Folded Circle Split

 Posted by on April 12, 2013
Apr 122013
 

201 Spear Street
SOMA Financial Area

Folded Circle Split by Fletcher BentonFolded Circle Split by Fletcher Benton – 1984

In walking through the lobby of 201 Spear Street I tripped upon this sculpture.  The office building is open from 8:00 am to 5:00 pm M-F.

Fletcher Benton (born February 25, 1931 Jackson, Ohio) is from San Francisco, California

He graduated from Miami University, Oxford, Ohio with a Bachelor of Fine Arts degree in 1956. From 1964 to 1967 he taught at the San Francisco Art Institute and taught as an associate professor and then professor of art at San Jose State University from 1967-1986.

Fletcher Benton began his career as an abstractionist painter in the 1950s and 1960s. Frustrated with the limitations of paint on canvas, Benton began work on movement with geometric pattern pieces and boxes which he was familiar with from his work in commercial signs. This was at the beginning of the kinetic movement, and Benton worked largely in isolation, unaware of other efforts of kinetic artists. The early works were more concerned with change, rather than movement. The pieces were really more like three-dimensional paintings. Full three-dimensional sculptures designed to be viewed from all angles came later and the movement of the pieces became less prevalent in his later works. In the late 1970s, he abandoned kinetic art, switching to a more traditional bronze and steel.

I tripped upon this piece while looking for two other pieces that are part of the 201 Spear Street POPOS.  The pieces, titled Smile and News are so poorly executed that I will leave it to the explorer in you to find them and make your own opinion.

Lobby of 201 Spear Street, SF

Go Bears

 Posted by on April 11, 2013
Apr 112013
 

817 Terry Francois Way
Mission Rock Resort
Dogpatch

Recycled Wood at Mission Rock ResortOld Cal Memorial Stadium Wood

Old Cal Memorial Stadium Seats

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Mission Rock Resort

Paul Olson is a versatile and very adaptable artist working in a variety of mediums.

Paul has worked as a freelance illustrator for twelve years creating unique artwork as well as adapting styles to work with illustration teams. He has created designs for print and the web for major marketing and PR firms as well as start-ups and private businesses.

As a muralist, Paul has been commissioned large-scale indoor and outdoor pieces for business parks, restaurants, and offices. He has also worked with interior designers to paint murals for private homes.

Sumer #24 by Larry Bell

 Posted by on April 6, 2013
Apr 062013
 

101 Second Street
SOMA Financial District

Summer #24 by Larry BellSumer #24 by Larry Bell – Bronze

Sumer #24 is a result of the POPOS program and the 1% for Art program of San Francisco. While it is viewable through the windows of the building it is available for viewing up close from 8:00 am to 6:00 pm M-F.

Larry Bell (born in 1939 in Chicago, Illinois) is a contemporary American artist and sculptor. He lives and works in Taos, New Mexico, and maintains a studio in Venice, California. From 1957 to 1959 he studied at the Chouinard Art Institute in Los Angeles as a student of Robert Irwin, Richards Ruben,Robert Chuey, and Emerson Woelffer. He is a grant recipient from, among others, the National Endowment for the Arts and the Guggenheim Foundation, and his artworks are found in the collections of many major cultural institutions. Bell’s work has been shown at museums and in public spaces in the United States and abroad over the course of his 40-year career.

Larry Bell’s art addresses the relationship between the art object and its environment through the sculptural and reflective properties of his work. Bell is often associated with Light and Space, a group of mostly West Coast artists whose work is primarily concerned with perceptual experience stemming from the viewer’s interaction with their work.

Art work at the 101 2nd Street POPOS SF

The Fire Next Time II

 Posted by on April 2, 2013
Apr 022013
 

Joseph P. Lee Rec Center
1395 Mendell
Backside
Bayview

The Fire Next Time IIFire Next Time II

Fire Next Time II

Excerpt from San Francisco Bay Area Murals by Timothy W. Drescher regarding the original mural:

Crumpler depicted three aspects of black people’s lives in the United States: education, religion, and culture.  The contemporary figures, a teacher and student, athletes and dancers, are watched over by exemplary portraits of Harriet Tubman and Paul Robeson. Above them are two Senufo birds which are mythical beings in Africa but here oversee the cultural and creative lives of the community…

By 1984, Crumpler continued the mural on the adjacent gymnasium at the Recreation Center. More stylized than the first part of the mural, it continues the same visual motifs, with large portraits of black leaders and a background of dualist flames. Wrapped around the northern corner is a hand holding a quilt from Alabama. Up Newcombe Street is another hand, but with a section of cloth with an African textile design on it…Between the two hands is a giant replica of a 16th-centuray Ife bronze figure against a background of Egyptian and United States Figures: King Tut, Muhammed Ali, Willie Mays, Wilma Rudolph, Arthur Ashe. The second part measures over five thousand square feet.

Mural at Joseph P. Lee Rec CenterOni – of Fire Next Time II

Dewey Crumpler

In 2007, the San Francisco Arts Commission contracted with ARG Conservation Services (ARG/CS) to restore and stabilize the mural. The main objective of the treatment was to prevent further deterioration of the mural and achieve an overall integrated visual restoration.

Tim Drescher

Dewey Crumpler painted over 15 murals throughout the Bay Area. His large-scale San Francisco projects include: A Celebration of African and African American Artists, 1984, at the African American Art and Culture Complex, formerly the Western Addition Cultural Center; The Children of San Francisco, 1986; and Knowledge, 1988. Crumpler now focuses his art practice on studio work. Dewey Crumpler received a BFA from the San Francisco Art Institute, an MA from San Francisco State University, and an MFA from Mills College in Oakland, CA. He resides in Berkeley, CA, with his wife Sandra and their two sons Saeed and Malik. Dewey Crumpler is Associate Professor of Painting at the San Francisco Art Institute.

In 1984 Crumpler was assisted by Dr. Timothy W. Drescher. Drescher has been studying and documenting community murals since 1972, was co-editor of Community Murals magazine from 1976 to 1987, and is the author of San Francisco Bay Area Murals: Communities Create Their Muses, 1904-1997. He wrote the Afterward to the revised edition of Toward A People’s Art, and consults and lectures widely on murals. Dr. Drescher has a Ph.D. in English Literature and Art History from the University of Wisconsin.

The restoration had a budget of $105,000 for cleaning and stabilization of the Dewey Crumpler mural, Fire Next Time II, and commemorative plaque for Fire Next Time I. $33,000 went to ARG and a $5000 honorarium payment went to Dewey Crumpler.

Fire Next Time I was removed during the remodeling of the Recreation Center, photos of it can be found inside the center.

Solar Plumes on a Painted Steel Fence

 Posted by on March 29, 2013
Mar 292013
 

Sunnyside Playground
200 Melrose
Twin Peaks

Fencing at Sunnyside Park, San Francisco

These painted steel panels were commissioned in 2008 for $23,600 by the San Francisco Art Commission to Deborah Kennedy.

According to Kennedy’s website the curvilinear patterns cut into water-jet cut stainless steel were abstracted from patterns found in NASA’s TRACE close-up satellite photos of the solar surface. These photos show enormous plumes of plasma, electrified gases that surge up from the surface of the sun. These plumes move at tremendous speeds and form coronal loops that stand hundreds of thousands of miles off the surface of the sun.

