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Hugo Rivera Gallery
published: 30 Mar 2015
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Corporeal Prison Fall 2019 Diego Rivera Gallery
Corporeal Prison collaborative installation (2019)
Diego Rivera Gallery in San Francisco // Sept. 30-Oct. 4, 2019
Corporeal Prison has helped us process issues surrounding borders and boundaries through the experience of collective art making. We seven artists produced a single installation by combining mediums and techniques from our individual practices. This collaborative effort began with conversations about life as consumers, our relationships with US political and societal borders and the function of boundaries within these contexts. Particular attention was paid to our self-regulating behaviors, as well as implicating ourselves with respect to the maintenance of present-day border structures. Who benefits from these borders? What keeps us from extending our empathy across boundarie...
published: 14 Feb 2020
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Art & Coffee/Hugo Rivera Gallery, Laguna Beach, CA
Art & Coffee/Hugo Rivera Gallery, Laguna Beach, CA
published: 06 Nov 2023
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Frida Kahlo & Diego Rivera and Gallery Morada | Art Loft 334 Episode
On this edition of art loft we visit the Frida Kahlo & Diego Rivera exhibit at the NSU Art Museum, and head to the Keys to visit Gallery Morada and artist Taylor Hale. It all ends the 48 hour film project short, Frank & The Rabbit.
published: 20 May 2015
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Mid-Market at Diego Rivera Gallery
Mid-Market Art Project presents Storied Sites: Architecture, Politics & People
Monday, April 16 - Saturday, April 21, 2012
Diego Rivera Gallery
Open daily 9:00am - 5:00pm
San Francisco Art Institute
800 Chestnut Street
San Francisco, CA
google map »
The Mid-Market Art Project (MMAP) is a collaborative endeavor that investigates the role of the arts within the socio-political forces of 'urban renewal' and its effect on the geographic area in which it operates. Understanding that artists and art initiatives often remain at the forefront of both city sanctioned and unofficial neighborhood shifts within the urban landscape, SFAI graduate students designed their MA Collaborative Thesis around the premise that arts administrators have a responsibility to actively examine their participation in t...
published: 20 Apr 2012
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Documents Installation, Diego Rivera Gallery, San Francisco Art Institute, 1998
This is the only video documentation of this event and despite the poor quality I still wanted to post.
This video documents an installation I created titled Documents. In this interactive performance work I used salt to stencil down homophobic words as if the floor were the canvas. It is my intention that the footprint of the viewer serves, rather than the hand of the artist, as the paint brush. By walking on the art, the audience is meant to deconstruct these negative signifiers embedded in the English language. Even though the viewer continues to destroy the words, I keep coming back to salt more words on the floor as such hurtful words keep coming back to the surface of our language and culture. The viewer by walking on the words serve to recuperate and transform the negative en...
published: 19 Apr 2022
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Hugo Rivera Gallery
published: 03 Jan 2016
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Suzanne Kehr speaking on Synapse at Diego Rivera Gallery 2008
Suzanne Kehr speaking about her piece "Synapse" at the Diego Rivera Gallery. She is a second year MFA Graduate student in Sculpture at San Francisco Art Insistute, San Francisco, California - Exhibition Title "With Reservations..." September 2008 (video by Ray Morrone)
published: 20 Nov 2008
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Dutch Montana in the Hugo Rivera Gallery
Dutch Montana is a California native. His most recent exhibition can be found in the Hugo Rivera Gallery in Laguna Beach. His Palm Tree abstract works have won awards and his American Flags have been collected throughout the United States.
published: 21 Apr 2021
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William Morris Gallery Archive Collection: Wilkinson & Rivera
Leading UK-based contemporary designers have been commissioned to reimagine objects from the William Morris Gallery archive that were significant to the life of William Morris, pioneer of the Arts and Crafts movement, and his family.
Each of these limited-edition products embodies a spirit of handmaking, working with natural materials and finding joy in labour; principles which underpinned William Morris’ own approach to design.
William Morris Gallery has also collaborated with Liberty to create a series of new products that celebrate the work of May Morris, daughter of William and Jane Morris and an influential and highly-skilled designer and artist.
Sales will support the education and community programme of William Morris Gallery.
In this video, learn more about Wilkinson & Rivera, ...
published: 15 Sep 2023
1:28
Corporeal Prison Fall 2019 Diego Rivera Gallery
Corporeal Prison collaborative installation (2019)
Diego Rivera Gallery in San Francisco // Sept. 30-Oct. 4, 2019
Corporeal Prison has helped us process issues...
