My Calendar

Events in February 2020

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January 26, 2020
January 27, 2020
January 28, 2020
January 29, 2020
January 30, 2020
January 31, 2020
February 1, 2020
February 2, 2020(1 event)

1:30 pm: CONVERSATIONS AT THE CULVER: HOBBITS AND BIG-BRAINED BABIES


February 2, 2020

Inlandia Institute proudly presents Sang-Hee Lee in conversation about evolution of humans and self-evolution with her best selling book, Close Encounters with Humankind, Sunday, February 2, 1:30 pm at the Culver Center.

When and where did our earliest ancestors first appear? When did we first walk upright? How did we become meat eaters? Are we still evolving? Lee explores our biggest evolutionary questions, and takes us along unexpected paths in our pursuit for answers.

In Lee’s hands, fossil teeth become data that allow us to discover when we began to live long enough to be grandparents.

She questions agriculture’s role in human history by showing an increase in disease and malnutrition after the introduction of farming.

Lee even suggests that social bonding—the key to humanity’s rise—was triggered not by our prized intelligence, but instead by the simple fact that large brains, coupled with narrow birth canals, forced us to seek help from others to successfully give birth.

Her curious nature and surprising conclusions make Close Encounters with Humankind a must-see illuminating delight!

Sang-Hee Lee is an anthropologist, specializing in human evolution. She is Professor in Anthropology and the Associate Dean in the College of Humanities, Arts, and Social Sciences, University of California at Riverside. Lee has been writing for the academia and the general public in various topics of human evolution through newspaper and magazine columns. She wrote a best-selling and award-winning book in Korea with Shin-Young Yoon and translated it into English, Close Encounters with Humankind: A Paleoanthropologist Investigates Our Evolving Species. The book is now in Spanish, Japanese, Traditional Chinese, Simplified Chinese, and Greek. Portuguese and Russian translations in progress.

“When we look more closely at the human journey, we see not a straight line, but a curvy, winding river.” —Sang-Hee Lee

This event is free and open to the public, followed by light refreshments and book sales. In partnership with UCR Arts and the UCR Center for Ideas and Society.

February 3, 2020
February 4, 2020
February 5, 2020
February 6, 2020(2 events)

1:00 pm: HENRY L.A. JEKEL OPENING EXHIBIT AT RAM


February 6, 2020

Fan of Henry L.A. Jekel? Come and celebrate the new exhibition at the Riverside Art Museum on February 1st at 6 pm! Based on the book by H. Vincent Moses and Catherine Whitmore, this exhibition (co-curated by them) means to preserve the legacy of the renowned architect.
The Riverside Art Museum is located at 3425 Mission Inn Avenue, Riverside, CA 92501.

7:00 pm: WORD CIRCUS: CELEBRATING BLACK HISTORY MONTH WITH SPOKEN WORD


February 6, 2020

New year, new format! Please join Inlandia on the first Thursday of the month on the first floor of the Riverside Public Library downtown for our newly-rebranded monthly Arts Walk series "Word Circus”!

Join poets Romaine Washington and Eric DeVaughnn for a night of spoken word, self-guided writing activities, shorter reading sessions, and open mic! February 6, 7 pm at 3581 Mission Inn Avenue.

Spoken word poetry is as much contemporary as it is ancient. It is as much performance as it is poetic. Its delivery can be rhythmic, rhyming, and dramatic. It can include physical gestures and facial expressions.

Topics can be satirical, political, provocative, emotional, anecdotal, musical, and any combination of material where an artist finds his or her passion.

The spoken word poem is one that lives the moment, that doesn’t only communicate on the page, but thrives with live execution and audience.

Audience has the chance to connect on a visceral level, enjoy the sounds of words, and relate to the meaning behind them.

Get in the groove of the new year with Inlandia's first Arts Walk event of 2020! Inlandia invites you to sign up for open-mic! Bring your family-friendly writing downtown and meet us at the library where a smiling audience awaits!

This month’s Riverside Arts Walk marks Inlandia’s first installment of “Word Circus,” a monthly series of brief reading segments and activities inspired by words.

Romaine Washington, M.Ed. is the author of a collection of poems, Sirens in Her Belly, (Jamii Publishing). She is a facilitator for the San Bernardino Inlandia Writing Workshop and a fellow of the Inland Area Writing Project, U. C. Riverside and The Watering Hole, South Carolina. Ms. Washington is an educator who has been published in numerous literary periodicals and has recited and performed her poetry in a variety of venues.

“Radio spills saxophone sounds through open windows / breeze swirls / music summersaults into a surreal finger poppin’ frenzy” —Romaine Washington, “A Tribute to Spike Lee,” Sirens in Her Belly

Performing under the moniker Thought Requires Uncommon Effort, or T.R.U.E, Eric DeVaughnn is a father, poet, author, and educator. He has hosted an open-mic, facilitated a poetry and performance workshop with the local literary laureate, and is a cofounder of innateDIVINITYbooks. He has two self-published collections: Aggressive: The Inherent Violence of my Beastly Unbecoming and The Beauty of Dragons. A new title is forthcoming.

“A good poem will paint the air around your head and season your whole mouth.” —Eric DeVaughnn

This event is free and open to the public. It is supported by the Friends of the Riverside Public Library.

