News from Vermont: Our Youngest Residents Learn and Thrive

At Vermont Family Apartments in Los Angeles, CA,  computer assistance and tutoring is offered in the computer room three times a month for residents who need help with resumes, homework, job applications, and web browsing.

The Garden Club meets twice a month to care for the community garden.

Vermont residents are grateful for the Food Forward program which provides fresh produce on a monthly basis. Food Forward staff and volunteers rescue 375,000 pounds of surplus produce each week from fruit trees, farmers markets, and the Los Angeles Wholesale Produce Market. 100% of these fresh fruits and vegetables are donated to over 1800 hunger relief agencies across eight counties in Southern California and distributed to folks like our low-income residents.

Residents meet once a month to celebrate birthdays of the month. They enjoy a delicious slice of cake, food, light refreshments, and raffles, all provided by EngAGE.

EngAGE changes lives by transforming affordable senior and multigenerational apartment communities into vibrant centers of learning, wellness, and creativity.

Program Director: Sandra Vargas
September 2018
Vermont Family Apartments is a Meta Housing Corporation Community.

 

 

 

 

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The Simple Form That Could Save Your Life

“The simple form that could save your life” is what writer Seth Godin calls this document that provides all of your basic medical information in one spot. It won’t take you long to fill out, and it’s easy to update. You can print it out and take it with you every time you visit a doctor. You can give it to your spouse/partner and your kids so they won’t have to guess about any of this if they’re helping you in an emergency. You can keep a printed version for yourself somewhere that’s easy to access.

And, as Seth suggests, forward a blank form or this post to people who will benefit from having it.


CONFIDENTIAL AND DETAILED HEALTH INFORMATION   [date]

[You can download the doc file from Seth’s post, or select and copy this list to your word processor, then edit it. Throughout this form, fill out the information between the brackets, and then delete the instructions]

 CONTACT INFORMATION

[name]

[address]

[home phone]

[cell phone]

[social security #]

[spouse/partner’s name]

[in case of emergency contact info]

PRIMARY CARE PHYSICIAN

[name, phone, affiliated hospitals]

INSURANCE

[name of provider; contact info; GROUP, if applicable]

CURRENT MEDICATIONS

[drug name, one by one, including dosage and frequency; purpose; and when first prescribed — approximately is fine]

ALLERGIC REACTIONS

CHRONIC ILLNESSES

[diabetes, arthritis, etc.]

PREVIOUS ILLNESSES

[in reverse chronological order, most recent first]

PREVIOUS SURGERIES/ACCIDENTS

[if you can, include names and contact info of previous doctors/hospitals]

FAMILY HISTORY

[brief statement for each family member, including grandparents, parents and siblings; include ages, serious illnesses and/or cause of death]

SOCIAL HISTORY

[alcohol, smoking, drug use]

LIFESTYLE

[exercise, diet]

ADMINISTRATION

[details about advanced directive, living will, health care proxy, name, phone and fax number of your pharmacy, organ donor status]

 

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Happy New Year!

Happy New Year from all of us at EngAGE!

Photo Credit: Dave Hogg
Flickr Creative Commons License

Holidays Around the World

United Planet’s blog discusses some of the winter holidays celebrated around the world: Christmas, Hanukkah, Kwanzaa, Las Posadas, Eid-al-Adha, and Diwali.

ReligiousTolerance.org mentions Winter Solstice, Bodhi Day, Saturnalia, Yule, Zartusht-no-diso, and others.

There are also the Chinese New Year (also called Spring Festival), Omisoka (Japanese celebration on the last day of the year), Oshogatsu (Japanese New Year), St. Lucia Day, Mardi Gras, and other religious and secular celebrations in the winter months.

However you celebrate the season, we wish you a happy, healthy, and peaceful New Year.

 

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News from Sterling Court: Art Class

The Art Class is a favorite activity for the residents of Sterling Court Senior Apartments in Anaheim, CA. What better way to gather among friends, explore hidden artistic talent, and, most importantly, have fun?!