This public artwork seeks to heighten awareness of the new understanding of the sun, and to encourage greater consideration of solar energy as a key to solving our global climate crisis.

Deborah Kennedy Solar Flare FencingDeborah Kennedy’s artwork consists of conceptually-based installations and objects in galleries, museums and public spaces. Her work begin with questions, such as: What new ways of thinking can help us solve our environmental problems? Can we reform our technological systems so they operate in a bio-compatible manner? How is exposure to toxic chemicals affecting the health of human and animal populations? Questions, such as these, focusing on social and environmental dilemmas are the starting point of her work.

These questions propel her investigations. Today, the majority of her research is web-based, where she tracks rapidly advancing scientific research on endocrine disruptors, the amphibian decline and other areas of concern. This research informs her choice of images, materials, and methods. Therefore, her creative process and artwork are characterized by an on-going state of inquiry, extensive research, and a balance between concept and form.

Kennedy says, “I want to work at the growing edge, where we as a global community are struggling to create new visions that will help solve our environmental problems. My hope is that these new perceptions will help us change how we think about ourselves and our role in the world. Then, perhaps, we can begin to change our behaviors as individuals and larger communities.”

Sunnyside Playground Painted Steel Fence Panels

 

SFGH Healing Garden

 Posted by on March 28, 2013
Mar 282013
 

1001 Potrero
San Francisco General Hospital

SFGH Healing Garden

The artist designed this small garden, in 1993, as an extension to an existing hospital memorial garden and as a place to provide seating sheltered from the wind. A red gravel walkway, edged in white granite city-surplus curbstones, forms a double helix, which is symbolic of life. The seating is made from salvaged granite.

Double Helix at SFGH gardenLook closely, you can see the double helix in the planter on the left.

Healing Garden at SFGH by Peter RichardsBenny Bufano’s Madonna graces the back of the garden.

Salvaged Granite SFGH Healing Garden

Peter Richards is a long-term Artist in Residence at the Exploratorium (an innovative science museum in San Francisco, California) Peter shares his enthusiasm for nature and the elements through his work. His engaging outdoor public sculptures and immersive landscaped environments bring such phenomena as wind and tidal movement into a larger cultural context. Peter is responsible for the Wave Organ in the bay, and the Philosophers Walk at McClaren Park. He holds an MFA from the Rinehart School of Sculpture in Baltimore, Maryland and a BA in Art from Colorado College.

The garden is part of the SFAC collection.

Precita Eyes covers McDonald’s in Paint

 Posted by on March 25, 2013
Mar 252013
 

2801 Mission Street
Mission District

Culture of the Crossroads

This mural, titled Culture of the Crossroads, was done in 1998 by Precita Eyes.  It covers the 24th Street side of the McDonalds Restaurant.

Mcdonald's Mural at 24th and Mission*

Precita Eyes Mural at 24th and Mission*

Mural at 2801 Mission Street, SF

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Murals in the Mission

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Mural on McDonalds in the Mission SF*

Precita Eyes Mural at 24th and Mission

Precita Eyes  is a multipurpose community based arts organization that has played an integral role in the city’s cultural heritage and arts education. One of only three community mural centers in the United States, the organization sponsors and implements ongoing mural projects throughout the Bay Area and internationally. In addition, it has a direct impact on arts education in the San Francisco Mission District by offering four weekly art classes for children and youth (18 months through 19 years) and other classes for adults. These classes and community mural projects enable children and youth to develop their individuality and confidence through creative activities and to experience unifying, positive social interaction through collaboration.

December 2013 update.  This McDonald’s is going through a complete remodel.  The mural will be gone, with the exception of the back wall.  The mural has truly served its purpose and changes happen.  Art and Architecture is glad that we were able to document the mural and bring it to you.

If you are interested in reading further Mission Local has written a very nice article here.

Globe by Topher Delaney

 Posted by on March 22, 2013
Mar 222013
 

299 2nd Street
Courtyard Marriott Hotel – 1st Floor
SOMA – Financial District

Globe by Topher DelaneyGlobe by Topher Delaney – Bronze

This piece is a result of the 1% for Art and POPOS programs in San Francisco.  It is available for viewing from 8:00 am to 6:00 pm. – However, if you step into the Lobby you can view it through the window if the courtyard area is not open.

Topher (Christopher) Delaney‘s  forty year career as an environmental artist has encompassed a wide breadth of projects which focus on the exploration of our cultural interpretations of landscape architecture, public art and the integration within the site spiritual precepts of “nature.”  Her practice, SEAM Studio, has evolved to serves as a venue for the investigation of cultural, social and artistic narratives “seamed” together to form dynamic physical installations.  Ms. Delaney’s projects place an emphasis on the integration of physical form with narratives referencing the currency of a site’s unique historical, cultural, physical and environmental profiles.  Ms. Delaney received her Bachelor of Arts in Landscape Architecture from the University of California at Berkeley after studying philosophy and cultural anthropology at Barnard College.

SEAM studios was responsible for the Fort Mason-SEATS exhibition that can be viewed here.

Public Art at Courtyard by Marriott Hotel on 2nd Street in San Francisco*

Globe by Topher Delaney

Time to Dream

 Posted by on March 20, 2013
Mar 202013
 

Joseph P. Lee Rec Center
1395 Mendell
Bayview

Time to Dream by Amana JohnsonTime to Dream by Amana Johnson

The Joseph P. Lee Rec Center, like many in San Francisco is behind a locked gate and only open during very limited hours.  I have relied on the artists website for a description of the piece and the photo of the book.

 

“Time To Dream” is a life-sized figure carved from a 3,000-pound block of Basalt Spring Stone found only in Zimbabwe, Southern Africa.  The figure, which took Johnson over nine months to carve, is deliberately not identified as either male or female in order to recognize the variations of gender that are present in today’s world.  The sculpture, supported by a circular bench of colored concrete, embellished with sculptural medallions, holds an open book whose pages are engraved with inspirational text by Johnson, that reads:  “We Need time to dream, time to remember and time to create the world we envision.”

we need time to dream, time to remember, and time to create the world we envision

As stated by Johnson, “At a time of profound change in American history‘Time To Dream’ arrives as a beacon to encourage new directions of thought and vision towards creating a world of social, economic, and racial equality.”

Amana Brembry Johnson is a prolific sculptor and mixed-media artist who has created figurative work in stone for nearly two decades.  Her current work reflects an integration of stone sculpture and ceramic work with other materials to create multi-layered, sculptural environments into which the audience can enter and become a part of the work itself.

Johnson earned a MFA in sculpture from the Maryland Institute College of Art in Baltimore and studied at the University of California at Irvine, where she received her BA in Social Ecology. She has created public work throughout the United States and is the recipient of numerous awards and grants.

 

This sculpture was commissioned by the SFAC for $60,000.

Journey through Books and Music

 Posted by on March 18, 2013
Mar 182013
 

1946 Market Street
Castro/Mission
The Mural is on the side of 43 Buchannan

A Journey through Books and Music - Mural on Market Street

Titled Joyous Discoveries: A Journey Through Books and Music, this mural, by Keith Hollander won the Public Mural Award of 2001 for the Finest Mural in the SF Bay Area.