February 7, 2020
February 8, 2020(1 event)

8:00 am: NATIVE VOICES POETRY FESTIVAL


February 8, 2020 February 9, 2020

Don't miss the 2020 Native Voices Poetry Festival on February 8th starting at 8 am!
Free performances, workshops and family fun. Explore the richness of Southern California Native American cultures. Celebrate the human voice in all the arts. Discover and be inspired by a deeper understanding of our region, its beauty, and its uniqueness. Create your own poetry and art.
The Dorothy Ramon Leaning Center is located at 111 N San Gorgonio Ave Banning, CA 92220.
For more info visit www.dorthyramon.org.
February 9, 2020(1 event)

8:00 am: NATIVE VOICES POETRY FESTIVAL


February 8, 2020 February 9, 2020

Don't miss the 2020 Native Voices Poetry Festival on February 8th starting at 8 am!
Free performances, workshops and family fun. Explore the richness of Southern California Native American cultures. Celebrate the human voice in all the arts. Discover and be inspired by a deeper understanding of our region, its beauty, and its uniqueness. Create your own poetry and art.
The Dorothy Ramon Leaning Center is located at 111 N San Gorgonio Ave Banning, CA 92220.
For more info visit www.dorthyramon.org.
February 10, 2020
February 11, 2020
February 12, 2020(1 event)

12:00 pm: UCR WRITERS WEEK


February 12, 2020

Writers Week is the longest-running, free literary event in California and features the most renowned authors of our day alongside those at the start of promising careers.
This year don't miss Inlandia Executive Director Cati Porter and 2019 Regional Hillary Gravendyk Prize winner Elizabeth Cantwell on February 12th at 12pm!
Read the full schedule and list of authors at the UCR Writers Week page.
This event will be held at the UCR campus located at 900 University Ave, Riverside, CA 92521 in the CHASS Interdisciplinary Building South Screening Room, INTS 1128.
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February 25, 2020
February 26, 2020
February 27, 2020
February 28, 2020(1 event)

6:00 pm: THE EQUILUX: OPEN MICS FOURTH FRIDAY AT THE CORONA PUBLIC LIBRARY


February 28, 2020

***IN PERSON EVENTS SUSPENDED UNTIL FURTHER NOTICE DUE TO THREAT OF COVID-19. ***

 

Join the Corona Public Library for a night of open mics happening the fourth Friday of every month! Acoustic, spoken word, acapella, poetry, freestyle, performance art and comedy are accepted.

Performances may be on any subject and in any style or genre but must be appropriate for a broad audience. Feel free to bring art pieces for display. Art supplies will be provided for the duration of the event. Light refreshments will be provided as well.

Child care will be provided for children that are potty-trained. Open to adults 18+. The library is located at 650 S Main St, Corona, CA 92882. They can be contacted at (951) 736-2381. Visit the City of Corona website for more information.

February 29, 2020(2 events)

6:00 pm: FACING FIRE OPENING EXHIBIT AT THE UCR CALIFORNIA MUSEUM OF PHOTOGRAPHY


February 29, 2020

Join Inlandia for the opening exhibit of Facing Fire at the UCR California Museum of Photography on February 29th at 6pm.
Fire as omen and elemental force, as metaphor and searing personal experience -- these are the subjects explored by the artists of Facing Fire. California's diverse ecologies are fire-prone, fire-adapted, even fire-dependent. In the past two decades, however, West Coast wildfires have exploded in scale and severity. There is a powerful consensus that we have entered a new era. The artists of Facing Fire bring us incendiary work from active fire lines and psychic burn zones. They face fire, sift its aftermath, and struggle with the implications.
The UCR Museum of Photography is located at 3824 Main St, Riverside, CA 92501.

7:00 pm: MANY RESTLESS CONCERNS: A CHORAL READING


February 29, 2020

Join 2012-2014 Inlandia Literary Laureate Gayle Brandeis for a special choral reading from her forthcoming book Many Restless Concerns (a testimony): The Victims of Countess Bathory Speak in Chorus on February 29th at 7 pm. The Riverside Women's Club is located at 4092 Tenth St, Riverside, CA 92501.
Coming February 2020, Many Restless Concerns (a testimony): The Victims of Countess Bathory Speak in Chorus gives voice to the hundreds of girls and women killed by Countess Erzsébet Báthory of Hungary between 1585 and 1609.
This event is organized by the Women’s Theater Workshop. The Women's Theater Workshop is a place for women to explore their own voices and stories as actors, directors, writers and technicians.
Visit Black Lawerence Press to order your copy today!

Gayle Brandeis is the author, most recently, of the memoir The Art of Misdiagnosis (Beacon Press), and the poetry collection The Selfless Bliss of the Body (Finishing Line Press). Her poetry, essays, and short fiction have been widely published in places such as The New York Times, The Washington Post, O (The Oprah Magazine), The Rumpus, Salon, Longreads, and more, and have received numerous honors, including a Barbara Mandigo Kelly Peace Poetry Award, Notable Essays in Best American Essays 2016 and 2019, the QPB/Story Magazine Short Story Award and the 2018 Multi Genre Maverick Writer Award. She served as Inlandia Literary Laureate from 2012-2014 and currently teaches at Sierra Nevada College and Antioch University Los Angeles.