All posts tagged San Francisco

Blur Book Is Here!

Blur Book Cover Image

It’s All A Blur, the current exhibition at SOMArts, is coming to a close. This Friday we are having the closing reception for the show and simultaneously releasing the exhibition catalog. Edited by SOMArts curator and gallery director Justin Hoover, it features writing by Guillermo Gómez-PeñaDale Hoyt , Amelia Jones, Niki Korth and Sandip Roy.  All the design work for this project was done by award-winning designer (aka my husband) Dan McKinley , who was recently recognized in Print Magazine’s 2010 Regional Design Annual, and many of the photographs of the installations were shot by Hewitt Photography (aka our wedding photographer), who gave us lots of generous in-kind support that made this possible.

The book is 128 pages, and in keeping with the theme it blurs the lines between a document of the exhibition and a stand-alone curated literary exploration. The retail price is $25 and can be purchased here via EventBrite or anytime from the SOMArts gallery.  This is a limited edition print of 500 copies.

The line up for the book release party and closing night promises to be exciting including readings by Dale Hoyt and Niki Korth, live video deejaying from David Lawrence and music by DJ Tom Thump.

Please come to the SOMArts Main Gallery this Friday from 6:00-9:00 pm with readings from 7:00-8:00.  The event is free and has a cash bar. Here is a link to the facebook event page.

(blog post text adapted from Justin Hoover’s e-newsletter.)

The Subtle Beauty of Subtle Beauty

A coincidence of timing: recent compliments about SOMArts and this interview with Elijah Huge, have me thinking about the subtle beauty of space and how it can effect artists and arts workers. I’ve worked in three inspiring spaces: The O’Neill, with its barn, log-cabin pub, large meadow and secluded beach, was the perfect setting for playwrights. The CFA was a cool, elegant backdrop for the vibrant passion of student work. SOMArts continues to reveal itself as a “queendom of infinite reinvention” (as it was described to me by an artist shortly after my arrival). The Most Inspiring of all Inspiring Places is probably Mass MoCA, and I wish we were able to visit during our trip east for the holidays, but it’s not happening this year.

CONTINUE READING ]

Sometimes, It’s Okay To Judge

SQUART: Spontaneous Queer Art

On Saturday, October 30th I’ll be one of the esteemed judges for SQUART (Spontaneous Queer Art!) over at The Lab. According to the website, “SQUART was originally conceived by Laura Arrington, out of the desire to foster community and create work without preciousness.”

Process begins at 6pm and the show starts at 8pm. Confirmed Performers are: Peter Max Lawrence, Anna Martine Whitehead, Rachael Dichter, Jorge Rodolfo De Hoyos Jr., Evan Johnson, Minna Harri, Harold Burns, Kirk Read, Jesse Hewit, Jai Arun Ravine, Miriam Wolodarski, Kevin Seaman, Kyra Rice and Liz Tenuto.

I’ve been hearing the buzz about SQUART for a while now so I am thrilled to be playing a role in the next one. Plus, they have a cool-lookin’ poster that reminds me of a cross between Paula Scher and Dia de los Muertos.

You can RSVP here.

A Cultural Center Without Walls in CT?

Even though I’ve been in San Francisco for nearly two years, you’d be surprised how many people still ask me what it’s like to be here and be running a cultural center as someone from “out of town.” And not just out of town, Connecticut. People who live in San Francisco have the same impression of Connecticut that I did when I was growing up in the midwest: Martha Stewart, old Yankees, rich New York suburbanites. San Franciscans are proud, and rightly so, of the diversity and empowerment here. But we (and I mean we San Franciscans—myself included) have so much going on that it can be hard to think beyond the city limits and imagine, let alone appreciate, what is happening in the community arts elsewhere in the country.

