Showing posts with label San Francisco. Show all posts
Showing posts with label San Francisco. Show all posts

07/09/25

Nicasio Fernandez @ Berggruen Gallery, San Francisco - "Light Whispers" Exhibition

Nicasio Fernandez: Light Whispers
Berggruen Gallery, San Francisco
August 21 – October 16, 2025

Berggruen Gallery presents Light Whispers, an exhibition of new work by New York artist NICASIO FERNANDEZ. This marks the gallery’s first solo presentation with Nicasio Fernandez. 

In Light Whispers, Nicasio Fernandez’s paintings convey a quiet intensity within moody, introspective settings, where his figures are steeped in a spectrum of emotions ranging from uncertainty and tension to concern and doubt. Drawing on film noir motifs—low-key light, deep shadows, and psychological intensity—Nicasio Fernandez places otherworldly figures in eerie, dramatic atmospheres that leave the viewer both unsettled and curious. Though traces of the domestic linger, the paintings deliberately omit any indicators of place, cultivating an enigmatic sense of space.  

Rather than referencing specific film stills, Fernandez’s works are instead constructed around a captivating moment, lingering feeling, or a memory Nicasio Fernandez has held onto and reshaped into his own vision. All but one painting conceal their cinematic references. "Dark Corner", titled after the 1954 film, depicts a forward-leaning figure in motion, the face and long brown overcoat partially backlit by an ambiguous source just outside the frame. The figure moves swiftly through a mysterious nightscape—perhaps in pursuit of something—seems to pause in hesitation, as if aware of a lurking presence.

While Nicasio Fernandez is known for his vibrant chromatic choices, subtle dark humor, and precise handling of materials—demonstrating an ability to be loud and provocative—this body of work marks a decisive shift toward restraint and alteration. His bold palette has been pared down and placed within a uniform tonal temperature. Scratchy brushwork reveals parts of the underpainting, while sharp, crisp edges begin to dissolve. The use of light nods not only to cinema but also to the art historical references such as Rembrandt’s portraiture and the soft glow of Vuillard’s domestic interiors. Fernandez’s purposeful obscuring of elements of the paintings in deeper shadows acts as a framing device to guide the viewer’s eye across the canvas.

Nicasio Fernandez refers to these small paintings as whispers; much like the transfer of sound, these works require close proximity to spark an exchange—inviting the viewer to step into the scene in order to fully dissect and absorb its information. Like considered sequences from cinema, the paintings invite open dialogue and allow space for interpretation. Through this quietness, Fernandez’s paintings offer a light whisper to the viewer, gently luring them into a mysterious, contemplative state.

NICASIO FERNANDEZ (b. 1993, Yonkers, NY) received a BFA from the School of Visual Arts in 2015. Most recently, his work has been exhibited at Harper’s, Los Angeles, New York, and East Hampton (2024, 2023, 2022, 2021, 2020, and 2018); Half Gallery, New York (2023, 2022); Alexander Berggruen, New York (2023, 2022); Ross + Kramer, New York and East Hampton (2022, 2021, and 2020); Over the Influence, Hong Kong and Los Angeles (2020, 2019). Fernandez’s work is included in the collections of the Hall Art Foundation, North Adams, MA; and The Bunker, Palm Beach, FL. His work has appeared in Artnet, At Large, and New American Paintings, among other publications. Nicasio Fernandez lives and works in upstate New York.

BERGGRUEN GALLERY
10 Hawthorne Street, San Francisco, CA 94105

06/09/25

Matt Kleberg @ Berggruen Gallery, San Francisco - "Bless Babel" Exhibition

Matt Kleberg: Bless Babel
Berggruen Gallery, San Francisco
August 21 – October 16, 2025

Berggruen Gallery presents Bless Babel, an exhibition of new work by San Antonio-based artist Matt Kleberg. This exhibition will mark the gallery’s second solo exhibition with Matt Kleberg.

In Bless Babel, each painting builds around a singular central niche, suggesting the absence of a subject. Confronted with this vacancy, the viewer finds themselves at the center of Kleberg’s geometric abstractions. Influenced by architectural and ritualistic spaces, the works in Bless Babel investigate the tropes through which conception is framed by institutional or personal belief. Kleberg’s paintings are not interested in objective truth, but rather in how belief transforms our relationship to space and objects. These paintings are not portals, unless you believe they are. They are not windows, unless you believe they are. 

This exhibition derives its title from Donald Barthelme’s 1987 essay Not Knowing, in which the writer and critic considers uncertainty, improvisation, and discovery as fundamental to the creative act. Barthelme speaks of commentary, elaboration, exegesis, and contradiction as necessary modes of engagement between a piece of art and the earlier works of previous makers that inform it. Babel and the scattering of languages offer an example of how different approaches to the same concept are inherent to human expression. Kleberg’s new paintings embrace the constraints of particular shapes borrowed from Tramp Art frames and Italian Renaissance devotional objects, to explore how different resolutions can come out of multiple iterations of the same motifs.

Matt Kleberg’s paintings contradict themselves, oscillating between ecstasy and oblivion, exuberance and tranquility. Hues of pink, terracotta, and bright blue radiate amongst moody browns, maroon, and sap green. Scumbled surfaces complicate illusionistic shadows; interior space collapses into itself as one moves closer. Shimmering like television static or speckled concrete, colors that appear solid break apart upon inspection. Chromatic undertones shift in their nature–perhaps waiting to coalesce. Some paintings tower, their stripes and bands undulating, monumental and inviting, formal yet playful. Indebted as much to American folk art traditions as to Duccio and the Sienese School, Kleberg’s paintings pay homage—yet with their vacancies and their tensions, the drama is of their own conjuring. A frame within a frame within a frame. The pleasure is in the not-knowing. 

MATT KLEBERG was born in 1985 in Kingsville, Texas. He received his BA from the University of Virginia in 2008 and his MFA from the Pratt Institute in 2015. Coverage of his work can be found in various publications, including The New York Times, The Brooklyn Rail, Artsy, Vice, Maake Magazine, ArtDaily, Juxtapoz Magazine, Square Cylinder, and Hyperallergic. His work is featured in multiple private and public collections, including the Williams College Museum of Art, the AD&A Museum of the University of California Santa Barbara, the Old Jail Art Center, the Addison Gallery of American Art, the Museum of Fine Arts Houston, and the National Gallery of Art. Matt Kleberg currently lives and works in San Antonio, TX.  

BERGGRUEN GALLERY
10 Hawthorne Street, San Francisco, CA 94105

18/07/25

Suzanne Jackson: What Is Love - Retrospective Exhibition @ SFMOMA, San Francisco + Walker Art Center, Minneapolis + Museum of Fine Arts, Boston

Suzanne Jackson: What Is Love
SFMOMA, San Francisco 
September 27, 2025 – March 1, 2026 
Walker Art Center, Minneapolis
May 14 – August 23, 2026
Museum of Fine Arts, Boston
September 26, 2026 – February 7, 2027

Suzanne Jackson - Wind and Water
SUZANNE JACKSON 
Wind and Water, 1975
The Museum of Modern Art, New York, 
acquired through the generosity of the Modern Women’s Fund, 
Alice and Tom Tisch, Anne and Joel Ehrenkranz, 
Marie-Josée and Henry R. Kravis, Michael S. Ovitz, 
Ronnie F. Heyman, and Pamela J. Joyner and Alfred J. Giuffrida 
© Suzanne Jackson, courtesy Ortuzar, New York
Photo: Ruben Diaz

The San Francisco Museum of Modern Art (SFMOMA) announces the first major museum retrospective devoted to the full breadth of the work of painter Suzanne Jackson, on view from September 27, 2025, to March 1, 2026. Developed in close collaboration with the artist, Suzanne Jackson: What Is Love celebrates Jackson’s groundbreaking artistic vision through more than 80 lyrical paintings and drawings from the 1960s to the present that explore her use of color, light and structure to expand the parameters of painting and illuminate the persistence of peace, love and beauty.

Debuting at SFMOMA and co-organized with the Walker Art Center, this comprehensive survey spans six decades, from Jackson’s early ethereal compositions on canvas that layer luminous washes of paint and depict figures intertwined with nature to recent three-dimensional paintings that suspend acrylic paint midair. SFMOMA will also premiere a new large-scale commission by the artist, inspired by her longstanding close observations of the natural world. Looking at influences beyond the artist’s studio, What Is Love examines how Jackson’s paintings have been informed by her experiences as a dancer, poet and theater designer, as well as her collaborations with radical artist communities.

