There are plenty of terrific pockets of culture all throughout the city of San Diego. One can find top San Diego hotels in every neighborhood, and they’re all worth exploring, and all very much connected. It’s one of the more navigable cities in the state, where a wrong turn on the freeway is usually pretty easily connected with onramps to others. Most places seem to be always less than 20 minutes away, making it easy to plan complicated itineraries, and see a lot of new things.
The city is connected by more than freeways, and more than cultures, although these are rather foundational to making things work. Just like culture is attracted to difference and sameness in equal measure, love of art breeds more love of art. It’s almost difficult to find successful artists who aren’t connected to UCSD in some way here, and the connections are worth embracing.
That’s definitely the case with the Patricia Rincon Dance Collective , where its founder is a faculty member at the university. Their work is eclectic, and has won multiple awards, and always worth seeing. Two of the company’s pet projects, the Blurred Borders Dance Festival, and the Myth Project, connect local artists with the university, and make larger concentric circles toward the international community. By connecting to the frameworks of the city, it also helps to make its frameworks more solid, and always more interesting.