Jun 21 Saturday
Presented by the URBAN-15 Group, the Josiah Media Festival is one of few film festivals around the world dedicated to showcasing outstanding works by artists 21 years old and younger.
The 19th JMF will accept film submissions from May 1st – August 1st, 2025.
The festival presents a career-defining opportunity for young media artists to showcase their work around the world. The festival was founded in 2007 in honor of San Antonio filmmaker Josiah Miles Neundorf by his parents, Marcus and Nancy Neundorf, who collaborated with URBAN-15 to create this event.
Now in it’s 19th year, JMF not only streams globally, but has grown to screen films submitted from all around of the world.
Enter your film in three easy steps:
1) Download the Josiah Media Festival Guidelines & Entry Forms at urban15.org/josiah-media-festival/enter
2) Read through the Guidelines and fill out the Entry and Release Forms in full.
3) Send us your completed Entry and Release Forms along with a High-Definition copy of your film by mail to the Josiah Media Festival, 2500 S. Presa, San Antonio, TX, 78210 or by email to josiahfestival@urban15.org.
The San Antonio Public Library is calling for submissions for this year's Big Pride Zine! The theme is "On the Shoulders of Giants". We want written or visual works that express to a queer person the positive the impact they had on your life, whether it's a friend, historical figure, stranger, or story character. The deadline for submissions is June 30th. For more details including how to submit your work, go to guides.mysapl.org/zines.
🎥 FILM SCREENING 🎥
In honor of Juneteenth, Oppressed Revolutionaries for Worker Power invites you to watch "Soundtrack Track to a Coup d'état" on June 21st at Carver Library (3350 E Commerce St) 1:30pm to 4:30pm and discussion afterwards!
This film is truly unlike any we've ever seen. As Africa was rapidly decolonizing, the capitalist countries of the West were conspiring to maintain control over the valuable natural resources of the continent by any means necessary. In the film, Patrice Lumumba rises to the leadership of the independence movement in Congo, eventually being elected president and joining the ranks of Pan African and Non-Aligned Movement leaders. But what is the difference between mere "independence" and "sovereignty?" That question is played out in dramatic fashion and set the playbook for the next several decades of neo-colonialism in Africa.
At the same time in the United States, the Civil Rights Movement was heating up, aiming to fulfill the promise of the Reconstruction Era following the Civil War, but usurped by the ruling class capitulation to Jim Crow counter-revolution. By this time, the question of how Black Liberation relates to Pan African decolonization became paramount - is Black Liberation primarily a struggle for internal democracy and representation within the U.S., or is it better understood as part of the struggle against colonialism and Western capitalist imperialism?
Incorporating many facets of the liberation struggles across the world - from symbolic representation, to revolutionary armed struggle, to counter-revolution - the film weaves through contradictions much like the brilliant jazz soundtrack which gives the film its name. Attentive viewers will take from the film an understanding as fresh today as 60+ years ago, when the events took place. The questions the film asks need to be taken up in our movements to move beyond the genocidal and capitalist machine, and towards a future of peace and cooperation.
If you can’t get enough of ABBA, boy do we have THE dance party for you! We are a DJ-based dance party playing all your favorite ABBA tracks, plus plenty of other disco hits from the 70s & 80s like The Bee Gees, Donna Summer, Cher, & so much more. So honey honey, take-a-chance and you’ll be dancing all night long. Grab tickets, put on your best disco attire, bring your friends, and have the best night of your life!
Jun 22 Sunday
SAMSAT’s seven weeks of T.J. Natarajan STEM summer camps begin June 9th, with schedules offered through August 1st. Full and half-day options are available on a variety of topics for kids grades 3rd through 12th. Weekly schedules, subject matter, link to registration, and how to become a camp sponsor is online at SAMSAT.org.
Emotions at Play with Pixar's Inside Out, the first interactive exhibit based on the award-winning Disney and Pixar film, helps visitors - young and old - understand the important role emotions, memory and imagination play in our everyday lives. Focusing on the five core emotions featured in the film - Joy, Sadness, Anger, Disgust and Fear - hands-on and digital experiences in the exhibit offer opportunities to explore some of the ways we express our emotions - and recognize emotions in others, too.
Irrationally Speaking highlights two art forms—collage and assemblage—as artistic techniques and conceptual approaches. With the simple act of placing two or more distinct images or objects together (sometimes jarringly so) artists can create a complex whole to address a multiplicity of meanings. Combined wood fragments, cut-and-pasted paper, seamless digital and photo-based prints comprised of disparate pictures, bronze sculptures created from discarded shoes, and contrasting clothing articles put together —these are some of the ways that contemporary artists harness a myriad of materials and methods to craft the art in this presentation.
Irrationally Speaking will be on view 9.21.24 - 8.31.25
Entry to Ruby City is free and open to the public. Reservations are recommended but not required.
Ruby City proudly presents Synthesis & Subversion Redux, an exhibition celebrating the legacy of Frances Jean Colpitt and the evolving conversation around Latinx art. This new exhibition revisits Colpitt’s groundbreaking 1996 show, Synthesis and Subversion: A Latino Direction in San Antonio Art, and its influence on contemporary art practices today.In 1996, Colpitt brought together a group of San Antonio-based artists—Jesse Amado, David Padilla Cabrera, Alejandro Diaz, Franco Mondini-Ruiz, Ana de Portela, and Chuck Ramirez—who explored identity, abstraction, and the everyday through conceptual approaches. The exhibition challenged norms and sparked critical debate, becoming a pivotal moment in San Antonio’s art history.
Now, nearly 30 years later, Redux builds on Colpitt’s vision while reflecting the profound changes in the art world since then. Curated by two Latinas in leadership roles at major institutions, Ruby City Director, Elyse A. Gonzales, and Curator of Latinx Art at the McNay Art Museum, Mia Lopez, Redux showcases the work of five contemporary artists: Juan Carlos Escobedo, Jenelle Esparza, Bárbara Miñarro, Angeles Salinas, and José Villalobos. These artists bring fresh perspectives to themes of identity, memory, and culture, often through craft-informed practices that incorporate textiles, personal history, and connections to the U.S.-Mexico border.
The exhibition will be on view from February 15, 2024 through September 28, 2025 at Studio, located inside Chris Park (111 Camp Street).