Ornamental Gates at Rolph Playground

 Posted by on September 13, 2012
Sep 132012
 

Rolph Playground
Potrero at 25th &
Utah and 25th
Mission/Potrero Hill

Isis Rodriguez has created two rolled iron ornamental artworks, one for each side of Rolph Playground.

 

Isis Rodriguez is a second generation Mid-Western Latina who grew up in Topeka, Kansas and received her first lessons in art from copying Hannah-Barbera cartoons by hand. She attended the University of Kansas where she received her BFA in Painting in 1988.

Two years later, she moved to San Francisco to pursue her cartoon inspired artwork using various art forms: murals, paintings, silk screens, graffiti, flyers, and posters. Isis worked on murals for the Clarion Alley Mural Project in San Francisco from 1993 to 2002 and as a result, she emerged as one of the artists from an ad hoc artistic movement known as “The Mission school”, that included painters like Barry McGee, Margaret Kilgallen, Rigo, Carolyn Castaño, and Aarron Noble.

In 2003, Isis completed her first public art commission of designing cartoon mosaics for “Parque Niños Unidos” at 23rd and Treat, San Francisco and received the Norcal Sanitary Fill Artist in Residency Program, San Francisco.

Isis Rodriquez now resides in San Miquel de Allende, Mexico.

 

Muni brings art to an industrial building

 Posted by on August 25, 2012
Aug 252012
 

700 Pennsylvania

Potrero Hill

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The Muni Ways and Structures Facility is located at 700 Pennsylvania Street at the base of Potrero Hill. The facility centralizes several Muni functions, including, among others, a machine shop, welding, carpentry, painting, and locksmith. Although the size and shape of the complex is unchanged from its former role as an overhead-door factory, it has been given a colorful new life through the work of San Francisco artist Robert Catalusci. The exterior walls are now painted ox-blood red and graphite with silver and copper-green accents. In addition to custom paint design, the artist designed massive steel gates and four 18-square-foot sculptural panels over the building’s four roll-up doors. The three-dimensional ‘waffle’ pattern of the gates and panels is painted in high-gloss silver that is slightly reflective so that the structures appear to change with the light throughout the day.

Catalusci’s gate and panel designs and bold paint application were inspired by the industrial and transportation orientation of the complex. He selected color to symbolize the ethnic diversity of the design team and Muni workers. For instance, he chose red as the color of international workers, and graphite and silver for their associations with industry and metal work. The artist worked in tandem with city architects, in particular Howard Wong, AIA, and the rest of the design and construction team throughout the five-year renovation project. In addition to the custom paint design, Catalusci, who hails from a family of builders, drafted plans for the huge gates and produced final drawings.

As a fine artist, Catalusci usually creates multi-media and large-scale three-dimensional sculpture based on architecture. He holds a B.F.A. from the San Francisco Art Institute and has exhibited regionally, in several private venues and at the San Francisco Arts Commission Gallery and the Capp Street Project.

Robert Catalusci’s work on the design and construction of the 700 Pennsylvania Muni Ways and Structures Facility was commissioned by the San Francisco Arts Commission for the San Francisco Municipal Railway. The commission is a result of the city’s percent for art ordinance, which provides for an art allocation of 2% of the cost of construction of new or renovated city structures.

Jul 292012
 
Potrero Hill
San Francisco General Hospital
23rd and Vermont
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Stiff Loops by Gerald Walburg
6000 pounds, Corten Steel, 1974

In 2009 Stiff Loops was moved from its original site and underwent a $44,650 renovation. It was then placed at the corner of the hospital parking lot to make way for the construction of the new Trauma Center. The conservation treatments were meant to mitigate corrosion and enhance structural stability.

Gerald Walburg (1936- ) is a retired art teacher from California State University Sacramento.

From a March 3, 2004 CSUS newspaper:
Like many artists, Walburg started drawing at a very young age. He majored in art as an undergraduate at San Francisco State University. Walburg continued his studies in art as a graduate student at UC Davis.

“It was there (at Davis) that I started working large,” Walburg said. By “large” he refers to the towering 40-foot metal sculpture that stands in front of the Macy’s in the downtown mall called the Indo Arch.

As a member of the Art Department faculty, Walburg has taught graduate, lower and upper division students. He encourages his students to work hard and to come to his class without a “preconceived idea of what sculpture should be.” He urges students to “(find) your own vision to express who you are.”
His aim as an artist is to challenge both himself and his viewers. An artist who is hardly satisfied with his work, Walburg is constantly reinventing himself.

