I don't even know how I would possibly go to all the events coming up, but here is a list of things I would/could/should do, just like I did last year, so we can compare score cards at the end.
Starting Thursday, September 8, the scene comes alive with a ton of stuff to see and do within a 3 hour time frame. It's First Thursday, which means something sometimes, like when there are shows worth going to in 49 Geary. (Every First Thursday there is an agreed-upon smattering of openings within the walls of 49 and 77 Geary. Lately, though, it seems galleries are changing up the opening dates, and the ones who stick to the First Thursday tend to be stuck on old-fashioned art, as well).
Jonathan Wallraven: "Smile to Your Life"
Kokoro Studio, 682 Geary Street, San Francisco
Opening 7-10 pm through September 29
Jonathan Wallraven, a current CCA MFA grad student, is sure to take sneering, hilarious digs at almost everyone with his large scale line drawings and text. Ala Raymond Pettibon, Wallraven seems to find the perfect thing you never expected his figures to say. His drawings always remind me of the high school drones who were doomed to peak at age eighteen, while the rest of us just kept dreaming of life beyond those four years of hell. It takes a lot to drag me down Geary into the seedy Tenderloin, but this might be one reason to do it.
"Some Paintings, Sculpture, & Drawings"
Patricia Sweetow Gallery, 77 Geary Street
Mezzanine level, San Francisco
Opening 5:30-7:30 pm through October 15
Patricia Sweetow often shows some great artists from her roster, and here is a chance to see, well, some paintings, sculpture, and drawings from them. I'm looking forward to work by glitter queen, Jamie Vasta, haunting (usually photo) work from Suné Woods, and abstract "Afro-Futurism" from CCA Professor, David Huffman.
Yoon Lee: "Minor Inconveniences"
Opening 5:30-7:30 pm through October 22
I have grown quite fond of Marx and Zavattero, as a gallery and as a couple, so I would probably go to most of their openings in any case. If you add in a pack of talented artists who bridge craft with a pop aesthetic, you have a pretty solid case to visit their gallery, celebrating its tenth year in business. Yoon Lee, a Korean-born, SFAI MFA graduate, won the Tournesol Prize at Headlands Center for the Arts, making her resume pretty impressive. I am unsure whether I am into her work, however. It brings to mind Chris Finley's swooping, exquisite, digitally manipulated images reproduced in paint so much that I am left wondering whether these works say anything new. However, the fact that I am unsure about them is the greatest reason to go see them in person.
Opening 5:30-7:30 pm through September 30
This group photography show at Wirtz Gallery brings together the best of their well-known photographers, including the late Larry Sultan, as well as Todd Hido and Jim Goldberg, among other talented artists.
"Media Love: A Group Exhibition", Unspeakable Projects
735 Tehama Street, San Francisco
Opening 6-9 pm through September 29
"Residency Projects II", Kala Art Institute
2990 San Pablo Avenue, Berkeley,
Opening 6-8 pm through October 15
Whew! Are you tired yet? Wait, there's one more opening that would certainly be worth attending! Kala's print-based institution offers competitive residencies and "Residency Projects II" is a culmination of work from the most recent crop of artists to use their facilities and resources. Elisheva Biernoff's super flat work, like the image above, sculptor Renee Gertler and photographer Jessica Ingram are all a strong lure to make the trek across the bridge into the East Bay.
THIS WAS JUST DAY ONE, PEOPLE! Stay tuned for show recommendations for the rest of the week. And as always, remember to bring comfy shoes, breath mints, and your coolest leather jacket.
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