There have been many times when I have wished I could take the artists and collaborators who inspire me here and show them what is going on in the Connecticut I know. New London, Hartford, New Haven, Middletown—the little cities that shaped my dreams of what is possible when people embrace the arts as a way to build strong and healthy communities. I am fortunate to see the transformative power of the arts at SOMArts, an organization that enjoys city support that is almost unprecedented elsewhere in the country. Because Connecticut cultural organizations do not have the same funding resources, and because I have always rooted for the underdog, what happens with the arts in Connecticut still evokes deep admiration in me, as well as pride for what the people living there have achieved and keep striving for.

Two projects in Connecticut caught my eye this week. The Green Street Arts Center, where I was the assistant director for several years, has created not one but two murals over the past two years. The most recent one, created by Marela Zacarias in collaboration with the after school program and a local soup kitchen, recognizes the city’s homeless population.

Further north, Hartford City Councilman Luis Cotto has begun a Kickstarter campaign to fund a cultural center without walls. We San Franciscans need only look to the city-supported virtual cultural centers to know how powerful this can be. The first project of the center was a collaboration between Cotto and Oakland-based artist and activist Favianna Rodriguez, whose work I have admired but who I have not had the pleasure of meeting personally.

Although I’ve had no hand in this project whatsoever, I am excited to see that someone from the Bay Area is playing a part, and to see another example of how the marriage of great minds can help accessible art continue to thrive in Hartford. Cotto’s right-hand-man at City Hall, Brendan Mahoney, is a longtime friend of my fiance‘s and will be officiating our wedding in September, and we will be hosting a gathering of many friends from around the country at SOMArts. So, while I can’t bring all my West Coast friends east, at least I will be able to share with my friends and family around the country the creative home that inspires me in the present, and look forward to future insurrection, connection and community through the arts.

Shaping Up On A Shoestring

Almost a year ago, something happened at SOMArts … I didn’t realize at the time, but it was the beginning of a movement I now call the “Shaping Up On A Shoestring Movement.” Someone who came to SOMArts for Day of the Dead exhibition contacted me, he was part of the National Council on Aging and worked with their employment training program.

Like most SOMArts opportunities, this one came about as the result of the NCOA’s contact with a friendly and inspiring staff member. SOMArts needed someone to monitor our galleries and the NCOA provided Lynne, whose role quickly expanded to include reception and administrative support.

Around the same time, a client of SOMArts suggested that we look into Philanthropy by Design, a charitable organization that connects a network of design industry professionals with community benefit organizations and saves tons of furniture from the landfill through creative reuse. Caroline Ranere of Ranere Design Group donated her time and talent to transform the SOMArts lobby, clean up our office spaces and create a more functional and welcoming workspace.

As we were cleaning and painting, we realized that although we had lots of volunteers at different times throughout the year, we didn’t have a way to track their time or interests so that we could make the best use of their skills. We also weren’t keeping track of all the volunteer time that was donated and relied upon as an essential resource for our organization. I remembered an article published on Blue Avocado, Tracking Volunteer Time To Boost Your Bottom Line, and we used the templates from that article to start building up a real volunteer program. We reached out to the California College of the Arts Center for Art and Public Life and applied for a student  to work as our Communications and Community Outreach Fellow. Staff members Deb Bok and Rene Yanez held volunteer orientations to help introduce new volunteers to the opportunities at SOMArts. We attended the Volunteer Center’s Board Match to connect with people who were interested in donating their skills as Board Members for nonprofits. We applied to Rebuilding Together and they brought more than 50 volunteers from The Belden Club to repaint our theater and Bay Gallery during National Volunteer Week (they even put photos of the day on their website). Amber Hasselbring of the Mission Greenbelt Project guided our growing volunteer team to revive our garden. Project 20 volunteers helped repair our floors and deejay at art openings. Curator & Gallery Director Justin Hoover developed internship descriptions for the gallery and reached out to local university programs to help develop the Ramp Gallery in our new lobby and prepare for exhibit installations.

