In upcoming gallery show, artist Fidencio Fifield-Perez explores ‘the pursuit of getting there’
Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 05:31:58 GMT
Tattoos of plants are visible under Fidencio Fifield-Perez’s shirt sleeve and shorts.Potted monsteras and other leafy houseplants sit on tables and shelves in the painter and paper artist’s studio, tucked deep inside a University of Minnesota building in the Como neighborhood. Some of his intricate two-tone paper weavings hanging on the walls depict plants, too.Artist Fidencio Fifield-Perez poses for a portrait in 2018. Fifield-Perez, who was born in Mexico, is currently the Dr. Harold R. Adams Artist-in-Residence Fellow in the University of Minnesota’s art department. (Photo courtesy Fidencio Fifield-Perez)Right now, he’s finishing up an incredibly photorealistic painting of a bunch of plants lovingly stuffed into the back of a U-Haul, ready to move cross-country. It’s on a massive square canvas, probably almost as tall as he is.His work is about immigration, movement, the labor of both doing and waiting. And visually, plants are the main characters. They’re “the placeholder for a ...Walker West Music Academy closing in on $12 million relocation, expansion in St. Paul
Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 05:31:58 GMT
The first time Grant West heard Carl Walker improvise on a church piano, he almost thought he’d met a long-lost twin.“I felt like I’d known him for a very long time,” said West, 76, who would go on to co-found a Selby Avenue music school bearing both their names. “Every now and then, I would hear somebody play, and I’d say, ‘That must be one of Carl Walker’s students,’ and it was. You could tell who was studying with him. He left his fingerprints.”Walker, who had once won a college scholarship by playing “Clair de Lune” at an Illinois gospel convention, was equally impressed. “We started out as good musical friends, and have been that ever since day one,” said the 85-year-old reverend, who keeps busy in retirement raising four of his great-grandchildren.On a winter’s day in early 1988, with the two church musicians eager to move beyond hosting lessons in their living rooms, the Walker West Musi...Janae Edmondson set to have another surgery Monday
Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 05:31:58 GMT
ST. LOUIS - The Tennessee teen who almost died after being struck by a car in downtown St. Louis is scheduled to have another surgery this week.Back in February, doctors amputated both of Jane Edmondson's legs after a driver hit her. Edmondson was in town for a volleyball tournament. Janae Edmondson set to have another surgery Monday Her mom says she's having another surgery Monday, and it's another step toward getting her prosthetics.Monday is also Janae's 18th birthday. There's a GoFundMe page set up for the teen that's raised over $815,000.Man found dead in north St. Louis City, police investigating
Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 05:31:58 GMT
ST. LOUIS - City police are investigating after a man was found dead in north St. Louis.Investigators were called out to the North Pointe neighborhood just before 1:00 a.m, where a man's body was found on Northcrest Lane Off Veronica Avenue. Vandals damage LGBTQ door display at south St. Louis County church Further information is currently unknown, but homicide detectives are handling the case. FOX 2 will update this story with more information as it becomes available.NBA Finals roundtable: Did Michael Jordan ever have better playoff run than what Nikola Jokic’s doing in 2023?
Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 05:31:58 GMT
Mark Kiszla: I’m not very good with numbers. Heck, I couldn’t remember the four-digit entry code to Team Post’s abode in South Florida without a cheat sheet. But I saw this stat from a hoops number-cruncher with a sense of history: Nuggets center Nikola Jokic is the first player in NBA history to produce 500 points, 250 rebounds and 150 assists in a single postseason. Sounds pretty, pretty good to me. Was Michael Jordan ever more dominant in the playoffs than the Joker we’re watching now? Has LeBron James or any other legend of the game ever done more for his team in the pursuit of a ring? Put it in historical perspective and explain it to me like I’m a 7-year-old child.Mike Singer: Nikola Jokic is an unsolvable riddle capable of flummoxing even the NBA’s best coaches. Double-team him, and he’ll slice the defense with darts. Single-cover him and he’ll bully the defender like a bear. From 3-point range, he’s devastating. His touch...Drew Sanders could grow into Vance Joseph’s next versatile weapon: “I think Denver got a steal”
Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 05:31:58 GMT
Drew Sanders’ road to the NFL isn’t quite a Johnny Cash song, but suffice it to say he’s been almost everywhere, man.He attended middle school in Oregon, then three Texas high schools in four years as his dad, a coach, got hired at Lake Dallas one year, Colleyville Heritage the next and then Denton Ryan. Then Sanders went to college, where he spent two years at Alabama and one at Arkansas.Seven years, six schools, four states, just as many alignments on the football field.Quarterback? He did that in high school. Tight end, too. Outside linebacker, inside linebacker, pass-rusher, cover man, Hackensack, Fond du Lac. He’s played pretty much everywhere, man.So while getting up to speed in the NFL as a third-round draft pick of the Broncos is undoubtedly a big move, learning and getting comfortable on the fly is nothing new for the 6-foot-5, 233-pounder.“It’s all kind of going by pretty fast,” Sanders allowed last month at Denver’s rookie minicamp. “A lot of stuff happening and a lot of ...Keeler: Blind Nuggets fans see what Kendrick Perkins, Stephen A. Smith can’t. Nikola Jokic, Jamal Murray destined to be NBA champions. “Watch. Just watch.”
Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 05:31:58 GMT
MIAMI — Blind men shake their heads and wonder what the heck Kendrick Perkins and Stephen A. Smith are looking at. Chris Tucker? Forest Whitaker? Shakira? Because it sure ain’t the Nuggets.“I just heard that Perkins is still doubling down on, ‘Miami’s gonna win this series,’” Lakewood’s Paul Sandoval told me with a laugh before Game 4 of the NBA Finals between the Nuggets and Heat.“It’s just like, ‘Why? What are you doing?’ I don’t think these national guys watch these games.”Exhibit B: Stephen A. hopped onto ESPN Thursday morning, fresh off Game 3 of the Finals, and decreed that two-time NBA MVP Nikola Jokic “isn’t known for having some kind of dominant post game now. That’s not his game.”After which his three co-hosts looked at him, justifiably, as if he’d just broken wind at the Vatican.“We’re kinda used to that,” Sandoval said. “We still get some of that small town treatment, but we’re not a small town. We get some of that from the coasts. A championship in the NBA will go a lon...Colorado natives Tyler Rogers, Taylor Rogers relishing time together in Giants bullpen as fourth twins to be MLB teammates
Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 05:31:58 GMT
The Rogers twins keep waiting for somebody to pinch them.Chatfield alums Tyler and Taylor are in their first season together on the San Francisco Giants and checked off another pie-in-the-sky feat this week with a three-game series at Coors Field, where they admitted their intertwined baseball lives feel more like dream than reality.“We keep having these ‘This is frickin cool’ milestones,” Taylor said. “In spring training, in the corner we had three lockers that were in its own little section. That set the feeling in. Then we opened up a Yankee Stadium — and the conversation was like, ‘Dude can you imagine 15-year-old us believing this?’ Then Tuesday, we drove to the ballpark together and played catch on Coors Field.“Just when we’re done (soaking in one moment) as brothers, another one comes and might top it.”The southpaw is Taylor, who’s in his first season with San Francisco. He signed a three-year, $33 million deal...Walters: California water rights at risk as three bills advance
Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 05:31:58 GMT
When California imposed its first-ever regulation on the extraction of water from underground aquifers in 2014, it gave environmental groups a landmark victory in their decades-long effort to overhaul water use laws.It was also a political setback for farmers, who are California’s major water users and have depended on wells to irrigate their crops as increasingly frequent droughts reduce surface water in rivers and reservoirs.However, while groundwater regulation ended one front in California’s never-ending political and legal battles over allocation of water, it merely set the stage for an even bigger conflict over surface water rights, particularly those pre-dating 1914, when the state first began controlling diversions.Just months after the groundwater regulation’s enactment, with drought still gripping the state, the water rights battle was joined when the state Water Resources Control Board attempted to curtail diversions by some pre-1914 rights holders.The board accused a sma...Analysis: Iga Swiatek doesn’t want to say what she thinks she is capable of, but it’s a lot
Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 05:31:58 GMT
PARIS (AP) — A popular question posed to tennis players after they begin accumulating Grand Slam titles is some form of: What’s next?What are your aims now? What do you want to accomplish? How many of these major championships can you collect?When it comes to Iga Swiatek, there is not much point in asking, although there were attempts Saturday night after she beat Karolina Muchova 6-2, 5-7, 6-4 in what turned into a riveting French Open final.That victory made Swiatek the owner of four Slam trophies, including three at Roland Garros. Just making it to the last match of the tournament assured her of maintaining her grip on the No. 1 ranking, where she’s been since April 2022.“I don’t think I need any idea. I’ll just go forward, you know?” Swiatek said. “My whole career, I’ve tried to — if you’re talking about wins — just win as much as possible, obviously. … I don’t think we all know what our limits are unless we’re done or we’re really mature. But I’m 22, so I literally ...Latest news
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