Log

 Posted by on February 3, 2014
Feb 032014
 
Log

Corner of Webster and Golden Gate Avenue Park behind the Rosa Parks Senior Center Western Addition I have driven past this park one thousand times and have always wondered about this tree stump.  Then one day my dear friend Netra Roston told me about an artist named Sargent Johnson. Sargent Johnson was not a stranger to this blog, his WPA work is at the Maritime Museum. Born in Boston on October 7, 1887, Sargent Claude Johnson was the third of six children of Anderson and Lizzie Jackson Johnson. Anderson Johnson was of Swedish ancestry, and his wife was Cherokee and Continue Reading

Cyril Magnin

 Posted by on January 31, 2014
Jan 312014
 
Cyril Magnin

City Hall South Light Court Cyril Magnin served as San Francisco’s Chief of Protocol from 1964 until his death in 1988.  He was responsible for keeping many key international consulates from moving out of San Francisco and to Los Angeles.  He is seen here walking his dog Tippecanoe. In Magnin’s 1981 autobiography, “Call Me Cyril,” opera superstar Beverly Sills is quoted as saying: “He twinkles, he’s a song-and-dance man, a sentimentalist, a tough businessman, a sucker for a hard-luck story–and one of the great philanthropists. He’s a prince of pleasure, a king of kindness, a formidable friend, and I am Continue Reading

Harvey Milk

 Posted by on January 30, 2014
Jan 302014
 
Harvey Milk

City Hall Supervisors Legislative Chamber Civic Center This is the only bust of a supervisor in San Francisco’s City Hall. Harvey Milk  was the first openly gay person to be elected to public office. Milk won a seat as a San Francisco supervisor in 1977.  He served almost 11 months in office and was responsible for passing a stringent gay rights ordinance for the city. On November 27, 1978, Milk and Mayor George Moscone were assassinated by Dan White, another city supervisor. Milk’s election and assassination were key components of a shift in San Francisco politics. Despite his short career in politics, Continue Reading

Goddess of Progress

 Posted by on January 29, 2014
Jan 292014
 
Goddess of Progress

City Hall South Light Court Goddess of Progress by F. Marion Wells The plaque that accompanies her reads: On April 17, 1906, the dome atop San Francisco’s City Hall that was completed in 1896 supported a twenty foot statue by F. Marion Wells.  The Goddess of Progress, with lightbulbs in her hair, held a torch aloft in her right hand, causing some contemporary counts to refer to it as the Goddess of Liberty.  The statue was so securely mounted that on April 18, 1906, when City Hall and the city around it lay in ruins from the great earthquake-fire, it Continue Reading

Whispering Dishes

 Posted by on January 28, 2014
Jan 282014
 
Whispering Dishes

Market Street and Yerba Buena Lane Financial District   This exhibit is the first of  a series titled Living Innovation Zones.  Living Innovation Zones (LIZ) are new public spaces opening up along Market Street between Octavia and The Embarcadero.  The LIZ’s  are collaborationa between the community, innovators, and the City to enhance the public good, foster learning and sharing, and showcase innovation.  The City plans to streamline permitting in order to boost participation in the program and bring more projects to sidewalks. “Whispering Dishes” is the first exhibit, and is a partnership between the Exploratorium and Yerba Buena Community Benefit District.  It features Continue Reading

Os Gemeos, Bode and The Warfield

 Posted by on January 27, 2014
Jan 272014
 
Os Gemeos, Bode and The Warfield

Taylor and Turk The Tenderloin This fun mural was finished in September of 2013.  It is a collaboration between Os Gemeos and Mark Bode, both whom have been in this site before. This whimsical piece sits on the back of the Warfield Theater on Market street.  The two cousins from Brazil and San Francisco artist Mark Bode  painted this mural which includes one of Os Gemeos’ characters and the iconic comic character “Cheech Wizard” created by Mark’s father Vaughn Bodé in 1957. Cheech Wizard The wall was organized by the Luggage Store Gallery and Wallspace SF.

