First, a few words about William Wiley
Before we plow into the weekend's (and next week's) great art events, I would like to take a moment to remember first-generation 新澳门六合彩内幕信息 Davis art faculty William Wiley. Some of my most fun and interesting days at the 新澳门六合彩内幕信息 Davis campus were spent with Wiley. He came back to the university in 2014 to present his iconic "Gong" sculpture to campus. I wrote about that event here. Today, the San Francisco Chronicle published his which does a great job telling his life story from his days before 新澳门六合彩内幕信息 Davis, at 新澳门六合彩内幕信息 Davis, and after 新澳门六合彩内幕信息 Davis. He was 83, passing away this week after battling Parkinson's disease. There will be more on Wiley later.
I leave you readers with a photo of Wiley's characteristic grin, taken when his Gong was being installed, at that time, in front of the Mondavi Center for Performing Arts. It was later placed outside the newly built Jan Shrem and Maria Manetti Shrem Museum of Art in 2016.
And, a few words from Wiley's poem, etched on the base that holds the Gong. It applies anytime.
One side for peace
One side for war
One side, what for?鈥擶illiam T. Wiley
And, if you are on or near campus anytime soon, go bang the Gong in his memory. He would really enjoy that.
Karen Nikos-Rose, Arts Blog editor
Shinkoskey presents 鈥楾elegraph Quartet鈥 Thursday
Thursday, April 29, 12:05 p.m. to 1 p.m., free, via . These concerts are brought to you by the 新澳门六合彩内幕信息 Davis Department of Music and the Ann E. Pitzer Center, 新澳门六合彩内幕信息 Davis.
Eric Chin and Joseph Maile, violins
Pei-Ling Lin, Viola | Jeremiah Shaw, Cello
Johannes Brahms: String Quartet No. 2 in A Minor, op. 51
Eleanor Alberga: String Quartet No. 2 (1994)
Each of the composers featured on this program had to make their way out of the shadows of overbearing circumstances that could have eclipsed them. Eleanor Alberga, a Jamaican composer working in England, has made a vital career composing vibrant and colorful works, breaking into the classical scene largely dominated by white European composers of the past. And Brahms, himself one of those European composers of the past, had to overcome his own anxieties created by the legacy of his idol, Beethoven, in order to write this second of three string quartets published in his lifetime. All three composers managed to find a way to allow their voices to be heard clearly despite the pressure bearing down on their personal and professional lives. Each of these works is a poignant testament to the fruits of that struggle, whether the struggle was personal or societal in nature.
Learn more about this program .
Preview of next week鈥檚 concert, Stephanie Lamprea, solo soprano, and works by graduate students
Thursday, May 6, 12:05 p.m. to 1 p.m., free, via .
, solo soprano (artist-in-residence)
笔谤辞驳谤补尘鈥
- Emily Joy Sullivan: Stream of Unconsciousness鈥
- Orkun Akyol: can you hear me?
- Joseph Vasinda: Hope Left鈥
- Addie Camsuzou: Love鈥檚 Witness
- Josiah Tayag Catalan: Sages鈥 Gardens
Read more about this program on the .
Alumni work appears in an exhibition at the Verge Center for the Arts
The Verge Center for the Arts as reopened and presenting its first exhibition in a year on-site. showcases the work of the 2020 Ali Youssefi Project (AYP) artists in residence, including alum (MFA 2019), (MFA 2017), and (MFA 2017). The show runs through May 9.
The title is a nod to the unique challenges the artists faced pursuing their residencies during quarantine and largely in isolation. The works produced reveal the deep personal explorations that come not just through the luxury of time and space that a residency provides, but also through the additional focus that solitude allows.
Find more information .
Lunchtime Art Chat with
Friday, April 30, 12 p.m., free, via Zoom. .
Are you tired of eating lunch alone? Join Verge staff member, Justina Martino, for a Lunchtime Art Chat with exhibiting artist and Ali Youssefi Project alum, (MFA 2017). Muzi will share a slideshow about her art, inspirations and processes and attendees will have the opportunity to ask questions.鈦 鈦
Rowe is a visual artist and photographer who works with the physical elements of the camera, observing photography through its own medium. She creates assemblages using obsolete technology and photographs through various processing methods. Often combining analog cameras, historical processing methods and contemporary subjects in her processes, she reflects on the significance of practicing analog media in the current Digital Age.鈦 鈦
For more information, go .
