From the subtle to the exuberantly gaudy.. so much wonderful work that you will need several visits to take it all in. A real review to come...
Saturday, October 31, 2015
Monday, October 19, 2015
Art from San Francisco's 1915 Panama-Pacific International Expo
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One of the few images from the original show, showing the salon style of hanging which was popular at the time. Review of the show here: http://www.examiner.com/article/art-from-sf-s-panama-pacific-international-exposition-revisited?CID=examiner_alerts_article |
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Edwin Deakin (American, b. England, 1838–1923), “Palace of Fine
Arts and the Lagoon,” ca. 1915. Oil on canvas. 32 3/8 × 48 3/8 in.
Crocker Art Museum
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E. Charlton Fortune, The Four Seasons),” ca. 1915. Oil on canvas. 16 1/4 × 20 in.
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Moonlight (Panama Pacific International Exposition),” ca. 1915. Soft- ground etching in color. 6 7/8 x 4 3/4 in. Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco
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Benjamin Chambers Brown (American, 1865-1942), “Art Palace, Reflections (Panama Pacific International Exposition),” ca. 1915. Soft-ground etching in color. 6 7/8x 4 7/8 in. Fine Arts Museums
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Bruce Nelson (American, 1888–1952), “The Summer Sea,” ca. 1914.
Oil on canvas. 30 × 40 in. Irvine Museum, California
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Edwin Austin Abbey (American, 1852–1911), “The Penance of
Eleanor, Duchess of Gloucester,” 1900. Oil on canvas. 49 × 85 in.
Carnegie Museum of Art, Pittsburgh
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Francis McComas (America, b. Australia, 1874-1938), “Navajo
Gateway, Arizona,” 1914. Watercolor. 26 3⁄4 x 21 1/16 in. Fine Arts
Museums of San Francisco, museum purchase, Skae Fund Legacy
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John Singer Sargent (American, b. Italy, 1856–1925), “The
Sketchers,” 1913. Oil on canvas. 22 × 28 in. Virginia Museum of Fine
Arts, the Arthur and Margaret Glasgow Fund
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Thursday, October 8, 2015
"Covert Operations' at the San Jose Museum of Art
Snowden and Manning’s revelations, NASA spying on citizens, the Chinese spying on Ai Weiwei, the Russians killing one of their spies by radioactive poisoning- at times, it seems like half the world is spying on the other half. Understanding our post 9/11 world is difficult enough; the artists in “Covert Operations: Investigating the Known Unknown” at the San Jose Museum of Art (SJMA) are attempting to present the more disturbing facets of our 'Brave New World" via multimedia. The exhibition’s conceptual themes include secrecy and disclosure, violence, power, subterfuge, surveillance, territory, geography and the visible versus the hidden. Subjects range from classified military sites and reconnaissance satellites to border and immigration surveillance, terrorist profiling to narcotics and human trafficking, illegal extradition flights to nuclear weapons.
The title of the exhibition was inspired by U.S. Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld’s response to a question at a 2002 news conference about the existence of weapons of mass destruction. “There are known knowns; there are things we know we know. We also know there are known unknowns; that is to say we know there are some things we do not know. But there are also unknown unknowns—the ones we don’t know we don’t know.” Rumsfeld’s insight into our post-9/11 landscape illustrates the logic behind the phrase “war on terror." Luckily, the artists here are free to use our democratic freedoms to bear witness to the attacks on liberty and abuses of power.
More at: http://www.examiner.com/article/covert-operations-investigating-the-known-unknown-at-the-sjma?CID=examiner_alerts_article
images courtesy of the SJMA/various artists
Sunday, October 4, 2015
A second look at "First Look" at the Asian
In August 2015, the Asian Art Museum launched its second summer exhibition of works from its recent contemporary art collection. The exhibition featured highlights and recent acquisitions in the Museum’s expanding contemporary art collection. Running until 11 October, the show marks the second time in 2015 that the Asian Art Museum is mounting a major display of contemporary art from its collection. The museum boasts a 180,000 strong collection, 1,100 of which are Asian contemporary artworks acquired in the past 15 years.