Jan 242014
 
EL Granada Apartment Building Goes Back to Its Roots

EL Granada At Sather Gate 2510 Bancroft Berkeley, California The Granada was built by Patrick O’Brien in 1904, and had been passed down in the family ever since. He built it so that everybody in the family would always have a roof over their heads, and so the building would always support the family. Like so many projects that go through time, the ornamentation was removed in the 1960’s or 1970’s to create a more streamlined effect.  In 1995 The Munger Brothers hired Michael H. Casey to recreate the two highly ornamented decorations above the windows.  Working from old photographs from Continue Reading

Caruso’s Dream Causes Pianos to Fly

 Posted by on January 24, 2014
Jan 242014
 
Caruso's Dream Causes Pianos to Fly

55 Ninth Street Mid Market/SOMA I spoke with Brian Goggin about his installation of Caruso’s Dream well over a year ago.  While it is taking a long time to get installed, and is was not quite finished when I wrote this post, I thought I would bring it to you anyway. Brian has been in this site many times, you can read all about him here. This is a public site-specific artwork commissioned by the developers of AVA 55 Ninth, a 17-story apartment complex on Ninth Street, sitting between Market and Mission. After singing Carmen in San Francisco, the famous tenor Enrico Caruso Continue Reading

Jan 222014
 
Helen Bruton's Tile Murals at the Golden West Hotel

114 Powell Street Union Square In the very narrow entry way to the Hotel Union Square are these two exquisite tile murals.  While the hotel was originally built in 1908 for the 1915 Pan Pacific International Exposition, the murals were not added until 1935. The murals were done by Helen Bruton Bell (1898-1985)  Ms. Bell was a fascinating woman.  One of three artistic sisters, she was born in Alameda.  She attended the University of California for one year. During World War I, she worked with her sisters Esther and Margaret in occupational therapy at the Letterman Hospital in San Francisco. Continue Reading

Cosmo Cocktails

 Posted by on January 21, 2014
Jan 212014
 
Cosmo Cocktails

20 Cosmo Place Lower Nob Hill/Tenderloin   This unassuming building has been providing fine drinks, food and happiness to San Francisco’s since 1951. Trader Vic’s opened in Cosmo Alley in 1951.  The restaurant was built from an old corrugated parking garage.  Passing along the narrow walk way through a tropical garden, customers entered the rustic shed. This photograph, from the archives of the San Francisco Chronicle (with no caption or story) must show the very beginnings of the place, if not the construction for its opening. While I spent fond nights there eating Pu pu Platters and downing Trader Vic’s Continue Reading

Painted Grain Silos in San Francisco

 Posted by on January 15, 2014
Jan 152014
 
Painted Grain Silos in San Francisco

696 Amador Street off 3rd Street / Pier 90/92 Bayview/Hunters Point A while back I wrote about these grain silos, I also mentioned at the time they eventually would become an art project.  You can read all about the silos here. This project is part of the Blue Greenway Project, a $2.2 million project funded through the Port of San Francisco. The Project was awarded to  the Seattle based firm of  Haddad/Drugan.  It is titled “Bayview Rise” and is expected to be in place for a minimum of 5 years.   According to their website: Bayview Rise works 2-dimensionally as Continue Reading

Windmills of Portola

 Posted by on January 14, 2014
Jan 142014
 
Windmills of Portola

Palega Park 500 Felton Portola District In November of 2013 eighty year old Palega Park underwent a $21.2 million Restoration. The Park’s new clubhouse features a mosaic mural by Kelly Ording commissioned by the San Francisco Arts Commission through the city’s two-percent-for-art ordinance. Located behind the clubhouse’s portico windows and visible from the street, Windmills pays homage to the Portola’s  past as the center of the city’s commercial flower industry.  The mural cost $127,400. According to Ording, “This mural contains four main elements that I found fascinating when researching this neighborhood; the wind, the windmills, the greenhouses and the fertile land.  I Continue Reading

