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El Centro Cultural de México is an all-volunteer alternative space in Santa Ana, Orange County, California, focusing on transnational projects that link residents to communities all over Mexico through the arts, culture, and social justice. Through educational programming, which includes workshops in dance, music, art, and literacy, it ...
Logo_of_Santa_Ana,_California.png (332 × 301 pixels, file size: 80 KB, MIME type: image/png) This is a file from the Wikimedia Commons . Information from its description page there is shown below.
The logo of the Boys & Girls Clubs of America, sourced from their website. This image or logo only consists of typefaces, individual words, slogans, or simple geometric shapes. These are not eligible for copyright alone because they are not original enough , and thus the logo is considered to be in the public domain .
The city of Santa Ana spent $7.5 million to purchase and refurbish what was the Grand Central Building, originally built in 1924. The project has won three architectural awards. [citation needed] The center's fiscal plan allows it to self-generate income to support basic day-to-day operations.
Girls Club, Girls' club, or variations, may refer to: Girls' Club Foundation , a non-profit art foundation and alternative art space, located in downtown Fort Lauderdale Girls, Inc. , formerly the "Girls Club of America"
Koo's began as a small art cafe in Santa Ana in the early 1990s, at 1505 N Main St. Santa Ana. It was founded by Dennis Lluy, Lou Bribiesca and Dan Montano. It had a living room area dedicated for spoken word artists and for bands to play. Koo's served coffee and snacks from its kitchen.
The Girls Club in San Francisco, California, also known as Mission Neighborhood Capp St. Center, was built in 1911, in the First Bay Tradition version of Shingle Style architecture. The building was used as a clubhouse for girls and neighborhood center, similar to the Boys Club of America .
Girls' Club exhibits works predominantly but not exclusively by female artists and is, "the only private collection in the world dedicated to exhibiting contemporary art by women. [1]" The exhibits present artists from a wide range of ethnic groups including those drawn from the local art community and established artists from around the world.