February 16, 2012

Ian Padgham & Claire Pasquier - SFMOMA Windows Installation

IN THE SFMOMA MINNA AND NATOMA STREET WINDOWS
7 ans de moirage // 7 Years of "Moirage"
Ian Padgham, Claire Pasquier
February 16 – August 31, 2012

Ian Padgham and Claire Pasquier,
7 ans de “Moirage”, 2012; photo: courtesy the artists

moiré noun \mȯ-ˈrā, mwä-\ an independent usually shimmering pattern seen when two geometrically regular patterns (as two sets of parallel lines or two halftone screens) are superimposed especially at an acute angle.

Artists Ian Padgham and Claire Pasquier are partners in art and life. Padgham is an American and Pasquier is French. A play on words, their installation entitled 7 ans de "Moirage" presents seven scenes using moiré patterns and refers to the seven years the couple has been married. Each vignette is also associated with a place where they lived—from Paris and the French countryside (Creuse) to San Francisco and the California coast.

The phenomenon of the moiré pattern is significant here because it is a product of interference. It is a result of alteration, modification, even disruption from another source. A moiré is created when two grids are overlaid at an angle, or when they have slightly different mesh sizes.

The moiré effect can be undesirable, as in a distorted half-tone print; or desirable, as in the pleasing flourishes that mark silk taffeta.

As Pasquier describes: “A couple is two people interacting, in the same set in the same time. Two people together create new stories and future memories.” The couple has also likened the work to weaving a tapestry, as they have painted and followed the lines on the canvas at the same time, intertwining and overlapping to re-create moments from their lives together.


The Windows installations can be viewed around the clock, so swing by and check out all seven pieces! 

February 11, 2012

Valentine's Day Portrait Event - Claire Pasquier


SFMOMA Artists Gallery
Now Taking Reservations for the 4th Annual Valentine's Day Portrait Event

Tuesday, February 14, Wednesday, February 15,
and Thursday, February 16




  

Make your Valentine's Day picture-perfect
at the fourth-annual Valentine's Day Portrait Event at the Artists Gallery.
Book your reservation today for a portrait painted by artist Claire Pasquier.
Call the gallery for an appointment: 415.441.4777  (prepaid reservations required).



Who: The SFMOMA Artists Gallery at Fort Mason Center and Artist Claire Pasquier
What: Valentine's Day Portrait Event
Where: SFMOMA Artists Gallery, Bldg A., Fort Mason Center, San Francisco, CA 94123
When: Tue. Feb 14, Wed. February 15, and Thurs. February 16, 2012.
Only 2 appointments available each day, one at 10 am and one at 2 pm by appointment only.
How Much: A $300 pre-paid reservation is required. Space is very limited. Call for an appointment: 415-441-4777.
More info: Web: http://www.sfmoma.org/artistsgallery


Gallery artist and Claire Pasquier will paint your portrait as a unique gift for your significant other.
The portrait sitting fee is $300 and includes one unframed original painting on paper approximately 12 x 12-inch to 15 x 15-inch depending on paper chosen . Please allow two hours for your session.
Custom mats and framing also available at an additional cost. Prepaid reservations required.





The SFMOMA Artists Gallery is located in Building A at Fort Mason Center.
Gallery hours are 11:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. Tuesdays through Saturdays.
Admission to gallery exhibitions is free of charge.
Representing Northern California artists, the SFMOMA Artists Gallery offers a diverse selection of original artwork for sale and rent.

Visit our website at www.sfmoma.org/artists_gallery  or call 415/441-4777 for more information.
Become a fan of the Gallery on Facebook and follow us on twitter.




 

February 4, 2012

My Mom is Making Pancakes on Friday for the Family

SFMOMA Artists Gallery Participates in International Interior Design Association’s Mid-Market Display Windows. 
 
This event raises awareness and funds for Raphael House in San Francisco.









SFMOMA Artists Gallery Window Entry Location: 1155 Market Street, San Francisco.
Exhibition Dates: February 3–March 25, 2012

The Windows Reveal Party: Thursday, February 9, 5:30–8:30 p.m, International Art Museum of America, 1025 Market St., between Sixth and Seventh streets. Tickets are $15–30 and may be purchased online at http://www.thewindows.org/.

The SFMOMA Artists Gallery at Fort Mason will be creating an entry for the International Interior Design Association’s (IIDA) The Windows Mid-Market Display. By dressing up vacant storefront windows along San Francisco’s Market Street, the IIDA hopes to invigorate downtown San Francisco, promote public art, and showcase the vibrant creativity of the design community.

This event raises awareness and funds for Raphael House, a shelter for children and families experiencing homelessness. Proceeds from the designer entry fees and ticket sales for the Reveal Party will go toward the renovation of the third floor at Raphael House, providing much-needed transitional housing.

Each design team participating will draw inspiration for their window from a piece of artwork and an accompanying personal story contributed by a child living at Raphael House.


Artwork that inspired the window design.

The SFMOMA Artists Gallery design team includes museum staff members Michelle Nye and Renée de Cossio, and local artists Jennifer LaPierre and Michael McConnell. The drawing that they received, “My Mom Is Making Pancakes on Friday for the Family” became the starting point for a window that includes the work of sculptor McConnell and muralist LaPierre.

Nye, a fine art advisor at the Artists Gallery and an artist herself, was struck by how Raphael House provides a setting where families can develop expressions of what home is to them. The child’s drawing, focused on the simple act of sitting down together for a meal, became the starting point for the Artists Gallery design team.

The team plans to construct an imaginative kitchen vignette featuring McConnell’s family of woodland creatures making and eating pancakes in a forested glen painted by LaPierre.