Following its presentation at SFMOMA, the exhibition will travel to the Walker Art Center (May 14–August 23, 2026) and Museum of Fine Arts, Boston (September 26, 2026–February 7, 2027).
“Suzanne Jackson: What Is Love promises to be a groundbreaking exhibition, bringing much-deserved attention to Jackson’s achievements as an influential painter who has created awe-inspiring compositions informed by her deep respect for ancestral traditions and the natural world,” said Christopher Bedford, SFMOMA Helen and Charles Schwab Director. “In the sixth decade of her career, Jackson continues to innovate by extending paint into three dimensions and embedding it with found materials to reflect on personal and cultural histories.”

“Suzanne Jackson’s life has been driven by an insistent search for creative freedom and a bohemian spirit that is indebted to the San Francisco ethos in which she was raised,” said Jenny Gheith, curator of the exhibition and SFMOMA Curator and Interim Head of Painting and Sculpture. “What Is Love captures the curiosity, wonder and resilience of Jackson’s life’s work, which is marked by adventurous experimentation, a dedication to supporting other artists and a persistent belief in the connection between all living things.”
SUZANNE JACKSON: WHAT IS LOVE - EXHIBITION OVERVIEW
For decades, my figurative forms and challenged shapes have pushed paint beyond the expected. With intentional reflective layers and floating luminous pigment, my work pursues alternative ways of seeing and interpreting spatial relationships of historical events, the lives of Black, Indigenous, and all global people, existing as “environmental abstractions” of our world.

Suzanne Jackson, 2025
Suzanne Jackson was born in 1944 in St. Louis and shortly thereafter moved with her family to San Francisco, where she would spend the first eight years of her childhood. Her family relocated to Fairbanks, Alaska, in 1952, and the remote natural landscape inspired her to learn to paint. In 1961, Jackson returned to San Francisco and spent her formative college years among the bohemian counterculture, studying art and theater at San Francisco State University and dancing with the Pacific Ballet. In 1967 she moved to Los Angeles, where she studied drawing with artist Charles White and became part of a radical artist community.

Suzanne Jackson - What I Love Publication
SUZANNE JACKSON 
Cover of Suzanne Jackson’s publication 
What I Love: Paintings, Poetry, and a Drawing, 1972 
© Suzanne Jackson, courtesy Ortuzar, New York

From 1968 to 1970, she ran Gallery 32, a self-funded exhibition space, out of her Los Angeles studio. At Gallery 32, Betye Saar and Senga Nengudi were among the artists featured in The Sapphire Show: You’ve Come A Long Way Baby (1970), credited as the first survey of African American women artists in Los Angeles. What Is Love brings together several artworks originally shown at Gallery 32 by Saar, Nengudi, David Hammons, Timothy Washington, Dan Concholar, John Outterbridge and Emory Douglas, among others, and will surface new research on its exhibition history. Jackson has reflected, “Gallery 32 functioned as a meeting space for its members to question history, culture and risky improvisations.”

In 1971, Suzanne Jackson gave birth to her son, a major life event that sparked tremendous creative growth. The following year, she self-published her first book of poems and paintings, titled What I Love. More than 50 years later, the title for Jackson’s retrospective turns “What I Love” to “What Is Love,” a provocation that broadens the understanding of the creativity that Jackson has pursued throughout her career.

Organized chronologically, Suzanne Jackson: What Is Love begins with Jackson’s first mature paintings and drawings that she made during the late 1960s and the early 1970s, many of which are the largest she has made to date. In these paintings, Suzanne Jackson treats acrylic paint like watercolor by setting down layers of washy pigment to create an ethereal, translucent quality. Depicting images from her dreams, Jackson’s lyrical symbolism often includes animals, plants, hearts and hands that communicate human connections to nature, universal love and unity. Jackson’s deep respect for ecology, continual study of dance and movement, and belief in her ancestors’ integration with the natural world can be seen in her most ambitious painting on canvas, In A Black Man’s Garden (1973), a large-scale triptych. Suzanne Jackson exhibited these early paintings at Ankrum Gallery, an important Los Angeles space for African American artists, along with Brockman gallery and Heritage Gallery.

Outside of the studio, Suzanne Jackson continued her advocacy for other artists, bringing together nearly 180 artists for the 1972 Black Expo in San Francisco. She also served alongside Ruth Asawa, Noah Purifoy, Gary Snyder and Peter Coyote on the California Arts Council (formed in 1976) and helped secure funding for public artworks through the Comprehensive Employment and Training Act (CETA), including two of her own murals, Wind (1978) and Spirit (1977–79).

In the 1980s, Suzanne Jackson moved between Los Angeles, the small mountain town of Idyllwild, California, and the San Francisco Bay Area. In Idyllwild, where she taught painting and dance, she created small-scale studies of leaves, trees and the mountains that surrounded her. This section of the exhibition brings together rarely seen paintings, works on paper and handmade books. After the unexpected death of her father in 1981, she began El Paradiso (1981–84)—a quintessential composition from this period—named after the bird of paradise, a symbol of freedom for the artist.

Suzanne Jackson stretched her artistic practice further when she earned an MFA in design at Yale University in 1990 and continued to work full-time designing costumes and sets for the theater. With limited resources and time for her studio practice, she began to experiment with leftover scenic Bogus paper (thick sheets of paper that cover the floor when sets are painted). Jackson’s paintings on this material often feature sculptural textures, a darker palette and rougher edges, with forms that bridge abstraction and figuration, as in Sapphire & Tunis (2010–11).

In 1996, Suzanne Jackson moved to Savannah, Georgia, where she continues to live and work. The charged Southern landscape prompted Jackson to further research her ancestral history and to work again in nature, often bringing her students from the Savannah College of Art and Design to sketch in locations with histories significant to enslavement. During this time, she began creating otherworldly paintings that suspend acrylic paint in midair, embedding the surfaces with personal ephemera and various found and sourced materials. These awe-inspiring, three-dimensional paintings are the most experimental of her career, with a focus on structure, light and the environment that relate to her background in theater and dance. Crossing Ebenezer (2017), which includes red netting from fire log bags that suggests both spilled blood and a distressed flag, memorializes a Civil War–era massacre of emancipated African Americans who were drowned in Ebenezer Creek, a tributary of the Savannah River.

Suzanne Jackson - Hers and His
SUZANNE JACKSON 
Hers and His, 2018 
San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, purchase, by 
exchange, through a gift of Peggy Guggenheim 
© Suzanne Jackson, courtesy Ortuzar, New York
Photo: Timothy Doyon

Jackson’s recent paintings also convey reflections on spirituality and aspects of her autobiography. Hers and His (2018), one of her most personal paintings, is dedicated to her parents and incorporates “his and hers” pillowcases and segments of her mother’s quilt block patterns. Created nearly 10 years after her mother’s passing, this work was inspired by a lecture by artist Faith Ringgold, who said that if your mother left unfinished quilts, it is your responsibility to complete them.

The exhibition concludes with ¿What Feeds Us? (2025), a new commission that reflects on the global environmental crisis. This large-scale installation, integrating organic materials such as moss and tree bark with plastic and trash, is built around a central sculptural component. Additional hanging elements combine acrylic paint with found materials, such as African fabric scraps, Indian sari curtains, Korean and Japanese papers. Addressing themes of migration and improvisation, this new work honors connections that exist across all living things.

SUZANNE JACKSON: WHAT IS LOVE - PUBLICATION

The exhibition will be accompanied by a richly illustrated catalogue that charts the full arc of Jackson’s life and multifaceted artistic vision. This 272-page monograph published by SFMOMA in association with Princeton University Press is edited by Jenny Gheith and includes essays and contributions by Kellie Jones, Paulina Pobocha, Tiffany E. Barber, Taylor Jasper, Molly Garfinkel and Jodi Waynberg, Taylor Renee Aldridge, and Meredith George Van Dyke. Jackson’s voice features prominently in a series of dialogues with fellow artists Senga Nengudi, Betye Saar, Fred Eversley and Richard Mayhew and a conversation about her process and new commission with SFMOMA paintings conservator Jennifer Hickey.

SUZANNE JACKSON: WHAT IS LOVE - CURATORS

Suzanne Jackson: What Is Love is co-organized by the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art and the Walker Art Center, Minneapolis. The exhibition is curated by Jenny Gheith, Curator and Interim Head of Painting and Sculpture at the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, with Taylor Jasper, Susan and Rob White Assistant Curator, Visual Art at the Walker Art Center. Curatorial support is provided by Auriel Garza, curatorial assistant, San Francisco Museum of Art, and Laurel Rand-Lewis, curatorial fellow, Visual Arts, Walker Art Center.

