in the south\, and converging between Tracy and Sacramento on the Westside with the San Francisco bay at Pittsburg. The Delta is supplied by the Sacramento River at the north end and the San Joaquin River to the southeast. \nSince the mid 19th century\, this natural inverted river delta has been transformed through a series of man-made levees into islands of fertile agricultural land. Besides agriculture\, its uses include transportation\, recreation\, hunting and fishing\, natural habitat (important especially for migratory waterfowl)\, and urban development. Historic towns within the Delta include Locke\, Walnut Grove\, and Isleton. Half of the water needs of California’s human population depend on the Sierra waters flowing through the Delta. \nThis exhibit of images represents selections from an ongoing three-year documentation of the Delta by the photographer Terry Holter. Terry was a professional photographer in San Francisco for 20 years. He lives in Sacramento and is currently devoting his photographic efforts to personal projects. \n \n  \n
URL:https://daviscemetery.org/event/terry-holter-exhibition/
CATEGORIES:Gallery 1855
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20220331
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20220430
DTSTAMP:20260510T220623
CREATED:20220331T183359Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220331T183758Z
UID:4168-1648684800-1651276799@daviscemetery.org
SUMMARY:Terry Holter Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:  Delta Views Part II \nThese images represent a continuation of different approaches to looking at our California Delta region.  \nThe first group is from a series titled “One Hundred Famous Views of the California Delta”. The format refers to a tradition used in Japanese Woodblock series in the 1800s. These prints would often show famous scenic views along important highway routes or within cities like Edo (ancient Tokyo). The series were released by publishers as individual prints and often ran to over a hundred images\, depending on how popular the series became with the public. The artists\, such as Hokusai and Hiroshige\, also became famous due to their prints. \nThe photographs in this exhibit are a selection from a series of something over one hundred views of the Delta. They are about the same size and format (oban) as the woodblock prints\, and also have a stylized border referring back to the traditional prints. The images in this series represent the variation in landscapes and human influences currently playing out within the delta boundary. \nThe second series is made up of small format photographs printed in monochrome. These reference an early style of Japanese woodblock print known as azuri-e\, meaning “blue print”. These early prints were simpler to produce than the later multicolored prints\, since they could be printed from a single block. They were printed in a reddish or blue ink. The cyan color in these photographs attempts to relate to the mood of the scene when the image was taken.  \n
URL:https://daviscemetery.org/event/terry-holter-exhibition-2/
CATEGORIES:Gallery 1855
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