News and More from the Art Alumni Group University of California, Berkeley



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Monday, December 15, 2008

Alumni News December 2008

Alumni in the news... in the bookstores... and in your Internets!
Now with more color pictures!

Karl Kasten's long-anticipated and profusely illustrated memoir, Foghorns and Peacocks, chronicles his college years, war years, professional years, activities in painting, printmaking, and education, and random observations, is due out any day now. Check back here for ordering instructions.
Luz Marina Ruiz had a busy fall, with two artists books at the Conrad Gallery in Tuscon, AZ and a show at NoneSuch Space Gallery in Oakland. Also this fall, Diane Damé Shepp BA '77 showed at the Oakland Museum as part of the Day of the Dead Exhibit.
Flatfile Galleries showed the work of Nancy Genn in Chicago at SOFA in November, with several of her cast bronze sculptures and mixed media drawings from her new Geneses series. Helen Ann Licht has a show at the Bade Museum, the Pacific School of Religion from Jan 7 through March. The title of the show will be the Bible and Bhuddha. Opening reception will be Saturday February 7, 2009. Check out what's going on at the Sebastopol Gallery and keep up with Sandy Eastoak by subscribing to her "Fish Rap" newsletter. In September, Christine Lando held a Contruction/Deconstruction show of her work at her gorgeous Dogpatch studio in San Francisco.
Prius-driving Barbara Morris had a show called Hybrids at the San Geronimo Valley Center in November. Jim Melchert MA '61 (also driving a Prius) had a solo show at Gallery Paule Anglim in San Francisco in June and another fabulous show in November at b. sakata garo entitled appropriatly enough Breaking and Entering. Yuriko Yamaguchi had a huge feature in the Washington Post with video that you can see on-line here. The Theater of Insects, Jo Whaley's beautiful new book, was published last month by Chronicle Books. Lynne Rutter BA '85 recently completed a major mural commission for the children's wing of the Burlingame Public Library.
"Blink" by Nemo Gould
Giant boxing Robots! Nemo Gould is mixing it up in the news, in the clubs, and on the Discovery Channel! Check out his Giant Boxing Robots on YouTube. Jeff King's Y2K Gallery includes some of Nemo's work, on now through January 23, 2009.
Casey Anderson continues to paint and exhibit in East Hampton, NY. Sandra Low BA '97 showed in two recent group exhibits: "we are all in this together" at McNish Art Gallery, Oxnard, CA in November, and "Reality Check" at Overtones Gallery, Los Angeles, CA in December. Merl Ross BA '85 recently celebrated her 20+ year career with a retrospective show in December at her historic Hillside School Studio. Kara Maria is currently showing her work in Los Angeles at the Charlie James Gallery, through January 3.
David Jones hawking his wares at a recent show.

The Elephant in the Room, a group of politically provocative, mixed-media sculptures by Emily Duffy MFA '93 had a pre-election showing True World Gallery in Joshua Tree.
A recent show called Art of Democracy; War and Empire at the Meridan Gallery in San Francisco, featured the expertly crafted "Limited Time: Sale: $999.99 Lead Shirt" by David Jones MFA '73. David's work was also exhibited in the October show Change America at Robert Berman Gallery, Santa Monica.



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A reminder that the Art Alumni Group is volunteer-run and You are invited to help! We no longer collect dues. All donations to the Art Alumni Group are tax-deductible. So send us money, too! Okay, thanks!





Wednesday, December 3, 2008

Reporters Needed!

We know our alumni are out there doing wonderful things that other alumni, nay, the whole world, want to read about here.
Help us spread the word about the accomplished and interesting lives of our alumni artists, by sending us articles, news, and images to share with this community.

If you would like to help write and edit this blog, please contact me about becoming a guest editor.

Tuesday, October 21, 2008

Graduate Program Update

Hello dear Art Alumni,

I'm writing to catch you up on the goings on of the Dept. of Art Practice.
As Graduate Adviser for the past three years, I'm particularly up to date on the status of our graduate program, so that is what I'll concentrate on sharing with you.

At present we run an MFA program with 13 or 14 graduate students per year. It's a two year program, and to achieve the degree, our students must produce an artistic thesis that is exhibited at the Berkeley Art Museum in May. The 5.25 full-time faculty we currently have in the department all work with graduate students, but we have also been able to hire outside advisers to with with MFA students in their second year, serving as members of their thesis committee. This has been a terrific way for students to make contact with artists who operate outside academia, and who come to them with no agenda other than to help and push them toward their best working practice.
In recent years we've had Allan de Souza, Stephanie Syjuco, Sergio de la Torre, Trevor Paglen, Vincent Fecteau, Pamela Wilson, Kota Ezawa, Josephine Taylor, and other internationally-known artists working with our grads in this capacity.
Our visiting artist lecture series has also provided extra studio visits to MFA students. Each year we bring 6 or 7 artists to campus to give a lecture, and visit the Richmond Field Station studios. In this way we are able to keep a fresh set of eyes on our students work throughout the year, and expose those students to visiting artists. We've found that some of these visitors go on to curate our students' work into
exhibitions, and even help them create relationships with galleries and dealers.

Our graduate program is also extremely competitive to get into: we receive upwards of 200 applications per year for 7 places, which allows us to pick students of high caliber. Many of these MFA students do not come straight from their undergrad programs, but have been out in the world working for a few years, and bring with them their life and studio experience. Of utmost importance to our ability to attract good applicants is the fact that our grad program is fully funded. Students receive a stipend as well as having their tuition paid. In their second year, they teach Art 8 or Art 23AC, and earn money and really valuable teaching experience that way as well. So we're finding that our student "body" is mature and mostly very self-starting. We've created a media lab and a wood shop at the Richmond Field Station, as well as building our large media lab here at Kroeber, so there are ample tools and spaces for students to work in.