The mural is now being lost due to construction on this corner.

The books in the picture are: Chaim Potok, “The Chosen”, Gabriel Garcia Marquez’s “100 Years of Solitude”, Maya Angelou’s “I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings”, “The Art Book”, Cervantes’ “Don Quixote”, J.D. Salinger’s “Catcher in the Rye”, and Douglas Adams’ “Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy”

Books-Mural-630x375

This is what the mural looked like originally.

Keith Hollander was born and raised in New York and began creating artwork at a very young age. His unique, surrealist style of painting has been exhibited at galleries and exhibits throughout the San Francisco bay area since he made his home here thirteen years ago. Keith received his first formal art studies at the School of Visual Arts in New York City.

Keith has always been fascinated by people-their relationship to themselves and others- and by the physical human form as it relates to other physical objects. Through his nonlinear exploration and love of painting, Keith transports the observer into realms of imagination that one may not have considered before, encouraging the question, “What does he mean?” The juxtaposition of the conceptual portal against the air of surrealism creates a powerful fusing of possibility and probability. Keith considers his creativity to be a tool to educate, provoke, and stimulate the human spirit and the senses.

Book Mural on Market Street

Major Funding: The Office of Mayor Willie Brown through the SF Neighborhood Beautification Office

Dos Leones at SFGH

 Posted by on March 16, 2013
Mar 162013
 

1001 Potrero
San Francisco General Hospital

Dos Liones by Mary Fuller at SFGH

So much of the collection paid for by the San Francisco Art Commission is not readily available to the general public.  This piece is no exception.  On the patio of the 3rd floor of SFGH, the doors were locked, however, you can see the sculpture through the window.

Titled Dos Liones, this sculpture, done in 1974, is by Mary Fuller.  Mary Fuller has many pieces of public art work around the San Francisco Bay Area.

Mary Fuller was born in Wichita, Kansas on October 20, 1922. Creating totemic figures, playful animals and dancing goddesses (to honor older women and their fiery spirit), she is also an author with one major art historical work, three mystery novels, and a host of short fiction and art reviews to her credit. Fullers family moved fom Kansas to California in 1924.

She grew up in the farm country of California’s Central Valley. She studied philosophy and literature at the University of California, Berkeley, in the early 1940’s, working as a welder in the Richmond shipyards in 1943 during World War II.

Mostly a self-taught artist, she apprenticed in ceramics at the California Faience Company in the 1940s and began to exhibit in 1947, wining first prize at the 6th and 8th Annual Pacific Coast Ceramic Show, 1947 and 1949. In 1949 she married the painter Robert McChesney, and many of her subsequent writings are published under the “Mary McChesney” name. As a mystery writer in the 1950s, however, she used the pseudonym “Joe Rayter” to publish The Victim Was Important; Asking for Trouble and Stab in the Dark. Fuller began to construct concrete sculpture in the 1950s while pursuing her writing career. She free-lanced for major art journals, including Art in America and Art-forum, throughout the 1960s, while also conducting research on 1930s Works Progress Administration artists for the Archives of American Art. A Ford Foundation fellow in 1965, she conducted research on modernist art in the Bay Area that culminated in A Period of Exploration, San Francisco 1945-1950, termed one of the key documentary works in the field of modern California art history.

Beginning in 1974, she was awarded the first of many public art commissions, including Dos Leones.

The above is excerpted from Women Artists of the American West by Susan Ressler.

American Bison at SFGH

 Posted by on March 13, 2013
Mar 132013
 

1001 Potrero
San Francisco General Hospital
2nd Floor – Cafeteria Patio

Buffalo by Raymond Puccinelli at SFGHBuffalo by Raimondo Puccinelli

Raimondo Puccinelli, (1904-1986) born and raised in San Francisco, is known above all for his sculpture which has been shown in numerous solo and group exhibitions. His standing as a sculptor was confirmed early on, firstly by the interest shown by the great museums on the West Coast of America and then by the commitment demonstrated by influential New York galleries  in which his works were exhibited alongside the great artists of the time: as did both the Ferargil Gallery with its exhibition “Degas, Maillol, Puccinelli” and the Westermann Gallery with “Barlach, Lehmbruck, Puccinelli” in 1936. 

However, apart from the hundreds of sculptures still owned by his family, Puccinelli’s estate includes about 7,500 drawings and sketches among which 1,700 are devoted to the subject of dance. The evidence of the labels of the San Francisico Museum of Modern Art found on the original mounts indicates that, at least in the 1930s, Puccinelli’s dance drawings were also exhibited in this museum.  These drawings have remained unknown to dance experts in the USA and Europe; to this day, there is no entry under Raimondo Puccinelli’s name in the New York Public Library’s catalogue, the world’s largest dance archive. This is surprising, considering Puccinelli had an almost unique opportunity to meet the celebrities of the dance world and to draw them.

In the early 1930s, he regularly visited Ann Mundstock’s Laban Studio in San Francisco to draw from life. It was here that dancers such as Harald Kreutzberg or Yvonne Georgi took classes during their tours. It was also here at Ann Mundstock’s, that Puccinelli met and fell in love with the young dancer, Esther Fehlen, whom he married in 1940.

Puccinelli drew Katherine Dunham and her dancers, or Tina Flade, Hanya Holm, Mary Wigman and her dance group. He became friends with Martha Graham and was frequently able to draw at her New York studio; Martha Graham herself during rehearsals, but also the members of her dance group and her pupils. Guest performances of celebrated dancers in both metropolises in which he was at home led to regular personal contacts and numerous sketches  also encompassing Indian dance (Uday Shankar) or Flamenco.

 

This work, titled American Bison – Buffalo was donated to the San Francisco Art Commission in 1974.

Empire Park

 Posted by on March 11, 2013
Mar 112013
 

600 Block of Commercial Street at Kearny
Empire Park
Chinatown

Fountain by Pepo Pichler

Empire Park (once called Grabhorn Park) is a POPOS (privately-owned public open space). It is provided and maintained by, The Empire Group, owners of 505 Montgomery Street. The spire perched atop 505 Montgomery is said to be a replica of the Empire State Building, but that is most likely because a giant inflatable gorilla was hung from the spire to announce the opening of the building.

This tiny little park is an oasis on a beautiful, carless portion of Commercial Street. The delightful water feature is by Pepo Pichler and is the focal point of the courtyard. In the spring, the entrance is draped in white wisteria. Other highlights are gigantic tree ferns planted throughout and potato vines climbing up the surrounding buildings.

Pepo Pilcher was born in 1948 in Klagenfurt, Austria. He studied at the Vienna Academy of Fine Arts. He moved to San Francisco in 1975 and now commutes between Austria and San Francisco.

Empire Park in San Francisco

This street holds so much San Francisco History:

Not far from Empire Park at  650/652 Commercial Street is the former site of the Eureka which was once the site of the Eureka Lodgings, where, paying 50 cents a day, Emperor Norton lived for 17 years, from sometime in either late 1862 or early 1863 until his death in January of 1880.

Emperor Norton in the 1870s. (Source – Collection of the California Historical Society)

In the newspaper offices of The San Francisco Call Building, next door at 636 Commercial one could have found Mark Twain writing at his desk on the 3rd floor during his 18-month tenure in the 1860s, or Bret Harte, working for the Mint just one floor down in sublet offices on the second floor.

