With Love, From Mom: A mother’s son lives on through their artistic collaborations

Alicia Gorecki wears many hats: She’s an artist, a teacher at Pasadena High School and most recently, she launched a nonprofit that aims to strengthen youth mental health through the arts in honor of her son, Reid, who died in 2023 of an accidental overdose at the age of 18.

“Sometimes I can barrel through talking about this, and sometimes I lose it,” Gorecki shared at the beginning of what would be a heartfelt 30-minute phone conversation. 

Reid died of fentanyl toxicity just three weeks before his high school graduation from California School of the Arts – San Gabriel Valley. He had sent in his college applications, received acceptance letters and scholarships, launched his clothing line on his website and had a production assistant gig lined up. . . .

Read the entire article at Pasadena Weekly.

The Colors of Community: Paint:Lab offers art classes in good and bad times

In the five years that Ally Mathieu has owned and operated Paint:Lab in Santa Monica, she has experienced two catastrophic, life-upending events. The first was the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020, the year she decided to assume operations of the walk-in art studio from the previous owners who had opened its doors in 2009. 

“I was working at Paint:Lab as an instructor, and they were going to close,” Mathieu said. “So, I was like, ‘Sure,’ in the middle of a global pandemic. All my friends’ businesses are closing, and I’m like, ‘Yeah, this will be so fun for me. I have nothing else going on.’ So, I bought it and turned it into an online school.”

Mathieu’s business move turned out to be not-so crazy. Her career history made her a perfect candidate to run the business. Before Paint:Lab, she worked for photography and movie studios doing set design and continued her own arts practice in private studios in Hollywood and DTLA. . . .

Read the entire article at The Argonaut.

‘Justice For My Sister’: Filmmaking as a means to heal from trauma

In 2011, when Pasadena local Kimberly Bautista finished her award-winning documentary about femicide in Guatemala, titled “Justice for My Sister,” her work had just begun. Partnering with survivors, organizers and artists to host community screenings, self-defense trainings and resource-sharing events, she traveled to more than 200 communities and, in doing so, realized she was creating a space for connection, healing and action.

Over the next four years, Bautista began to hatch a plan: launch a nonprofit for Black, Indigenous, and People of Color (BIPOC) women, nonbinary youth, foster youth and survivors of gender-based violence, called Justice For My Sister (JFMS), focusing on youth leadership, workforce development and systems change. . . .

Read the entire article at Pasadena Weekly.

Life-Saving Science: Phoenix MedSpa offers early detection test for 50 cancers

In the family practice in which board-certified physician assistant Kristina Cadwell worked, she spent about eight minutes with each patient. This was not enough time for her to discuss and deliver long-term wellness results, and it was one of the reasons she decided to open Vibrant Skin Bar in Arcadia six years ago.

Kristina Cadwell

Her MedSpa journey would be slightly delayed because about six months after launching, COVID happened. Vibrant Skin Bar had to close and juggle the challenges of when and how to safely see patients and when to order medical supplies from the hospitals.

Today, Cadwell feels right at home in the community, and her doors are open for next-level wellness. . . .

Read the entire article at Lovin’ Life.

Framing the Future: Photographic Arts Council Los Angeles puts down roots at The REEF LA

In the words of Michael Dawson, president of Photographic Arts Council Los Angeles (PAC LA), the nonprofit hosted probably its most important event ever in its 12-year history on September 13: a talk with internationally acclaimed documentary photographer and visual storyteller Susan Meiselas at the American Cinematheque’s Aero Theatre in Santa Monica. The event was free with registration, made possible with the support of Eastman Museum Los Angeles and just one of many events in PAC LA’s “Year of the Woman” series.

Photo by: Chris Mortenson

Meiselas, known for her documentation of human rights issues in Latin America, was also promoting the 2025 rerelease of her book, “Nicaragua,” and a book signing followed the talk.

The Meiselas event falls in line with PAC LA’s plans for future growth: Make new and leverage existing partnerships to produce public-facing events. For this event, PAC LA partnered with Arcana: Books on the Arts in Culver City, which sold Meiselas’ book and also promoted the event.

Read the entire article at LA Downtown News.

How WFHC Spells Relief: F-R-E-E M-A-M-M-O-G-R-A-M-S

The month of October has become synonymous with breast cancer awareness. Yet Westside Family Health Center remains focused year-round on educating and servicing its patients about the second most common cancer in American women.