Corporeal Prison collaborative installation (2019)
Diego Rivera Gallery in San Francisco // Sept. 30-Oct. 4, 2019
Corporeal Prison has helped us process issues surrounding borders and boundaries through the experience of collective art making. We seven artists produced a single installation by combining mediums and techniques from our individual practices. This collaborative effort began with conversations about life as consumers, our relationships with US political and societal borders and the function of boundaries within these contexts. Particular attention was paid to our self-regulating behaviors, as well as implicating ourselves with respect to the maintenance of present-day border structures. Who benefits from these borders? What keeps us from extending our empathy across boundaries drawn? How do psychological borders manifest within public spheres?
Light and water represent natural resources and bodies within contested environments enveloping the USA. Using the circular form of the oculus illuminating the gallery as a starting point, the discourse of corporeality is extended to architecture. Corporeal Prison relies on the architectural structures of the Diego Rivera Gallery - such as its rounded window and ceiling beams - to highlight this environment as a shelter for communal activities. Of particular interest is architecture’s function in compartmentalization and delineation of borders between different people. Personal borders, both tangible and intangible, can be a manifestation of efforts to protect oneself. A variety of ephemeral borders easily dissolved by shifting perspectives within the gallery reflects these concerns.
Materials: Wood, steel, glass, mirrors, linen, embroidered fabric, emergency blankets, water, sand, PVC, 5-channel soundscape.
Artists: Julia Fairbrother, Giuliana Funkhouser, Minjun Kim, Nivedita Madigubba, Amayi Nona Morales ,Bobby Singer, Shannon Sperling
Video by Elisabeth Wren Eckman.
https://wn.com/Corporeal_Prison_Fall_2019_Diego_Rivera_Gallery
Corporeal Prison collaborative installation (2019)
Diego Rivera Gallery in San Francisco // Sept. 30-Oct. 4, 2019
Corporeal Prison has helped us process issues surrounding borders and boundaries through the experience of collective art making. We seven artists produced a single installation by combining mediums and techniques from our individual practices. This collaborative effort began with conversations about life as consumers, our relationships with US political and societal borders and the function of boundaries within these contexts. Particular attention was paid to our self-regulating behaviors, as well as implicating ourselves with respect to the maintenance of present-day border structures. Who benefits from these borders? What keeps us from extending our empathy across boundaries drawn? How do psychological borders manifest within public spheres?
Light and water represent natural resources and bodies within contested environments enveloping the USA. Using the circular form of the oculus illuminating the gallery as a starting point, the discourse of corporeality is extended to architecture. Corporeal Prison relies on the architectural structures of the Diego Rivera Gallery - such as its rounded window and ceiling beams - to highlight this environment as a shelter for communal activities. Of particular interest is architecture’s function in compartmentalization and delineation of borders between different people. Personal borders, both tangible and intangible, can be a manifestation of efforts to protect oneself. A variety of ephemeral borders easily dissolved by shifting perspectives within the gallery reflects these concerns.
Materials: Wood, steel, glass, mirrors, linen, embroidered fabric, emergency blankets, water, sand, PVC, 5-channel soundscape.
Artists: Julia Fairbrother, Giuliana Funkhouser, Minjun Kim, Nivedita Madigubba, Amayi Nona Morales ,Bobby Singer, Shannon Sperling
Video by Elisabeth Wren Eckman.
- published: 14 Feb 2020
- views: 50
0:21
Art & Coffee/Hugo Rivera Gallery, Laguna Beach, CA
Art & Coffee/Hugo Rivera Gallery, Laguna Beach, CA
Art & Coffee/Hugo Rivera Gallery, Laguna Beach, CA
https://wn.com/Art_Coffee_Hugo_Rivera_Gallery,_Laguna_Beach,_Ca
Art & Coffee/Hugo Rivera Gallery, Laguna Beach, CA
- published: 06 Nov 2023
- views: 31
26:37
Frida Kahlo & Diego Rivera and Gallery Morada | Art Loft 334 Episode
On this edition of art loft we visit the Frida Kahlo & Diego Rivera exhibit at the NSU Art Museum, and head to the Keys to visit Gallery Morada and artist Taylo...
On this edition of art loft we visit the Frida Kahlo & Diego Rivera exhibit at the NSU Art Museum, and head to the Keys to visit Gallery Morada and artist Taylor Hale. It all ends the 48 hour film project short, Frank & The Rabbit.
https://wn.com/Frida_Kahlo_Diego_Rivera_And_Gallery_Morada_|_Art_Loft_334_Episode
On this edition of art loft we visit the Frida Kahlo & Diego Rivera exhibit at the NSU Art Museum, and head to the Keys to visit Gallery Morada and artist Taylor Hale. It all ends the 48 hour film project short, Frank & The Rabbit.