Less than a year later, we’ve partnered with over fifteen organizations and logged more than 2,000 volunteer hours. More importantly, we’ve made significant improvements that will benefit all of the arts and community-building cultural groups who depend on SOMArts and expanded a fun, diverse community of individuals who believe in our mission. Getting strategic about our repair and maintenance efforts means that more donations directly support our programs, and that our donors can feel confident that every dollar they give is going as far as it can. (in case I am being too subtle this is a PITCH to donate to SOMArts—it’s worth it!)

When I think back, the most amazing thing about our little shaping up on a shoestring movement is how easy it was to undertake these projects and how much we got in return for our efforts. In-kind volunteer and employment programs saved SOMArts many thousands of dollars this year and all it took was small, intentional, progressive changes over the course of a year. The organizations (who I’ve linked to for the benefit of other arts managers who might read this) were without exception excited to work with arts organizations, and those of us who work at SOMArts made new friends who are full of great suggestions and enthusiasm.

If you live in the area and haven’t been to SOMArts in a while, there is a beautiful exhibit in the Main Gallery right now: (Re-)CLAIM, an exhibition by the Asian Pacific Islander Cultural Center. And next Saturday is a fundraiser to support SNAG (Seventh Native American Generation) youth in attending the Allied Media Conference. There will be a skateboard art exhibit, vendors, drumming, Pomo dancers, Mohawk acoustic soul music, LOTS of other music and dancing, visual art and good food. It will be a very fun time for a very good cause.

What’s New, SFMOMA?

For Christmas, Dan’s sister gave us a membership to the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art. I’ve been a member of many visual arts organizations in the past (ArtSpace New Haven, Southern Exposure, Wadsworth Atheneum, Real Art Ways, and on and on) but for whatever reason this is the first one that has resulted in participation as I imagine it’s more or less intended. The membership provides us with the ability to spontaneously drop in, look around, enjoy an exhibition without feeling the need to take in the whole building. And, we get to skip the line, which is a nice perk on a rainy Sunday. I’m lovin’ it.

Today, we went to the Luc Tuymans exhibition, which Dan blogged about here.

In addition to the shows, I am also enjoying SFMOMA’s new lineup of bloggers, er, columnists. They just got started and already there’s an interesting post by Renny Pritkin about artists who’ve left town (and those who have stayed). I discovered Pritkin’s Prescription For A Healthy Art Scene on the Open Space blog shortly after moving to San Francisco last year, and it was posted on my office wall for quite a while. Glad to see that he is now an official poster, creating an interactive online space for dialogue.

Speaking of dialogue, there was quite the turnout for SOMArts’s Saturday afternoon talk about politics and printmaking. Sixty-five people showed up to see the work of more than 30 Bay Area artists represented in the exhibition, and to hear the differing opinions of Art Hazelwood, Robert Flynn Johnson, Steve Lopez and Don Farnsworth. Somehow, there is a connection to be made in the tremendous (and growing) local turnout at SOMArts shows, and the response by artists and curators on Pritkin’s blog who are seeking the kind of business, finance and critical rigor that will sustain them here. The lack of posts on my own blog is due partly to a desire not to make this site an annex to my work space … but these artists’ needs, and how to support them with our limited resources, are very much on my mind.

So, over at SOMArts we’ve been doing some advocacy in the face of budget cuts to the cultural centers. We’ve been writing grants. And we have been working damn hard.

And right now, I wish there was another day to this weekend! This one was good, and too short. Thanks San Francisco, for living up to expectations once again.

i live here:SF

IMG_9076

(photo by Julie Michelle)

A couple of months ago, I wrote about some of my favorite San Francisco blogs … and through the magic of the interwebs, this connected me with Julie Michelle, author and artist behind i live here: sf. Julie invited to be here 90th subject, and we took a walk around SOMArts for the photo shoot. You can view the slideshow, along with my essay about discovering a community through art, here.