“It would be easier to stay at the same pace over and over again,” he said. He believes that people should “develop as an artist over time” rather than think about what particular style they want to display.
“It usually takes people 10 years to understand what I’m doing as an artist. By that time I’ve already moved on,” he said.

If Walburg does not succeed in challenging you through his art, there is still a chance his politics will. Like many other faculty members at Sac State, Walburg has seen many changes since 1969, when he joined the faculty.

“The level of support for the Art Department has diminished greatly,” laments Walburg. For example, in 1969 the operating expense for his sculpting class was $1,000. Today, 35 years later, he receives $600 in operating expenses to accomplish the same level of teaching. The lack of money, he said, makes it “more and more difficult to do the job.”

Within the past 20 years Walburg has seen student fees rise higher and higher. He points out that it was not always like this.

“Education was once what made California great — it is now what breaks us,” Walburg said.
When he started working, administrators came from the faculty. “They had a real connection to the education,” he explains. The administration now seems to be looking at education from more of a business standpoint. The lack of evaluation in the administration offices leaves him to conclude that the best interest of the students is no longer what is being sought.

“Money should be put back into education,” Walburg said

Potrero Hill – Cars and Birds

 Posted by on December 27, 2011
Dec 272011
 
16th and Bryant
Potrero Hill, San Francisco

This mural at 16th and Bryant is by Rigo and was done in 1997.  Rigo has been in this website many times. was born and raised on the Portuguese island of Madeira. He later established himself as an artist in San Francisco, earning a BFA from San Francisco Art Institute in 1991 and an MFA from Stanford University in 1997. From 1984-2002, Rigo used the last two digits of the current year as part of his name, finally settling upon “23″ in 2003

 

Potrero Hill – Snake Mural

 Posted by on December 5, 2011
Dec 052011
 
Potrero Hill
17th and Alabama

Sometimes murals catch you, not for their quality but for their whimsy.  Take a look at the close up pictures.  This mural is by Javier Manrique, a multidisciplinary artist who has shown all over the world. This mural is on the wall of Project Artaud where Manrique lives.

Potrero Hill – Umbrellas

 Posted by on November 27, 2011
Nov 272011
 
Potrero Hill
17th and Florida
Muybridge Live
Benjy Young

The photos of these umbrellas have been on my computer for quite a while.  I did not want to post them until I knew who the artist was, and that task proved elusive.  However, today was one of those days that make it all worth while.  I went back to the umbrellas, as you will be able to tell by the varying sky and took a few more shots.  I also took the time to start knocking on doors and asking who was the creator of this whimsical, wonderful installation.  Well, after a fashion, out walked the most dashing gentlemen to claim them.  His name is Benji Young, and we had a wonderful chat.

Benjy was inspired by Eadweard Muybridge.  The title, Muybridge Live, represents the concept that this is one umbrella caught on film.  The staves in-between each umbrella represent the division between each frame of film.   The sculpture intends to refer back to the medium of photographs, and what photographer doesn’t love the concept of referring media back to photography?

 

For those not familiar with Muybridge’s work he was an English photographer who spent much of his life in the United States. He is known for his pioneering work on animal locomotion which used multiple cameras to capture motion, and his zoopraxiscope, a device for projecting motion pictures that pre-dated the flexible perforated film strip.  He began to build his reputation in 1867 with photos of Yosemite and San Francisco.  Muybridges’ history in California was sealed thanks to Leland Stanford with his horse in motion studies.  If you are interested in reading more about the horse in motion study you can find it here.

In Dollar We Trust on Potrero Hill

 Posted by on October 23, 2011
Oct 232011
 
Potrero Hill / Mission District
Alabama between 17th and Mariposa

This long mural is titled “In Dollar We Trust” and is by two artists from Apotik Komik (Yogyakarta, Java, Indonesia artist collective), Samuel Indratama and Arie Dyanto.   I read a fascinating article by Jim Sullivan of Mira Costa College, about how art expresses the lost dreams of California.  In it  Mr. Sullivan  explains that this piece “condemns the California Dream of a money dependent government and emphasizes the importance of severing individuals’ obedience to greedy authorities. At first glance, spontaneous groups of blood-shot eyes are featured throughout the mural as they vigorously attach to a young man and attack him relentlessly until they burn the soles of his shoes. The eyes easily manage to surround the man, allowing him no feasible escape. These unforgiving eyes are our government that is starved of money and determined to stalk the red hooded man until he submits to their immense greed.

