Showing posts with label Richmond Art Center. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Richmond Art Center. Show all posts

01/05/25

Time & Tide: The Art of John Wehrle @ Richmond Art Center

Time & Tide: The Art of John Wehrle
Richmond Art Center
Through June 14, 2025

John Wehrle
John Wehrle 
Rising Tide, 2011-2025
© John Wehrle, courtesy of Richmond Art Center

Richmond Art Center presents Time & Tide, the first major exhibition to comprehensively survey the work of Richmond-based artist John Wehrle. Best known for his murals in Richmond, the Bay Area, and throughout California and the West Coast, Wehrle’s diverse artistic practice spans more than 50 years.

Time & Tide highlights Wehrle’s expansive body of work, including murals, sculptures, “stitched” photographs, limited edition digital print portfolios, videos, and studio paintings. From his early years as a combat artist in Vietnam to his most recent digital photographic works, John Wehrle explores themes of war, survival, the environment, and human progress, offering a profound reflection on our evolving world and social constructs.
“John Wehrle’s art is not just a visual experience,” says curator Jeff Nathanson. “It is an invitation to explore the complexities of our existence and connect with the emotions that define us as human beings.”
Blending whimsy, allegory, and history, John Wehrle is especially known for his public art, which has shaped Richmond’s urban landscape with landmark murals such as The Plunge (2010) and Revisionist History (1995). His murals and gateways across California continue to leave a lasting impact on communities statewide.

Curated by Jeff Nathanson, Time & Tide: The Art of John Wehrle is accompanied by a catalogue, public programs, and self-guided mural tour.

RICHMOND ART CENTER
2540 Barrett Avenue, Richmond, CA 94804

Time & Tide: The Art of John Wehrle @ Richmond Art Center, April 9 – June 14, 2025

22/02/24

Richmond Biennial Exhibition 2024 Artists - Right Here, Right Now, Richmond - Anthony Delgado, Art Hazelwood, e bond, Erin McCluskey Wheeler, Helia Pouyanfar, Quinn Keck, Taro Hattori

Right Here, Right Now, Richmond
Third Richmond Biennial of Art
Richmond Art Center
September 4 – November 21, 2024

Richmond Art Center announces the seven artists selected to present work in Right Here, Right Now, Richmond. In its third iteration, this biennial exhibition celebrates local, visionary art and ideas through commissioning new artwork from artists who either live or work in Richmond, California.

The 2024 RHRN artists are Anthony Delgado, Art Hazelwood, e bond, Erin McCluskey Wheeler, Helia Pouyanfar, Quinn Keck, and Taro Hattori.

The Biennial exhibition will be presented at Richmond Art Center and curated by Roberto Martinez

RICHMOND BIENNIAL EXHIBITION 2024 ARTISTS

e bond
e bond

e bond makes digital spaces by day, handmade books by night, hangs out with trees on weekends and writes something close to poems in the spaces between. Under the studio name roughdrAftbooks, she makes one-of-a-kind artists books, printed matter and abstract drawings that merge and blur the boundaries of art, craft, design and poetry. e holds a BFA from Moore College and an MFA from Mills College. 

Anthony Delgado
Anthony Delgado

Anthony Delgado is a Californian by birth and by nature. His starting point in art was as a painter, attending UMASS in Amherst, and Cal for degrees in Fine Art. After working in graphic design for over 30 years, photography is now Delgado’s principal artistic pursuit. His recent work focuses on capturing the “decisive moment”, when animate and inanimate, emotion and action combine to form a singular image. 

Taro Hattori
Taro Hattori

Taro Hattori is an interdisciplinary artist who has shown his installations and socially engaged projects nationally and internationally. His recent work often creates relationships between physical sculpture and space with people with a specific socio-political background through their performances, conversations and singing. He is currently teaching at CCA the chair of Sculpture and Individualized Programs. 

