Contemporary Bay Area artists featured in exhibition 'About Place: Bay Area Artists from the Svane Gift'
The First Art Newspaper on the Net    Established in 1996 Friday, November 22, 2024


Contemporary Bay Area artists featured in exhibition 'About Place: Bay Area Artists from the Svane Gift'
Installation view of About Place: Bay Area Artists from the Svane Gift, de Young museum, San Francisco, 2022. Photograph by Gary Sexton. Image courtesy of the Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco.



SAN FRANCISCO, CA.- About Place: Bay Area Artists from the Svane Gift presents contemporary works by Bay Area artists from the Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco’s collection. The ten Bay Area artists featured in About Place, Guillermo Galindo, Postcommodity, Chris Johanson, Clare Rojas, Chelsea Ryoko Wong, Miguel Arzabe, Saif Azzuz, Katy Grannan, Wesaam Al-Badry and Rupy C. Tut explore themes related to their physical and imagined environments, as well as their heritage and sense of belonging. The exhibition opens with Going to Water (2021), a multi-channel video and sound installation by the Indigenous artist collective Postcommodity in the de Young museum’s central atrium Wilsey Court, and continues in the contemporary art galleries, where visitors will experience more than a dozen additional works - including a diverse collection of paintings, photographs and a sonic sculpture.

Works from the Svane gift are also featured in an upcoming collaboration with SFJAZZ Collective's October 24-27, 2024 SFJAZZ Center residency, as part of their 2024-25 season. The Collective’s seven-person musical group will compose new material and arrange familiar songs inspired by select works from the acquisition, and then perform the compositions at the Center’s Miner Auditorium later this year. Each composition fully utilizes the auditorium's immersive media system and video of the artworks will be displayed as accompanying visuals.

In 2022, the Fine Arts Museums acquired 42 artworks by 30 emerging and mid-career Bay Area artists as part of the Svane initiative. Funded with the generous support of the Svane Family Foundation, the initiative champions artists whose works encapsulate concerns and approaches at the forefront of artistic practice throughout the region over the past decade. The second in a series of exhibitions drawn from the initiative, About Place touches on the illusion of real and imagined boundaries of place, and how we relate to where we are and where we come from. This mutually informed identity combines the practice of self-care and ecological stewardship and highlights the importance of belonging.

“About Place illustrates how contemporary, local artists are addressing some of the most complex issues of our time with careful consideration,” said Thomas P. Campbell, Director and CEO of the Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco. “As a city museum, it is central to our mission to uplift and provide a platform to our local art community. The Bay Area arts community is known for its bold expression and creative output and we are deeply grateful to the Svane Family Foundation for investing in the community through their generous gift.”

The pressing issue of climate change, the local and global impact of ecological disasters and the erosion of our environment are recurrent themes throughout the exhibition. In their works, both Saif Azzuz and Postcommodity insist upon a future in which we draw upon Indigenous traditions to inform ecological stewardship. Reframing man-made disasters, such as the 2021 California wildfires and the 1926 evaporation of Owens Lake, Postcommodity and Azzuz each challenge the notion that nature can be molded to suit our needs as humans, pointing to the fragility of nature and reminding us of how dependent we are on the health of our land. The color palette Azzuz uses for painting Lo’op’ (It burns) (2021) is inspired by maps of the 2021 droughts and fires. Similarly in Rupy C. Tut’s painting New Normal (2022), natural elements are integrated into symbols that both praise and lament the state of our planet.

Other works in the exhibition confront the tangible aspects of place by incorporating found materials in their work. Chris Johanson and Miguel Arzabe use discarded materials as the foundation of their compositions - Johanson through discarded drop clothes and Arzabe in weaving patterns inspired by Andean textiles from discarded everyday items and strips of painted canvas. The reuse of found or discarded materials not only speaks to larger concerns of ecology but also adds additional layers of meaning to the works, such as in Guillermo Galindo’s Ready to Go (2015), which reuses a broken bicycle and chair that he found along the US-Mexico border.

“About Place interrogates the ways in which our environment and our identities are mutually and reciprocally informed,” shared Janna Keegan, Associate Curator of Contemporary Art and Programming. “Artists within this group explore their own histories to demonstrate the plurality of approaches in nurturing our relationships to the land we walk on.”

Finally, a group of works experiment with the relationship between figure and ground as they relate to place. In Unknow Know with What Is 12 (2021), Chris Johanson combines swirling shapes with floating heads and bodies, ants, rats, and other animals into energetic yet muted compositions that evoke feelings of impermanence and fluidity. Likewise, Claire Rojas’s painting Walking in Rainbow Rain (2021), which flattens the figure against the background, alludes to unconsciously becoming a reflection of or disappearing into one’s environment. The rain’s rainbow palette brightens the initially drab urban environment, relating the figure to San Francisco and the city’s history of LGBTQ+ liberation and social justice.