- published: 20 May 2015
- views: 502
4:37
Mid-Market at Diego Rivera Gallery
Mid-Market Art Project presents Storied Sites: Architecture, Politics & People
Monday, April 16 - Saturday, April 21, 2012
Diego Rivera Gallery
Open daily 9:00a...
Mid-Market Art Project presents Storied Sites: Architecture, Politics & People
Monday, April 16 - Saturday, April 21, 2012
Diego Rivera Gallery
Open daily 9:00am - 5:00pm
San Francisco Art Institute
800 Chestnut Street
San Francisco, CA
google map »
The Mid-Market Art Project (MMAP) is a collaborative endeavor that investigates the role of the arts within the socio-political forces of 'urban renewal' and its effect on the geographic area in which it operates. Understanding that artists and art initiatives often remain at the forefront of both city sanctioned and unofficial neighborhood shifts within the urban landscape, SFAI graduate students designed their MA Collaborative Thesis around the premise that arts administrators have a responsibility to actively examine their participation in this process.
This exhibition collects documentation of and information about three projects that the MMAP commissioned to be realized in the mid-market neighborhood of San Francisco in April and May, 2012. Each project will be located on Market Street, between 5th and 8th, occupying different areas of 'idle' spaces, including the interior of a building, a boarded up exterior, and the sidewalk in front of a vacant storefront.
Featured artists: Linda Trunzo, NODE (Network of Daily Experience), and Warmbaby.
Opening Reception: Tuesday, April 17 from 5:30pm-8:00.
There will be curator and artist-led walkthroughs of the exhibition at 5:30pm and 7pm.
For more information about the artists' projects and the MMAP, visit www.midmarketartproject.org.
https://wn.com/Mid_Market_At_Diego_Rivera_Gallery
Mid-Market Art Project presents Storied Sites: Architecture, Politics & People
Monday, April 16 - Saturday, April 21, 2012
Diego Rivera Gallery
Open daily 9:00am - 5:00pm
San Francisco Art Institute
800 Chestnut Street
San Francisco, CA
google map »
The Mid-Market Art Project (MMAP) is a collaborative endeavor that investigates the role of the arts within the socio-political forces of 'urban renewal' and its effect on the geographic area in which it operates. Understanding that artists and art initiatives often remain at the forefront of both city sanctioned and unofficial neighborhood shifts within the urban landscape, SFAI graduate students designed their MA Collaborative Thesis around the premise that arts administrators have a responsibility to actively examine their participation in this process.
This exhibition collects documentation of and information about three projects that the MMAP commissioned to be realized in the mid-market neighborhood of San Francisco in April and May, 2012. Each project will be located on Market Street, between 5th and 8th, occupying different areas of 'idle' spaces, including the interior of a building, a boarded up exterior, and the sidewalk in front of a vacant storefront.
Featured artists: Linda Trunzo, NODE (Network of Daily Experience), and Warmbaby.
Opening Reception: Tuesday, April 17 from 5:30pm-8:00.
There will be curator and artist-led walkthroughs of the exhibition at 5:30pm and 7pm.
For more information about the artists' projects and the MMAP, visit www.midmarketartproject.org.
- published: 20 Apr 2012
- views: 93
44:23
Documents Installation, Diego Rivera Gallery, San Francisco Art Institute, 1998
This is the only video documentation of this event and despite the poor quality I still wanted to post.
This video documents an installation I created titled D...
This is the only video documentation of this event and despite the poor quality I still wanted to post.
This video documents an installation I created titled Documents. In this interactive performance work I used salt to stencil down homophobic words as if the floor were the canvas. It is my intention that the footprint of the viewer serves, rather than the hand of the artist, as the paint brush. By walking on the art, the audience is meant to deconstruct these negative signifiers embedded in the English language. Even though the viewer continues to destroy the words, I keep coming back to salt more words on the floor as such hurtful words keep coming back to the surface of our language and culture. The viewer by walking on the words serve to recuperate and transform the negative energy contained in such words. Note the beautiful marks the soles of shoes leave in their wake as if each viewer are using a different kind of paint brush.
Other queer works include sculpture, digital compositing and another performance work where I collaborate with a polygraph examiner, whose voice you can faintly here in the background with my responses to his questions. We used his equipment so that my body's uncontrolled biological responses to his 'name calling' would be manifested as drawings produced by his polygraph equipment.