SFMOMA 
SAN FRANCISCO MUSEUM OF MODERN ART
151 Third Street, San Francisco, CA 94103

16/07/25

Helen Berggruen @ Berggruen Gallery, San Francisco

Helen Berggruen
Berggruen Gallery, San Francisco
June 26 – August 14, 2025

Berggruen Gallery presents an exhibition of paintings by California artist Helen Berggruen. This marks Berggruen’s second solo exhibition with the gallery.

Helen Berggruen's paintings exude energetic universes—microworlds overflowing with character. Her full-spectrum palette and abundant use of mixed patterns and textures are packed with robust detail. Berggruen’s scenes feel familiar—landscapes, still lifes, and interiors reminiscent of the Post-Impressionists—her lively renderings animate the utilitarian into the fantastical through expressive gestures. Living room curtains twist; trees and florals reach and writhe. Streams of water and sky are filled with emphatic dabs of blue, yellow, and lavender.

Berggruen’s paintings sing with worlds beyond, with windows acting as portals to fictional universes just out of reach. In Powerlock, a desktop comes to life as everyday objects dance across its surface—paint brushes, scissors, and stacks of books abound. Tractors and trucks move hurriedly down Parisian cobblestones and through rural industrial landscapes; the storybook quality of Berggruen’s work playfully hints at narratives full of folly and adventure. Plucking her characters from her own drawings based on art historical sculptures and paintings, Hellen Berggruen breathes new life into her subjects, building stages and worlds in which they might self-actualize or drift into the cosmos through her painterly world-building. Filled with warmth and movement, her depictions of quotidian scenes become spirited worlds, each object and detail with its own allegorical significance; they act as celebrations of observation and rearrangement. Based in San Francisco, California, Helen Berggruen has exhibited in galleries and museums both nationally and internationally.

BERGGRUEN GALLERY
10 Hawthorne Street, San Francisco, CA 94105

26/06/25

KAWS: FAMILY @ SFMOMA, San Francisco - San Francisco Museum of Modern Art

KAWS: FAMILY
San Francisco Museum of Modern Art
November 15, 2025 – Spring 2026

KAWS: Family
KAWS
, FAMILY, 2021
Private collection
© KAWS

The San Francisco Museum of Modern Art (SFMOMA) announces KAWS: FAMILY, a dazzling exploration of the multidimensional work of American artist KAWS. Beginning his career as a graffiti artist in Jersey City and Manhattan in the 1990s, KAWS has become renowned in the art world and beyond for his work in sculpture, painting, drawing, product design, large-scale public works and augmented reality. KAWS’s multidisciplinary practice is frequently centered around a cast of characters whose features are drawn from icons of American animation and pop culture. Recasting and reimagining his distinctive and relatable artistic lexicon, KAWS produces meticulous and exuberant works that investigate our connection to objects and one another. Organized by the Art Gallery of Ontario (AGO), KAWS: FAMILY will conclude its popular international tour at SFMOMA from November 15, 2025, to Spring 2026.

Featuring more than 100 artworks from the past three decades, the exhibition is organized as a series of encounters, with families of related artworks installed throughout SFMOMA’s Floor 4, including sculptures, bold and vibrant paintings, product collaborations and collectibles.
“KAWS has a distinct appeal to a vast array of audiences with his iconic characters and meticulous work in a stunning range of mediums,” said Christopher Bedford, Helen and Charles Schwab Director of SFMOMA. “The playful and contemplative works—a dynamic blend of his street art practice and formal education—will offer something for everyone when the exhibition opens at SFMOMA this fall.”
After spending his teenage years painting graffiti in the streets of Jersey City and Manhattan, KAWS eventually enrolled in the School of Visual Arts (SVA) where he received his BFA in illustration in 1996. Since that time, the artist has carved a unique position for himself in the art world, creating a globally recognized practice rooted in drawing, painting and sculpture, and amplified through collaborations with global fashion and design brands.

Working in bronze, wood, on paper and canvas, with vinyl toys and commercial products, KAWS’s art is populated by a cast of recurring figures inspired by his early practice of altering phone booth and bus shelter advertisements with his unique visual language. Originally painting his trademark skull and crossbones over the faces of models, he applied the same concept to altering iconic mascots and characters within the cultural zeitgeist. These figures are at once playful and serious, and in their various poses, forms and sizes, explore distinctly human emotions ranging from loneliness and anxiety to grief and joy. The exhibition takes its title and thematic jumping-off point from the work FAMILY (2021), a bronze sculpture featuring three recurring characters in KAWS’s work. The grouping includes a figure with crossed out eyes inspired by early American rubber hose animations named COMPANION; a bulbous figure named CHUM; and a fur-covered character named BFF—posed together in the style of a studio portrait.

Alongside sculptures, drawings and paintings, a selection of shoe designs, cereal boxes, album covers and a loveseat composed of plush toys made in collaboration with Brazilian design studio Estúdio Campana help showcase KAWS’s ongoing engagement with design and fashion brands and commitment to his work being widely accessible. These commercial works share the same dedication to bold color and strong lines seen in the artist’s paintings and sculptures and have helped KAWS gain a large and dedicated global following.

ARTIST KAWS

KAWS (Brian Donnelly) was born in Jersey City, New Jersey, in 1974. Over the last three decades he has built a successful career with work that consistently shows his formal agility as an artist, as well as his underlying wit, irreverence and affection for the current cultural moment. His practice possesses a sophisticated humor and thoughtful interplay with consumer products and collaborations with global brands, ranging from General Mills and Nike, to Supreme and Comme de Garçons. He often draws inspiration from and appropriates pop culture animations to form a unique artistic vocabulary for his work across a variety of media.

KAWS has exhibited extensively throughout the United States and internationally. Recent solo exhibitions of his work have been presented at institutions such as Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art, Bentonville; the Art Gallery of Ontario, Toronto; The Parrish Art Museum, Watermill, New York; The Andy Warhol Museum, Pittsburgh; the Serpentine Gallery, London, UK; National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne; Brooklyn Museum, New York; Museum of Contemporary Art, Detroit; High Museum of Art, Atlanta; Fire Station, Qatar Museums, Doha; Mori Arts Center Gallery, Tokyo; the Yuz Museum, Shanghai; and the Modern Art Museum of Fort Worth, Texas. He is represented by Skarstedt Gallery and Galerie Max Hetzler.

CATALOGUE: KAWS: FAMILY is accompanied by a 156-page, fully illustrated hardcover catalogue co-published by the Art Gallery of Ontario (AGO) and Delmonico Books. Featuring an essay by Julian Cox, AGO deputy director and chief curator, and an interview with KAWS by Jim Shedden, AGO curator of special projects and director of publishing, the publication is available in person at the SFMOMA Museum Store or at museumstore.sfmoma.org.

KAWS: FAMILY is organized by the Art Gallery of Ontario (AGO) and curated by Julian Cox, deputy director & chief curator, AGO. The San Francisco Museum of Modern Art (SFMOMA) presentation is curated by William Hernández Luege, curatorial associate, painting and sculpture, SFMOMA; and Daryl McCurdy, curatorial associate, architecture and design, SFMOMA.

SFMOMA - SAN FRANCISCO MUSEUM OF MODERN ART
151 Third Street, San Francisco, CA 94103 

Alejandro Cartagena Retrospective Exhibition @ SFMOMA - San Francisco Museum of Modern Art: "Alejandro Cartagena: Ground Rules"

Alejandro Cartagena: Ground Rules
SFMOMA, San Francisco 
November 22, 2025 – April 19, 2026

Alejandro Cartagena
Alejandro Cartagena
Carpoolers #21
from the series Carpoolers, 2011-12 
© Alejandro Cartagena, courtesy the artist

Alejandro Cartagena
Alejandro Cartagena 
Fragmented Cities, Escobedo
from the series Suburbia Mexicana, 2005-10
© Alejandro Cartagena, courtesy the artist

Alejandro Cartagena

Alejandro Cartagena and Rubén Marcos 
Identidad Nuevo León #41
from the series Identidad Nuevo León, 2005-6 
© Alejandro Cartagena, courtesy the artist

The San Francisco Museum of Modern Art (SFMOMA) announces Alejandro Cartagena: Ground Rules, the artist’s first retrospective, on view from November 22, 2025, to April 19, 2026. Over two prolific decades, Alejandro Cartagena has produced an incredibly varied body of work that reflects on contemporary life in Mexico and its changing landscapes, which have been his home since the age of 13. From color documentary photography to collage, the appropriation of found photographs to Artificial Intelligence (AI)-generated works, Cartagena’s prodigious output is unified by his commitment to addressing Mexico’s most pressing social, economic and environmental issues.