Art Hazelwood
Art Hazelwood

For over 35 years Art Hazelwood has created politically charged prints, working with dozens of organizations from arts organizations to unions to grassroots movements. He taught printmaking at the San Francisco Art Institute where he founded the San Francisco Poster Syndicate, which brings together political poster makers to work with activists. UC Santa Cruz Special Collections has established an archive of approximately 300 of his political prints. 

Quinn Keck
Quinn Keck

Quinn Keck is a multidisciplinary artist working across traditional printmaking, painting, and digital mediums to create dialogues on the human experience. Instead of portraying just the physical form of people, places, and objects, Quinn abstracts layers to discuss identity, memory, perception, and grief – exploring the absurdity of making patterns in a chaotic world in their work. 

Erin McCluskey Wheeler
Erin McCluskey Wheeler

Erin McCluskey Wheeler, born and raised in, and current resident of, Richmond, CA,  is a mixed media artist, writer, curator, and teacher. Erin McCluskey Wheeler is a studio facilitator at NIAD Art Center in Richmond and teaches online with 92NY. Erin holds a BA in studio art and art history from Beloit College, and an MFA from California College of the Arts in writing. 

Helia Pouyanfar
Helia Pouyanfar

Helia Pouyanfar was born in Tehran, Iran, and immigrated to California in 2014. Inspired by her cultural background, her architectural sculptures and research endeavors to illustrate and investigate the permanently transient state of the refugee body and its negotiation and reconciliation with Place. She received her BA from University of California, Berkeley and her MFA from University of California, Davis. 

RICHMOND ART CENTER
2540 Barrett Avenue, Richmond, CA 94804

18/07/19

Countersteer: Custom Motorcycles as Self-Portraits @ Richmond Art Center

Countersteer: Custom Motorcycles as Self-Portraits
Richmond Art Center
September 10 – November 22, 2019

Countersteer: Custom Motorcycles as Self-Portraits
© Richmond Art Center

The Richmond Art Center will present a unique exhibition on the aesthetic, functionality and individuality of the popular open road vehicle that has for generations symbolized personal freedom. From its humble beginnings in the late 1800s as a motorized bicycle, the motorcycle has inspired creative modifications matching its great versatility, it can be a street machine, a long-distance touring bike, a track racer, a mountain endurance machine, a drag racer and more. Creative individuals have endeavored to improve the performance and enhance aesthetic qualities of their vehicle of choice. The rider is exposed, an integral part of the machine, out in the open. But when it is still, it becomes an aesthetic object, with painted surfaces and hand-crafted parts that reflects the rider’s intended self-portrait of its maker.

“Motorcycles have captivated imaginations and inspired creativity for generations,” says Phillip Linhares, guest co-curator of the exhibition. “This is not a motorcycle show, but an exhibition of personal and cultural expression, combining art and engineering in the evolution of an aesthetic object.”

Countersteer is an exhibition of works by artists and engineers making motorcycles their own. The exhibition will include 12 custom and classic motorcycles ranging from a Harley-Davidson’s first V-Twin, to a contemporary costumed designed motorcycle to a ridable Part-Bin Special assembled by a team of artists, just to see if they could. A glimpse into motorcycle culture and spirit will include paintings and sculptures by artists, as well as personal paraphernalia, and stories of individuals inspired by their own riding exploits. Each machine in the collection represents the vision of an individual of out riding, out maneuvering or just out shining the field of stock motorcycles.

“The exhibition reveals a strong do-it-yourself ethos that drives people to turn two-wheel conveyances into movable sculpture” said Danny Aarons, co-curator. “It offers a view into a hugely diverse sub-culture and asks Why customize a bike? Can we recognize a motorcycle as Art”?

“Countersteering” is term used by motorcyclists to initiate a lean of the body turn toward a given direction and momentarily steering counter to the desired direction.

Countersteer: Custom Motorcycles as Self-Portraits, is guest co-curated by Phil Linares, retired Chief Curator of the Oakland Museum and Danny Aarons, motorcycle enthusiast.

RICHMOND ART CENTER
2540 Barrett Avenue, Richmond, California 94804
richmondartcenter.org