Friday, October 25, 2013

Madrigal Family Singers & Dancers In Concert

Share the joy! Come to Dorothy Ramon Learning Center's Fourth Sunday concert October 27, 2013, to share Cahuilla traditional bird songs with the Madrigal Family Bird Singers and Dancers. 

 
Carlos Puma Photo
Details: 3 p.m. Oct. 27, 127 N. San Gorgonio Ave., Banning
Your $10 saves and shares Southern California's Native American cultures, languages, history, and music and other traditional arts.

Carlos Puma Photo

Carlos Puma Photo










Tuesday, August 13, 2013

2013 Dragonfly Gala!

Daniel McCarthy (left) with President Ernest H. Siva (Carlos Puma Photo)
Thank you, to all who supported, donated, and volunteered at our 2013 Dragonfly Gala. Thanks to you, the annual celebration of Southern California's Native American cultures was a huge success. We're thrilled that we awarded Daniel McCarthy the Dragonfly Award for his high-soaring achievements in saving and sharing Southern California Native American cultures.

Friday, August 9, 2013

Gala on

Our website is down temporarily, due to problems at the host site. It should be back up soon. 
Also, the Silver Fire is nowhere near our Gala location. 
So, we'll keep calm and Gala on. 

Sneak peek at some silent auction items at our Aug. 10, 2013, Dragonfly Gala:

GALA DETAILS HERE

Thursday, August 8, 2013

Dragonfly Gala!

It's almost time for the Dragonfly Gala! Yes, our wonderful gathering to celebrate Southern California's Native American cultures is scheduled Saturday, Aug. 10, 2013.

The food is always a fabulous feast, but this year, it will be even more fabulous. Look who's in the kitchen!


Deborah Small Photo


Yes, it's the famed Chia Cafe group led by Daniel McCarthy. They'll offer a sumptious bounty, and some tastes of Native foods, too. Don't miss.

Daniel McCarthy will have to come out of the kitchen at some point because he's also receiving this year's Dragonfly Award for his soaring achievements in saving and sharing Southern California's Native American cultures.

This year's theme is Heritage Keepers, important to Dorothy Ramon Learning Center since 1993, when we began saving and sharing cultures, languages, history, and traditional arts. It's our 10-year birthday, but we'll also pay tribute to the City of Banning, which is celebrating its 100th birthday. We'll have some special 1800s music.

And of course we'll also have our wonderful, timeless bird singing and dancing, and Native American flute music, too, from our own Dragonfly Winds Ensemble flute class that meets monthly at the Center. 

Don't miss:
• Cultural exhibits highlighting our Native American heritage
• Our famed silent auction
• Special live auction
• Much, much more!



DETAILS:
WHO: Proceeds benefit the nonprofit Dorothy Ramon Learning Center's work to save and share Native American traditional cultures.
WHERE: Morongo Community Center, 13000 Malki Road (formerly Fields Road), Morongo Reservation
WHEN: Aug. 10. Reserve your spot now!

TICKETS: $40 each. Tables: $1,000, $2,000, or $3,000.
TO RSVP : CALL US, 951.849.7736 or, 951.849.4676 

OR  EMAIL US. 

Visit our website to learn more about the Learning Center.

Sunday, July 14, 2013

Don't Miss Lionheart on July 28

This Concert is Sunday, July 28
Performing in 2012 (Pat Murkland Photo)
On Sunday, July 28, Lionheart will fill our Gathering Hall with a Celtic-inspired blend of voices and musical instruments. Lionheart, a quartet weaving a tapestry of music including Celtic, world traditions, classical, pop, rock and originals, will perform a concert celebrating Banning's centennial. 
Guitar music,  traditional and non-traditional (Photo by Pat Murkland)
The concert is scheduled from 3-5 p.m. at 127 N. San Gorgonio, Banning. 
 (Photo by Pat Murkland)
The quartet led by Giselle L. Marciszewski presents a sometimes driving, yet sometimes haunting soundscape, including acoustic 6- & 12-string guitars, classical guitar, baritone and soprano vocals, oboe, English horn, Irish pennywhistles, recorder, keyboard, double bass, electric bass and percussion. 
Photo by Pat Murkland
Admission is $10 and benefits the Center.

Friday, July 12, 2013

Calling all Dragonflies

When the dragonflies come to you, the Ushkana lullaby says, it's because you're open to them and calm in spirit. If you're in inner turmoil, they'll stay away.
Ernest H. Siva (Pat Murkland Photo)
Our Head Dragonfly, Center President and Founder Ernest H. Siva, will share this beautiful song and more as a special guest of the Dragonfly Winds Flute Class on Saturday starting at 5 p.m., 127 N. San Gorgonio Ave., Banning. Come hear Native American stories and songs.

The class, led by members of the Inland Empire Flute Circle, meets every second Saturday to play Native American wooden flutes. Beginners are welcome, and if you don't have a flute, the teachers will loan you one. 

The emphasis is on playing from the heart. The gentle creativity of the Native American flute certainly helps one remain open for any and all dragonflies to come. Please do. 