Twain once wrote of Emperor Norton: “Oh, dear, it was always a painful thing to me to see the Emperor (Norton I., of San Francisco) begging; for although nobody else believed he was an Emperor, he believed it. … What an odd thing it is, that neither Frank Soulé, nor Charley Warren Stoddard, nor I, nor Bret Harte the Immortal Bilk, nor any other professionally literary person of S.F., has ever “written up” the Emperor Norton. Nobody has ever written him up who was able to see any but his (ludicrous or his) grotesque side; but I think that with all his dirt & unsavoriness there was a pathetic side to him. Anybody who said so in print would be laughed at in S.F., doubtless, but no matter, I have seen the Emperor when his dignity was wounded; and when he was both hurt & indignant at the dishonoring of an imperial draft; & when he was full of trouble & bodings on account of the presence of the Russian fleet, he connecting it with his refusal to ally himself with the Romanoffs by marriage, & believing these ships were come to take advantage of his entanglements with Peru & Bolivia; I have seen him in all his various moods & tenses, & there was always more room for pity than laughter. He believed he was a natural son of one of the English Georges–but I wander from my subject.”
– letter to William Dean Howells, September 3, 1880

Despite this letter, Twain would later base the character of “The King” in The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, on Emperor Norton.

 

First U.S. Branch Mint

608 Commerical Street:

The original mint is no longer there. At present, the home of the San Francisco Historical Society occupies the 1875 U.S. Subtreasury Building, which was built after the original mint building was demolished.

Privately-owned public open spaces (POPOS) are publicly accessible spaces in forms of plazas, terraces, atriums, small parks, and even snippets that are provided and maintained by private developers. In San Francisco, POPOS mostly appear in the Downtown office district area. Prior to 1985, developers provided POPOS under three general circumstances: voluntarily, in exchange for a density bonus, or as a condition of approval. The 1985 Downtown Plan created the first systemic requirements for developers to provide publicly accessible open space as a part of projects.

The Downtown Plan also established the “1% Art Program” which is how the fountain came to be.

Mar 072013
 

150 California Street
POPOS on the 6th Floor Terrace
Open 9 am to 6 pm

Arch by Edward Carptenter

Ed Carpenter is an artist specializing in large-scale public installations ranging from architectural sculpture to infrastructure design. Since 1973 he has completed scores of projects for public, corporate, and ecclesiastical clients. Working internationally from his studio in Portland, Oregon, Carpenter collaborates with a variety of expert consultants, sub-contractors, and studio assistants. He personally oversees every step of each commission, and installs them himself with a crew of long-time helpers.

While an interest in light has been fundamental to virtually all of Carpenter’s work, he also embraces commissions that require new approaches and skills. Recent projects include interior and exterior sculptures, bridges, towers, and gateways. His use of glass in new configurations, programmed artificial lighting, and unusual tension structures have broken new ground in architectural art.

Carpenter is grandson of a painter/sculptor, and step-son of an architect, in whose office he worked summers as a teenager. He studied architectural glass art under artists in England and Germany during the early 1970’s

Ed Carpenter at 150 California Street

 

150 California Street is a 22 story office tower in the heart of the downtown San Francisco´s business district. Its sixth floor roof garden provides landscaped outdoor space for the building´s workers. The owner´s unusual challenges to the artist were first to create a sculpture which would disguise and ameliorate a large air vent and diesel exhaust stack emerging into the roof garden, and second that the sculpture should add to the ambience of the garden for its users. Ed Carpenter´s solution to this brief incorporates both the vent and the stack into an arbor-like aluminum and stainless steel tension structure. Integrated into the structure is a network of tension cables supporting laminated dichroic glass details designed to cast delicate projections and reflections of colored light onto surrounding architectural surfaces. The sculpture provides an arching contrast to the surrounding skyscrapers and creates an inviting space beneath its 54´ span for workers on their breaks.

150 California Street POPOS

 

Privately-owned public open spaces (POPOS) are publicly accessible spaces in forms of plazas, terraces, atriums, small parks, and even snippets that are provided and maintained by private developers. In San Francisco, POPOS mostly appear in the Downtown office district area. Prior to 1985, developers provided POPOS under three general circumstances: voluntarily, in exchange for a density bonus, or as a condition of approval. The 1985 Downtown Plan created the first systemic requirements for developers to provide publicly accessible open space.

The Downtown Plan also established the “1% Art Program”.

Mar 062013
 

1 Sansome Street
POPOS
Open During Business Hours

The Star Girl at 1 Sansome StreetStar Maiden by Stirling Calder

(Alexander) Stirling Calder attended the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts, in 1885, at the age of 16. Here he studied under Thomas Eakins. He apprenticed as a sculptor the following year, working on his father’s extensive sculpture program for Philadelphia City Hall, and is reported to have modeled the arm of one of the figures. In 1890, he moved to Paris where he studied at the Académie Julian under Henri Michel Chapu, and then was accepted in the École nationale supérieure des Beaux-Arts where he entered the atelier of Alexandre Falguière.

In 1912, he was named acting-chief (under Karl Bitter) of the sculpture program for the Panama-Pacific Exposition, a World’s Fair to open in San Francisco, California in February 1915. He obtained a studio in NYC and there employed the services of model Audrey Munson who posed for him for Star Maiden (1913–15) – (labeled Star Girl on this piece).

For the Exposition, Calder completed three massive sculpture groups, The Nations of the East and The Nations of the West, which crowned triumphal arches, and a fountain group, The Fountain of Energy.

Nations of the West was a massive sculpture group that crowned the Arch of the Setting Sun. The second group, The Nations of the East (including a life-size elephant), crowned the Arch of the Rising Sun.

Bronze’s, if the molds are available, are easy to replicate and therefore there can be many copies of an original piece. This replica was commissioned by Citigroup in 1985 with permission from Margaret Calder Hayes, daughter of Stirling Calder and brother of Alexander (Sandy) Calder.

1 Sansome Street POPOS

 

Star maiden sits in this atrium and is one of San Francisco’s many POPOS.  What is now the conservatory was the original structure of The Anglo and London Paris National Bank, which through a series of mergers and consolidations over the years became the Crocker Anglo Bank branch of the Crocker Bank in 1956 and continued to occupy the building through 1981.

Completed in 1910 by renowned San Francisco architect Albert Pissis as The Anglo and London Paris National Bank, the buildings original construction was a steel frame, reinforced concrete, granite clad two-story building constructed in traditional temple form complete with 38’ high Doric columns. Like many other banks built in San Francisco at the time, it was designed in the classical temple form to symbolize the significant role of the financial institution in the community.

In 1915 the bank expanded into the adjoining Holbrook Building at 58-64 Sutter Street, and in 1921 another San Francisco architect, George Kelham, was commissioned to design an addition to the building. The resulting design nearly tripled the area of the original building and expanded the Sansome Street frontage from one to five bays. The Kelham addition repeated the same giant order of the original building but placed the entrance in the recessed porch as it stands today.