Tile Benches at Alta Plaza

 Posted by on January 13, 2014
Jan 132014
 
Tile Benches at Alta Plaza

Alta Plaza Steiner/Clay/Scott/Jackson Pacific Heights   There are two benches in the children’s area of Alta Plaza Playground covered in beautiful tile mosaics. Commissioned by Friends of Alta Plaza Park, the artist, Aileen Barr, combined handmade tile and mosaic to create the two seating walls for the newly renovated playground. A series of donor tiles are integrated into the design, which display the names of community members who contributed to the fund for the renovation. The seating walls measure 30 ft and 50 ft in length.   Aileen Barr has been in this website many times, you can see her Continue Reading

Restoring Historic Murals

 Posted by on January 10, 2014
Jan 102014
 
Restoring Historic Murals

Franklin Square Park 2500 17th Street Potrero Hill Brotherhood of Man by Anthony Stellon  This once abandoned mosaic was found by David Schweisguth in 2006. While walking his beagle Huxley in Franklin Square Park one afternoon, Huxley sniffed around a large concrete slab serving as a makeshift potting table, Schweisguth looked under the plastic sheet covering the table top and found this treasure. With the help of local mural expert Lillian Sizemore, who wrote A Guide to Mosaic Sites: San Francisco, they discovered that the artist was Anthony Stellon, who died in 2005. Schwiesguth’s discovery came at the right time. A neighborhood Continue Reading

Tiled Stairways to Heaven

 Posted by on January 9, 2014
Jan 092014
 
Tiled Stairways to Heaven

Golden Gate Heights 16th Avenue between Kirkham and Lawton This is the second project by Aileen Barr and Colette Crutcher covering stairways in the Golden Gate Heights area. You can read about both of them and their first project here.   This project was made possible by a group called Hidden Garden Steps.  According to their website: The Hidden Garden Steps Project is a community-based, public art initiative to create mosaic steps, a public garden and a wall mural on 16th Avenue extending uphill from Kirkham to Lawton in the Golden Gate Heights/Inner Sunset neighborhood. Formal partners include the San Francisco Continue Reading

Eng-Skell

 Posted by on January 8, 2014
Jan 082014
 
Eng-Skell

1043 Howard Street SOMA It is hard to believe that in a world of corporate mergers and gentrification of neighborhoods, that the original company that built this wonderful deco building still occupies it. In 1900 W.A. England and H.D. Skellinger founded the Eng-Skell Company.  The company made flavoring extracts for the bakery and bottling trades and specialties such as orange bitters for the bar trade. In 1930 the company built this three-story Art Deco building in SOMA.  The building was designed by architect A.C. Griewank.  It is 100,000 square feet and originally housed a laboratory, manufacturing plant, warehouse and office Continue Reading

Shining Paths

 Posted by on January 7, 2014
Jan 072014
 
Shining Paths

SFO International Terminal Gate G level 3 Post TSA Shining Paths: San Francisco’s Sister Cities 2006 by Lewis Desoto 16 Derkson projectors, lamps and gobo light gels 68 in. in diameter. This work in its entirety consists of 16 light projections (divided between boarding areas A and G) that celebrate San Francisco’s Sister Cities around the world. The work is an extension of the artist’s On the Air project, located on the floor of the international terminal arrivals lobby. Here, each Sister City is represented by the aeronautical map for its airport, overlaid with the image of the city flower. Continue Reading

Blue Deer

 Posted by on January 6, 2014
Jan 062014
 
Blue Deer

SFO International Terminal Gate G Level 3 Post TSA Blue Deer 2006-2007 Oil and Pigmented Ink with Gesso Ground on Wood Panels Clare Rojas The plaque on this piece reads:  Inspired by American folk art, quilting and storytelling, Clare Rojas creates dreamlike images executed in tightly drawn crystalline shapes.  Rojas intends to bring a sense of warmth and comfort to the viewer and she often changes the exhibition space to better fit the feeling of her work.  Here she transforms the gate room wall into space more reminiscent of home. “Blue Deer” is based on a children’s book Rojas wrote Continue Reading