EngAGE changes lives by transforming affordable senior and multigenerational apartment communities into vibrant centers of learning, wellness, and creativity.

Program Director: Essence Parker
Sterling Courts is a Meta Housing Corporation Community

 

 

 

 

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News from ACE/121: Gallery Exhibition Ending Soon

Leo Eguiarte & Melly Trochez: RITUAL/S
November 17, 2018 – January 5, 2019

ace/121 Gallery is pleased to present RITUAL/S, the first shared exhibition of Glendale-based visual artists Leo Eguiarte and Melly Trochez.

Join the artists at the closing reception on January 5th from 5 to 7 p.m.

Leo Eguiarte’s ongoing series delves into a world of symbolism and graphic imagery, reflecting Eguiarte’s interests in signs and everyday ritual. While much of the work suggests esoterism and metaphysical states or landscapes, Eguiarte’s approach is particularly subtle, focusing on the unspoken customs that particular groups or individuals practice daily. As a kind of re-appropriation of what he sees as an already-appropriated point of view of some occultist groups and beliefs, his imagery evolves out of any concrete attachment to belief or practice, and enters into a meticulous and precise graphic world with simple vocabularies. His circuit panel series strives toward a kind of streamlined perfection: symmetrical lines, patterned dots, concentric circles, prisms and a consistently limited color scheme of magenta, pink and turquoise that allow for infinite variations on a theme.

Artworks by Leo Eguiarte at ace/121 Gallery

Eguiarte was raised in Pasadena and he remembers stories he heard as a child about JPL (Jet Propulsion Laboratory of NASA), the Devil’s Gate gorge of Arroyo Seco and the folklore of the local Tongva tribe of the Hahamog’na region (present day Glendale and Pasadena). Far from occultist or even referencing any particular folklore or myth, Eguiarte’s works suggest a conscious evolution of common routines and customs into ethereal landscapes – a kind of observational re-imagining of the cosmos, one that playfully rests on the surface of a circuit panel. This latter point brings us to a more tangible and familiar place: computers, action figures, toys… Eguiarte is a lifelong collector of toys and figurines, however the works depart from any aesthetic of the action figure and emerge as highly developed worlds, uncanny and expansive.


Melly Trochez’s work deals specifically with rituals: activities that are passed on culturally through generations that become embedded in notions of identity. Particularly interested in observing – and often commenting on – standards of beauty in Latina culture, Trochez’s larger format acrylic paintings depict characters from her own life (sometimes even herself) participating in beautifying routines: ironing and bleaching hair, applying sunblock, mirror gazing – many rituals that become unconscious, those that we forget why we even began doing them. Comments made when we were younger, images seen during developing years, advice and critique passed down through generations become an everyday practice. Trochez is pointing at these through her depictions that carry the cultural focus to an image. In doing so, she highlights these rituals and brings them into question – a question that feels more like curiosity, or a simple noticing, rather than outward critique or commentary.

Artworks by Melly Trochez at ace/121 Gallery

Her subjects are people she knows or images that remind her of figures in her life. The way they are depicted, however, always seems to suggest the emotion (or lack thereof) behind the action, something close to a self-reflection.  A set of eyes, staring out from the painting, suggests a disconnect with the routine; as a friend prepares dye to bleach her hair, she gazes through her glasses, seemingly lost in thought or in the familiarity of the routine that she herself doesn’t question.

In her collage work, Trochez confronts a more laborious series of routines: cardboard collecting, strawberry picking, train hopping…these are activities that highlight the labor of the disenfranchised. The dynamic, textured and colorful images quickly give way to the reality of the routine: the physical labor, the precarious nature of the work, and the trauma that can become a part of activities performed to survive. This body of work pays homage to the stories of the immigrant experience. Trochez, both personally and professionally, has experienced these stories:

“I am deeply opposed to the notion of human rights deliberately being violated.  I feel compelled to create the work to remind people that all human existence should be valued and hope that people in general respond to an already vulnerable population with compassion and understanding rather than racism and hate. This body of work is to encourage discussion, reflection and tolerance.”