CitiBank placed a 43-story office tower adjacent to the original bank structure in 1980, preserving only the original bank as the conservatory and a cutaway of the front that can be viewed if one enters the office tower lobby.

original 1 Sansome Street Building

Carnaval on 24th

 Posted by on March 4, 2013
Mar 042013
 

3195 24th Street
The Mission

Carnaval mural over the House of Brakes, SF

This badly faded mural is titled Carnaval and was done in 1983.  The artist was Daniel Galves with help from Dan Fontes, James Morgan, Jay Shield and Keith Sklar.

Carnaval by Dan Fontes

Daniel Galvez is an Oakland-based muralist.  He studied at the College of Arts and Crafts in Oakland (BFA in painting in 1975) and San Francisco State University (MFA in 1979). Galvez has done murals through out the United States.

On December 14, 2011 Christy Khoshaba, writer for a wonderful local ezine called Mission Local ran an article about this mural – here it is in its entirety:

Lou Dematteis was simply taking pictures. He used his Nikon F2 to document the first-ever 1979 Carnaval parade. From there, Carnaval committee member Mauricio Aviles pushed to get a selection of the photos onto a city mural.

“I was very happy to give [Aviles] my images,” said Dematteis. “I was a big proponent of neighborhood and community art.”

Twenty-eight years later, “Carnaval,” showcasing real people, real establishments and the real energy of the Mission, remains – dimmer, but still very much alive on 24th and South Van Ness.

“It’s the joy of life coming into the streets — it’s thrilling,” said Dan Fontes, one of five artists who worked on the mural with lead artist Daniel Galvez.

Thrilling, but washed out, and several cultural leaders would like to see it restored to its original luster.

Aviles, a member of the original Carnaval Committee that pushed for its creation who is now trying to raise funds for its restoration, said, “It looks really bad; it needs to be redone and repainted.” Up until now, his main challenge has been finding the time.

Carlos Baron, a theater arts professor at San Francisco State University, said that his students could help with the labor in exchange for class credit.

The mural, which some call “Golden Dreams of the Mission,” reflects the annual Carnaval celebration, and has a story that stretches across the neighborhood’s history.

It began with Dematteis’ photos. With those in hand, Aviles contacted Galvez, who then drew up a list of five other artists – Fontes, Keith Sklar, Jamie Morgan, Eduardo Pineda and Jean Shield. Over six months and on a budget of $13,000 they painted the 24-foot-high, 75-foot-wide mural that Annice Jacoby, the editor of “Mission Muralismo,” called an excellent example of mural realism.

The Challenge

The muralists had to insert planks above the House of Brakes to preserve the roof, leaving them no choice but to use a swinging stage. They learned how to use it, raising and lowering themselves and relying on “that twisty knot that saves your life,” said Fontes.

“It was a little terrifying,” said Galvez. In fact, one of his artists stood on the stage for a few minutes, couldn’t take it anymore and left the project.

Before beginning the wall, Galvez took measurements and considered the issue of the three light wells. He used a high school auditorium to shoot his image onto carbon paper. After he sketched it, he rolled the drawings up, transferred them to the site and taped them to the wall.

The artists began at the top and worked their way down. They went over it with chalk, then traced line by line with a ballpoint pen.

Fontes calls it a “clever mural.” They used architectural tricks to make it integrate well with the building. That included adding planks to the top of the building, and shows especially in the treatment of the light well, where the female dancer’s hand is stretched out to create depth (3D) and emphasis for the viewer.

When creating windows, they used the trompe l’oeil technique, an illusion of something that appears to be there but really isn’t. It fools the eye into thinking the windows genuinely exist.

“The Victorian detail and architectural detail — it’s all painted,” said Patricia Rose, Precita Eyes’ tour coordinator. She also notes how few people notice the wall isn’t a Victorian, until it’s pointed out. “It’s done so well that most people don’t notice.”

But that took time. “We’d go across the street, have a burrito and beat up [how well the illusion came off] over lunch,” said Fontes. “We’d laugh about certain things, kid each other about how we got the arms or eyes wrong.”

Eventually they got it right. “I was a photorealist painter, and I wanted my murals to have that quality,” said Galvez. To achieve the realism, they had to always stand two feet away from the painting. Every paint stroke had to be large enough to be seen across the street.

“It was worth the effort,” said Galvez. “It was really well received.” People began to tell him how much pride they felt in the Mission. They were glad it was about a classic Latino tradition. His goal of having the mural be a part of the fabric of people’s lives was accomplished.

The Characters

Several community organizers and the artists themselves couldn’t recall much about the real people behind the sketches.

But for Richard Talavera, the Mexican Bus specialist, it was just like yesterday.

Talavera clearly remembers the larger-than-life man in the center of the mural wearing a fire truck-red vest. Jaime Aguilar was a Muni driver, and for five years one of the principal drivers of the Mexican Bus, a cultural tour service that began as a project for Day of the Dead in the early ’90s and still gives tours of Latin dance clubs, city murals and city history.

“He just had a way with people,” said Talavera. So much so that when he walked into a nightclub with his party, he would dance with 10 women at the same time and get them all moving. On the bus, he got additional tips for his dance moves.

“He was just this incredible, fabulous personality,” said Talavera, who credits Aguilar with much of the bus’s success. “Until this day, when people point out the bus, they don’t say ‘Mexican Bus,’ but they say ‘Jaime, Jaime,’” he said.

To the right of Aguilar, the man in the puffy orange and red jacket playing a drum is believed by many to be musician Jorge Molina, Rose said. It doesn’t look like him, she said, “although it could be him when he was much younger.”

The woman decked out in a silver sequined bodysuit with a bejeweled headband adorned with feathers was a Brazilian dancer named Marlena, according to Dematteis. Talavera called Marlena the Greta Garbo of her day. Marlena’s thin arched eyebrows resembled Garbo’s. “She was an extremely beautiful actress.”

The older man coming out of the window lived on Valencia and 23rd Street, said Aviles. He would look out for the younger kids who were in trouble. The woman next to him was his sister.

The artists used enamel paints, which didn’t hold up well in the sunlight. Because they didn’t use a strong ultraviolet protector, “it diminished in intensity by 50 percent,” said Fontes.

Restoration

The city doesn’t have a specific fund for restoring murals. For patrons who would like to see this mural restored, Lanita Henriquez from the Community Challenge Grant office (CCG) within the Office of City Administration broke down the process and offered advice.

Because the mural is on private property, there must be a huge community push that’s backed up by the property owner and the muralists. First, an application must be submitted to the CCG office. This application must be linked with a nonprofit 501(c)(3) organization that will act as the fiscal sponsor, creating a budget, work plan and proposal. The nonprofit would also help with outreach and community awareness.

The nonprofit can be an art-related organization, but it doesn’t have to be. As long as it has a cash flow, it will work. This is because all city grants go through reimbursements, as early as every 30 days. Depending on the grant request, there must be a match. For example, a medium-level grant of $15,000 to $30,000 must have a 35 percent community match.

Once the project is approved for a grant, it goes to the San Francisco Arts Commission. No matter what the public art project, the commission reviews and approves the civic design review and gives permission to begin the restoration process.

Galvez would love to see the mural come back. But, he said, “There’s always been talk.”

