Different style, same spirit, and getting the job done.
From The Citrus Report
As noted above, these two paintings by Josh Smith are on view at Altman Siegel in San Francisco through February 25, 2012. The show, which features Jessica Dickinson, Liam Everett, Alex Olson, Josh Smith, and Garth Weiser, is definitely something we are checking out this week.
From The Citrus Report
This piece is being shown at Guerrero Gallery’s An American Language, a sign painting show featuring 12 different sign painters from the land they call America. This is a 49ers piece by Mike Meyer. It works for this week, very well, indeed.
From The Citrus Report
From Left Coast Books in Goleta, California: Russell Crotty’s work is represented in the collections of the Museum of Modern Art (New York), Pompidou (Paris), Whitney Museum of American Art (New York), Museum of Contemporary Art (Los Angeles), San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, San Francisco Fine Arts Museum, New York Public Library, and others.
Crotty’s “Fragments from the West Coast: A Peculiar Surf Vernacular” will be on display through December 24, 2011.
A good friend of ours, Austin McManus, will have photographs and new zine at a show with one of the great independent spirits in photography and documentary art, Bill Daniel (director of the great “Who Is Bozo Texino?”). Stop by the Lost Door in San Francisco this weekend, December 4, and get a nice slice of what makes SF and the Bay Area a special place. Great name for a show, too: Tin Ton Tic Tac Click Clack.
From The Citrus Report
Starting yesterday, the World Tour is at Ocean Beach in San Francisco. This doesn’t normally happen (this is a specialty event that changes location every year), the waves are really good, and the surfing is even better. Go watch some really fantastic wave riding, get your picture with Kelly Slater, drool over Dane Reynolds, or get out what ever other weird fetishized crazing you may possess for the world of professional surfing. You’re not in San Francisco? (Sorry thats a real shame if you’re not) Watch the contest live online.
From The Citrus Report
FIFTY24SF Gallery is proud to present, My So Called Life, the first solo show of San Francisco-based photographer, Andrea Sonnenberg aka Teen Witch. My So Called Life opens November 3, 2011.
My So Called Life will feature over 50 photographs from Sonnenberg’s body of work, each uniquely hand-printed at Hamburger Eyes lab in SF’s Mission District.
Significant buzz was built around Sonnenberg’s photography after exhibiting works at MOCA’s seminal Art In the Streets graffiti and street art survey, as well as works included in Barry McGee and Josh Lazcano’s “Let’s Go Bombing Tonight” show in Copenhagen, My So Called Life is an accumulation of Sonnenberg’s trademark portrait, graffiti, landscape, action, and day in the life photography. Building off the unique lineage of street photography in San Francisco, Sonnenberg’s unfiltered, raw, and often humorous work has made her an active documentarian of a new generation of SF youth culture. Her intimate portraits of her friends and of herself are often candid, revealing a truth about both the city and the personalities that exist inside. The photos present a world of unbridled optimism and a carefree rebirth of homegrown bohemian culture in the midst of a city preoccupied by technological innovation.
“San Francisco has a lot to do with how I work and what I document,” Sonnenberg says. “There is this energy here, this vibe, that is impenetrable. People born here are obsessed with being native and that sense of pride also shows in people’s actions, which I love to capture.”
Andrea Sonnenberg aka Teen Witch has shown at MOCA in Los Angeles, V1 Gallery in Copenhagen, and Ed. Varie in New York City.
Andrea Sonnenberg grew up in San Francisco surrounded by photographers, graffiti artists, and musicians. By the age of 14, she was photographing and documenting the various exploits of her friends and contemporaries. Their penchant for getting into extremely unique and often dangerous situations became the basis of her body of work. Soon, she began to print her photos by hand at San Francisco’s famed Hamburger Eyes studio. Her work was included in MOCA’s 2010 Art In the Streets retrospective, the United States’ first graffiti and street art survey. Sonnenberg lives and works in San Francisco. This is her first solo exhibit at FIFTY24SF Gallery.
Posted by FIFTY24SF Gallery
We do feel it rare to be able to see a traveling exhibition at two consecutive venues. This past summer, we visited Richard Serra’s Drawing at the MET in NYC, but the buzz in the building had been for the Alexander McQueen exhibition, which was gaining momentum and a labyrinth of lines throughout the building. Our experience with Serra was quiet, but dramatic. The work, of course, was strong, and in its simple construction and arrangement, had a unique language all to its own. But we felt it wasn’t given the proper space to breath.
The move to the SFMoMA proves to be the right conditions for which to see Serra’s work. The natural light, the higher ceilings, and bigger rooms allow for Serra’s drawings and sculptures to exist as they should. We always imagined Serra’s sculptures existing in old industrial warehouses, in large, open spaces that put scale and materials in focus. His drawings, some sketches, some full thoughts, some just examinations of the human’s ability to connect with shapes, angles, and simple construction need their own rooms to thrive.
If you have a chance to stop by Serra’s retrospective, we recommend going in the afternoon during the week, with few people interrupting the experience. Its solitary, and its own universe. Just enjoy it. —Raymond Brown / The Citrus Report
From The Citrus Report
Where have we been in 3 weeks? We have watched about 10 movies on airplanes that all were really bad, been to 5 different countries, saw fjords, mountain towns, oil museums, Hawaiian beaches, drank Mai Tais, got felt up by crafty Norwegians, saw lots of street art, appreciated oil money just a tad, found flying over London to be pretty great sightseeing, learned not to leave your resort, Italian gas station coffee is the real deal, pizza may be better in San Francisco, our cat likes to vacation as well, Norway’s Food Story is excellent, read two books, began to love Bon Iver just a bit more, found Phil Collins is soothing as shit, learned Italians love Noel Gallagher, and came to the conclusion that the key to life is $15 bottles of water and a population of 5m with oil. And we are back.
From The Citrus Report
Watch Jeremy take you on a tour of our favorite city. View more videos at: http://thefeast.com.
From The Citrus Report