Alejandro Cartagena: Ground Rules explores the artist’s practice as a “project photographer,” highlighting work from over 20 series. For each project, Cartagena conducts extensive research, then establishes a set of creative constraints around elements such as format, subject matter or location to guide him, often amassing hundreds of photographs around a topic. No photograph is more important than another; rather, his work allows meaning to emerge through accumulation, juxtaposition and variation. The exhibition traces recurring concerns across his career for the first time, including land use, the U.S.-Mexico border, climate change, increasing wealth disparities and the effects of rapid suburban sprawl, while also examining how Alejandro Cartagena uses archival sources, photobooks, large-scale installations and AI to expand what photography can be. Alejandro Cartagena: Ground Rules will be accompanied by an illustrated monograph published by Aperture that charts the artist’s full career, featuring newly commissioned texts.
“Photography changed our world two centuries ago; the way we see it, and the way we think about it has never been the same since we started using it,” said Alejandro Cartagena. “I want to be part of that history of how the medium transformed our understanding of social, political and environmental issues through images.”
“While Cartagena’s photographs are rooted in his observations of life in Mexico, part of their great power is their ability to open up broad conversations that transcend geography,” said Christopher Bedford, Helen and Charles Schwab Director of SFMOMA. “Cartagena’s work invites reflection and probing questions that serve to complicate our understanding of important social and environmental topics. I believe this exhibition will resonate deeply with our audiences.”
The exhibition opens with Alejandro Cartagena’s early photographic projects, where many of his central concerns, such as urban life, appropriation, and the U.S.-Mexico border, first come into focus. At the beginning of his career, Alejandro Cartagena trained his camera on himself and his fellow residents of Nuevo León, Mexico. His first large-scale project, Identidad Nuevo León (2005), was created in collaboration with fellow photographer Rubén Marcos. The two set up a mobile studio with a white backdrop and spent a year photographing 800 people in 25 municipalities in Nuevo León. Each sitter offers a distinct sense of style and presence. Around the same time, for his 2004-05 series Espacios Habitables (Living Spaces)Alejandro Cartagena returned to his birthplace, the Dominican Republic, and asked passersby to take his portrait as if he were a tourist in front of places from his youth. Blurry and taken from a low camera angle, these images gesture toward reconnecting with the past.

In 2009, Alejandro Cartagena began a trilogy of projects about the U.S.-Mexico border: Between Borders (2009–10), Americanos (2012–14) and Without Walls (2017). While some photographs portray the physical border itself, the series as a whole explores its broader cultural, economic and psychological impact. Cartagena pushes back against simplistic south-to-north migration narratives and questions the promise of the American dream, depicting the border not only as a territorial divide but as an invisible force shaping lives, perceptions and policies on both sides of this artificial barrier.

As the exhibition progresses, the environment and issues around land use emerge as central concerns for the artist. In his critically acclaimed, multiyear project Suburbia Mexicana (2005–10), the artist developed five subseries: Fragmented Cities, Lost Rivers, The Other Distance, Urban Wastelands and People of the Suburbs, which examine the complex relationship between urban centers and the suburbs haphazardly built around them. From poignant, sun-drenched landscapes of dried-up riverbeds to portraits in front of undulating rows of identical, box-like houses, Cartagena looks at how growth has altered the landscape and deeply impacted the lives of its residents.

For his popular series Carpoolers (2011–12), Alejandro Cartagena asked a deceptively simple question: what happens when suburban expansion outpaces public infrastructure? The answer plays out in his depiction of laborers who, without access to a direct bus line, commute in the flatbeds of pickup trucks from their homes in the suburbs to wealthy Mexican enclaves. Standing on a pedestrian overpass for three mornings a week for a year, Alejandro Cartagena photographed these workers from above. Meanwhile, the series Suburban Bus (2016) addresses similar questions but instead looks at those who do have access to a bus line. Over the course of three days and nights, the artist took the bus nonstop to retrace the route he would take daily between 1993 to 2004 on his way to work at his family’s restaurant in Juárez. Alejandro Cartagena places the viewer amongst the huddled passengers, some trying to rest as others stand and sway with the motion of the bus. At once breathtakingly beautiful and melancholic, the series captures the exhaustion and solitude of long-distance commuting.

In 2016, Alejandro Cartagena began experimenting with collage, starting with his own photographs and then moving to small, black-and-white vernacular photographs he gathered at Mexican flea markets and landfills. For his series Photo Structures (2018–19), he carefully excised figures from found pictures, leaving only the background. The resulting images reveal the formal patterns of photographic composition—the repeated poses, angles and backdrops—while also asking what is lost or gained when the ostensible subject disappears.

Continuing to push the limits of photography, Alejandro Cartagena founded Fellowship in 2021, a platform initially created to share NFT-based photography. The project quickly evolved into a broader space for the distribution, collection and exploration of digital media, including generative art, artificial intelligence and video. The exhibition will include a selection of his NFTs. In his most recent video series, We Are Things (2025), Alejandro Cartagena revisits his interest in archival imagery through a new lens—using an AI image generator trained on a personal archive. This latest work brings his experimentation full circle, blending the digital with the analog and linking his early collages of found photographs with cutting-edge technology.

The final section of the exhibition showcases Cartagena’s photobooks as central components of his practice. A prolific self-publisher, Alejndro Cartagena sees the photobook as the natural progression for a project photographer; the editing and sequencing of the work, for him, fundamentally affix meaning to the imagery.

Photographer Alejandro Cartagena

Born in Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic in 1977, Alejandro Cartagena lives and works in Monterrey, Mexico. Over the last two decades, his projects have employed landscape photography and portraiture as a means to examine social, urban and environmental issues. His work has been exhibited at more than 50 group and solo exhibitions, including the Centre de Cultura Contemporània de Barcelona (CCCB) in Barcelona and the Fondation Cartier pour l’Art Contemporain in Paris. His work is held in the permanent collections of the Coppel collection, the FEMSA Collection, the George Eastman House, The J. Paul Getty Museum, The Museum of Contemporary Photography in Chicago, The Museum of Fine Arts in Houston, the Portland Museum of Art, the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, and the Santa Barbara Museum of Art, and The West Collection.

Alejandro Cartagena has received several awards including the international Photolucida Critical Mass Book Award, the Street Photography Award in London Photo Festival, the Lente Latino Award in Chile, the Premio IILA-FotoGrafia Award in Rome and the Salon de la Fotografia of Fototeca de Nuevo León in Mexico. He was shortlisted for the Deutsche Börse Photography Foundation Prize in 2021.

Publication : The exhibition will be accompanied by the first comprehensive, fully bilingual publication that charts the entire career of Alejandro Cartagena to date. Published by Aperture, Alejandro Cartagena: Ground Rules features 175 illustrations as well as contributions by Tatiana Bilbao, Álvaro Enrigue, Horacio Fernández, Charlotte Kent and Shana Lopes.

Alejandro Cartagena: Ground Rules is co-organized by the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art and Fundación MAPFRE, Madrid, where it will be on view from  June through August 2026.

The exhibition is curated by Shana Lopes, assistant curator of photography, with Alex Landry, curatorial assistant, photography.

SFMOMA - SAN FRANCISCO MUSEUM OF MODERN ART
151 Third Street, San Francisco, CA 94103 

06/06/25

Viaje a la Luna (A trip to the moon) @ CCA Wattis Institute for Contemporary Arts, San Francisco

Viaje a la Luna (A trip to the moon)
CCA Wattis Institute for Contemporary Arts, San Francisco
June 12 – October 11, 2025

Emilio Amero Photogram
EMILIO AMERO
Photogram (star pattern), ca. 1932 
Vintage silver print on paper on mount, 9 3⁄4 x 7 3⁄4 in 
Collection of the Smithsonian American Art Museum, 
museum purchase through the 
Luisita L. and Franz H. Denghausen Endowment

Alvaro Urbano
ALVARO URBANO
Granada Granada (installation view), 
Travesía Cuatro, Guadalajara, MX 
Image courtesy of Álvaro Urbano and Travesía Cuatro 
Photo: Agustín Arce

CCA Wattis Institute for Contemporary Arts announces Viaje a la luna (A trip to the moon), an exhibition inspired by the only screenplay ever written by the renowned Spanish poet Federico García Lorca. Curated by Diego Villalobos (Wattis Institute) and Rodrigo Ortiz Monasterio (independent curator and CCA alumni, Mexico City), the exhibition will be on view in San Francisco, before traveling to Centro Federico García Lorca in Granada beginning October 30.