Your $10 will go to Dorothy Ramon Learning Center's work to save and share Southern California's Native American cultures, languages, history, and music and traditional arts.
Information: 951.849.7736.

Friday, June 21, 2013

Come to the Dragonfly Gala!

Dorothy Ramon Learning Center's annual Dragonfly Gala is flying in. At the Aug. 10 Gala, we'll celebrate our 10th birthday, along with Southern California's American Indian cultures. The city of Banning also is marking its 100th birthday and will join in.

Come eat, sing birds, dance, and yes, shop at the amazing silent auction. Our Galas are like big family gatherings. Sometimes more than 400 people join our community of commitment to Native American cultures. This year's theme is Heritage Keepers, important to Dorothy Ramon Learning Center since 1993, when we began saving and sharing cultures, languages, history, and traditional arts. 

Don't miss: 
• A fabulous dinner with samplings of native foods
• To-die-for desserts!
• Cultural exhibits highlighting our Native American heritage
• Flute music
• Traditional bird singing and dancing
• Our famed silent auction, and we mean epic
• Special live auction
• Dragonfly Award for high-soaring achievements
• Much, much more!


DETAILS: 
WHO: Proceeds benefit the nonprofit Dorothy Ramon Learning Center's work to save and share Native American traditional cultures. 
WHERE: Morongo Community Center, 13000 Malki Road (formerly Fields Road), Morongo Reservation 
WHEN: Aug. 10. Reserve your spot now!

TICKETS: $40 each. Tables: $1,000, $2,000, or $3,000.
TO RSVP : CALL US, 951.849.7736 or, 951.849.4676 
OR  EMAIL US. 

Visit our website to learn more about the Learning Center.

Thursday, May 16, 2013

Lecture to Feature Ushkana Author Richard Hanks


Richard Hanks spent years delving into long-forgotten and obscure archives and listening to Native American voices. He learned about Native Americans' fights for their homelands and basic human rights. He learned about heroes. 

The history books usually lack these stories that are vital to American heritage and the story of tribal sovereignty. So, Richard Hanks wrote it all down. Ushkana Press, the publishing arm of Dorothy Ramon Learning Center, recently published This War is For A Whole Life: The Culture of Resistance Among Southern California Indians, 1850-1966.

On Saturday you can hear Richard Hanks share some of these stories. Yes, people often think of Sioux and Plains warriors when we think of resistance and fights for traditional homelands. But Southern California's own American Indian leaders and families also were amazing heroes. Come learn about them at the Banning Centennial Lecture Series.

Time: Saturday, May 18, 7 p.m.
Location: San Manuel Gathering Hall at Dorothy Ramon Learning Center, 127 N. San Gorgonio Ave. Banning, CA 92220
Price: $5/person goes to the Banning Centennial Committee

Tuesday, April 23, 2013

Dragonfly Lecture on April 29

What some see as annoying weeds, others treasure as native plants important to indigenous people — foods, medicines, and more. And what some don't see at all are vital signs, forgotten murals tucked here and there throughout the Inland region. 

Explore Inland backways and back alleys in a search for "Vital Signs and Lavish Weeds" with poet Juan Delgado at Dorothy Ramon Learning Center's next Dragonfly Lecture on Monday, April 29.  

Juan Delgado is an award-winning poet who is unflinching witness to voices, lives, and landscapes often overlooked. He is a professor of English and director of the M.F.A. program in Creative Writing at California State University, San Bernardino. 

The lecture is scheduled to start at 6 p.m. April 29 at Dorothy Ramon Learning Center's San Manuel Gathering Hall, 127 N. San Gorgonio Ave., Banning. Your $5 will help the nonprofit Learning Center save and share Southern California's Native American cultures, languages, history, and traditional arts. Information: 951.849.7736.

10 years in the Pass: Ballet concert April 28

San Gorgonio Ballet is celebrating its 10th anniversary this year and so is Dorothy Ramon Learning Center. The two nonprofits will get together on April 28 when the ballet’s junior company performs in the Center’s San Manuel Gathering Hall, 127 N. San Gorgonio Ave., Banning.

San Gorgonio Ballet is a 501(C)3 nonprofit professional ballet company that was established in 2003 by founding artistic director Julia Olsen-Rodriguez. The ballet company is dedicated to the preservation and presentation of the art of classical dance by providing professional performances danced by professional dancers from throughout the United States. The company trains and gives opportunity for talented local youth to perform with these artists in both elite theater productions along with many local outreach performances yearly.


San Gorgonio Ballet Junior Company is scheduled to perform from 3 to 5 p.m. April 28 at the Learning Center’s Hall in downtown Banning. San Gorgonio Ballet Junior Company is a special group of talented young dancers on their way to professional careers in dance. This amazing young company will be performing a variety of classical and contemporary ballet works along with a special appearance by artistic director, Julia Olsen-Rodriguez. The performance will also feature the great classical ballet titled "Pas de Quatre" first set in 1845 by Jules Perrot; it’s one of the most adored of the classical ballets. There will also be a sampling of some new contemporary work and a rousing Can Can, sure to please one and all.

