May 26 2011

SFMOMA Artists Gallery presents">SFMOMA Artists Gallery presents

Ron Dono­van, Chris Shaw, & Chuck Sperry

June 11, 2011 — Jan­u­ary 12, 2012

Bay Area rock poster art con­tem­po­raries Chris Shaw, Chuck Sperry, and Ron Dono­van stand out amongst their pre­de­ces­sors in the Bay Area tra­di­tion of poster mak­ing that spans nearly 50 years. Through their pro­lific bod­ies of work, the mas­ter­ful artists have brought inno­va­tion, inven­tion, and new mean­ing to this art form. Each dis­tinc­tively fuses pro­pa­ganda, imagery, text, and his­tor­i­cal art ref­er­ences with Pop and rock-poster art sen­si­bil­i­ties to cre­ate acces­si­ble, relat­able imagery that is at once empow­er­ing and unde­ni­ably populist.

Chris Shaw working in his studio

Minna Street windows

A col­lab­o­ra­tive art work involv­ing three indi­vid­u­ally cre­ated win­dow instal­la­tions, Dono­van, Shaw, and Sperry layer silkscreen, paint­ing, col­lage, and mixed media to trans­form two-dimensional imagery into three-dimensional expres­sion. Show­ing rev­er­ence for man’s com­mu­nica­tive nature, they ref­er­ence the renewal of the idea that art has a purpose.

 

Natoma Street win­dows - Tem­po­rally Bound

Tem­po­rally Bound is a “visual impro­vi­sa­tion” between Sperry and Shaw. Its form is drawn from the Asian accordion-style bound scroll to rec­og­nize the Pacific Rim as the gath­er­ing cen­ter of the art world and to empha­size post­mod­ern appro­pri­ated mul­ti­cul­tur­al­ism. Sperry and Shaw express a real­iza­tion of the tem­po­ral, time-punctuated nature of street and poster art. By bind­ing the pan­els together in mon­u­men­tal book form, the artists cre­ate a visual record of events through a modal­ity of time. Addi­tion­ally, through bind­ing inven­tion, the con­tex­tu­al­iza­tion of visual imagery, and a reas­sign­ing of rep­re­sen­ta­tional mean­ing, the artists trans­form ephemeral events and expe­ri­ences by cre­at­ing a lex­i­con of a shared cul­tural visual memory.

Chuck Sperry printing at the Firehouse

The “Win­dows Pro­gram” uses the SFMOMA Garage’s street-level win­dows located at 150 Natoma and 147 Minna Street (between Third and New Mont­gomery Streets) to show­case art­work. The pro­gram, orga­nized  by Renée de Cos­sio of the Artists Gallery, invites some of the area’s most ambi­tious artists to trans­form these every­day spaces into com­pelling exhi­bi­tions that the passerby can view round the clock.

 

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May 1 2011

Make Tacos Not War! Art Exhibit

Make Taco's, Not War art exhibit print (black)

Fri­day, May 6th from 6:00pm — 9:00pm

This is a high-octane art exhibit intended to gen­er­ate feel­ings of pas­sion and love for all mankind thru the medium of the print­ers’ ink. Rev­o­lu­tion­ary, thought pro­vok­ing, highly flam­ma­ble and very spicy, we will feed your mind with images intended to change the world thru the magic cre­ated when art and taco’s collide.

North Bay Artist and Print­maker Lawrence ‘El’ Cola­cion in col­lab­o­ra­tion with friends: Con­tinue reading

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Sep 8 2010

& Peter LeCompte">Faya Gallery presents Chris Shaw, Chuck Sperry & Peter LeCompte

For all you East Coast­ers — head down to the Faya Gallery at 211 Eliz­a­beth Street in New York City to see paint­ings by Chris Shaw, screen­printed rock posters by Chuck Sperry, and hand-painted screen­prints by Peter LeCompte. Open­ing recep­tion is tonight from 6:00 — 9:00 pm EST. Here’s a peek at some of the pieces on display:

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