Allison Harding was the Guest Curator at the Asian Art Museum and the one who organized “First Look”. As she explained to the press:
"To truly understand the contemporary, you must understand the tradition from which it emerged. “First Look” embodies how tradition can inspire new works in the present and continue to impact contemporary life.”
The Asian Art Museum is not new to contemporary art exhibitions. The Museum has already held “28 Chinese” this summer, presenting 48 works by 28 Chinese artists organized by Miami’s Rubell Collection. Over the past 15 years, the Asian Art Museum has made a concentrated effort to include contemporary art in its exhibitions and acquisitions. They have organized two major contemporary art exhibitions – “Phantoms of Asia” (2012) and “Gorgeous” (2014) and number of exhibitions and installations including “Proximities” (2014), “Tetsuya Ishida: Saving the World with a Brushstroke” (2014-2015) and “Sanaz Mazinani: Threshold” (2015).
Many of the pieces, as skillful as they are, could be done by anybody, anywhere. For me, Asian art has such a magnificent past; I don't want to see that past thrown away for a generic modern "future." The best artists - well, those whose work I liked - combined cultural traditions with work that will prove timeless.
The Night of Perpetual Day, 2013
By Yang Yongliang (Chinese, b. 1980)
Four-channel HD video with sound, 8:32 min.
Acquisition made possible by Gorretti and Lawrence Lui, with additional funding from Richard Beleson, 2014.14
"The Night of Perpetual Day" combines Chinese painting traditions with new media techniques to construct an animated landscape exploring China’s rapid urban development. The artist’s process begins in the city, where he photographs the development of contemporary China that surrounds him. His images document the tensions of urbanization: progress and destruction, the grayness of the metropolis and the beauty of nature. He then digitally collages different photographs together and animates them to construct a landscape simultaneously futuristic and historic,
Interview with the artist at the Guardian.
At age sixteen Yako Hodo began six years of apprenticeship with three different bamboo masters before becoming an independent artist. Making only one or two exhibition pieces each year, he won numerous awards for his bamboo work, which transforms the strength and resiliency of bamboo into energetic, sculptural compositions. While "Wave Crest" and "Forest" suggest the beauty and movement of natural forms, "My UFO" offers the artist’s view of more alien terrain.
Allison Harding was the Guest Curator at the Asian Art Museum and the one who organized “First Look”. As she explained to the press:
"To truly understand the contemporary, you must understand the tradition from which it emerged. “First Look” embodies how tradition can inspire new works in the present and continue to impact contemporary life.”
The Asian Art Museum is not new to contemporary art exhibitions. The Museum has already held “28 Chinese” this summer, presenting 48 works by 28 Chinese artists organized by Miami’s Rubell Collection. Over the past 15 years, the Asian Art Museum has made a concentrated effort to include contemporary art in its exhibitions and acquisitions. They have organized two major contemporary art exhibitions – “Phantoms of Asia” (2012) and “Gorgeous” (2014) and number of exhibitions and installations including “Proximities” (2014), “Tetsuya Ishida: Saving the World with a Brushstroke” (2014-2015) and “Sanaz Mazinani: Threshold” (2015).
Many of the pieces, as skillful as they are, could be done by anybody, anywhere. For me, Asian art has such a magnificent past; I don't want to see that past thrown away for a generic modern "future." The best artists - well, those whose work I liked - combined cultural traditions with work that will prove timeless.
The Night of Perpetual Day, 2013
By Yang Yongliang (Chinese, b. 1980)
Four-channel HD video with sound, 8:32 min.