Baile

 Posted by on January 3, 2014
Jan 032014
 
Baile

SFO International Terminal Gate G Level 3 Post TSA “Baile” – Copper and Powder Coated Steel – 1999 – Carmen Lomas Garza The plaque on this piece reads: This image of Mexican Flokloric dancers is inspired by the tradition of Mexican and Chinese tissue paper cutouts and French silhouettes.  As an artist, Carmen Lomas Carza often recalls her memories of growing up in South Texas as inspiration for her imagery  Shi is known for her portrayal of popular customs and events, from tamale-making to community fiestas. Carmen Lomas Garza was born in Kingsville, Texas. At 13, she made a commitment Continue Reading

Sanctuary

 Posted by on January 2, 2014
Jan 022014
 
Sanctuary

SFO International Terminal Gate G Level 3 Post TSA The plaque on this piece reads: Arrival at SFO is the beginning of a new life for many immigrants.  Just as the surrounding wetlands prove sanctuary for shore birds during their annual migration.  the mural is painted in fresco buono an ancient technique that mixes pigment directly into wet plaster. The artists on this piece were Juana Alicia and Emmanuel Catarino Montoyo.  Both of these artists have been in this website before, you can read about both of them here. This piece was commissioned by the San Francisco Art Commission for Continue Reading

Bird Technology

 Posted by on January 1, 2014
Jan 012014
 
Bird Technology

SFO Boarding Area G Level 3 International Terminal Post TSA Bird Technology – Hand Painted Ceramic Tile – 1999 by Rupert Garcia The plaque on this piece reads: This work combines two images: a bird that symbolizes natural flight, and a geometric grid that symbolizes the technological advances that made human flight possible.  Implicit in the work is the potential for conflict between the natural world and technology. According to the Smithsonian: Rupert García came from a family active in the creation and instruction of folk arts and traditions. After completing his service in the U.S. Air Force in Indochina, Continue Reading

Thinking of Balmy Alley

 Posted by on December 31, 2013
Dec 312013
 
Thinking of Balmy Alley

SFO International Terminal Boarding Area G Level 3 Post TSA Ceramic Tile Mosaic – 1999 by Rigo 99 The plaque on this piece reads: This work, of a solitary boy totally absorbed in the act of paining, is inspired  y a mural (since destroyed) painted in 1993 by the artist and local youth in Balmy Alley, located in San Francisco’s Mission District. Rigo 99 has been in this website many times before.  This piece was commissioned by the San Francisco Art Commission for the airport.

Fly, Flight Fugit

 Posted by on December 30, 2013
Dec 302013
 
Fly, Flight Fugit

SFO International Terminal Boarding Area G – Level 3 Post TSA Fly, Flight Fugit by Squeak Carnwath Porcelain Enamel on Steel – 1999 210 in. x 210 in.; each panel is 30 in. square The plaque that accompanies the piece states: “When I’m I’m a Plane, I often think about things that fly naturally.  This work is about those things – Bees, Flags, Snow Bugs, Mercury, Rain and Flights of Fancy” Much of Cornwath’s work is about her own thoughts, reactions, and memories.  She frequently combines hand-scrawled words, visual images and color into luminous paintings that prompt the personal thoughts Continue Reading

Glass that challenges your understanding

 Posted by on December 27, 2013
Dec 272013
 
Glass that challenges your understanding

San Francisco International Terminal Terminal Two Air Over Under by Norie Sato – 2011 These two Huge panels are easier to see than to photograph.  (The above photo is courtesy of FlySFO) They are hand painted and silkscreened glass enamels on float glass and measure 16 ft. x 150 ft. each. Norie Sato’s imagery was inspired by our relationship to clouds and flight. Specifically, her work delves into some of flight’s inherent qualities: ephemeral, abstract, pictorial, natural, man-made, symmetrical and changeable. The artwork depicts the dual experience of being under or over clouds when flying in a plane. According to the Continue Reading