Richard Freeman, Videographer
https://wn.com/Documents_Installation,_Diego_Rivera_Gallery,_San_Francisco_Art_Institute,_1998
This is the only video documentation of this event and despite the poor quality I still wanted to post.
This video documents an installation I created titled Documents. In this interactive performance work I used salt to stencil down homophobic words as if the floor were the canvas. It is my intention that the footprint of the viewer serves, rather than the hand of the artist, as the paint brush. By walking on the art, the audience is meant to deconstruct these negative signifiers embedded in the English language. Even though the viewer continues to destroy the words, I keep coming back to salt more words on the floor as such hurtful words keep coming back to the surface of our language and culture. The viewer by walking on the words serve to recuperate and transform the negative energy contained in such words. Note the beautiful marks the soles of shoes leave in their wake as if each viewer are using a different kind of paint brush.
Other queer works include sculpture, digital compositing and another performance work where I collaborate with a polygraph examiner, whose voice you can faintly here in the background with my responses to his questions. We used his equipment so that my body's uncontrolled biological responses to his 'name calling' would be manifested as drawings produced by his polygraph equipment.
Richard Freeman, Videographer
- published: 19 Apr 2022
- views: 64
1:11
Suzanne Kehr speaking on Synapse at Diego Rivera Gallery 2008
Suzanne Kehr speaking about her piece "Synapse" at the Diego Rivera Gallery. She is a second year MFA Graduate student in Sculpture at San Francisco Art Insistu...
Suzanne Kehr speaking about her piece "Synapse" at the Diego Rivera Gallery. She is a second year MFA Graduate student in Sculpture at San Francisco Art Insistute, San Francisco, California - Exhibition Title "With Reservations..." September 2008 (video by Ray Morrone)
https://wn.com/Suzanne_Kehr_Speaking_On_Synapse_At_Diego_Rivera_Gallery_2008
Suzanne Kehr speaking about her piece "Synapse" at the Diego Rivera Gallery. She is a second year MFA Graduate student in Sculpture at San Francisco Art Insistute, San Francisco, California - Exhibition Title "With Reservations..." September 2008 (video by Ray Morrone)
- published: 20 Nov 2008
- views: 304
6:45
Dutch Montana in the Hugo Rivera Gallery
Dutch Montana is a California native. His most recent exhibition can be found in the Hugo Rivera Gallery in Laguna Beach. His Palm Tree abstract works have won ...
Dutch Montana is a California native. His most recent exhibition can be found in the Hugo Rivera Gallery in Laguna Beach. His Palm Tree abstract works have won awards and his American Flags have been collected throughout the United States.
https://wn.com/Dutch_Montana_In_The_Hugo_Rivera_Gallery
Dutch Montana is a California native. His most recent exhibition can be found in the Hugo Rivera Gallery in Laguna Beach. His Palm Tree abstract works have won awards and his American Flags have been collected throughout the United States.
- published: 21 Apr 2021
- views: 40
2:09
William Morris Gallery Archive Collection: Wilkinson & Rivera
Leading UK-based contemporary designers have been commissioned to reimagine objects from the William Morris Gallery archive that were significant to the life of...
Leading UK-based contemporary designers have been commissioned to reimagine objects from the William Morris Gallery archive that were significant to the life of William Morris, pioneer of the Arts and Crafts movement, and his family.
Each of these limited-edition products embodies a spirit of handmaking, working with natural materials and finding joy in labour; principles which underpinned William Morris’ own approach to design.
William Morris Gallery has also collaborated with Liberty to create a series of new products that celebrate the work of May Morris, daughter of William and Jane Morris and an influential and highly-skilled designer and artist.
Sales will support the education and community programme of William Morris Gallery.
In this video, learn more about Wilkinson & Rivera, creators of the Sussex Chair, which forms part of the Archive Collection.
https://wn.com/William_Morris_Gallery_Archive_Collection_Wilkinson_Rivera
Leading UK-based contemporary designers have been commissioned to reimagine objects from the William Morris Gallery archive that were significant to the life of William Morris, pioneer of the Arts and Crafts movement, and his family.
Each of these limited-edition products embodies a spirit of handmaking, working with natural materials and finding joy in labour; principles which underpinned William Morris’ own approach to design.
William Morris Gallery has also collaborated with Liberty to create a series of new products that celebrate the work of May Morris, daughter of William and Jane Morris and an influential and highly-skilled designer and artist.
Sales will support the education and community programme of William Morris Gallery.
In this video, learn more about Wilkinson & Rivera, creators of the Sussex Chair, which forms part of the Archive Collection.
- published: 15 Sep 2023
- views: 162