Acquisition made possible by Gorretti and Lawrence Lui, with additional funding from Richard Beleson, 2014.14
"The Night of Perpetual Day" combines Chinese painting traditions with new media techniques to construct an animated landscape exploring China’s rapid urban development. The artist’s process begins in the city, where he photographs the development of contemporary China that surrounds him. His images document the tensions of urbanization: progress and destruction, the grayness of the metropolis and the beauty of nature. He then digitally collages different photographs together and animates them to construct a landscape simultaneously futuristic and historic,
Interview with the artist at the Guardian.
Vase, 1985
By Kim Yik-yung (Korean, b. 1935)
Porcelain with clear glaze
Gift of Dr. Phyllis A. Kempner and Dr. David D. Stein, 2015.22
Kim Yik-yung’s ceramics emphasize the whiteness of porcelain clay and the aesthetics of modern forms, overlapping the traditional and the contemporary. While studying in New York in the early 1960s, Kim went to a lecture by the influential British ceramic artist and teacher Bernard Leach and heard him say one should learn everything about ceramic art by studying Korea’s Joseon dynasty (1392–1910) whiteware ceramics. Since then, her goal has been to create unembellished porcelain forms with innovative surface treatments that convey the sense of serenity characteristic of traditional Korean ceramics.
By Kim Yik-yung (Korean, b. 1935)
Porcelain with clear glaze
Gift of Dr. Phyllis A. Kempner and Dr. David D. Stein, 2015.22
Kim Yik-yung’s ceramics emphasize the whiteness of porcelain clay and the aesthetics of modern forms, overlapping the traditional and the contemporary. While studying in New York in the early 1960s, Kim went to a lecture by the influential British ceramic artist and teacher Bernard Leach and heard him say one should learn everything about ceramic art by studying Korea’s Joseon dynasty (1392–1910) whiteware ceramics. Since then, her goal has been to create unembellished porcelain forms with innovative surface treatments that convey the sense of serenity characteristic of traditional Korean ceramics.
My UFO by Yako Hoda
Ended Season by Zheng Chongbin. Ink and acrylic on Xuan paper.
Thursday, October 1, 2015
Asia Week San Francisco Bay Area 2015
Not able to go to China? Putting off that trip to Mongolia? Not to worry – for one activity and art packed week, Asia comes to the Bay Area.
Starting October 2nd through October 10, the week brings together Asian art dealers, auction houses, cultural institutions and academia, uniting the diverse participants around the theme of “Asian Art in the Contemporary World.”
The week begins with a Chinatown Art walk. Led by the Chinese Culture Foundation, the walk takes visitors through a history of Chinatown’s struggle to control its image and voice. The artwork seen on this guided tour features significant events in history such as the I-Hotel and also symbols of cultural pride
Qui Deshu. Fissure - Gathered Colors, 2009
In the afternoon, NanHai Art is sponsoring a two-part symposium on “Asian Art in the Contemporary World. The first panel is titled “Innovation and Continuity: Art Across Asia Now, the symposium will survey major trends in contemporary Asian Art. The second panel focuses on art from marketing and collecting perspectives. The gallery is also showing the work of Qui Deshu, whose work combines a traditional Chinese aesthetic along with a modern perspective.
In between, the visitor can view the current exhibit at the Asian Art Museum “First Look an exhibition featuring highlights and recent acquisitions in the Museum’s expanding contemporary art collection. Running until 11 October, the show marks the second time in 2015 that the Asian Art Museum is mounting a major display of contemporary art from its collection. Allison Harding, the Guest Curator organized “First Look”. She explained “To truly understand the contemporary, you must understand the tradition from which it emerged. “First Look” embodies how tradition can inspire new works in the present and continue to impact contemporary life.”
In Berkeley, California, you will find The Mongolia Foundation presenting an exhibition of three leading Mongolian women artists. Munkhtsetseg Jalkhaajav, also known as Mugi, currently has her works on show at the 56th Venice Biennale 2015. She creates oil paintings, collage, bronze and fabric sculptures, with themes of healing and nature. In contrast, Nomin Bold uses a traditional painting style known as Mongol Zurag, while Tugs-Oyun Sodnom is one of the earliest female oil painters in Mongolia whose versatility spans oil painting and graphic art.