SFMOMA exhibition 鈥楤ay Area Walls鈥 features local artists
SFMOMA presents a series of commissions by local artists that consider the COVID-19 pandemic and unfolding crises of 2020. Displayed across three floors (Floors 3, 5, and 7) of the museum, these artworks reveal the far-reaching impact of these events on Bay Area communities. Entry for this exhibition is included with general admission. Get tickets .
, one of the featured artists, works with topics related to her upbringing in Mexico City, creating imagery from memories of buildings covered in handmade signs, chaotic trips to markets, and her grandmother鈥檚 house. For Conjuro para la sanaci贸n de nuestro futuro (A spell for the healing of our future), Hern谩ndez brings forth symbols and icons from milagros, or miracle charms, to summon a higher power for our community鈥檚 health and future and remind us that we are all connected. (Floor 3, closing Sept. 5, 2022). See video below.
Learn more about the exhibition on .
SFMOMA presents an open studio workshop for educators
with Favianna Rodriguez for educators
Saturday, May 1, 10 a.m. to 1 p.m., free, virtual. .
This workshop by SFMOMA introduces teachers to a contemporary artist鈥檚 work through images and video resources. Educators will hear directly from artist and engage in a hands-on activity written by the artist for SFMOMA鈥檚 Open Studio project. This virtual professional development workshop is designed for high school teachers, but all K鈥12 educators are welcome to attend.
More information about the event .
To learn more about Rodriguez and her work, read our Arts Blog story.
Pence Gallery introduces 鈥楢rt in the Garden鈥 and a new exhibit this Saturday
This year in lieu of the annual Garden Tour, the Pence is hosting Art in the Garden, a one-day fundraising sale in the Pence courtyard on Saturday, May 1 from 10 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Every art form for the garden will be there, including whimsical outdoor sculptures, stepping stones, bird baths, and more. Participating artists include Deb Hill, Sandy Whetstone, Kit Lam, Judy Catambay, Jackie Boutin, Susan Phelan, Marcia Smith, Jeff Nebeker, Marti Schoen and Jill Van Zanten. Purchase fresh bouquets of flowers and decorative potted plants, all in celebration of May Day! Enjoy free seeds donated by Hedgerow Farms.
Upstairs, is on display from May 1 to May 30, an exhibit of paintings by local artists on the theme of plants and gardens. Participating artists include Chris Kidd, Kristine Bybee, Marie Therese Brown, Deb Hill, Naomi Bautista, Anne Lincoln, Janet Crittenden, Rebecca Ryland, Barbara Smithson, Linda Clark Johnson, Marlene Lee, Karen Fess, Mary Neri King, Cynthia Kroener, Adele Shaw, Kaye Gamper, Pete Scully, and Patris.
For more information about the event, visit the .
Crocker hosts a virtual festival for El D铆a Del Ni帽o on Saturday
The Crocker Art Museum, Sacramento, opened this month at 25 percent capacity, per COVID guidelines. As such, events are ticketed and space is limited. They are still having virtual events as well. Read on.
Saturday, May 1, 11 a.m. to 1 p.m., free, via Livestream. .
Join the Crocker Art Museum for a family-friendly, bilingual (Spanish) celebration of El D铆a Del Ni帽o/Children鈥檚 Day, Mexico's annual holiday that acknowledges and honors children. Connect with your kids 鈥 or your own inner child 鈥 in a virtual two-hour festival filled with lively performances, engaging art activities, and exciting, special guests from local organizations.
For more information about the event, go .
Free Sundays
The Crocker Art Museum in Sacramento introduces Welcome back Sundays through May 31 where visitors can get free admission to the museum on Sundays. Reserve your spot . If you can鈥檛 make it on these days, the Museum will be open Thursday through Sunday, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. All tickets are timed and are available . To ensure a safe visit, .
For any further information about opening, visit the .
Next week in art
Asian Art Museum continues with their virtual 鈥楾akeout Tuesdays鈥
Tuesday, May 4, 12 p.m. to 12:30 p.m., $0-5, via Zoom. Buy tickets .
The Asian Art Museum in San Francisco presents another Takeout Tuesday where you can 鈥渢ake out鈥 a taste of art and join museum docents and fellow art lovers for interactive lunchtime encounters with selected artworks from the collection. Next week, docent Sheryln Leong will lead 鈥淧ainting a Tang Court Lady in the 20th Century鈥 where attendees will join Leong in a conversation about the genre of figure painting.
