Showing posts with label October 2009. Show all posts
Showing posts with label October 2009. Show all posts

Saturday, October 31, 2009

Wayne Jiang's Open Studio Today and Tomorrow

FROM WAYNE JIANG:

You are invited to my Spring Open Studio on the weekend of October 31st and Nov. 1st. at Hunter's Point in San Francisco.
With over 15 acres of art studios contained in 7 buildings and over 160 artists, the Spring Open Studio at Hunter's Point Shipyard is the very best and most representative Open Studio in San Francisco.

My new works will be exhibited in my studio, including: Restaurant paintings and affordable small landscape and still life paintings.

Exhibit Starts: Saturday, October 31st
Exhibit Ends: Sunday, November 1st
Hours:11AM - 6PM

Address: Building 116, Studio #22, Hunter's Point Shipyard, San Francisco

Tuesday, October 27, 2009

Jessica Dunne's New Book Available Now- Craft: Shaping a Surfboard


SD Gallery Artist Jessica Dunne has recently released, Craft: Shaping a Surfboard. Jessica's etchings are featured in this beautiful book that merges Jessica's imagery and text from Dave Parmenter, the surfboard creator himself. Please take a look at this link for more information: Craft by Jessica Dunne

Jessica Dunne, Hose
Three-plate spit-bite aquatints, 6 x 6 inches, 2009

Jessica Dunne, Skil
Three-plate spit-bite aquatints, 6 x 6 inches, 2009

From the book Craft: Shaping a Surfboard 2009, eight spit-bite aquatint etchings and letterpress, 17 pages, 13 ” x 12”

The idea of putting words with images to create an interaction between them has always fascinated Dunne. This is her first artist book after years looking for the appropriate text. Dunne’s father, Philip Dunne, was a screenwriter, and her grandfather was Finley Peter Dunne, the political satirist. With this background, she realized that to put words and images together required the right text. She found that text in the writings of Dave Parmenter.

Dave Parmenter is a renowned surfboard shaper, writer, and former professional surfer. He writes personally—and often furiously—about shaping boards, surfing, and contemporary surf culture. In his dedication to his craft, Dunne found something akin to her feelings about her own work. His article in The Surfer’s Journal about shaping a surfboard, with all the considerations that make it function in dangerous situations, is excerpted in this book.

Dunne grew up in Malibu, and her partner of many years, Mark Renneker, is a devoted big-wave surfer. She has lived for years with as many as forty-five surfboards of varying lengths and silhouettes. She is not a surfer, however. But it wasn’t the sport of surfing that caught her attention as being the motive for shaping a surfboard. The craftsmen involved in the task, their tools, and the terminology all fascinated her: the shaper, the glasser, a downrail.

The craftsman holding out against technology and mechanized efficiency is a driving force in the author’s monologue. And the prints evoke the working environment of the surfboard shaper. People involved in fine crafts have more in common than not. Since the industrial revolution began, craftsmen have been skulking around, sensing, and maybe enjoying, impending obsolescence.

Craft consists of blocks of text excerpted from the article “A Shaper’s Fugue,” originally published in The Surfer’s Journal 13:4. Each page of text faces a spit-bite aquatint etching. Each of the eight etchings was created at Eastside Editions in San Francisco. The spit-bite aquatint is a technique of painting acid on an aquatinted plate to produce rich and soft tones. Dunne is well known for her spit-bite aquatints in black and white. In this project, however, she created color prints using multiple plates.

This book is about shaping a surfboard, but it is also a tribute to craftsmen, including those who contributed to the book itself: Dave Parmenter the writer, David Avery the etching printer, Jonathan Clark the typesetter and letterpress printer, and the binder Klaus-Ullrich S. Rötzscher, at Pettingell Book Bindery.

I spent a lot of time nosing around in Dave’s San Luis Obispo shaping-shack when he wasn’t there, ogling the strange tools and stranger claustrophobic space. Then I watched him shape a board and envied his skill. A painting or print does not have to perform physically, as does a board, but the pressure on Dave to create a perfect object, his ability to create this great curvilinear shape out of a hunk of foam that will also withstand the force of a large wave, was humbling.
–Jessica Dunne

Friday, October 23, 2009

Ceramic Pets Looking For Good Homes

Kiln Treats by Gary Dinnen
10/8-10/31/09

Gary Dinnen has created a wide variety of ceramic pets for his current show Kiln Treats. There are dogs, cats, and other little guys that all need good homes. They don't require their shots, cleaning up after, and they'll always be around to keep you company! Come by and pick out your own Dinnen pet or one for someone you love. These guys need good homes!

Take a look at this link for more images: Gary Dinnen Kiln Treats

Wednesday, October 21, 2009

Our Current Exhibition: Gary Dinnen, Maureen Hood, and Ken Kalman


Gary Dinnen- Kiln Treats

Maureen Hood- PostCards

Ken Kalman- Objects, Maps and Riveted

October 8-31, 2009

Gary Dinnen, Surpassing Understanding, 2009, Ceramic, 47.5" x 21" x 20 - $3200.

Maureen Hood, 2009, Shop Girl, Mixed Media on Canvas, 32" x 50"- $5600.



Ken Kalman, Bi-Plane, 2008, Aluminum Sheets, Rivets and Paper, 60" x 24" x 8"- $3000.