While at the foundation, head over to the concurrent exhibition “Bay Area Mongolian Artists: Visions from Afar” featuring three artists based in the San Francisco and East Bay regions. One of the artists, Turburam Sandagdorj also known as Turo, uses paper cutting techniques in both large and minuscule installations. His work features characters in Mongolian folk tales and the world of fantasy. The Institute for East Asian Studies at UC Berkeley is presenting "Auspicious Images to Feminist Critiques: The Evolution of Mithila Painting in Rural India. "
The week culminates with the opening party with San Francisco’s Open Studios, the city’s biggest art event of the year SF Open Studios is the oldest and largest open studios program in the country, featuring an annual, month-long art event in October and November that showcases over 800 emerging and established San Francisco artists in their studios. We invite you to explore our city and find amazing art at every turn. You’ll discover an authentic connection to your art community and artwork in myriad forms, from painting, photography, and printmaking to glass, metal sculpture, and more. The event connects collectors with artists for engaging dialogue and a glimpse into the life of the working artist; SF Open Studios simultaneously helps artists build their mailing list, gain new admirers, and ultimately sustain a living making art.
The complete schedule and list of participants is here.
Monday, September 28, 2015
Letters to Myself
Calligrapher Alan A. Blackman
Jewett Gallery
SF Main Library
Secreted in the basement of the San Francisco Main Library
is the Jewett Gallery, one small plain room that often hosts noteworthy exhibits. “Letters to Myself” refers to Alan A.Blackman’s collection of postcards to himself with new stamps and first day
issued postmarks.
Over many years, calligrapher Blackman sent money for multiple stamps to the issuing post office, along with a self-addressed post card, with his name and address in varying fonts, colors, and styles drawn in the same theme as the new stamps the post office attached to mail back to him.
Over many years, calligrapher Blackman sent money for multiple stamps to the issuing post office, along with a self-addressed post card, with his name and address in varying fonts, colors, and styles drawn in the same theme as the new stamps the post office attached to mail back to him.
The letters of his name stand on skates for Olympic Stamps,
golf balls fly through the air on golf stamps. On bridge stamps, his name
is suspended between towers.
Blackman received first day issue stamps from around the
world. The collection also includes letters to his son, to whom the exhibit is
dedicated.
The exhibit notes that Blackman no longer lives at any of
the addresses on the post cards.
Wednesday, September 16, 2015
New work by Afro-American Indian artist Edmonia Lewis discovered
An important work by the 19th-Century Edmonia Lewis (1842-1907), has come to light. The marble 1870 "Bust of Christ" is in the collection of the Bute family on the Isle of Bute in Scotland.
http://www.examiner.com/article/important-work-by-19th-century-american-sculptor-edmonia-lewis-comes-to-light
Wednesday, August 26, 2015
'Comic Book Apocalypse: The Graphic World of Jack Kirby' at CS Northridge
An exhibit honoring Jack Kirby, the most influential and well known comic book artist in America. For almost a decade, Kirby provided Marvel's house style, co-creating with Stan Lee many of the Marvel characters and designing their visual motifs. At Lee's request, he often provided new-to-Marvel artists "breakdown" layouts, over which they would pencil in order to become acquainted with the Marvel look.
More at: http://www.examiner.com/article/comic-book-apocalypse-the-graphic-world-of-jack-kirby-at-cs-northridge
Thursday, August 20, 2015
Tuesday, August 18, 2015
'Astley D. M. Cooper and Mrs. Stanford's Jewels,' at the Cantor Arts Center
A rare look at a the work of an early 20th century California artist. Nationally recognized during his time but largely forgotten in our own, painter Astley D. M. Cooper (1856–1924) used a faux Egyptian temple as a studio, paid off bar debts with paintings, and threw the wildest parties that San Jose, California had ever seen. With their luscious colors and trompe l’oeil trickery, his landscapes, portraits, and wild western scenes aimed to both please and astonish. To this day, he has a following among those who collect early California art.