This event is free for members and $5 for non-members. More information .
The Eugene Lunn Memorial Lecture introduces 鈥楽tephen Greenblatt: Shakespeare鈥檚 Second Chance鈥
Tuesday, May 4, 4 p.m., free, via Zoom. .
In 1610, a 46-year-old Shakespeare wrote The Winter鈥檚 Tale, a play about a 46-year-old king who recovers a wife and a daughter whom he believed he had irrevocably lost. He borrowed the plot from a potboiler written years earlier by his old nemesis Robert Greene. Even though very few details actually match Shakespeare鈥檚 life, there is something striking in his engagement with a story in which a father, haunted by a sense of guilt for the death of his only son, is reunited years later with the daughter whom he had cast away as an infant. Taking this story over from Greene, Shakespeare radically rewrote its ending to give the wayward husband the opportunity to repair his damaged relationship with his wife. The Winter鈥檚 Tale can be viewed as a template for understanding what it takes, according to Shakespeare, to have a second chance in life.
Stephen Greenblatt is an American Shakespearean, literary historian and author. He has served as the John Cogan University Professor of the Humanities at Harvard University since 2000. Greenblatt is the general editor of The Norton Shakespeare (2015) and the general editor and contributor to The Norton Anthology of English Literature. Greenblatt is one of the founders of New Historicism, a set of critical practices that he often refers to as "cultural poetics.鈥 He won the Pulitzer Prize for General Nonfiction in 2012 and the National Book Award for Nonfiction in 2011 for The Swerve: How the World Became Modern.
This annual lectureship honors cultural historian Eugene Lunn, who during 20 years as a member of the faculty in the 新澳门六合彩内幕信息 Davis Department of History distinguished himself as an esteemed teacher and mentor, and an influential scholar in the field of modern European intellectual history.
This lecture is organized by the 新澳门六合彩内幕信息 Davis Department of History. Co-sponsored by the Manetti Shrem Museum.
Learn more about this event and future programs by Manetti Shrem Museum .
Department of Art and Art History Visiting Artist Lecture Series features Irina Rozovsky
Thursday, May 6, 4:30 p.m. to 6 p.m., free, via Zoom. .
The Visiting Artists Lecture Series is organized by Art Studio faculty and master of fine arts candidates. It invites some of the most compelling practitioners and thinkers working today to 新澳门六合彩内幕信息 Davis鈥 including nationally and internationally recognized artists, critics and curators鈥攆or public lectures, readings and critiques with students and faculty across disciplines.
For this virtual lecture, the series welcomes artist (b. 1981, Russia) who has exhibited in museums and galleries in the United States and abroad. She has published two monographs, One to Nothing (2011) and Island in my Mind (2015). A monograph of her 10-year project, In Plain Air, is forthcoming this year. Rozovsky鈥檚 work is in the collections of the Metropolitan Museum of Art, Philadelphia Museum of Art and Haggerty Museum of Art, and was featured in MoMA鈥檚 Companion Pieces: New Photography 2020. With her husband Mark Steinmetz, she runs The Humid, a photographic project space in Athens, Georgia.
Organized by the Department of Art and Art History. Co-sponsored by the College of Letters and Science and the Manetti Shrem Museum.
Learn more about this event and future programs by Manetti Shrem Museum .
TANA holds a virtual book launch featuring 新澳门六合彩内幕信息 Davis鈥 Maceo Montoya
Thursday, May 6, 5 p.m., free. Via Zoom. .
A book launch for , associate professor of Chicana and Chicano studies, visual artist and writer, will be held online by . The novel Preparatory Notes for Future Masterpieces: A Novel is an adventurous and satirical story about an artist and features 50 drawings by Montoya. He will be joined by a fiction writer, art critic, and law professor at Loyola Marymount, where she will read from her novel Art Is Everything. Both books are centered on Latinx artists struggling to make their voices heard.
Art Social Media of the Week
We came across this by the 新澳门六合彩内幕信息D Basement Gallery reminding us that their next show Thanks for the Debt is coming up May 15 to May 17.
Media Resources
Top photo: The Telegraph (String) Quartet will perform the 新澳门六合彩内幕信息 Davis Shinkoskey Noon Concert, available on the Music Department's YouTube channel. (courtesy photo)