Photo by: Chris Mortenson

Last year WFHC celebrated its 50th anniversary. The Federally Qualified Health Center offers services to 13,000-plus patients spread throughout 170 zip codes in Los Angeles.

“The service that we provide is a screening mammogram,” said Felicia Osborn, Medical Director of Reproductive Health and Prenatal Programs. “Some are coming for the first time when they turn 40, and others are continuing their health maintenance. They have had mammograms in the past and either had abnormal ones and are returning for a screening mammogram or they’re continuing their screening mammograms for prevention purposes to detect cancer.” . . .

Read the entire article at LA Downtown News.

Nothin’ But Love: Move Your Feet Tennis Foundation to host community tennis play day

Coach Lisa Thomas launched the Pasadena-based Move Your Feet Tennis Foundation (MYFTF) seven years ago, because as a young woman growing up in Chicago, she had been impacted by a similar organization, in which tennis players taught kids in the community how to play. 

“That was such a substantial time in my life,” Thomas said. “I feel like I wouldn’t have been the person that I became without that start. My intention is always to give back and to give the opportunity that I had to as many kids as I can.”

Thomas played both tennis and basketball in high school and college, at which time she was drafted by the first professional basketball league in the United States, the Women’s Professional Basketball League, where she played from 1979 to 1982. In 2018, she was inducted into the Women’s Basketball Hall of Fame — the same year she started Move Your Feet. . . .

Read the entire article at Pasadena Weekly.

Decades of Dance in L.A.: Celebrating 20 Years of Visions and Voices and 10 Years of USC Kaufman

This night was more than a performance; it was a celebration of dance in L.A.—more specifically, how USC has nurtured and supported dance in L.A. through Visions and Voices, its arts and humanities initiative, and USC Glorya Kaufman School of Dance. For 20 years, Visions and Voices has presented dance organizations at no cost to USC students and most times, free to the general public. Ten years ago, Kaufman School of Dance admitted its first 33 students, affectionately called the O.G. 33, before officially opening the new Glorya Kaufman International Dance Center in 2016. In the introductory remarks, Kaufman received a big shout out, noting that the arts philanthropist passed away this summer.

Photo by: Henry Kofman

To celebrate this 20th and 10th anniversary, respectively, Visions and Voices threw a performance-powered dance party in Bovard Auditorium on Thursday night, September 18 featuring Versa-Style Street Dance Company, JA Collective and CONTRA-TIEMPO Dance Theater. As the audience filled into the packed house, Ninabutterfly, a current senior at the School of Dance, DJ’ed, and postcards of past Visions and Voices performances, from Alonzo King LINES Ballet to Savion Glover, were projected onto a huge screen on the stage. . . .

Read the entire article at LA Dance Chronicle.

The Keys to Hope: New affordable housing in Little Tokyo-Skid Row neighborhood

The ribbon cutting and grand opening of Umeya Apartments was a big day for Little Tokyo — and especially for Little Tokyo Service Center (LTSC), which has spearheaded the affordable housing project since purchasing the Umeya Rice Cake Company factory in 2019. On Sept. 25, the community, business partners and politicians gathered to celebrate the new mixed-use development featuring 175 deeply affordable apartments that will soon house 300 people.

“This is what the future of Los Angeles looks like,” councilmember Ysabel Jurado of District 14 said. “Today we are opening 88 units of permanent supported housing for unhoused neighbors and 85 affordable homes for low-income families. But what we are really opening is a future rooted in stability, dignity and community. This is a testament to the vision, the perseverance and the heart of a community that knows exactly what it needs and has the courage to build it.” . . .

Read the entire article at LA Downtown News.

Playing in Peace: Sholem offers a secular alternative for nonreligious Jews

It’s Sunday just after noon, and the students and staff of Sholem, a secular community and school, have gathered together to sing the lyrics to “This Land is Your Land” by Woody Guthrie and “Bim Bam” by Nachum Frankel. Most Sundays, at the end of class, Rebekka Helford, Sholem’s vice principal, teacher of the youngest class starting in pre-K, and mother of two Sholem students, accompanies a group sing-along on her acoustic guitar.

Photo by: Chris Mortenson

“This is a bonding, family activity,” Rebekka said after the students had left for the day. “It is a commitment to belonging. As a society we are so fragmented, lonely and isolated, and that is not our birthright. As humans, we are used to living in groups, which helps us to be well and at ease. People schlep here to be surrounded by faces who they can bond with and make a community with. It is a place to belong, where you can be of value and be valued and connect to your family in a deeper way.” . . .

Read the entire article at The Argonaut.