Showing posts with label Mission. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mission. Show all posts

Thursday, October 27, 2016

It Started on Albion Street

Laguna Dolores (Albion Street), mixed media photo collage on board, 10”x8”

Have you seen my exhibit of Time Travel Photos yet? It includes 26 new photo collages that illustrate San Francisco’s past, present and perhaps even the future.  The show is up until November 27, 2106 at Glama Rama at 304 Valencia Street in San Francisco.

After seeing the show head down to Albion Street between 16th and 17th.  There you will find an historic plaque marking the location of the original Mission Dolores stood on the shores of a shallow lake.  This spot was the inspiration fore the first piece in the series (shown above).

Tuesday, June 14, 2016

The Passage of Time leads to Time Travel Photos

Laguna Dolores (Albion Street)
mixed media photo collage on board, 10”x8”
When making art about the passage of time, it might be necessary to let some time pass yourself.   This year, as I started creating the pieces for this new series of Time Travel Photos, I began to understand that my own process began decades ago. 

My story started the summer I was nine years old.  It was when I saw sand dunes for the first time.  The moment of that experience of seeing dunes, in person, for the first time, sticks with me decades later.  It was at a place called Sandy Neck that I would learn to love as a teenager.  That vacation alongside a salt marsh was just a glimpse of what was to come.  In a few years my family left the city and we moved to Cape Cod.  We lived near the beach and next to a salt marsh.  That was the time when I really began to appreciate nature and also learned the vital role that marshes play in marine ecosystems.

Fast forward to life in San Francisco.  It is a city like many cities, especially the coastal ones, where the natural environment was radically altered to allow the city to grow.  Creeks and waterways were blocked, land was leveled and even hilltops were removed.  Marshes and tidal flats were filled in to expand San Francisco out into the Bay.  As I learned more about San Francisco’s history, I learned about the hidden coast that was beneath the streets.  I spent years working in offices in Jackson Square and the base of Potrero Hill.  Places that are blocks from the shore but where, at one point in time, the high tide reached the spots where the buildings now sit. 

I was sitting outside eating my lunch one day in 1998, I was near the old Trans Bay Terminal and I had, for lack of a better word, a vision.  I started visualizing this busy spot between office buildings and what it must have been like about 200 years back.  I thought about when the Spanish had just arrived and the place had changed little since the Ohlone made it their home.  I imagined a quiet place with the smell of the tide, dense vegetation and wildlife.  I started to wonder about how I could turn this vision, this idea, into art.

Then, in 2011, I carried out a different type of project about time.  The 2011 Project was one where I made a small, four-inch square, piece of art each day for the entire year.  The 365 pieces focused on different themes and ideas and I experimented with a number of styles and mediums.  The series was intended as both a time capsule of my work as well as something akin to a sketchbook for future work.  There was one particular photo collage that I loved the instant it was finished. 

Back in the summer of 2011 I did what would be first Time Travel Collage (shown above). In the Mission, on Albion Street, there is an historic plaque commemorating the site of the first mission that was on the shores of a small lake.  I took photos of the street that I then cut up and layered with photos of a similar lake with a marshy shore.  We are fortunate to live in the Bay Area where so much of the natural world remains accessible, intact and close by.  With this first piece, I was able to show both the now and the then (or at least a reasonable representation of the then).


It took until 2016, but now I have been able to focus my attention on creating a series of time travel photos that capture the present but remind us of the past, the land and life that was there before the city.

Thursday, May 5, 2016

New Mexico always recharges my “Art Batteries”


Another series of small (4”x4”), quick studies inspired by my recent trip to New Mexico includes places like Pecos National Historic Park and the ruins in Jemez.  Now it’s time to work on some bigger paintings…

Tuesday, September 4, 2012

Imagining Val Travel Opens September 16th




Below is the information and statement for my upcoming installation:


304 Valencia Street (at 14th St.)
San Francisco
September 16th – November 3rd, 2012

Opening Reception
Sunday, September 16th, 6 pm - 9 pm


I have always been interested in history, from the big moments to the everyday.  I have a special fascination for San Francisco history.  I even like to look-up the history of spots in my neighborhood.  For a relatively young city, San Francisco has a rich, layered history.  It is also a city full of ghosts.  It made me wonder about the space at 304 Valencia.  What was there long before Glama-Rama?

Now, just imagine what it was like at 304 Valencia Street when they were renovating and moving into the new location for Glama-Rama.  Imagine a trip to a dusty, dark basement and finding a forgotten corner.  They might have discovered a box filled with discarded items from a long gone tenant.  Imagine Val Travel.

Ask yourself, could a former travel agency be haunted?  What sort of ghosts would be there?  I like to think it could be a place of pleasant and happy spirits.  The positive energy left behind would be from the years of customers coming by to plan and anticipate exciting adventures.  A salon and a travel agency have something in common.  They are both places that fulfill dreams and make our lives more glamorous. It’s no accident that Glama-Rama found a new home at 304 Valencia.

With this mind, I wanted to create a new series of travel themed, mixed media pieces using travel-related ephemera.  The installation at Glama-Rama Salon & Gallery is meant to infuse the space with the soul of an imaginary, long lost travel agency.  The work pays homage to all travel agencies because they have all but vanished from our urban landscapes.  

I reuse and repurpose old bits of paper, everything from maps to postcards to stamps to photographs to magazines to various travel ephemera.  Recycling is only part of the agenda.  Even though I may destroy certain items to reuse them, there is a side of historic preservation with my work.  Rather than tucking something in a box or drawer, I prefer to permanently add it to a piece of art.  The work may have aesthetic value, but it also can serve as a time capsule by using items that would otherwise be lost or forgotten.  Many of the items I use are being rendered “obsolete” in our digital society.  Snapshots, postage stamps, tickets stubs are among things that are vanishing from our day-to-day lives.


Wednesday, July 18, 2012

Old Photos



I love old photos of San Francisco.  I love seeing pictures of familiar places the way they looked in years past.  I can spend hours online browsing the San Francisco Public Library’s Historic Photo Collection.    It’s fascinating for me to see what was there 50 years ago, 100 years ago, or even in the 19th Century.  The library doesn’t have every photo though.  I find old photos from other online sources or poking in old albums at thrifts stores or at paper fairs.  Sometimes old photos just fall out of some used book I bought.

I am not sure where the photo pictured above turned up.  It’s marked “Valencia and 15th” in handwriting on the back.  I’d say it’s 1950’s.  And something tells me, we’ll know more about it soon.