Federico García Lorca was one of the most influential Spanish poets of the 20th century and a leading member of the artistic vanguard, pushing Surrealism to the foreground through avant-garde poetry, theater, and drawing. Viaje a la luna takes the form of an unfolding work of speculative fiction, centered around this screenplay, which started filming in Mexico in 1932, but was halted when Lorca was killed in Spain by Franco's army. The film was later lost in a studio fire in Mexico City, and the only traces that remain are a handful of photographs taken on set. Bringing together historic and contemporary works and commissioned artworks by artists from around the world, the exhibition pieces together Lorca’s personal history and film script, and addresses the central question: What would the film have been like had it been fully realized?
“The exhibition will take visitors on a mysterious journey, unearthing the lost film and establishing a dialogue between Lorca’s personal history and the screenplay,” said curator Diego Villabos. “It will elucidate how art, for Lorca, was a refuge and a place to forge an identity, a distressed search for love as a way to indirectly express his homosexuality and politics. At a time when politics are having a heightened impact on the arts, delving into an artist’s coded exploration of identity in conversation with contemporary artists feels ever more relevant.”
Federico García Lorca and a film lost to time

A son of a wealthy landowner, Federico Garcia Lorca grew up in rural Andalusia, on the outskirts of Granada, a region with a rich history and presence of Gypsy, Roma, and Arabic communities. Working at a time when Fascism was on the rise, Lorca – who was both gay and a leftist – often used his work as an opportunity to tell stories that drew on vivid metaphors and imagery to express his identity and give voice to marginalized communities. In the late-1920s, Lorca moved to New York and became exposed to the Harlem Renaissance, where he met influential writers like Nella Larssen, Langston Hughes––who would eventually translate some of Lorca’s works into English––and the Mexican painter and filmmaker Emilio Amero, who became a close friend and confidante.

In a single feverish night Lorca drafted his first and only screenplay, and convinced Amero to turn the work into a film. By 1932, Amero began filming Lorca’s script – a surrealist vision divided into 72 loosely connected short scenes that were mystical, romantic, and violent. But the film, which evoked themes of both societal repression and persecution, told through a series of characters who don’t feel comfortable in their own skin, never came to fruition as Lorca was murdered by Franco’s Nationalist army in 1936 and production halted. The film reel was eventually lost in a fire in Mexico City and faded into obscurity, another unfinished project, and an enigma in history. Today, the only remnants of the screenplay are the script itself and a handful of photographs taken during production.

Viaje a la Luna comes to Life through the eyes of contemporary artists

Viaje a la Luna seeks to bring the film to life through works by Federico Garcia Lorca, Amero, and a number of contemporary artists, reconstructing elements of the forgotten story, and reflecting on the thematic throughlines of the screenplay that continue to resonate today, including personal expression during a time of repression, the impact of technology, and art as a refuge in the face of oppression. The artists included in the exhibition are: Emilio Amero, Diane Arbus, Lola Álvarez Bravo, Manuel Álvarez Bravo, Nina Canell, Marc Camille Chaimowicz, Ajit Chauhan, Tania Pérez Córdova, Federico García Lorca, Rosalind Nashashibi, Francesco Pedraglio, Álvaro Urbano, and Danh Vo.

Among the works on view will be a series of haunting drawings by Federico Garcia Lorca, created while he was in New York; digitally scanned negatives by Lola Álvarez Bravo taken on the set of Viaje a la Luna; photograms by Amaro done in New York around the same time period as Lorca wrote the script; and other works by these artists that stitch together narratives of Mexican life at the time Lorca was working, situating the work historically and bringing to life elements of the film lost to time.

Alongside these historical works, Lorca’s identity and personal history come to light through creative reflections by an international roster of contemporary artists. Álvaro Urbano will present a sculptural work commissioned for the exhibition that recreates a silhouette of Lorca’s balcony in Granada and meditates on his execution. Also on view will be a text work by Danh Võ made for a festival in Seville based on a line of Lorca’s poetry, which commemorates both Lorca’s execution and the death of a bullfighter; a meditative film work by Rosalind Nashashibi that takes as its departure point thematic throughlines of Ursula K. Le Guin’s The Shobies’ Story, which has echoes of Lorca’s film, including her own exploration of non-nuclear family structures and communal forms of living; and a sculptural work by Nina Canell that poetically considers the impact of technology on our everyday lives — a question relevant to Lorca, working as Fascism rose to the fore and technology became a tool for warfare.

Through these works, the exhibition explores the negotiation between the past and present—between an unfinished artwork and the political climate that saw its making and incompleteness, and through the parallels in Lorca’s world and our own: Lorca’s caught between the Spanish Civil War, the Great Depression, the rise of Fascism in the West, and the proliferation of Internationalist movements across the globe; and ours, marked by extreme political polarization, censorship, and rampant social inequalities. The exhibition operates within the context of a world in transition, where the featured artists present artworks that are poetic and idiosyncratic, and reflect a volatile political landscape. In a way, Viaje a la luna and its incompleteness––a permanently unresolved project––reflects the ongoing political struggle between right and left-wing ideologies and the cultural conditions that propel them.

CCA WATTIS INSTITUTE FOR CONTEMPORARY ARTS
145 Hooper Street, San Francisco, CA

02/06/25

Richard Diebenkorn: Prints from Two Decades @ Crown Point Press Gallery, San Francisco

Richard Diebenkorn 
Prints from Two Decades
Crown Point Press, San Francisco
Through June 30, 2025

Richard Diebenkorn
RICHARD DIEBENKORN
Spade Drypoint, 1982
© Richard Diebenkorn Foundation
Coutesy of Crown Point Press

I’m making my drawing in spite of the metal. I think I’m going to make a straight line, and it says, ‘Oh, no you don’t!—Richard Diebenkorn, 1962
Crown Point Press presents Richard Diebenkorn: Prints from Two Decades, a radiant exhibition of prints made by the artist during a series of residencies at the Press between 1980 and 1990. Organized with the Richard Diebenkorn Foundation and Crown Point Executive Director, Valerie Wade, the show takes place on the occasion of the highly anticipated release of Richard Diebenkorn: The Catalogue Raisonné of Prints (Yale University Press, 2025), which includes new scholarly essays, more than 850 significantly scaled images, and a richly illustrated chronology of Diebenkorn’s printmaking years. The works on view in the Crown Point Gallery were created in the final decade and a half of the artist’s life, the “high point” in his printmaking oeuvre, writes Starr Figura, Curator in the Department of Drawings and Prints at the Museum of Modern Art. In her essay Richard Diebenkorn, Printmaker, she adds that the objects made during this period “rank among the most extraordinarily luminous and elegantly structured prints ever produced.”

Richard Diebenkorn (1922–1993) was highly accomplished in printmaking and worked with professional print shops over a period of more than 30 years (1962–1992). Master Printer Kathan Brown at Crown Point Press published a selection of his earliest intaglio prints in 1965 as 41 Etchings Drypoints. “It was Crown Point Press in San Francisco and the intaglio print processes it offered that captivated him the most: etching, drypoint, aquatint, and related techniques for incising an image into a metal printing plate,” Starr Figura adds, which “provided endless horizons for his work.”

In 1980, the artist began his Clubs and Spades series of works on paper containing symbols and heraldic imagery that had fascinated him since he was a young person; the iconography appeared in his prints as early as 1963. A series of intaglio prints made at the Press in which he deployed clubs, spades, and crosses in the early 1980s is “the first occasion,” Starr Figura writes, “when Diebenkorn’s prints start to rival the saturated color, imposing presence, and painterly ambition of his paintings on paper.” Spade Drypoint (1982) evinces his love of the drypoint process with its aggressive lines, while a shimmering aquatint with scraping made the same year, Green Tree Spade, is remarkable for its vividness and texture.

Ne Comprends Pas and Oui, both from 1990, were made during one of his most productive residencies at the Press. Oui, with its floating, broken detritus, marked a return to reversal techniques, which he had experimented with nearly a decade prior in 1981. Emily York, in Magical Secrets about Aquatint: Spit Bite, Sugar Lift and Other Etched Tones Step-by-Step (Crown Point Press, 2008), recalls that Renée Bott made an aquatint reversal of Ne Comprends Pas, which became Oui. “Diebenkorn mainly drew with asphaltum to make Ne Comprends Pas, a predominantly black image in which the drawn forms come through as the white of the paper. After finishing the print, he wondered what it would look like if the lines were dark on light,” writes Emily York.

The very experimental, geometric Passage I and Passage II were made during the same time as Ne Comprends Pas and Oui and were also created with the reversal process. Richard Diebenkorn added a strip of color to Passage I, as he did with his most celebrated print, Green, published in 1986 by the Press. “It wasn’t the first time that Dick had done that,” and “not a lot of artists that I’ve worked with have done that,” says Renée Bott, from a wide-ranging interview conducted by Karin Breuer, Curator in Charge of the Achenbach Foundation for Graphic Arts, Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco and featured in the volumes. “He kept looking at it and…it wasn’t complete to him without adding something.”