Carnaval Mural on 24th Street in the Mission

Zio Ziegler Paints the Mission

 Posted by on February 25, 2013
Feb 252013
 

Zio Ziegler on Barlett and 24thBartlett and 24th

Zio Ziegler at Mission and SycamoreMission and Sycamore

Zio Ziegler

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Ziegler

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Zio Ziegler

Zio Ziegler has several murals around San Francisco.

According to his website:

 For me painting is balance. Within this balance there is consciousness, instinct and distraction. My work is a constant fusion of all three. Torn between the classical and the contemporary in my inspirations, but constantly reminded of the paradigm shift towards the digital age around us, my paintings walk a fine line of voyeurism and awareness both is process and perception. The paintings have organic growth cycles of their own, but the inexplicable instinct of a paintings necessity for completion calls for the greatest changes of all. I create public art that forms as much from the environment it is painted in, than the studio where the gestation takes places. For me, the balance of working publicly, and privately assists the entire creative process in a symbiotic way. It is the open source template of the streets that is a constant reminder of the democratic yet organic nature of art these days. To be aware of this ephemeral state of painting, assists the visceral encouragement of instinct in the studio. And so, with balance of both studio and streets, consciousness and aloofness, instinct and thought comes my paintings.

Anish Kapoor in San Francisco

 Posted by on February 22, 2013
Feb 222013
 

235 2nd Street
SOMA Financial District

Making the World Many by Anish KapoorMaking the World Many by Anish Kapoor – Stainless Steel

Making the World Many is part of the 1% for Arts and POPOS programs of San Francisco.  While viewable through the building window, the piece is available for closer viewing from 8:00 am to 6:00 pm M-F.

Anish Kapoor, (born 12 March 1954) is an Indian-born British sculptor born in Mumbai. Kapoor has lived and worked in London since the early 1970s when he moved to study art, first at the Hornsey College of Art and later at the Chelsea School of Art and Design.

He represented Britain in the XLIV Venice Biennale in 1990, when he was awarded the Premio Duemila Prize. In 1991 he received the Turner Prize and in 2002 received the Unilever Commission for the Turbine Hall at Tate Modern. His most notable U.S. public sculptures include Cloud Gate, Millennium Park, Chicago, Sky Mirror exhibited at the Rockefeller Center, New York.

Anish Kapoor became known in the 1980s for his geometric or biomorphic sculptures made using simple materials such as granite, limestone, marble, pigment and plaster.  In the late 1980s and 1990s, he was acclaimed for his explorations of matter and non-matter, specifically evoking the void in both free-standing sculptural works and ambitious installations.  Since 1995, he has worked with the highly reflective surface of polished stainless steel. These works are mirror-like, reflecting or distorting the viewer and surroundings.

Core by Charles Arnoldi

 Posted by on February 20, 2013
Feb 202013
 

101 2nd Street
SOMA – Financial District

Core by Charles ArnoldoCore by Charles Arnoldi – Acrylic on Canvas

Core is a result of the POPOS and 1% for Art programs of San Francisco.  While viewable through the buildings glass it is available for closer viewing from 8:00 am to 6:00 pm M-F.

Charles Arnoldi was born April 10, 1946 in Dayton, Ohio.

While visiting a girlfriend’s grandmother in New York, he took the opportunity to view works by Jackson Pollock and Willem de Kooning. Observing their smudges, smears, and imperfections, he sensed that he too was capable of such work, and decided to attend art school. Arnoldi attended junior college in Ventura, California, where a professor convinced him to apply to the Art Center in Los Angeles. He was accepted with a scholarship, and enrolled in commercial illustration classes. It was the late 1960s, and Arnoldi recalls a stifling classroom environment where male students were required to wear ties. After only two weeks, he left and transferred to the Chouinard Art Institute in Los Angeles in 1968, where he remained for eight months before deciding to abandon his formal education and complete his training through his art practice. Arnoldi began using actual tree branches as a compositional element in his works, combined with painting to create stick constructions. These works did not endeavor to create illusions but rather inhabited physical space.

In the early 1970s, the artist attracted attention for his wall-relief wood sculptures, holding his first solo exhibition at the Riko Mizuno Gallery in Los Angeles in 1971. The following year he was included in Documenta V, Kassel, Germany, 1972. The use of wood has remained a feature of Arnoldi’s oeuvre, although since the 1980s he has often employed it in combination with other media. Roark, in the collection of the Honolulu Museum of Art, is a bronze sculpture that closely resembles wood.

He played himself in the 2005 film, Sketches of Frank Gehry, directed by Sydney Pollack. Arnoldi lives and works in Los Angeles.

San Francisco County Jail

 Posted by on February 19, 2013
Feb 192013
 

Sheriffs Star Plaza
San Francisco Jail Facility
7th and Bryant
SOMA

Sheriffs Star Plaza

 

This paving is the work of Vicki Scuri of VSSW.

Vicki received her MFA from the University of Wisconsin in Madison

She describes herself: Collaborative, integrated design is my passion. The focus of my practice is community-based design for infrastructure, with emphasis on community identity through awareness of place, history and culture. For more than 25 years, I have participated on design teams across the US, creating holistic environments, often becoming local landmarks, reflecting collective values, shared histories and symbolic meanings that enrich and extend our lives through day-to-day experience and collective memory.

This San Francisco jail complex is located near the Hall of Justice on Seventh Street. Opened in 1994, the complex is actually two jails. This main complex jail is a “direct supervision facility [that] has become a national model for program-oriented prisoner rehabilitation.” The second, which acts as the main intake and release facility for the city, was praised by Pulitzer Prize-winning architecture critic Allan Temko as “a stunning victory for architectural freedom over bureaucratic stupidity.”

When the jail was built the art work came under fire.  Primarily for a $22,000 couch that is in the lobby. Here is an article that ran at the time:

Around the old jail here, talk is of one thing: a handmade, jade green, 60- foot-long, $22,701 couch that will sit in the lobby of the new county jail, which is known as either a fine new facility or the Glamour Slammer, depending on who’s speaking.

Everyone agrees the couch is unique. The stylish eight-piece sectional was built by Marco Fine Furniture of San Francisco, whose other clients include Leona Helmsley, Donald Trump and the Sultan of Brunei.

The couch is not just furniture; it’s art. It was paid for by the budget stipulated for public art in any public project. Under the provisions of a 1969 city ordinance, up to 2 percent of the cost of new buildings must be spent on art accoutrements. In the case of the new jail, which cost $53.5 million, the amount was $600,000.

The couch might not have been a big deal if the city had enough money to open the jail completely, but it doesn’t. Only half of the 440-bed jail is scheduled to open in December because the city doesn’t have the funds to hire staff, in part because of extra money spent to upgrade the jail from minimum to medium security.

“The jail is over budget,” said Susan Pontious, curator of the public art program. But, she added, “that has nothing to do with us.”

Other arts officials, on the defensive, say the couch is an exemplary model of how to make public art functional. Their stance is that the city could have hung paintings or installed sculptures, but opted instead to create something practical.

Or as the builder of the sofa, Marco Martin, told a Bay Area newspaper columnist: “It’s not some big piece of metal doggy-do. At least you can sit on it.”

But the couch has made city officials miserable. “It’s not our sofa,” said Eileen Hirst, chief of staff for Sheriff Michael Hennessey, whose department will run the jail.