Ford Elementary School Lunette

 Posted by on December 23, 2013
Dec 232013
 
Ford Elementary School Lunette

Ford Elementary School 2711 Maricopa Avenue Richmond, California Sally Swanson Architects of San Francisco designed a new $19 million energy-efficient school to replace the outdated original Ford Elementary School in Richmond, California. The new school’s design is a modern interpretation of the Mission Style. The school’s framework, a repeating 30-foot grid, creates the flexibility for the educational programming in the interior, and easily accommodates a variety of alternative teaching methodologies. The light-filled corridors, with articulated beams, double as a collaborative in-between area where learning can also take place.  On the second floor, the corridor is transformed into a street for the innovative learning Continue Reading

Flight Patterns

 Posted by on December 23, 2013
Dec 232013
 
Flight Patterns

San Francisco International Airport Terminal One Boarding Area C Flight Patterns by Larry Kirkland – 1987 Stainless steel cables, painted aluminum tubing, sheeting and screening 264 in. x 276 in. x 756 in. Born in 1950 in Port Hueneme, California, Larry Kirkland moved with his military family throughout the U.S. and abroad during his childhood. He received his undergraduate degree in environmental design in 1972 from Oregon State University and his Masters of Fine Arts degree in 1974 from the University of Kansas. Kirkland created these large, aerial sculptures that are characterized by its nearly transparent, ethereal quality. This work was Continue Reading

A Mosaic of Bay Area History

 Posted by on December 20, 2013
Dec 202013
 
A Mosaic of Bay Area History

San Francisco International Airport Terminal 1 Connector Level 2 Bay Area Victorian, Bay Area, Deco, Bay Area Funk by Joyce Kozloff – 1982 This artwork is inspired by historical decorative styles found in the Bay Area. The left panel, Bay Area Victorian, draws its sources from the ornament on old homes in the Mission District, Pacific Heights, the Western Addition and Potrero Hill.  The right panel, Bay Area Deco, references downtown Oakland in its heyday, when the Fox and Paramount theaters were built.  Both the celadon grey-green of the I. Magnin store and the cobalt blue and silver facade of Continue Reading

Thousands and Thousands of Tiles

 Posted by on December 19, 2013
Dec 192013
 
Thousands and Thousands of Tiles

San Francisco International Airport International Terminal Main Hall Gateway 2000- by Ik-Joong Kang  This artwork contains 5,400 unique 3 in. x 3 in. paintings, wood carvings, tiles and cast acrylic cubes. The artist began working in this 3 in. x 3 in. format when he was a student and commuted long distances to various part-time jobs. The 3 in. canvases were small enough for him to carry in his backpack and paint on the subway. The piece is mixed media including canvas, wood, ceramic tile and found objects, it measures 120 X 720 inches. Born in 1960, in Cheong Ju, Continue Reading

Stacking Stones

 Posted by on December 18, 2013
Dec 182013
 
Stacking Stones

San Francisco International Airport Terminal Two Level Two Stacking Stones by Seiji Kunishma – 1983 These stones were commissioned by SFAC for the airport in 1983.  They remained in the airport during the new construction. Born in Nagoya, Japan, Seiji Kunishima is an internationally renowned artist whose sculptures are characterized by a serene balance between the traditional and the modern. Stacking Stones weighs 14 tons and is created from stone quarried near Nagoya. Each section of rock was shaped to fit into the next and the outer surface was chiseled or polished to create contrasts of color, texture and depth. Continue Reading

Tapestries to take your breath away

 Posted by on December 1, 2013
Dec 012013
 
Tapestries to take your breath away

San Francisco International Airport Terminal 2 Waiting Area This is a series by Mark Adams.  They include Garden Outside Gate, Garden in Golden Gate Park, and Garden in San Andreas Valley.  They have been in storage for over 20 years at the SFAC.  They were brought out and installed as part of the complete remodel of Terminal 2 at SFO.  They are absolutely stunning, and thank goodness they have been brought out for all to enjoy. Woven in the traditional Aubusson style, these flax woven wool tapestries represent various gardens that the artist remembers from his years living in San Continue Reading

error: Content is protected !!