http://www.examiner.com/article/astley-d-m-cooper-and-mrs-stanford-s-jewels-at-the-cantor-arts-center?CID=examiner_alerts_article
http://www.examiner.com/article/astley-d-m-cooper-and-mrs-stanford-s-jewels-at-the-cantor-arts-center?CID=examiner_alerts_article
Monday, July 13, 2015
Bill Cosby's African-American art collection to remain on view at the Smithsonian
Gerard Sekoto. 1913–1993, South Africa Boy and the Candle. 1943
It really is about the artists and the Cosby's have a magnificent collection. Many of these artists, because they are African-American, are little known and little seen:
Highlights of the collection include: Rare late 18th- and early 19th-century portraits by the Baltimore-based African American artist Joshua Johnston
Explorations of black spirituality in the 1894 masterwork “The Thankful Poor” by Henry Ossawa Tanner and in the 1943 painting “Boy and the Candle” by South African artist Gerard Sekoto
The struggle for freedom and equality explored through the 1989 sculpture “Toussaint Louverture et la vieille esclave” by the Senegalese artist Ousmane Sow and the 1982 painting “Still Life: Souvenir No. IV” by the African American artist Eldzier Cortor
History, knowledge and memories explored through Cosby family quilts and African textile
A section on music and urban life that includes African musical instruments and African and African American modern and contemporary works
http://www.examiner.com/article/bill-cosby-s-african-american-art-collection-to-remain-on-view-at-the-smithsonia?CID=examiner_alerts_article
Thursday, July 2, 2015
Burning Man Temple returns to Patricia's Green, July Arts Calendar, Discover and Go and more..
Burning Man temple returns to Patricia's Green in Hayes Valley:
http://www.examiner.com/article/hayes-valley-temple-returns-to-patricia-s-green-sf
July Arts Calendar from SF Art Enthusiast: http://sfartenthusiast.com/calendar/
Discover and Go: San Francisco Public Library is transitioning its beloved free museum and attractions passes program, known as Check Out San Francisco Family Pass, to a new online platform called Discover and Go. Library users will still be able to access free passes to more than a dozen San Francisco museums and attractions with the use of their library card. With Discover and Go, library users can better plan their visits to local attractions by reserving a pass online with their library card and printing their tickets at home or at the neighborhood library. In addition, while the Check Out San Francisco Family Pass was available only for families accompanied by children under 18, some Discover and Go attraction passes are available for users of any age.
To start accessing passes to a variety of Bay Area attractions with your Library card, go to: discover.sfpl.org
San Francisco’s Discover and Go program is sponsored by the Department of Children Youth and Their Families (DCYF) and San Francisco Recreation & Parks.
http://sfpl.org/mobile.xhtml.php?pg=2000812701
Highlights from past SFAQ projects: http://sfaq.us/event/highlights-from-past-sfaq-projects-2012-2015/
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Photo courtesy of Black Rock Arts |
July Arts Calendar from SF Art Enthusiast: http://sfartenthusiast.com/calendar/
Discover and Go: San Francisco Public Library is transitioning its beloved free museum and attractions passes program, known as Check Out San Francisco Family Pass, to a new online platform called Discover and Go. Library users will still be able to access free passes to more than a dozen San Francisco museums and attractions with the use of their library card. With Discover and Go, library users can better plan their visits to local attractions by reserving a pass online with their library card and printing their tickets at home or at the neighborhood library. In addition, while the Check Out San Francisco Family Pass was available only for families accompanied by children under 18, some Discover and Go attraction passes are available for users of any age.