The $10 admission will benefit Dorothy Ramon Learning Center, which saves and shares Southern California’s Native American cultures, arts, languages, and history. The Center offers a concert every Fourth Sunday in a cross-cultural series that benefits the Center’s work.
Information: 951.849.7736

 



Thursday, March 28, 2013

Connect With The Landscape

UPDATE: Due to an injury, we are sad to announce we are postponing this workshop. We'll let you know when it's rescheduled.

 Dorothy Ramon Learning Center plans a two-day workshop in the Banning area on April 27-28 that will help artists connect with San Gorgonio Pass native landscapes through the paintbrush — and through Native American cultures.

Plein-air artist Terry d. Chacon (Pat Murkland Photo)

In the first part of the workshop, Center President Ernest Siva (Cahuilla/Serrano) of Banning will share traditional area Native American cultural songs and stories. Daniel McCarthy, an archaeologist knowledgable in native plant uses, will share the Native Americans' many uses of local native plants for foods, medicines, tools, and more, and lead a short tour of the landscape. 

Then Terry d. Chacon of Redlands, a national award-winning artist, will take over and lead a plein-air workshop, painting with oils outside on location in natural light.

Proceeds from the $100 workshop will benefit the nonprofit Dorothy Ramon Learning Center's work to save and share Southern California Native American cultures, languages, history, and traditional arts, according to organizers. Class space is limited; to enroll call the Center, 951.849.7736. Information: www.dorothyramon.blogspot.com.

Tuesday, March 19, 2013

Save Your Family Treasures

Basket by Eva Salazar
What family treasure do you have?  Maybe it’s a Native American basket. Or a one-of-a-kind photo album featuring your ancestors. Or your great-grandmother’s quilt. At Dorothy Ramon Learning Center on Monday, March 25, you can find out how to preserve your treasure for yourself and future generations. 

Maggie Wetherbee, curator of the Edward Dean Museum & Gardens in Cherry Valley, will explain in a Dragonfly Lecture starting at 6 p.m. at The Gathering Hall, 127 N. San Gorgonio, Banning, how to care for and preserve heirlooms and family treasures. 

Wetherbee encourages people to bring their “stuff” to share and for her advice. It’ll be a lot like a San Gorgonio Pass version of the popular television program, “Antiques Roadshow;” although Wetherbee does not give values, she will refer those interested in their item’s value to a qualified appraiser.

What she will do is advise you how to take care of your treasure. At similar lectures elsewhere in Riverside County, people have brought amazing items to show Wetherbee, such as old Native American baskets and even a Civil War diary. So, join the fun and see what others have celebrating heritage and history.

Wetherbee has extensive experience in preservation and curation. Most recently as curator at Edward-Dean, Wetherbee has worked to preserve an extensive and varied collection dating from the 1500s.

The recommended donation of $5 will benefit Dorothy Ramon Learning Center’s mission to save and share Southern California’s Native American cultures, languages, history, and traditional arts. Information: 951.849.7736.

Saturday, February 23, 2013

Finger-picking Fourth Sunday Concert

Courtesy of Don Strandberg
Have Fun. And Do Good:
Every Fourth Sunday, the Center presents a concert with cross-cultural music in our amazingly acoustical Gathering Hall. The concert is only $10 and benefits our work to save and share Southern California's Native American cultures.

This Fourth Sunday, Feb. 24, concert features guitarist Don Strandberg.

About the Music:
Don regularly mixes guitar instrumentals with spirited versions of traditional songs ranging from folk to blues to country. He also enjoys performing carefully selected songs from more contemporary sources. And he sings.

Details: 3 p.m. at the Center's San Manuel Gathering Hall, 127 N. San Gorgonio Ave., Banning. $10


About the Musician:
Don Strandberg grew up in Redlands, CA, and began guitar lessons at age 9 at the House of Note music store. His first teacher was Norm 'Roly' Sanders, the founding member and lead guitarist for the now legendary surf band, the Tornados.

Don was old enough to be strongly affected by Folk Revival music of the early 1960s, and sought to perfect the art of fingerpicking (also refered to as fingerstyle guitar playing) in response to that influence. Both American and English guitarists made their mark on Don's playing, and over the years he continued playing and performing locally, first in high school concerts, then as a regular at the Penny University Music Hall in San Bernardino. 

All in all, Don has been perfecting his playing and performing for almost 50 years.

Among his influences are Merle Travis, Doc Watson, John Fahey (all Americans), and  Bert Jansch and Davey Graham (from England).

He describes his playing as lush but restrained. He says this comes from: solo instrumentals on steel string guitar, classical guitar studies, and years of being an accompanist in a number of ensembles. The latter he counts as extremely important in developing a sense of how much playing is just right for any given situation, while he believes his studies in classical guitar taught him how to make each note count. This is central to his approach to the guitar.

Don now lives in San Diego and over the last 10 years he's produced a number of CDs of instrumental guitar music, garnering strong reviews in San Diego Troubador magazine, making him a known quantity in the circle of top fingerstyle guitar players in the area. 

Come and enjoy!