“Home is presented from a childlike perspective, weaving the wonders of the natural world into the comfort and safety of a familiar domestic interior,” Nye says. “As children innately understand, life is richly fulfilling when the imagination is allowed to roam. As adults we come to understand that though we deal in practicalities and necessities, a satisfying life, at home and work, requires creativity, play, and wonder.”
The Windows Reveal Party will be held Thursday, February 9, from 5:30 to 8:30 p.m. at the International Art Museum of America (1025 Market Street between Sixth and Seventh streets). Tickets are $15–$30 and may be purchased online at http://www.thewindows.org/.

The International Interior Design Association (IIDA) is a professional networking and educational association of 13,000 members in 10 specialty practice forums and 29 chapters around the world. The San Francisco City Center is the heart and foundation of the award-winning IIDA Northern California Chapter. Each year the chapter provides its members with a series of programs and events that inspire, educate, and connect the San Francisco design community.

Raphael House, the first shelter for children and families experiencing homelessness in Northern California, provides an environment of loving support where families are able to move toward brighter and more hopeful futures. The mission of Raphael House is to help at-risk children and their parents achieve stable housing and financial independence, while strengthening family bonds and personal dignity.

The SFMOMA Artists Gallery features a dynamic exhibition program and represents Bay Area artists at all stages of their careers. As a nonprofit gallery, the majority of the proceeds go directly to our artists. The remainder supports exhibitions and educational programming at the museum. Located in Building A at Fort Mason Center, the Gallery is open 11:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. Tuesdays through Saturdays. Admission to gallery exhibitions is free of charge.

Visit sfmoma.org/visit/artists_gallery  or call 415.441.4777 for more information. Become a fan of the Gallery on Facebook (facebook.com/ArtistsGallerySFMOMA), follow us on Twitter (@SFMOMAArtistsG), and check out our blog (sfmomaag.blogspot.com).

February 2, 2012

Happy Birthday to James Joyce!


James Joyce, author of Dubliners

February 2 marks the 130th Anniversary of Joyce’s Birth.

The 130th anniversary of the birth of James Joyce on February 2  is an opportune moment for reflection upon the convoluted themes of Irish Diaspora identity. Also a good time to brush up on some history before our highly anticipated March show Amid A Space Between, Irish Artists in America.

Joyce, probably the most well-known Irish writer, travelled to Paris after university and only made five return visits, the last in 1912, after which he never returned. He lived over 30 years out of the country that would be the main subject of his many writings for the rest of his life, including the seminal work, Ulysses. Other artists many might identify as Irish like Samuel Beckett, also lived in Ireland during his formative years, but by age 30 he had moved to France and lived on the continent and wrote nearly all his major works in French.




Many Irish artists have made significant contributions to the arts within other countries.  Art historian, painter, and sculptor Brian O'Doherty, who moved to America in 1957, was an influential member of the National Endowment for the Arts, where he was responsible for the creation of such programs as American Masters and Great Performances. Closer to home, William Coulter, considered the most important West Coast maritime artist of the 19th century moved to San Francisco and began his career in 1869. His most famous work is San Francisco Fire, 1906, and his works are in the Oakland Museum of California’s permanent collection.





As our world grows smaller due to the ease of communication, travel, and global collaboration, it has become increasingly difficult to assign artists representative to any nationality. Today, there are 40 million people in the United States alone who identify themselves having Irish ancestry, with the island of origin having a population of just 4 million people. Artists like Katie Holten, Richard Mosse, Alen MacWeeney, Helen O’Leary, Helen O’Toole, and Nuala Clarke in SFMOMA Artists Gallery’s upcoming show, Amid a Space Between: Irish Artists in America highlight in their artworks the significant traits of Irish art's Diaspora. They have been both a significant part of the history of modern and contemporary art here in the United States and Ireland. The artists’ ambiguous and multifaceted Irish identities also illustrates a larger idea that many artists of various nationalities and groups form communities and create opportunities to exchange ideas and experiences.

Amid A Space Between, Irish Artists in America opens at SFMOMA Artists Gallery March 8. Please join us for the opening on March 10.




Here are a few ways to commemorate the birth of one of the 20th Century’s greatest writers.

Attend a Lecture
Sunday, January 29th, 4 pm
United Irish Cultural Center, 2700 45th Avenue, San Francisco
Professor David Vela (Diablo Valley College)
“The Influence of Joyce’s Works on Latin American Writers”
A reception will follow the presentation.  Join the ILHS at the event and attend this event for free, $5 suggested donation for visitors.

Have Irish Breakfast & Read Dubliners
The Copper Kettle
2240 Taraval St. (between 32nd Ave & 33rd Ave)
San Francisco, CA 94116
The Copper Kettle serves a traditional Irish Breakfast with eggs, bacon, black pudding, white pudding, potatoes, beans, grilled tomato and slices of freshly baked Irish bread. Order a pot of tea to go with it.

Listen to Reels and Jigs
Fiddler Martin Hayes can trace his roots directly back to the Tulla Ceili Band, in which he played along with his father P.J. Hayes. Guitarist Dennis Cahill was born in Chicago and studied at the city’s prestigious Music College. Both share a love for this traditional music that Martin says, “contains the longing and essence that moves you at the level of your soul.”

Save the Date for an Art Opening
Saturday, March 10, from 1 to 3 p.m.
SFMOMA Artists Gallery, Bldg. A, Fort Mason Center
 Amid a Space Between: Irish Artists in America
On view March 8 thru April 19, 2012
Admission free!!