SF County Jail #1The address of the building is 425 7th Street

Chinese in San Francisco

 Posted by on February 18, 2013
Feb 182013
 

950 Washington Street
Chinatown

Mural at 950 Washington Street

This mural sits on the wall of the Commodore Stockton School. The School has a very rich history. Formed in 1859 it was originally called the Chinese School. It was created for chinese only students as they were not allowed in the public schools. In 1885 the school was renamed the Oriental School to allow Koreans and Japanese to attend. In 1924 the school was renamed Commodore Stockton. Alice Fong Yu was its first Chinese teacher and children were banned from speaking Chinese.

The mural depicts the Chinese of San Francisco. It was painted in 1987 by K.S. Chan

Commodore School Mural by K.S. Chan

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Chinese in San Francisco - mural

The mural was funded, in part, by the Mayors Office of Community Development.

A Joan Brown Obelisk at 343 Sansome Street

 Posted by on February 15, 2013
Feb 152013
 

343 Sansome Street
The Financial District

Joan Brown Obelisk at 343 Sansome StreetFour Seasons by Joan Brown

This tiled obelisk is by Joan Brown. Joan Brown was an American figurative painter who was born in San Francisco and lived and worked in Northern California. She was a notable member of the “second generation” of the Bay Area Figurative Movement.

She studied at the California School of Fine Art (now San Francisco Art Institute), where her teachers included Elmer Bischoff.   Her sculpture is not as well known, and yet she did several of these obelisks, there are at least 3 in San Francisco.  These include the Pine Tree Obelisk in Sidney Walton Park, Obelisk in the Rincon Center, and this one.  Sadly, in 1990, she was killed while doing an obelisk installation in India.

The sculpture is a result of both the 1% for Arts Program and the POPOS program of San Francisco and is available for viewing between 9:00 am and 5:00 pm Monday through Friday.

Joan Brown's Four Seasons

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Art in the POPOS at 343 Montgomery

Privately-owned public open spaces (POPOS) are publicly accessible spaces in forms of plazas, terraces, atriums, small parks, and even snippets that are provided and maintained by private developers. In San Francisco, POPOS mostly appear in the Downtown office district area. The 1985 Downtown Plan created the first systemic requirements for developers to provide publicly accessible open space as a part of projects.

The public art requirement created by the downtown plan is commonly known as the “1% for Art” program. This requirement, governed by Section 429 of the Planning Code, provides that construction of a new building or addition of 25,000 square feet or more within the downtown C‐3 district, triggers a requirement that provide public art that equals at least 1% of the total construction cost be provided.

 

Old Blueprints take on a New Look

 Posted by on February 13, 2013
Feb 132013
 

Muni Metro East Yard
Pier 80
Bayview

Muni Metro East Yard

This view, taken through a fence, is as close as one will get to the art work at the new Muni Metro East maintenance facility.

Nobuho Nagasawa Glass Work for Muni

*Anita Margrill Glass work for Muni

These photos I took from the Pulp Studios website.

I am going to simply copy directly what they have to say about these pieces as the information is excellent.

“The beauty of rail car engineering details is revealed in these historic blueprints from the 19th and 20th centuries.” Artist Anita Margrill’s statement rings true upon the very first site of the two towering glass curtain walls on the Metro East Light Rail Vehicle Maintenance and Operations Facility. This installation is a prime example of how art can seamlessly meld with Architecture, while taking two very standard stairwells from ordinary to extraordinary.

The artists Nobuho Nagasawa and Anita Margrill were inspired by the intricate pattern of white lines contrasting with the bold blue on the engineering blueprints they had found in the Muni Metro Archives.

In 1996 Pulp Studio received the call from Judy Moran of the San Francisco Arts Commission to work with artists to fabricate these two very large curtain walls, that measure an impressive 36 feet high by 19 feet wide. At the time Pulp proposed bringing the vision into reality by carving the line portions onto the glass and then painting them white to capture the vibrancy of the bold white lines of the drawing. However, this being a public works project 10 years had passed by the the time the facility was ready for it’s crown jewels to be produced.

During the interim, better technologies were formed and Pulp Studio recommended using their photographic laminated SentryGlas Expressions (SGX) product instead of the carved glass. SGX is a form of laminate that can be printed on in the full RGB spectrum, and even in white to produce photographic quality images. Once laminated the unprinted areas are clear, this product is what allows the blueprints to have their highly defined intricate bold look.

The 21 individual insulated glass sections of each curtain wall are comprised of two parts. A laminated blue glass panel on the interior and a clear glass panel on the exterior laminated with a mechanical engineering drawing printed in white on SGX as the substrate within the glass.

The San Francisco Municipal Transportation Agency recently won an award for the facility from the American Public Works Association, which is a national association that recognizes exceptional public works projects. This facility won in the category of projects costing over $75,000,000. Judy Moran of the SFAC said, “I am sure the curtain walls played a large part in making it an exceptional facility. Everyone is very happy with them, they are stunning.”

These pieces were commissioned for $100,000.

Nobuho Nagasawa has appeared here before with her Liberty Ship sculpture at the SFMTA Motor Coach Facility.

Anita Margrill  was born in New York City . She attended Cranbrook Academy of Art, received her BA from Bennington College, her B. Architecture from CUNY School of Architecture and Environmental Studies, and her MA in Interdisciplinary Arts from San Francisco State University.  As a licensed architect she has designed and built several passive solar houses and she holds numerous copyrights and patents for her water distribution systems.

The Drum Bridge at the Japanese Tea Garden

 Posted by on February 12, 2013
Feb 122013
 

Japanese Tea Garden
Golden Gate Park

Drum Bridge at the Japanese Tea Garden

San Francisco’s first Japanese Tea Garden was originally developed by art-dealer George Turner Marsh as part of the 1894 Midwinter Fair, an event that brought the City by the Bay into the international limelight.

Shinshichi Nakatani was selected to design and build the Drum Bridge (Taiko Bashi).

He built the bridge in Japan, dismantled it and brought back with him. Halfway through completion, the Expo ran out of funds. Shinshichi left San Francisco and returned to Japan. He sold off personal land holdings and brought the money back with him to complete the project.

After the Expo was over, the decision to donate the bridge and gate to the City of San Francisco was made. The bridge and gate have been there ever since.

Historically, the design has had several different functions

It reveals a reflection of a full circle or full moon over still water. The steepness forces those entering a tea garden to slow down, allegedly putting them in the right state of mind for a tea ceremony, and perhaps the most practical – it allows for boats to pass underneath, while using minimal amount of space on the plots of land that support it.

Guardians of Ping Yuen

 Posted by on February 6, 2013
Feb 062013
 

711 Pacific
Chinatown
Ping Yuen Housing

Ping Yuen Housing in Chinatown, SF

Originally 8 terracotta Foo dogs graced this gateway.

Chinese Foo Dogs at Ping Yuen Housing

Chinese guardian lions, known as Shishi or Imperial guardian lion, and often called “Foo Dogs” in the West, are a common representation of the lion in pre-modern China. They have traditionally stood in front of Chinese Imperial palaces, Imperial tombs, government offices, temples, and the homes of government officials and the wealthy, from the Han Dynasty (206 BC-AD 220), and were believed to have powerful mythic protective benefits.