Eventually, the eyes begin to invade the man as they protrude from his jacket and take place where his heart and vital organs would reside. This depicts that the eyes of our authorities allow no room for independence as they, “dictate the rhythm of life throughout California”  and monitor every aspect of our lives in order to ultimately hold tight reins over an individual’s decisions and where an individual’s money is spent. Upon further inspection of the mural, a single eye raids the man’s wallet making it apparent he is simply another duplicative pawn to the government as the eyes brainwash him to follow the ideal that he is only worth what money values him at. However, it is apparent the man longs to be freed of this money-deprived government as he peers up past the dollar bill he’s captured in, yearning for a present that would deem him free of constant watch and regulation. As our money engrossed government remains constant surveillance over society, individuals undisputedly wish to cease their obedience to the dysfunction and ultimately be free. ”

While I find this explanation rather fascinating, especially since the “Occupy Wall Street” movement is starting to spread across this country, I also find it difficult to completely swallow.  The artists that produced this are actually Indonesian.  Both gentlemen’s art suffered under the Suharto Government. They are both known to use subtle references to express social and economic concerns in their art.  I am sure that their personal experiences were far more influential than the theories the professor puts forward.
The Alabama St. Mural was sponsored by Southern Exposure, who collaborated with Clarion Alley Mural Project, Intersection for the Arts, and Sama sama/You’re Welcome.  Sama sama/You’re Welcome is an international collaboration and exchange program between SF and Indonesian artists, designed to foster an understanding of contemporary art and culture between the communities.

Pepe Ozan’s Invocation

 Posted by on July 18, 2011
Jul 182011
 
Potrero Hill – San Francisco

This sculpture is located at the corner of Bayshore Blvd, Cesar Chavez and 26th Street, just to the side of Highway 101. Though it was installed in 2004, to mark the beginning of a new bike path, they just started construction on said path this month.

The sculptor, Pepe Ozan, stated that the piece represents an Eagle-Warrior, an institution that survived all of Mesoamerica’s civilizations throughout 2000 years until the arrival of the Conquistadors. The Eagle-Warriors were a corps of elite who served as leaders in religious ceremonies as well as on the battlefield.

The plaque on this sculpture reads “Presented to Honor the Indigenous Heritage of This Region”

The piece was part of the SFAC 2006-07 budget and cost $14,000.

Pepe Ozan Eagle Warrior

Pepe Ozan (1940-2013)  was an Argentinian sculptor that was very active with Burning Man.

From the Burning Man Blog:

One of Pepe’s lingam sculptures was first burned at Burning Man in 1993, and he created “Pepe’s Tower” each year after that until 2000. In Burning Man’s early years in the Black Rock Desert, the ritual burning of “Pepe’s Tower” on Friday night was traditionally followed by the burning of the Man the next evening. The Friday night ritual became more elaborate each year, and in 1996 it was renamed “The Burning Man Opera”.

“Le Nystere de Papa Loko” opera, 1999 (Photo by Tom Pendergast)
Pepe’s elaborate operas included “The Arrival of Empress Zoe” (1996), “The Daughters of Ishtar” (1997), “The Temple of Rudra” (1998), “Le Mystere De Papa Loko” (1999), “The Thaur-Taurs of Atlan” (2000), and “Ark of the Nereids” (2002), which featured a 35′-long mobile sculpture / musical instrument in the form of a Spanish Galleon crossed with a mythical aquatic creature. These epic performances, remembered fondly by so many in our community, would feature over 2,000 dancers and performers – in a true demonstration of radical inclusion, any and all Burners were invited to participate.

Invocation

My office is only 5 blocks from this spot, and I drive by this spot at least 3 times a week. I am not sure if I really have never seen it, or, more likely, the city finally got around to clearing away overgrown trees and shrubs.

I bring this up, not to point out my intense concentration on the road while I drive, but to discuss a problem that the City of San Francisco has with its art collection It has been said that the cities collection is valued at around $90 million dollars and includes over 4,000 items, one of the richest city-owned art collections in the world.

Sadly, management of the collection is so shoddy that the city cannot say for sure how many pieces it owns. Some pieces have been damaged because of lack of maintenance or poor storage; others have disappeared entirely.

The San Francisco Arts Commission is the city agency responsible for the collection. The page of their website that listed the collection shut down recently, with an apology that they were trying to get a better handle on the collection and bring a more complete list to the public.

Since the Civic Arts Collection’s inception in 1932, a full survey of the city’s holdings has never been done. A complete inventory is under way, but until its scheduled completion in late 2012, the city can only guess at the collection’s size.

Approximately 900 pieces are in storage, while the rest are scattered around parks, hospitals, offices, courtrooms and other public city-owned spaces.

The budget to tally, repair and keep an eye on the collection is minimal, and the staff almost non-existent.

What I suspect here is that this particular sculpture was hidden in the local flora, only to be discovered again after the gardeners arrived.

 

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