In their first shared exhibition, Eguiarte and Trochez have chosen to collaborate on a work together throughout the course of the exhibition. By sharing the development of a single artwork as part of their exhibition, the two artists will create and confront their own ritual/s in real time in the space of the ace/121 Gallery.


Leo Eguiarte is an American artist born and residing in Los Angeles, California. He received a B.F.A. from Art Center College of Design in 2009, where he mainly focused on painting as his primary practice. He has worked as a muralist, printmaker, art facilitator, and as a teaching artist. Eguiarte’s current work deals with the disconnection people face living in a material-driven society, the type of environment that discourages a true bond towards the natural world and replaces it with an addiction for material commodities. With a strong admiration for the natural world and the daunting possibility of an imminent ecological collapse, this dilemma inspires him to make work on man’s role on this critical issue. His work has been exhibited at Mark Moore gallery in Culver City, Track 16 Gallery in Santa Monica, Alyse de Roulet Williamson Gallery in Pasadena, and at the Pasadena Museum of California Art.

Melly Trochez‘s work embodies personal narratives and observations of those around her with an emphasis on her Latina experience. Trochez graduated from California State Fullerton in 2004 with a BFA and Loyola Marymount University in 2011 with an MA to practice as an Art Psychotherapist. Her work continues to be an ongoing dialogue around identity and the constructs in our culture that impact how we move through life.  She started her career with a focus on painting self-portraits 20 years ago, each a depiction of the self has been represented through one of her four series involving social commentary, personal disclosures, epiphanies and popular culture. Recently, she has turned her focus on external experiences.  Painting has been a primary medium to which she explores and resolves provocative experiences that others have shared or that she has personally experienced. Her latest body of work remains focused on the experience as a first-generation Latina. The work explores standards of beauty in Latina culture, how color, body, hair and tradition, create discourse and tension in how we learn to embrace ourselves. Trochez has also been creating new works about Latino immigrants and the experiences of undocumented youth. Along with her art making for the past 7 years she has simultaneously been working as an Art Psychotherapist in community-based settings. This practice has only further enriched her understanding of the arts and its value as it pertains to health and wellness.

Learn more at about these artists at www.leoeguiarte.com and www.mellytrochez.com

You can also hear the artists and gallery curator Ben Evans on the Experience Talks Radio Show on Sunday, 12/30, at 5:30 p.m. on 90.7 KPFK-FM and streaming live at kpfk.org.  Host: John Semper Jr.

 

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News from Metro@Compton: Healthy and Creative Activities

At The Metro at Compton Senior Apartments in Compton, CA, residents stay happily engaged with their monthly birthday celebrations, the monthly Food Forward program which provides fresh produce, the Garden Club, Tech Class, the Walking Club, Fitness Class, and a Craft Class that focused on decorating some very colorful and creative t-shirts!

Nutrition and health education programs are provided with support from our partner, SCAN Health Plan.

Monthly Birthday Celebration

Food Forward

Food Forward

Garden Club

Tech Class

Walking Club

Fitness Class

T-shirt decorating for September’s Community Cup competition.

T-shirt decorating for September’s Community Cup competition.

EngAGE changes lives by transforming affordable senior and multigenerational apartment communities into vibrant centers of learning, wellness, and creativity.

Program Director: Sandra Vargas
September 2018
Birthday celebration made possible with support from WSH Management.
The Metro at Compton Senior Apartments is a Meta Housing Corporation community.

 

Posted in Community, Community Cup, Community News, Cooking/Gardening, Exercise/Sports, Food Assistance, Hand-Crafting, Metro Compton, Technology | Tagged , , , , , | Leave a comment

Experience Talks: Melly Trochez & Leo Eguiarte + Ben Evans

Experience Talks - EngAGE, Inc.

