Showing posts with label sf galleries. Show all posts
Showing posts with label sf galleries. Show all posts

Tuesday, January 28, 2020

Jürgen Trautwein - If yesterday were tomorrow today would be Sunday Paintings - gallery 60SIX, San Francisco





Jürgen Trautwein

If yesterday were tomorrow today would be Sunday
Paintings


Jürgen Trautwein presents his seventh exhibition with 60SIX, "If Yesterday were Tomorrow, Today would be Sunday."
In this series, old newsprint collages from the mid 90’s live under acrylic paint. The artist used mainly San Francisco Chronicle & Examiner Sunday papers using a wheat flour based gluing process in multiple layers revealing bends, wrinkles, folds and resulting in unexpected refractions. The agitated surfaces become rich and nuanced while unlabored. The creases and lines and pools of paint are reminiscent of his set of works from the Topography series as well as earlier work on antique linen where minimal fields are interrupted by paint sticking to folds and creases.
The artist says of his new series, "YesterMorrow reflects on the idea of re-thinking, re-evaluation, re-painting, re-creation, re-cycling and re-definition." The paintings are, he says, “silent reminders of erased content, voids of no incident.”
Trautwein’s paintings often feel like objects that have undergone a reaction. The materials are fully present and embodied in the object. The artist’s title "If Yesterday were Tomorrow Today would be Sunday," illustrates his zen approach. The logic is absent, and we are left only with the present moment and the object and our experience of it.

http://www.gallery60six.com/yestermorrow


Friday, March 12, 2010

At the CCA Wattis institute for contemporary arts

silvia watching the kampfmachine image in 3d
the Voight-Kampff machine, an imaginary mechanism of interrogation
used to distinguish humans from replicants (or androids)

pyramid lake by michael bravo/harrell fletcher,

at the magnificent seven and route 101 shows
@ the wattis institute for contemporary arts.


Wednesday, May 13, 2009

Skate this Art @ market street gallery in SF



  May 4 th-31st 
art auction/benefit:    "Skate This Art"  
at the Market Street Gallery (1554 Market) between Van Ness and Franklin... 
(half of proceeds go to the Roaddawgs homeless youth drop-in center.) 

I believe this is the second annual, curated by our own Randall John. Last year's auction/benefit of these one-of-a-kind skateboard decks, made into display-worthy works of art by local artists extraordinaire, each in their own inimitable style, was SO successful that, this year, the San Francisco Chronicle is going to cover the event ...

Among the participating artists are, yours truly, Rebecca Peters and Ronald F. Sauer, also Blake More, Richard 'Luckey' Perri, Randall John... and many many others. Hope to see you there. (Text via email)


Monday, May 11, 2009

Tenderloin National Forest










Selected images from the Tenderloin National Forest, located in Cohen Alley off Ellis Street in the San Francisco Tenderloin. The Tenderloin National Forest was created to address the lack of green space in this neighborhood. The Forest is intended to be an inspiration and model for others to attempt gardening in the inner city. Co founded by Darryl Smith, director of the Luggage store gallery.
Here for more

Saturday, May 9, 2009

Trace Elements @ SF arts commission




Nice surprise while walking by. On scene shots from the Trace Elements installation/ performance @ SF Art commission on Grove.

Wednesday, March 18, 2009

Proust re-drawn

installation view, fragment of Molly Springfield's Translation

"the thickness of art "
Proust


page 5
28 drawings of photocopies of Marcel Proust's in search of lost time, sequential pages from the first chapter of the book. The project is in spirit of Kosuth and Baldessari, or the concept of drawing as writing and writing as drawing and seeing as reading and reading as seeing.
Currently at Steven Wolf



Thursday, March 12, 2009

Gold, Silver and Iron

Looking at the window while walking out of Silverman gallery,

real art is still in the gutter.

Wednesday, February 18, 2009

low(S)low Life at CCA Wattis Institute


Grandmasters of conceptual art, a lowslow environment.

Maria Lassnig's doubt in oil on canvas


Some images from Paul McCarthy's Low Life Slow Life part2 at the Wattis Institute for contemporary Arts. A two-part exhibition curated by the Los Angeles–based artist Paul McCarthy. It presents a diverse range of artists and artworks related to McCarthy's memories of his own career.<


by Dennis Oppenheim

other works by participating artists(following pieces not in show)

Dennis Oppenheim

Bruce Naumann

Les Levine
Fung Lin and Hal where mentioning him many times before.

part 1 show review

Thursday, December 11, 2008

Blue Poetry




Images from the 'this place called poetry' exhibition at the San Francisco Arts commission gallery.
What happens when poetry comes into your life? Can words make a difference? Meet 11 San Francisco youth who’ve embarked on a lifelong journey with words. This exhibition of art and films tell the stories of young people finding and claiming their place. read more

Sunday, September 14, 2008

Praba Pilar and L.M. Bogad - we remember the sun performance at the SF art institute

LM Bogad

Neruda by Praba

L.M. Bogad and Praba Pilar performed on 9.11 an original piece commemorating the anniversary of an infamous terrorist act: the CIA-assisted military overthrow of Chile's democratically elected President, Salvador Allende
. This rooftop ritual rememberd the sun of hope and rebellion that shone around the world a generation ago, with its triumphs and failures, its precious solidarity and numerous betrayals.
I did like the multilayered complexity of the performance and how the audience got involved in the piece.


one of the multiple performance sets, it could be a play as well, great script and research.

another set of the performance, great tower piece, very intense...