The exhibition culminates in the weightless 1990 etchings Domino I and Domino II which are, observes Starr Figura, “among the most richly textured and densely composed images that Diebenkorn had ever produced.” As Diebenkorn’s “Ocean Park geometries seem on the brink of dissolving…there is the sense of familiar forms and structures being opened up, loosened, and softened.”

Special Film
A new and special film with the late Kathan Brown and Valerie Wade, and together with Andrea Liguori, Executive Director of the Richard Diebenkorn Foundation and Editor, Richard Diebenkorn: The Catalogue Raisonné of Prints, explores the artist’s history with the Press and the “golden era”of printmaking during the 1980s. Andrea Liguori, in a tender interview conducted with Kathan Brown in late 2023, unearths brightly hued paper scraps discovered during filming that the artist had used to construct an iconic print image. The film was produced at Crown Point Press by Matthew Pendergast and is now available on crownpoint.com and diebenkorn.org.

CROWN POINT GALLERY
20 Hawthorne Street, San Francisco, CA 94105

RICHARD DIEBENKORN: PRINTS FROM TWO DECADES
CROWN POINT PRESS, May 23 – June 30, 2025

02/05/25

Isca Greenfield-Sanders @ Berggruen Gallery, San Francisco - "Cut from a Dream" Exhibition

Isca Greenfield-Sanders
Cut from a Dream
Berggruen Gallery, San Francisco
May 1 – June 19, 2025

Berggruen Gallery presents Cut from a Dream, an exhibition of new paintings and works on paper by New York-based painter Isca Greenfield-Sanders

Isca Greenfield-Sanders’ idyllic landscape paintings and works on paper depict fleeting moments of found and collected memories. Greenfield-Sanders' serene compositions take viewers through outdoor scenes of aerial beachscapes, lake coastlines, and open fields of wildflowers. While the artist typically works from 35-millimeter vintage slides from the 1950s–1960s, Cut From A Dream draws, for the first time, not only on found images but also on personal photography.

Isca Greenfield-Sanders shifts between representational and surreal chromatic choices in her work. In Red Wildflowers, 2025, the bright reds and greens of uncut flowers contrast against a cool blue sky, creating depth and movement; one can almost feel the quality of air as it moves through the patch of grass rustling the wildflowers. In Pink Lake, 2024 the deliberate use of Opera Pink as an overriding hue transforms a naturalistic scene into something surreal, tinted rosily like a holiday memory from childhood. The interplay between natural and stylized elements works to create atmospheric landscapes that feel both familiar and dreamlike–often punctuated by far off-figures just out of view. 

Exploring themes of collective memory, nostalgia, and the documentation of experience, Isca Greenfield-Sanders probes the nature of recollections as images are translated into various mediums. Beginning by gridding each photograph, she creates several studies in colored pencil and watercolor, which she then collages and paints over in oil. Through this additive process of layering opaque and transparent paints, hidden elements of the composition reveal themselves the longer one spends with the painting; reflecting in form how memories, like concealed layers, emerge, shift, and are re-shaped over time.  

Isca Greenfield-Sanders (b. 1978, New York) holds a dual degree in mathematics and visual arts from Brown University. She has had numerous solo exhibitions throughout Europe and the United States, including a solo museum exhibition in 2010 at the Museum of Contemporary Art, Denver. Greenfield-Sanders’s work is in the collection of The Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York, NY; the Brooklyn Museum, Brooklyn, NY; The Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, TX; the USA Museum Morsbroich, Leverkusen, Germany; the McNay Art Museum, San Antonio, TX; the Israel Museum, Jerusalem, Israel; The Estée Lauder Corporation, New York, NY; and The Victoria and Albert Museum, London. She has been the subject of articles in several publications, including Artforum, ARTnews, Artnet Magazine, Harper’s Bazaar, The New Yorker, The New York Times, and Vanity Fair.

BERGGRUEN GALLERY
10 Hawthorne Street, San Francisco, CA 94105

29/04/25

Val Britton @ Berggruen Gallery, San Francisco - "Ghost Coast" Exhibition

Val Britton: Ghost Coast 
Berggruen Gallery, San Francisco 
May 1 – June 19, 2025

Berggruen Gallery presents Ghost Coast, an exhibition of new two-dimensional mixed media works by Portland-based artist VAL BRITTON. Combining painting, collage, ink, watercolor, drawing, and cut paper, Britton’s works of abstraction form invented psycho-geographic terrains that explore themes of memory, care, and transformation. This show marks Britton's first solo exhibition with the gallery.

Britton’s compositions mimic and evoke the intertwining of spatial networks–cosmological, symbolic, emotional, topographic–that we inhabit at each given moment. Playing with various aerial and terrestrial perspectives, Britton’s kinetic collages of cut, stained, and painted paper evoke the formal language of map-making. Yet, her shapes and forms coalesce to create imaginary dreamscapes. Britton’s interest in maps began when she was a young artist as a way to process the loss of her father, a long-haul truck driver and mechanic, who passed away when Britton was young. When she road-tripped across the country to begin graduate school at California College of the Arts, Val Britton used an atlas to piece together old itineraries and retrace his cross-country routes. This was a profound experience for Britton, as it allowed her to excavate memories and relocate forgotten histories. While the literal map has receded from Britton’s compositions, she remains interested in mapping as a conceptual process–how notions of vastness, distance, and time affect us deeply. Perhaps more portal than landscape, Britton’s works offer terrains of observation, as Jens Hoffman wrote, “to view Britton’s work is to remain open to the places your own associations and affinities might take you.”

Equally as important as Britton's theoretical interest in the delineation of space and time is an ethos of caretaking which approaches materials as an opportunity for mending. Val Britton asks how art might re-embody that which has been rejected, overlooked, or forgotten. Britton’s materials often come from repurposed objects, such as found paper, and discarded ink cartridges. As a resident of Portland's Glean (2022) and San Francisco’s Recology Artist-in-Residency Program (2010), Britton confronted the grief of collective waste and further explored an art practice rooted in regenerative action and conservation. During her time at the Tides Institute and Museum of Art in Eastport, Maine (2024), she began using salt water in all of her paintings. The minerals build up on the surface of her compositions, adding further to the tactile nature of each painting, as well as prioritizing the usage of non-toxic materials. 

Trained at the Rhode Island School of Design in printmaking, Britton’s paintings and large-scale installations approach paper as a medium with vast sculptural potential. Deviating from the strict-editioning of her rigorous printmaking training, Britton looks for the surprise and slippage in each image–preferring hand cutting over laser in order to allow each work to unfurl intuitively. This embrace of unpredictability also draws her to water-based media, where the uncontrollable nature of water and pigment becomes an essential part of her process. As it flows, soaks, and marbles across the compositions, pools of pigment spread across the paintings like bodies of water from above–a method imbued with a “mixture of chance, surprise, and surrender.” Often working in series, Val Britton embraces a call-and-response approach akin to improvisational jazz—a mode of spontaneity, emotion, and interplay. She develops multiple compositions at once, allowing them to engage in an evolving dialogue. The title Ghost Coast hints at various interpretations–the map, the print, the planet, the personal. The disappearing of coastlines, the history of filling in the San Francisco Bay, the usage of ghost prints in the monoprint process, the embodied histories of reclaimed materials, and the returning to paths and memories of those who have passed. 

VAL BRITTON received a BFA from the Rhode Island School of Design before completing her MFA from California College of the Arts. An award-winning public artist with permanent commissions at San Francisco International Airport among others, Britton’s work is part of numerous collections, including the Arkansas Museum of Fine Arts, the Cleveland Clinic Fine Art Collection, de Saisset Museum at Santa Clara University, Facebook Headquarters, the Achenbach Foundation for Graphic Arts at the Legion of Honor San Francisco, Library of Congress, National September 11 Memorial & Museum, New-York Historical Society, New York Public Library Print Collection, and the San Jose Museum of Art. Britton's work has been shown in over 65 solo and group exhibitions in museums, galleries, art fairs, universities, and non-profit institutions nationally and internationally. She is the recipient of many grants, fellowships, and residencies including a Pollock-Krasner Foundation Grant and the Fleishhacker Foundation Eureka Fellowship. Born in Livingston, New Jersey, Val Britton spent 14 years in San Francisco before relocating to the Pacific Northwest, where she now lives and works in Portland, Oregon. 

