Thursday, October 20, 2011

Is This Sunset For Real? An Amazing Night on My Roof

The roof of my building has views of the Golden Gate Bridge, Coit Tower, the Transamerica Building, North Beach and Russian Hill. I love it and am so lucky.
The deck is fully exposed to the Northwest, so it can be cold and windy. 
But some nights, it is breathtaking. 
I also love my Canon G11 camera, which took these amazing pictures. 






Oscar the Grouch loves the roof




Saturday, October 15, 2011

You Should Really See These Films

A librarian and a postal worker, using only their government salaries, build one of the greatest contemporary art collections in modern history.

Herb and Dorothy



A $25 billion dollar art collection is wrestled away from its owner and taken over by his sworn enemy.

The Art of the Steal



A brilliant Oscar-winning screenwriter's career and life is unalterably changed after he is blacklisted by the U.S. Senate.


Trumbo



These three films are definitely worth watching.
Herb and Dorothy
The Art of the Steal
Trumbo
All are available to stream on Netflix. 

Friday, October 14, 2011

Richard Serra and Creating His Huge, Awesome Sculptures

Cycle, 2011. Gagosian Gallery, New York. Photo from Modern Painters.

Richard Serra's Drawing Retrospective opened at the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art on Thursday, October 13 for a member preview. The exhibit traveled from the Metropolitan Museum in New York, where it opened in April 2011. 

Serra is most famous for his large-scale steel sculptures, yet this exhibit goes behind the scenes of his process and into a different style of his art. Fifty drawings, some taking up a full wall of the museum, as well as the artist's private notebooks allows visitors a window into the early stages of Serra's creativity and planning.  I was very happy to receive a membership to the museum for Christmas, so I was able to visit on a quiet afternoon. 

Drawings after Circuit, 1972. From Modern Painters.
Serra explains the 18 drawings from the photo above, which are very large and take up a full wall in the SF MOMA exhibit. "The Circuit drawings are the result of mapping. They were an exercise for me, in that they recorded what I saw as I moved 360 degrees around the periphery of the room looking at the openings between the four plates of the sculpture." 

The San Francisco exhibit coincides with two other exhibits opening this month, one at the Guggenheim Museum Bilbao in Spain called "Constantin Brancusi and Richard Serra" and an exhibit of two new works at the Gagosian Gallery in New York. Cycle, 2011, in the photo at the top of this post, is at the Gagosian. Serra is on the cover of the September 2011 issue of Modern Painters magazine, and the article in the magazine gave me context for the SF MOMA exhibit.

My Curves Are Not Mad, 1987. The Nasher Sculpture Center in Dallas


 Last year, I visited the Nasher Sculpture Center in Dallas and loved Serra's huge steel sculpture, My Curves Are Not Mad, in the museum's garden.  I have sometimes struggled to really understand sculpture. The Drawing Retrospective as well as the recent press about Richard Serra have helped me to see that his sculpture is about space and how space can change with the addition of a sculpture. 

Checking the echo in My Curves Are Not Mad
The drawings opened my eyes to the thought that goes into Serra's work and when I left the museum yesterday, I was exhausted. That is usually a sign that I have learned something that may take some time for me to process. 


Open Ended, 2007-2008. From Modern Painters.

The photographs of Serra's work in this post are from pictures I took of the pages in Modern Painters.
Read an interview with Serra from ARTINFO, the website for Modern Painters: 

Read an article from ARTINFO about the Drawing Retrospective when it opened at the Met in New York: 

Tuesday, October 11, 2011

sixty+ minutes of sound: september

Broken Social Scene at Hardly Strictly Bluegrass Festival 2011
September 2011 Playlist

Gone, Gone, Gone  -  Nikki Lane
The Next Time Around  -  Little Joy
The Birds They Circle  -  Karen Elson
Jolene  -  Dolly Parton
Ain't No Sunshine  -  Bill Withers
I'm on Fire  -  Bruce Springsteen
Nashville Skyline Rag  -  Bob Dylan
Lebanese Blond  -  Thievery Corporation
Halfway Home  -  TV on the Radio
Groove is in the Heart  -  Deee-Lite
Champagne and Reefer (Live)  -  The Rolling Stones featuring Buddy Guy
Here Comes the Sun  -  Richie Havens
Written in Reverse  -  Spoon
Tighten Up  -  The Black Keys
California Sunrise  -  Dirty Gold
Bizarre Love Triangle  -  New Order
I Feel Love  -  Donna Summer
Ride Like the Wind  -  Christopher Cross
Superheavy  -  SuperHeavy
Right Place, Wrong Time  -  Dr. John
Tonight, I'll Be Staying Here with You (Live)  -  Bob Dylan with Rolling Thunder
Too Young to Burn  -  Sonny & The Sunsets
Empire State of Mind  -  Jay Z & Alicia Keys

Thursday, October 6, 2011

Look No Further for San Francisco Neighborhood Information!


Paseo Properties is a Bay Area real estate firm that was recently founded by my friends Rob Santo Domingo and Porter Farthing. They asked me to research and write about neighborhoods in San Francisco and Marin County for the local information section of the company's website. 

Since I've only been in San Francisco for about two years, it was a great project that inspired me to learn more about the city and surrounding towns. I hope it is helpful for anyone looking for more information about this beautiful and special part of California. 

Check out my writing on their website: 
http://www.paseopropertiessf.com/neighborhood-info