The Mercury News

Gala going online with auctions, good music

- Sal Pizarro

The San Jose Museum of Art’s annual gala is normally one of the fall’s most visually stunning events, with the Circle of Palms outside the downtown gallery filled with eye-catching performanc­es and guests who take the suggestion of “creative formal” attire to interestin­g lengths. But for this year’s gala, you won’t need a peacockfea­ther print dress or a midnight blue tuxedo. You won’t even need a ticket.

The gala and auction Saturday will be virtual and free for everyone to tune in. The 6 p.m. event will honor longtime patrons Cheryl and Bruce Kiddoo and artist Pae White, and it will include the unveiling of a new sculpture for the museum’s atrium — a mobile created by White that’s been described as “dazzling” by those who have seen it.

But a real treat for audiences will be a lineup of performanc­es from South Bay arts groups and artists with ties to the Bay Area. That includes Bellarmine College Prep alum and Broadway actor Ryan Vasquez, who will perform excerpts from “Hamilton”; Vietnamese musician VânÁnh Võ, accompanie­d by the Blood Moon Orchestra, who created an original song for the gala; and a dance-along flash mob with choreograp­her Jadell Lee.

Other performanc­es will feature Mosaic Silicon Valley, an initiative of Sangram Arts; New Ballet; Opera San Jose; and San Jose Jazz.

There’s also a silent auction that opens Thursday and closes Sunday, and a live auction that will close during the broadcast Saturday night, with 10% of auction proceeds supporting the Black Lives Matter Global Network. Go to sjmusart. org/2020gala to register and get more informatio­n. JAZZY aOLLASORAT­ION >> Before their appearance at the Museum of Art gala, San Jose

Jazz and Silicon Valley nonprofit Sangram Arts are collaborat­ing this week on the first program in “Making the Mosaic,” a series that allows diverse audiences and guests to explore what being “American” means to them.

The debut program at 7 p.m. Thursday will feature saxophonis­t George Brooks and sitar player Arjun Verma exploring — in both discussion and performanc­e — improvisat­ion, which is a key element in both jazz and Indian classical music. You can register for the Zoom event at both sanga marts. org or sanjosejaz­z.org/ events.

INSPIRING EVENT >> The legendary Neil Young, Ozomatli’s Raul Pacheco and indigenous vocalist Calina Lawrence are lending performanc­es to Green Foothills’ annual Nature’s Inspiratio­n celebratio­n on Sunday. The online event will honor Valentin Lopez, who has been chairman of the Amah Mutsun Tribal Band since 2003 and has worked tirelessly to bring internatio­nal awareness to the experience of indigenous people.

A major part of that work has been protecting Juristac, land just south of Gilroy that is at the heart of the Amah Mutsun Tribal Band’s ancestral lands. Now known as Sargent Ranch, the land is being eyed for developmen­t of a sand and gravel mining operation. The fight also brought Lopez to the attention of Young, who is providing a recorded performanc­e.

“This is a celebratio­n of the people in our community who are fighting for a livable planet,” Green Foothills Executive Director Megan Fluke said.

Tickets to the 6:30 p.m. fundraiser are $150 each and can be purchased at greenfooth­ills.org/natures-inspiratio­n.

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