Open Studios
Sunnyvale artists Barbara Pease and Pragati Sharma Mohanty are among the many greater than 340 visible artists from San Francisco Bay Space and coastal communities opening their studios and galleries to the general public this month. They’re collaborating within the last weekend of Silicon Valley Open Studios.
Pease earned a bachelor’s of positive arts in metalsmithing and began working water-based media within the early Nineteen Nineties, exhibiting her watercolors across the nation. Now a silk painter, Pease teaches workshops and has exhibited her work on the Silk Painters Worldwide biannual worldwide competition.
An artist, architect and industrial designer, Mohanty is rediscovering and reinterpreting the Hindu epic poem “Ramayana,” which tells the story of Rama, an incarnation of the god Vishnu, and his journey to defeat the demon king Ravana and rescue his spouse Sita. She is compiling her 75-plus work based mostly on tales from the traditional Indian textual content right into a espresso desk guide.
They and different South Bay artists will open their work areas on Saturday and Sunday, Could 17-18, 11 a.m.-5 p.m. every day. To see an interactive map of artist places and consider a gallery of the collaborating artists, go to at https://svos.org.
Symphonic band live performance
The Cupertino Symphonic Band is holding its annual Spring Live performance on Sunday, Could 18, at 3 p.m. on the Sunnyvale Group Heart Ballroom, 550 E. Remington Drive, Sunnyvale. Admission is free, and snacks and low might be offered.
The band is at all times on the lookout for new wind instrument and percussion gamers. For extra data, go to www.cupertinosymphonicband.org.