The nine events of LEAD 2020 are expected to welcome more than 3,500 attendees (in-person) to the CSUSB campus, with thousands more online via Town Hall viewing sites around the world.
“Failure of the Mechanical” by CSUSB graduate student Frank Perez, which opens Thursday, March 12, explores ideas of personal experiences and how reliance is placed on the mechanical for those experiences to be recorded, perceived and shared.
MFA student Haylie Roché’s exhibit, “Honeymoon,” which explores the nature of consumption and how it is romanticized in modern society, will be on display from Feb. 27 through March 4.
Cheech Marin, the honorary chair/padrino de honor, is the morning featured speaker, and Rosalío Muñoz, chiefly remembered as the co-chair of the Chicano Moratorium Committee, will speak in the afternoon. The summit will take place on March 26.
David B. Jang's exhibit “Endomorphism,” featuring a combination of highly engaging installation and two-dimensional artworks, is on display through May 9.
The theme for the 11th annual summit is “Movimiento y Compromiso: 50 Years of Challenges, Possibilities, and the Quest for Educational Equity.” The summit is set for March 26, and online registration is now open.
RAFFMA’s “Made in California” exhibit, featuring portrait photographs of renowned California artists alongside their iconic works, will run until Saturday, Dec. 7.
Three CSUSB MFA students will be featured in an exhibit titled “I am…” in RAFFMA’s Dutton Family Gallery beginning Nov. 13 and running through Nov. 26.
What does it mean to be a California artist? Find out at RAFFMA’s Artists in Conversation panel on Nov. 14, which will feature artists from the museum’s current exhibit, Made in California.