Experience Talks - EngAGE, Inc.Tune in to Experience Talks, our weekly “Radio Magazine for the Experienced Listener,” on Sundays at 5:30 PM PT on KPFK 90.7 FM Los Angeles, 98.7 FM Santa Barbara, 99.5 China Lake, 93.7 N. San Diego, streaming live online, and now syndicated on up to 100 Pacifica Network stations! Experience Talks is produced by the non-profit EngAGE, Inc.

Miss the show? You can always hear it as a podcast on the Listen Page of our website! You’ll also find an archive-in-progress of all of our previous shows there for you to enjoy. New shows are usually posted within 48 hours after broadcast

 


DECEMBER 30, 2018 @ 5:30 PM PDT
MELLY TROCHEZ
LEO EGUIARTE
BEN EVANS
with host JOHN SEMPER JR.


“Ritual/s”
Two-Person Show
ACE/121 Gallery
121 N Kenwood St
Glendale, CA

Join the artists at the closing reception on January 5th from 5 to 7 p.m.

In their first shared exhibition, Leo Eguiarte and Melly Trochez have chosen to collaborate on a work together throughout the course of the exhibition. By sharing the development of a single artwork as part of their exhibition, the two artists will create and confront their own ritual/s in real time in the space of the ACE/121 Gallery.


MELLY TROCHEZ‘ work embodies personal narratives and observations of those around her with an emphasis on her Latina experience.  Trochez graduated from California State Fullerton in 2004 with a BFA, and Loyola Marymount University in 2011 with an MA/MFT and discipline in Art Therapy to practice as an Art Psychotherapist. Her work continues to be an ongoing dialogue around identity and the constructs in our culture that impact how we move through life. She started her career with a focus on painting self portraits 20 years ago. Each depiction of the self has been represented through one of her four series involving social commentary, personal disclosures, epiphanies, and popular culture. Currently, the artist has turned her focus on external experiences. Painting has been a primary medium in which she explores and resolves provocative experiences that others have shared or that she has personally experienced. Her latest body of work remains focused on the experience as a first generation Latina.  The work explores standards of beauty in Latina culture, how color, body, hair, and tradition, create discourse and tension in how we learn to embrace ourselves. Melly has also been creating new works about Latino immigrants and the experiences of undocumented youth. Along with her art making for the past seven years she has simultaneously been working as an Art Psychotherapist in community-based settings. This practice has only further enriched her understanding of the arts and its value as it pertains to health and wellness.


LEO EGUIARTE is an American artist born and residing in Los Angeles. California. He received a B.F.A. from Art Center College of Design in 2009, where he mainly focused on painting as his primary practice. He has worked as a muralist, printmaker, art facilitator, and as a teaching artist. Eguiarte’s current work deals with the disconnection people face living in a materialistic driven society, the type of environment that discourages a true bond towards the natural world and replaces it with an addiction to material commodities. With a strong admiration for the natural world and the daunting possibility of an imminent ecological collapse, this dilemma inspires him to make work on man’s role in this critical issue. The work is designed to confront these ideas of influence and desire, and to empower the viewer to consider alternative choices for the ways in which we interact with and participate in the world, encouraging a constantly evolving perspective and reminding us of a shared existence.


BEN EVANS, Program Director/Gallery Curator at ACE/121 – Originally from Washington state, Ben settled in Los Angeles after a decade living abroad. Following a B.A. in Theater Studies from Yale University, he lived in London, Barcelona and Paris, where he earned an M.A. in Theater and Choreography from the University of Paris 8. His work as a choreographer and performer toured across Europe and parts of North and South America, and his more recent work in visual art has been shown in France, Germany, Brazil and Cyprus. He grew up with a strong sense of service and his move to Los Angeles was inspired by a desire to make an impact on a local level. He is elated to work with the residents at ACE/121 in Glendale in creating an innovative model of multi-generational living, art making and community development.

 

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