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Dementia/Alzheimer’s Support Group: A safe, confidential, supportive environment for families to develop informal mutual support, get information about dementia and develop methods and skills to solve problems related to dementia. Fourth Tuesday of the month. Sunnyvale Presbyterian Church gym, 728 Fremont Ave., room 750, Sunnyvale. For more information, call the Alzheimer’s Association at 800-272-3900. Eating Disorders and Body Image Support Groups: The Eating Disorders Resource Center offers free support groups to create a safe space for those struggling with eating disorders and body image dissatisfaction. The groups are unstructured and open to all ages, genders and types of eating issues. First and third Tuesdays of the month, 7-8:30 p.m. El Camino Hospital, 2500 Grant Road, Mountain View.

Standing on the sidelines never seemed like an option for the San Francisco International Arts Festival, With the election of Donald Trump in 2016, the globally minded organization quickly set out to provide a forum for artists active in the resistance against policies designed to restrict access to the United States, Last year, the festival’s programming centered on protest, guided by German playwright Bertolt ballet shoe for middle blythe / obitsu 11 Brecht’s insistence on the importance of artists bearing witness through their work to “the dark times.”..

Running May 25 to June 4 at various venues and spaces around San Francisco’s Fort Mason Center, this year’s SFIAF centers on Martin Luther King Jr.’s April 4, 1967 speech at Manhattan’s Riverside Church denouncing U.S. martial foreign policy, “Beyond Vietnam — A Time to Break Silence.”. “Since Trump was elected we’ve created these themed years in opposition to him,” says SFIAF Director Andrew Wood. “Last year our theme was, ‘we protest.’ This year it’s, ‘we organize.’ And next year it’s the path to democracy, how do we proactively envision what we want.”.

Presenting some four-dozen dance, theater and musical acts representing Japan, Lithuania, Macedonia, Argentina, South Korea and Taiwan, the SFIAF is particularly adept at showcasing the diverse array of performers who call the Bay Area home. Rather than imposing a partisan agenda on the artists, the theme provides a loose framework to explore conditions in the U.S, and far beyond, The festival’s centerpiece is Saturday’s world premiere of Berkeley drummer/composer Anthony Brown’s “Down by the Riverside: Requiem for a King” (8 p.m.; Cowell Theatre; $25-$65) featuring Brown’s Asian American Orchestra with text by Angela Davis, Vietnamese master instrumentalist Vân-Ánh Võ, and the gospel vocal ensemble Voices of a Dream, led by Amikaeyla Gaston, Epic in scale, the work is built on spirituals, though like all of Brown’s projects it incorporates Asian instruments and ballet shoe for middle blythe / obitsu 11 musical traditions within a jazz framework..

“In taking a stand against the Vietnam War, King ran a lot of risks,” Wood says. “He got pilloried even within the movement. Today, we’re being attacked in so many different ways, and like King said, an attack on one is an attack on all. That’s the overriding theme.”. There’s no shortage of risks for artists and organizations wading into the political fray. In the U.S. the danger doesn’t come from a police agent’s knock in the middle of the night. Rather, artists can alienate audiences or reduce creative expression to agitprop, creating a self-congratulatory feedback loop with like-minded listeners. One way that the SFIAF guards against self-complacency is by presenting a plethora of viewpoints. Here are five performances from this year’s festival that embody SFIAF’s far-reaching vision.

Fanna-Fi-Allah: An ensemble devoted to qawwali, Fanna-Fi-Allah plays the ecstatic devotional music of Sufi Muslims from Pakistan and India, Led by vocalist and harmonium expert Tahir Hussain Faridi Qawwal, who has studied under qawwali’s greatest masters, Fanna-Fi-Allah delivers incantatory messages of universal love ballet shoe for middle blythe / obitsu 11 with sweeping power, accompanied by tabla beats and clapping, Details: 7:30 p.m, May 24, Cowell Theater; $35, Orchestra Gold with Mariam Diakité: A master musician from Mali, Mariam Diakité is a dancer, teacher and singer who co-founded Orchestra Gold with Bay Area guitarist and multi-instrumentalist Erich Huffaker, a devoted student of Mali’s Bambara culture, Inspired by the sweet, rolling grooves of Mali’s post-independence ensembles, the orchestra brings together a stellar cast of players, including Berkeley-reared saxophonist Raffi Garabedian, Berkeley bassist/percussionist Luke Baće, and percussionist Jesse Servin, Details: 7 p.m, May 25; Gallery 308; $12..

Hafez Modirzadeh with Prasant Radhakrishnan: East meets East in this powerhouse duo. As an educator, improviser, composer and conceptualist, San Jose tenor saxophonist Hafez Modirzadeh has quietly but inexorably established himself as an essential architect of jazz’s encompassing aesthetic by incorporating classical Iranian modes into his improvisational system. Fremont altoist Prasant Radhakrishnan combines a deep study of the Carnatic tradition with jazz exploration, disciplines he united in the trio VidyA. Expect a wide-ranging musical conversation in this promising encounter. Details: 4:30 p.m. May 27; Firehouse; $15-$25.

Melody of China with the Veve Vodou Drum and Dance Ensemble: Directed by hammered dulcimer virtuoso Yangqin Zhao, the Bay Area’s leading traditional Chinese music ensemble Melody of China has a long record of cross-cultural collaborations, Dubbed “Spirit Rhythms,” this program features MOC on several traditional pieces as well as original works by Zeke Nealy and the Haitian Veve Vodou Drum and Dance Ensemble, Details: 3 p.m, June 3; Gallery 308; $20-$30, Theatre Flamenco de San Francisco: Revitalized under the direction of Carola Zertuche, the Bay Area’s second oldest dance company presents “El Cruce de Lenguajes” (The Crossing of Languages) a new Zertuche production that features guest artists from Spain, Mexico, South America, India and the U.S., including Andalusian-born guitarist David Paez and dancer Cristina ballet shoe for middle blythe / obitsu 11 Hall, the US-born, Seville-based artist who has earned international recognition in flamenco, Details: 6 p.m, June 3; Gallery 308; $15-$35..



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