About Place is curated by Janna Keegan, Associate Curator of Contemporary Art and Programming at the Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco. Led by Claudia Schmuckli, Curator in Charge of Contemporary Art and Programming, the Svane Family Foundation acquisition reflects the abundant artistic energy and creative scope of contemporary Bay Area artists.

Established in 2019 by Zendesk founder and CEO Mikkel Svane, the Svane Family Foundation earmarked $1 million in 2021 to support the Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco’s acquisition of contemporary works by Bay Area artists. Through the generosity of the Foundation, the Fine Arts Museums was able to acquire work by Stephanie Syjuco; Allison Smith; Chris Johanson; Clare Rojas; Katy Grannan; Chelsea Wong; Koak; Ruby Neri; Maria A. Guzman Capron; Daisy May Sheff; Christiane Lyons; Wesaam Al-Badry; Guillermo Galindo; Sahar Khoury; Muzae Sesay; Woody De Othello; David Huffman; Postcommodity; Miguel Arzabe; Saif Azzuz; Rupy C. Tut; Sydney Cain; Rashaad Newsome; Ramekon O’Arwisters; Angela Hennessy; Ana Teresa Fernández; Liz Hernández; Demetri Broxton; Kota Ezawa; and Sadie Barnette to its collection of contemporary art.










Today's News

September 26, 2024

A leggy Tyrannosaur emerges from a Mexican desert

Free public art exhibition transforming Los Angeles after dark returns on October 5

Rare Harlem Renaissance sculpture and Tiffany silver among estate goods offered at Sterling Associates

Bellmans to sell rare study by Sir John Lavery

The Raclin Murphy Museum of Art receives major gift from the estate of Ernestine Morris Carmichael Raclin

MAGMA Gallery announces a new collaboration with the French artist Jules Dedet Granel, alias L'Atlas

ICA London opens Geumhyung Jeong's Under Construction

Christie's to offer the Danute and Alain Mallart Collection

Contemporary Bay Area artists featured in exhibition 'About Place: Bay Area Artists from the Svane Gift'

T.I. and Tiny awarded $71 million over L.O.L. dolls' likeness to R&B group

The Cleveland Museum of Art acquires Ancient Greek helmet and works by Dorothea Tanning and Rembrandt

Galerie Lelong & Co., New York presents a solo exhibition by Leonardo Drew

His father is leaving office. Is Hunter Biden's art market also over?

She found a home in music. Now she's the composer for the king.

The mushroom kingdom that Shigeru Miyamoto built

Kathryn Crosby, actress and Bing Crosby's widow, dies at 90

Jack DeJohnette, one of Jazz's great drummers, has a surprise

Exploring the roots of Mideast turbulence onstage

Naftali Herstik, renowned and influential cantor, dies at 77

moniquemeloche presents David Antonio Cruz's third solo exhibition with the gallery

What's eating Trump? The singing 'Ghost of John McCain'

Britain's National Theater director takes a final bow

How to Eliminate Feet Smells from Your Air Conditioner: A Step-by-Step Guide

DIY Solutions: What to Do When Your AC Breaks Down

Step-By-Step Guide To Apply Wonder Woman Makeup

How to Get Ready for Your Immigration Interview in Austin TX

How to Choose the Right ERP Software Development Partner?

Division of Property in a Divorce: A Comprehensive Guide




Museums, Exhibits, Artists, Milestones, Digital Art, Architecture, Photography,
Photographers, Special Photos, Special Reports, Featured Stories, Auctions, Art Fairs,
Anecdotes, Art Quiz, Education, Mythology, 3D Images, Last Week, .

 



Founder:
Ignacio Villarreal
(1941 - 2019)
Editor & Publisher: Jose Villarreal
Art Director: Juan José Sepúlveda Ramírez
Writer: Ofelia Zurbia Betancourt

Attorneys
Truck Accident Attorneys
Accident Attorneys
Holistic Dentist
Abogado de accidentes
สล็อต
สล็อตเว็บตรง

Royalville Communications, Inc
produces:

ignaciovillarreal.org juncodelavega.com facundocabral-elfinal.org
Founder's Site. Hommage
to a Mexican poet.
Hommage
       

The First Art Newspaper on the Net. The Best Versions Of Ave Maria Song Junco de la Vega Site Ignacio Villarreal Site Parroquia Natividad del Señor
Tell a Friend
Dear User, please complete the form below in order to recommend the Artdaily newsletter to someone you know.
Please complete all fields marked *.
Sending Mail
Sending Successful