BERGGRUEN GALLERY
10 Hawthorne Street, San Francisco, CA 94105

21/04/25

Alec Soth: Advice for Young Artists @ Fraenkel Gallery, San Francisco

Alec Soth: Advice for Young Artists
Fraenkel Gallery, San Francisco
April 17 – May 23, 2025

Alec Soth Photograph
ALEC SOTH
Katherine’s Drawing, 2024 
© Alec Soth, courtesy of Fraenkel Gallery

Fraenkel Gallery presents Alec Soth: Advice for Young Artists, an exhibition exploring the cultivation of creativity through playful and surprising photographs made at undergraduate art programs. Rather than offering the guidance promised by the show’s title, the series presents reflections on artmaking at different stages of life, exploring the connections between photography, time, and aging. Inspired in part by Walker Evans’s Polaroids of young people, the photographs range from bright still lifes made from art department props to enigmatic images of students and oblique self-portraits.

The series grew from Soth’s interest in portraits that Walker Evans made towards the end of his life, depicting young people at colleges and universities. Best known for his Farm Security Administration-era documentary work, in the 1970s Walker Evans began working with the new Polaroid SX-70 camera, recording signs and lettering among other subjects. Many of Evans’s celebrated Polaroids depict the vernacular subjects for which he was best known. But for Soth, “the work I love are his portraits of young people made while visiting universities,” he writes. The Polaroids “sparked something,” Alec Soth notes, and looking for similar encounters, he began visiting art departments around the U.S. Rather than giving lectures, Soth met with students and classes in exchange for access, writing that he “liked just hanging around and pretending I was an art student.” 

With humor and humility, Soth’s images sometimes suggest an unbridgeable distance between himself and the art school world he records. Artist Lecture presents Soth’s view of a lecture hall seen from the podium. The photograph captures seats filled with students and faculty, recording their amused, bored, or distracted reactions to Soth’s camera. In Katherine’s Drawing, pictured on the monograph’s cover, a pencil sketch of Soth’s face is framed behind cracked glass. Drawn by Soth’s intern at his request, the work’s shattered surface undermines any authority or self-seriousness it might otherwise embody.

Alec Soth: Advice for Young Artists
Alec Soth: Advice for Young Artists
MACK, September 2024
Embossed linen hardcover
72 pages, 61 plates, 10.5 x 10.75 inches
ISBN 978-1-915743-76-3

More often, the images find Alec Soth at play, reclaiming the freedom and experimentation that belongs to beginners in any pursuit. Still lifes depict unexpected configurations of materials used to teach drawing and painting. In Still Life II, a colorful assembly of objects includes red apples and a scowling bust, and Alec Soth himself hidden at the back of the classroom. In a number of portraits, Alec Soth photographs art students framed by their work and their tools, peeking from behind canvases or holding a shutter release cable. In Ameerah, a young woman poses on a stool with her hands clasped. A study in blues, greys, and browns, the image also doubles as a self-portrait, with Soth’s own reflection visible in a smudged mirror.

ALEC SOTH is based in Minneapolis, Minnesota. Recent solo exhibitions include Alec Soth: A Room of Rooms at the Tokyo Photographic Art Museum, and Alec Soth: Reading Room at the Joslyn Art Museum in Omaha, Nebraska, on view through May 4. His photographs have been featured in solo survey shows organized by Jeu de Paume, Paris; Walker Art Center, Minneapolis; and MediaSpace, London. In 2008, Alec Soth created Little Brown Mushroom, a multi-media enterprise focused on visual storytelling. His work is in the collection of the J. Paul Getty Museum, Los Angeles; Minneapolis Institute of Arts; Museum of Contemporary Art, Chicago; Museum of Modern Art, New York; and the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, among many others. The artist’s monographs include Sleeping by the Mississippi, NIAGARA, The Last Days of W, Broken Manual, Gathered Leaves, Songbook, I Know How Furiously Your Heart Is Beating, and A Pound of Pictures. Soth has been the recipient of numerous fellowships and awards, including a Guggenheim Fellowship in 2013. He is a member of Magnum Photos. 

FRAENKEL GALLERY, SAN FRANCISCO
49 Geary Street, San Francisco, CA 94108 

12/04/25

Ruth Asawa: Retrospective Exhibition @ SFMOMA, San Francisco - MoMA, NYC - Guggenheim Bilbao - Fondation Beyeler

Ruth Asawa: Retrospective
San Francisco Museum of Modern Art
April 5 – September 2, 2025

The San Francisco Museum of Modern Art (SFMOMA) presents Ruth Asawa: Retrospective, the first major national and international museum retrospective of the groundbreaking work of RUTH ASAWA (1926–2013). Premiering at SFMOMA, this first posthumous retrospective features the entire spectrum of the artist’s awe-inspiring practice. Sculpture, drawings, prints, paintings, design objects and archival material from US-based public and private collections offer an in-depth look at her expansive output and its inspirations, exploring the ways her longtime San Francisco home and garden served as the epicenter of her creative universe, and highlighting the ethos of collaboration and inclusivity that informed her numerous public sculpture commissions and unwavering dedication to arts advocacy.
Ruth Asawa: Retrospective is deeply aligned with SFMOMA’s vision to be both local and global—presenting Bay Area artists with profound significance that also have the potential to be highly impactful and relevant on an international scale,” said Christopher Bedford, Helen and Charles Schwab Director of SFMOMA. “This exhibition provides an opportunity to celebrate the legendary Ruth Asawa, who was both a widely acclaimed artist and a hometown inspiration whose impact can be very much felt today.”
Ruth Asawa: Retrospective features more than 300 works spanning six decades of the artist’s career, engaging in the full range of materials and techniques that Asawa employed. Her signature looped-wire sculptures shares gallery space with lesser-known works in other mediums that supply valuable insight into the interconnectedness and relentlessly experimental nature of her artistic vision. In addition to Asawa’s own work, the exhibition includes a select number of works by peers and mentors with whom Ruth Asawa engaged in creative dialogue including Josef Albers, Imogen Cunningham, Buckminster Fuller, Ray Johnson, Hazel Larsen Archer, Merry Renk and Marguerite Wildenhain.

Ruth Asawa: Retrospective is an exhibition partnership between SFMOMA and The Museum of Modern Art, New York (MoMA) and co-curated by Janet Bishop, Thomas Weisel Family Chief Curator and Curator of Painting and Sculpture, SFMOMA and Cara Manes, Associate Curator, Department of Painting and Sculpture, MoMA.
“It is an immense privilege to present the full range of Ruth Asawa’s life’s work through this retrospective,” said Janet Bishop. “Not only was Asawa an exceptionally talented artist—among the most distinguished sculptors of the 20th century and a major contributor in so many other mediums—but she lived her values in everything she did, modeling the importance of the arts and opening up creative opportunities for others at every turn.”
RUTH ASAWA RETROSPECTIVE 
EXHIBITION HIGHLIGHTS

Ruth Asawa: Retrospective unfolds across more than 14,000 square feet in the Barbara and Gerson Bakar and Mimi and Peter Haas Galleries on SFMOMA’s fourth floor. Following a loosely chronological arc, a dozen sections present Asawa’s extensive body of work within the unfolding narrative of her life and career.

Ruth Asawa was born in Norwalk, California, in 1926 and raised on a farm. In 1942, the teenage Asawa and her family were unjustly displaced to incarceration camps, along with many other people of Japanese descent, in the wake of Executive Order 9066. After the end of World War II, Asawa enrolled in the experimental Black Mountain College near Asheville, North Carolina. The opening gallery of the exhibition will highlight her highly generative studies at the college from 1946 to 1949. With the encouragement of Black Mountain College teachers including Josef Albers, Buckminster Fuller and Max Dehn, Asawa flourished, creating drawings with undulating lines, repeating patterns and studies of positive and negative space that would resonate in later work. This gallery also features Asawa’s 1947 trip to Toluca, Mexico, during which she learned a looped-wire technique used for basketry that would prove fundamental to her sculptural practice of the following decade and beyond.

In 1949, Ruth Asawa moved from North Carolina to San Francisco—the city she would call home for the rest of her life—and exhibited at SFMOMA (then the San Francisco Museum of Art) for the first time. A gallery devoted to the 1950s in San Francisco will reveal a decade of tremendous productivity, including the development of the artist’s signature innovation—hanging looped-wire sculptures with forms within forms and interlocking lobes, no two alike—that she exhibited locally, nationally and internationally. An adjacent gallery will include Asawa’s designs for commercial projects including fabric patterns and wallpaper.

In 1962, Ruth Asawa received the gift of a desert plant that inspired her next major body of work: tied-wire sculptures, some wall-mounted, some suspended and some displayed directly on the floor. A gallery focused on nature will examine the artist’s deep affinity with the organic world and its relationship to her practice in both two and three dimensions.