The Play That Changed My Life & Other Drama

This week I have been thinking a lot about theater. One of the things I was most excited about when I moved to San Francisco was the availability of affordable live theater, and one of the surprises of actually living here is the reality of not getting out and see as many plays as I would like.

I can count the number of plays I saw last year on two hands: Evie’s Waltz at Magic Theatre, The America Play by Thick Description, Skin at Climate Theater, Culture Clash and Friends and Over the Mountain at Brava, You’re Gonna Cry at Red Poppy Art House. Overall, they were some of the most social, entertaining and educational evenings I’ve had at local arts events. And within this list there are major omissions, things I wanted to see but couldn’t, theaters I’ve been meaning to get to, even tickets purchased and not used because when faced with the possibility of a free evening, a good night’s sleep won out (according to Ben Cameron, that last one makes me a Yankelovich poll statistic).

I’ve been thinking about what it would take to ensure that theater gets more time and space between work, family, friends, visual art, readings, live music, et cetera. I’ve been thinking about who participates in Bay Area theater, after a brief but provocative talk with a colleague whose local theatergoing experience—particularly, observations about who is in the audience—has been very different from mine.

And, I’ve been wondering … do so-called “community nights” encourage misconceptions about who likes theater and decrease dialogue by surrounding us with a sea of ourselves? How much does this take away from the overall theatergoing experience? Is this balanced by an increase in attendance and other benefits?

I think a bad night at the theater can often be redeemed by the civic aspect—the opportunity to exchange ideas and opinions with other audience members. A good night of theater can become life-changing. How do community nights shift the civic aspect?

Another reason this is all stirred up in my head is that last night I was reminded, via Twitter, of a theatergoing experience that changed my life.

So the story is, I was just out of college and had moved to the Twin Cities to pursue my dream of being an actor at the Guthrie. I auditioned for a play at Pillsbury House, a professional theater that is part of a larger nonprofit network of community centers—they didn’t give me the part, but they gave me a free ticket to see a play called Dutchman, written in 1963 by beat poet and black activist LeRoi Jones. Pillsbury House was in an unfamiliar neighborhood. The play was disturbing. The post-show talk was uncomfortable.

Upon experiencing the same production, journalist Anne Ursu  wrote the following in a CityPages article:

“[cast & director]Goranson, Remington, and Blagen smile and look out at the audience with       welcoming expressions. There is silence. After a while, a white man speaks in general terms about the language of the play, accompanied by the sound of shifting in seats. Then, silence again. The troika onstage looks as if they want to be somewhere else. So does the audience. Finally Rohan Preston, theater critic for the Star Tribune, raises his voice. ‘I don’t know if I should be speaking, but I’m really struck by how uncomfortable everybody is, by how difficult it is for us to have this discussion.’ Everybody breathes in.”

“Everybody breathes in” … and then, at the performance I saw, they couldn’t stop talking.

For me, the civic aspect of that experience—different people in the same room together, sharing ideas about what they had just seen—opened the door to a place where people were making an effort to understand and appreciate each other better through art, and pursuit of that experience has defined my most significant personal and professional choices for ten years. The performance was electrifying. The quality of the discussion, once it got rolling, had everything to do with the fact that some harsh truths had been laid bare onstage before an audience with differing experience, knowledge and opinions.

Getting back to the question of seeing more theater now, that intersection of art and ideas is what I am looking for, and it is hard to find within the calendar listings, advertising and marketing for most theaters. It is easier to stay “close to home,” rely on the recommendations of friends and colleagues, attend arts events that aren’t as high-risk as theater, where once you walk through the door you are pretty much committing yourself to 2+ hours.

But when all’s said and done, I love theater. And it was a play, not an exhibition or a reading or a dance class, that changed my life. The tweet that got me thinking about this was from Howard Sherman, my former boss at the O’Neill Theater Center and now director of the American Theatre Wing. ATW is holding a Play That Changed My Life contest. Interesting to see how theater has changed the lives of others!