To start accessing passes to a variety of Bay Area attractions with your Library card, go to: discover.sfpl.org
San Francisco’s Discover and Go program is sponsored by the Department of Children Youth and Their Families (DCYF) and San Francisco Recreation & Parks.
http://sfpl.org/mobile.xhtml.php?pg=2000812701
Highlights from past SFAQ projects: http://sfaq.us/event/highlights-from-past-sfaq-projects-2012-2015/
Sunday, June 14, 2015
'28 Chinese' at the Asian Art Museum
Edgy, transgressive, disturbing, challenging, interesting and in some cases, simply beautiful - if there's one show you must see in June, this should be the one.
http://www.examiner.com/article/28-chinese-at-the-asian-art-museum
Thursday, June 4, 2015
Thursday, May 21, 2015
Tuesday, May 19, 2015
Friday, May 8, 2015
Wednesday, April 22, 2015
'Promised Land: The Art of Jacob Lawrence' at the Cantor Arts Center
Thanks to the generosity of the late Dr. Herbert J. Kayden of New York City and his daughter Joelle Kayden, Stanford MBA ’81, of Washington, D.C., the Cantor Arts Center at Stanford University now holds one of the largest collections in any museum of the work of Jacob Lawrence (1917–2000), a leading voice in the artistic portrayal of the African American experience.
The gift is comprised of five paintings, 11 drawings, 39 prints and one illustrated book, all dating between 1943 and 1998 and all given in memory of Dr. Gabrielle H. Reem, who is Herbert Kayden’s wife and Joelle Kayden’s mother.
More at: http://www.examiner.com/article/promised-land-the-art-of-jacob-lawrence-at-the-cantor-arts-center?CID=examiner_alerts_article
Wednesday, April 15, 2015
Alternative Exhibition Spaces (Artists Keep Inventing)
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One of Richard Shelton's paintings, on large pieces of destructed buildings. At Temporary Space LA. |
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Gallery visitor with iPad for enhanced viewing (point it at the art and it gives you more info on the piece, including preliminary drawings.) Work by Richard Shelton. At Temporary Space LA. |
On a recent scouting mission to LA, we stumbled across an art opening at Temporary Space LA, which is (temporarily) at 5522 Wilshire Blvd. There was coffee, live music, and a big solo show of work by Richard Shelton. Temporary Space, like BigCrow, is about “creating an alternative art economy.” How refreshing! They were also started by artists, in this case Richard Shelton & Stacie Meyer. Unlike our invitational group shows, they are doing solo shows by mid-career artists and they have some cool tech-assisted art-viewing ideas that I’ve never seen before. They also encourage and facilitate direct collector to artist communication.
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Gallery visitors at Temporary Space LA. Works on paper by Richard Shelton. |
The best part of the experience for us (David W. Sumner, Pamela A. Heyda, John W. Wall, and yours truly) was the enthusiastic response from the gallerists when they found out we were artists from SF. We were welcomed, given freebies, invited to submit, and encouraged to move down to LA.
Wow. OK. We’ll be back.
Thursday, March 26, 2015
The Met launches 'The Artist Project,' a new online video series
Thomas P. Campbell, Director and CEO of The Metropolitan Museum of
Art, announced today the launch of a new online video series, The Artist
Project, in which 100 artists respond to works from The Met’s vast
collection, which spans more than five millennia and cultures throughout
the world. Beginning March 2015, for one year, the Met will invite 100
artists—local, national, and global—to choose individual works of art or
galleries that spark their imaginations. In this online series, artists
reflect on what art is, what inspires them from across 5,000 years of
art, and in so doing, they reveal the power of a museum and The Met.
Their unique and passionate ways of seeing and experiencing art
encourage all museum visitors to look in a personal way.
Trailer here: http://artistproject.metmuseum.org/about/
Over the course of five seasons, The Artist Project will share the perspectives of one hundred artists with the public, telling us what they see when they look at The Met.
http://www.examiner.com/article/the-met-launches-a-new-online-video-series-the-artist-project
Trailer here: http://artistproject.metmuseum.org/about/
Over the course of five seasons, The Artist Project will share the perspectives of one hundred artists with the public, telling us what they see when they look at The Met.
http://www.examiner.com/article/the-met-launches-a-new-online-video-series-the-artist-project
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