In a shift in register from the unfolding of Asawa’s artistic innovations across time, the exhibition features a gallery evoking the Noe Valley home and studio that was the hub of the artist’s creative and family life for more than half a century, from the early 1960s until her passing in 2013. This section reconvenes a grouping of wire sculptures of various forms and sizes that Asawa is known to have hung from the rafters in her living room, as well as a selection of the artist’s sketchbooks and examples of her material experiments in clay, copper, electroplating and bronze. Highlights of the space are Asawa’s original hand-carved redwood doors from the house and works she displayed by other artists, including Josef Albers, Ray Johnson, Peggy Tolk-Watkins and Marguerite Wildenhain.

Another section spanning several decades features the artist’s miniatures: a dozen of her tiniest wire sculptures—the smallest measuring just over one inch in diameter—that are installed in cases that invite close looking. The continued inspiration of the artist’s garden is revealed in a final gallery featuring a stunning array of Asawa’s late drawings of plants, bouquets and flowers produced during the 1990s and early 2000s.

Throughout the retrospective, Asawa’s contemporaneous arts advocacy and public sculpture practice from the 1960s forward are highlighted. Video, photographs, maquettes and archival materials  illuminate Asawa’s fountains at San Francisco’s Ghirardelli Square (Andrea, 1968); Union Square (San Francisco Fountain, 1973); and Bayside Plaza, Embarcadero (Aurora, 1986), as well as projects connected to Japanese American incarceration in San Jose (Japanese American Internment Memorial, 1990–94) and at San Francisco State University (Garden of Remembrance, 2000-02).

RUTH ASAWA RETROSPECTIVE 
EXHIBITION VENUES + DATES 2025 - 2027

SFMOMA: April 5–September 2, 2025

MoMA, NY: October 19, 2025–February 7, 2026

Guggenheim Bilbao: March 20–September 13, 2026

Fondation Beyeler: October 18, 2026–January 24, 2027

RUTH ASAWA RETROSPECTIVE - CATALOGUE

Ruth Asawa Restrospective Catalogue
Ruth Asawa: Retrospective
Edited by Janet Bishop and Cara Manes
Published by SFMOMA / Yale University Press
336 Pages, 9.37 x 12.70 in, 325 color + b-w illustrations
Hadcover - IBSN: 9780300278859
Published: April 2025
An extensively illustrated 336-page catalogue published by SFMOMA in association with Yale University Press accompanies the exhibition. Texts on key aspects of Asawa’s art and creative practice contextualize this visual survey. Lead essayists include Anne Anlin Cheng, Janet Bishop, Cara Manes, and Jennie Yoon and Marci Kwon. Additional contributors include Genji Amino, Isabel Bird, Caitlin Haskell, Charlotte Healy, Corey Keller, Ruth Ozeki, Marin Sarvé-Tarr, Jeffrey Saletnik and Dominika Tylcz.
RUTH ASAWA RETROSPECTIVE - ORGANIZATION

Ruth Asawa: Retrospective is an exhibition partnership between the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art (SFMOMA) and The Museum of Modern Art, New York (MoMA). The exhibition is co-curated by Janet Bishop, Thomas Weisel Family Chief Curator and Curator of Painting and Sculpture, SFMOMA; and Cara Manes, Associate Curator, Department of Painting and Sculpture, MoMA; with Marin Sarvé-Tarr, Assistant Curator, and William Hernández Luege, Curatorial Associate, Painting and Sculpture, SFMOMA; and Dominika Tylcz, Curatorial Assistant, Department of Department of Painting and Sculpture, MoMA.

SFMOMA - SAN FRANCISCO MUSEUM OF MODERN ART
151 Third Street, San Francisco, CA 94103

14/02/25

Sophie Calle Exhibition @ Fraenkel Gallery, San Francisco

Sophie Calle
Fraenkel Gallery, San Francisco
February 27 – April 12, 2025

Fraenkel Gallery presents an exhibition by Sophie Calle. For more than forty years Calle has made work that draws from her life, transforming elements from her public and private relationships into intimate narratives. The exhibition features several series exploring questions about legacy and loss, topics Sophie Calle approaches with her typical humor and candor. Making its U.S. debut, catalogue raisonné of the unfinished focuses on projects Sophie Calle previously conceptualized but didn’t pursue. Each piece pairs fragments from the project with Calle’s text about its failure. Another series, Picassos in lockdown, comprises photographs Sophie Calle made at the Musée National Picasso in Paris during the pandemic. Each shows a painting covered for protection while the museum was closed. The exhibition also features a selection of works looking at death and remembrance through the lens of Calle’s relationship with her parents. This is Sophie Calle’s fifth exhibition at Fraenkel Gallery, since 1994.

The series catalogue raisonné of the unfinished collects photographs, handwritten notes, comic books, and other documents, each paired with a short text describing the artwork Sophie Calle had originally imagined and how it came to (not) be. A red stamp across each text pronounces her reason for rejecting the work. The projects range from Calle’s request for museum visitors to propose ideas for her to enact (“Not exhilarating”), to an attempt to insert herself into a Mexican comic book collection that included the word “Calle” in the title (“Anecdotal”). Together, the series presents a sort of self-imposed salon des refusés, revealing glimpses of Calle’s process and celebrating the transformation of many dead ends into a final positive form.

In 2023, Musée National Picasso presented a solo exhibition of Calle’s work, timed to the 50th anniversary of the death of Pablo Picasso. The deliberately retrospective exhibition, titled À toi de faire, ma mignonne, (“It’s up to you, my darling”) included photographs Sophie Calle made while the museum was closed during the pandemic, recording the cloth and paper coverings that shielded Picasso’s paintings from light and dust. Sophie Calle has described her encounter with the paintings: “The Picassos were under protection, wrapped up, hidden. Underneath — a ghostlike, less intimidating presence,” she writes. Titled after the works they conceal, the photographs in Picassos in lockdown encourage the viewer to recall the original painting.

A third gallery presents selections from Autobiographies and other elegiac, family-focused works, pairing photographs and texts in frames or urn-like wooden boxes. In Autobiographies (Morning), Sophie Calle awaits her father’s last words, while Autobiographies (My Mother Died) reproduces notes about death from Calle’s diary and her mother’s. A glass-fronted box titled Necrology presents the obituary Sophie Calle commissioned for herself, hidden behind pinned butterflies to remain unreadable. The piece incorporates Calle’s commentary about her decision to obscure the writing: “So as not to attract too much attention from death, I decided it was best to cover up what I did not want to read,” she notes. In these and other works, Sophie Calle addresses her own mortality with characteristic honesty and wit, taking on the question of how we remember and are in turn remembered.

Sophie Calle was recently featured in Sophie Calle: Overshare at the Walker Art Center in Minneapolis, and Absences: Sophie Calle & Toulouse-Lautrec at the Mitsubishi Ichigokan Museum, Tokyo. Her work was presented in the solo exhibition Finir en Beauté (Neither Give Nor Throw Away), held in the cryptoporticus at Arles as part of the photography festival Rencontres d’Arles in France. Her work has been shown in museums around the world and is in the collections of the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York; Museum of Modern Art, New York; Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York; Los Angeles County Museum of Art; San Francisco Museum of Modern Art; Centre Pompidou, Paris; and Tate, London, among many others. Sophie Calle is the recipient of numerous awards, including most recently the Praemium Imperiale Award in 2024, as well as the Royal Photographic Society’s Centenary Medal, an Infinity Award from the International Center of Photography, and the Hasselblad Foundation International Award in Photography, among others. 

FRAENKEL GALLERY
49 Geary Street, San Francisco, CA 94108

RELATED POST ON WANAFOTO

In English

Sophie Calle: Missing, Fort Mason Center for Arts and Culture, San Francisco, June 29 – August 20, 2017 

Sophie Calle: My mother, my cat, my father, in that order, FraenkelLAB (Fraenkel Gallery), San Francisco, June 23 – August 26, 2017

Sophie Calle, Fraenkel Gallery, San Francisco, 29 October – 24 December 2015 

Sophie Calle, Louisiana Museum of Modern Art, Humlebaek, Denmark, 23 June - 24 October 2010

In French

Sophie Calle: À toi de faire, ma mignonne, Musée Picasso, Paris, 3 octobre 2023 - 7 janvier 2024 


Sophie Calle, Musée d'art moderne Louisiana, Humlabaek, Danemark, 23 juin - 24 octobre 2010

SOPHIE CALLE. M'AS-TU VUE, Centre Pompidou, Paris, 19 novembre 2003 - 15 mars 2004