The artist Mary Erckenbrack researched traditional Chinese animals before designing the dogs.

Mary Erkenbrack was born in Seattle, Washington on Nov. 30, 1910, Erckenbrack was raised in Rio De Janeiro, London, and Paris as her father, a shipping commissioner, moved about. While in France she studied art in Le Havre at Pension Jeanne d’Arc.

During 1933-35 her married name was Hennessy.   In 1935 she settled in San Francisco and became active in the North Beach art scene.  She soon established Mary E’s Mud Shop and was kept busy fulfilling ceramic orders for Gump’s, Marshall Fields and others.
Mary Erckenbrack - Ping Yuen Foo Dogs

Familia

 Posted by on February 4, 2013
Feb 042013
 

Potrero del Sol Park
Potrero Hill
Potrero at 25th Street

Familia by Victor Reyes

Familia is by Victor Reyes, who has many pieces around San Francisco.

On June 9, 2011 the San Francisco Examiner ran this article about the mural:

A community that came together to solve the problem of persistent graffiti at a neighborhood park celebrated the unveiling of a mural painted in the hope of staving off vandalism.

Potrero del Sol Park, which is a favorite among skaters and schoolchildren, is bordered by Buena Vista Elementary School and a building maintained by San Francisco General Hospital.

Taggers constantly targeted a wall of the hospital building, according to The City’s Recreation and Park Department. After hospital painters’ efforts to efface the wall were thwarted time and time again, the community rallied.

The school’s PTA found the artist Victor Reyes to compose a mural, and the students competed in a naming contest. The parks department waived the permit fee, the hospital donated paint and scaffolding and navigated the plan through the San Francisco Arts Commission.

The “Familia” mural, whose bright blocks of colors pop against the otherwise neutral surroundings, was unveiled 10 a.m. Wednesday at the park located at 25th and Utah streets.

According to the parks department, the mural is the story of “a shared problem and a creative solution.

SOMA Grand’s Glass Mosaic

 Posted by on February 1, 2013
Feb 012013
 

1160 Mission Street
SOMA
SOMA Grand

Art on Soma Grand

Composed of 390 panels, most about 2-by-7 feet and 1/4-inch thick, this mural is titled “Realm”. It is the biggest piece of glass art in the city. Coming in at three stories tall, it cost $800,000.

The piece is part of the 1% for art program of San Francisco and was created by Dorothy Lenehan.

Realm at Soma Grand

Dorothy Lenehan founded Lenehan Architectural Glass in 1995 after a years-long tenure with Narcissus Quagliata’s acclaimed glass studio in Oakland, including 10 years as studio manager.  After the Quagliata Studio relocated to Mexico City in 1995, Dorothy moved her studio to Emeryville and changed the focus of her work from leaded art glasswork to contemporary fused, painted and laminated architectural elements.

Dorothy Lenehan's Glass Mosaic on Soma Grand

The “1% for Art” program requirement is governed by Section 429 of the Planning Code, which provides that construction of a new building or addition of 25,000 square feet or more within the downtown C‐3 district, triggers a requirement that the project provide public art that equals at least 1% of the total construction cost.

Bufano at Westside Courts

 Posted by on January 31, 2013
Jan 312013
 

Westside Courts Housing Project
2501 Sutter Street
Lower Pacific Heights

Bufano at Westside Courts Housing Project

This sculpture, by well known San Francisco sculptor  Beniamino Bufano, is titled Saint Francis on Horseback.  Standing  8′ x 6′ and of black granite  it is located in the central courtyard of the project. It was made in 1935 but not placed here until 1945.

Westside Courts were built in 1943, Westside includes 136 units in six buildings that cover a full city block. Westside s unusual because it is located in a thriving, mixed-income neighborhood. Another distinction is in its construction, which relied on heavy cement blocks, creating buildings that have suffered less from degradation over time.

Westside is a development that has exceeded its useful life. The development is more than 65 years old, and residents live with outdated appliances; unpredictable plumbing, mechanical, and electrical systems; extensive rodent problems; and other issues that affect their health and quality of life.

Westside  comes under the purvue of HOPE SF, a subsidiary of the San Francisco Housing Authority.

Beniamino Bufano on Sutter Street in San Francisco

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Benny Bufano St. Francis on Horseback

Candlestick Park Community Garden Mural

 Posted by on January 30, 2013
Jan 302013
 

1150 Carroll Avenue
Candlestick Park State Recreation Area

Candlestick Point Community Garden Mural

This mural is on the side of the Candlestick Park Rangers Office.  The area in front is the Candlestick Point Community Garden.

The theme of the mural, expressed through symbolism, shape and color shows the various stages of the gardening experience.  The mural 30′ x 100′, took four months to complete.  It was designed in 1982,  by five artists and graduate students from San Francisco State University.  Barbara Plant, Gary Mathews, Eric Graham, James Adams and Maria Gonzalez.

Rather than using the wall surface as a canvas to be covered, the artists incorporated the exposed pebble wall into the design and purposely left areas unpainted.

Candlestick Point Community Garden MuralThis photo is from the original dedication 

Candlestick Point State Recreation Area was the first California State Park unit developed to bring state park values into the urban setting. From historic wetlands to landfill to landscaped park, Candlestick Point demonstrates major land use changes of the San Francisco Bay. Its name is derived from 19th century locals who thought the burning of nearby abandoned sailing ships and their flaming masts in the bay resembled lighted candlesticks.

1150 Carroll Avenue, San Francisco

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CCSF Mission Campus

 Posted by on January 29, 2013
Jan 292013
 

1125 Valencia
Mission District

CCSF Mission Campus Mayan Calendar

Said to be the biggest Tonalmachiotl in the world, this version of the Aztec Calendar sits at the entry way to the City College of San Francisco Mission Campus.

Tonalmachiotl is called the Aztec Calendar, the Sunstone or Piedra del Sol. Scholars believe that pre-conquest Mesoamerican cultures conceived of time as circular…. [Mesoamericans] therefore thought they could predict the future by recording events from the past. Using their calendric system and mathematics, they could look both back in time to when they believed the world began, and infinitely forward.

This colorful 27-foot Aztec Calendar hovering over the entrance to the campus on Valencia Street is constructed of some 660 ceramic tiles painted mostly bright blue and orange. The calendar is hand-engraved and painted and was commissioned for $200,000 to two Tucson artists, Alex Garza and Carlos Valenzuela.

Excerpt from a Tucson Weekly Article:  Garza was born in Cristal, an epicenter at one time for Mexican-American civil rights in Texas. Garza’s family moved well before Jose Angel Gutierrez, a founder of La Raza Unida, and other activists changed the course for Mexican-Americans in south Texas.

The Garzas found discrimination up north when they settled in Des Plaines, Ill., where they worked tomato and onion fields near what was becoming O’Hare Airport. Garza combines matter-of-fact recollections with humor, including being a champion in downing burgers from the first McDonald’s.

His and other Mexican-American families were pushed off the main streets, and Garza was intent on exploring. He did in Chicago in the heady late 1960s. He studied and trained and gravitated not toward galleries but to neighborhoods.

He now teaches at Las Artes.

Carlos Valenzuela also teaches at Las Artes, and other programs encouraging youth out of crime and into education.

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