Our curriculum for graduate studies has changed somewhat, to emphasize the vast resources of the UCB community at large. MFA students take at least two courses from outside of the Art dept. during their time here, and we see the powerful impact of faculty from a broad range of disciplines on the students' work. They are studying philosophy, physics, rhetoric, computer science, sociology, art history, environmental science, history, performance studies, interactive design, and architecture, to give you a far from exhaustive list. The presence of the Berkeley Center for New Media also offers our students various fora for discussion with students from other disciplines, as well as a second busy lecture series to attend.

Our recent hire of Brody Reiman to teach sculpture and run the sculpture area has proved to be a very, very good one. Brody has the most astonishing ability to motivate good work from students that I have ever seen. The quality and quantity of 3D and installation work being produced by the department has grown hugely since she began as an Assistant Professor in 2007 (though she'd taught as a lecturer several times previous to 2007, and we were impressed with her then too). She is in the process of setting up a laser cutter for the department (our first!) and that represents an exciting new step forward for us. Brody and I hope to begin combining our curricula with a new course in video and sculpture as well.

At the undergrad level, we're seeing a growth of declared art majors. We now have something like 180 majors, which, distributed amongst only 5.25 full time faculty and 4 staff is a formidable work load. But we continue to have the help of our four devoted continuing lecturers - Randy Hussong, Kevin Radley, John McNamara and Craig Nagasawa, who do a yeoman's share of work. Our visiting lecturers have provided an ever-broadening range of courses to our curriculum for undergrads. We now offer courses with titles such as "Experimental Landscapes," "Issues in Multi-Cultural display," "Art, Medicine and Disability," (Katherine Sherwood's legendary course), "Art and Meditation," "Sound Art," "Game Design," and, in the summer time, Digital Photography. Students clamor for more classes, and when the University budget provides, we provide. We're eager to be able to offer more courses.

Many of the faculty continue to travel widely for exhibitions of their work, or for performances, or screenings of films and videos. Katherine Sherwood currently has a one-person show at Paule Anglim Gallery in San Francisco. Greg Niemeyer won a MacArthur Foundation-funded grant last summer to build a complex interactive project. We all treasure our studio time! We're lucky, also to have a new Chair at the helm: Hertha Sweet Wong, whose background is in Creative Writing, but whose research has focused mostly on Native American folk culture. She began her 3-year term this fall and we're VERY pleased to have her.

Morale is good! We're delighted we've been able to build up a media lab that is the envy of many departments on campus. In room 285 we have a video shooting studio and lecture space, and in room 295 we have a computer lab with 20 dedicated stations for animation, game design, and video editing. It's a big change, and students hop on to the equipment as fast as we can train them on it.

I'm happy to answer any questions you may have, and grateful for your interest and continued dedication to the Department of Art Practice.

Sincerely,

Anne Walsh
Associate Professor for Video
Graduate Advisor

Saturday, September 20, 2008

6th Annual Symposium October 18, 2008

What's Happening - Contemporary Art

In the sixth annual Art Alumni Symposium we present "What's Happening- Contemporary Art" an exchange by now-oriented artists and educators, exploring the processes of contemporary artists, the dynamic post-modern political and social force in today's art world.

Tina Takemoto as Bjork-Geisha

Speakers include Rene de Guzman, curator at the Oakland Museum; Tina Takemoto, performance artist and professor at CCA; Berkeley Art Museum Matrix Curator Elizabeth Thomas; and Petra Royale Bibeau, Founder/Curator of Maniac Gallery, an alternative space for contemporary artists.
Spontaneous audience participation via a non-commercial guerrilla broadcast of Neighborhood Public Radio.

UC Berkeley Art Alumni Symposium VI
"What's Happening?" Contemporary Art
Saturday, October 18th, 9:30 AM - 4 PM
160 Kroeber Hall, UC Berkeley
suggested donation: $20

The afternoon will wrap up with a private reception in Worth Ryder Gallery and the Karl Kasten retrospective exhibit.

Please join us!

Saturday, September 13, 2008

Karl Kasten Restropective at Worth Ryder Gallery

September 23 through October 24, 2008 the University of California's Department of Art Practice will present "Karl Kasten/UCB: the 70 year Journey" - a retrospective exhibition of the works of renowned artist and popular mentor, Professor Emeritus Karl Kasten. The show will cover Mr. Kasten's 70 year relationship with the university, and will also feature works created by colleagues and former students.

Kasten attended Cal in the mid- 1930’s and graduated in '38, and later returned to teach in 1950 at the request of Kastens' most influential mentor, Worth Ryder.
Another powerful influence in Mr. Kasten's early career was the influential Hans Hoffmann, who taught at UC from 1930 -31 and laid the groundwork for modernizing the newly formed department.

As part of the exhibition, the gallery will also feature a variety of artwork created by colleagues and fellow members of what has been referred to as "The Berkeley School". A select number of former students will also present their work.

Worth Ryder Gallery is located in Kroeber Hall opening hours Tuesday - Saturday 12 noon - 4 PM
Join the Alumni and the Department of Art Practice in celebrating the opening of this exhibit September 23rd, 4 - 7 PM.

Sunday, June 1, 2008

How to contact the Art Alumni Group...

join - donate - send us your news!

The Art Alumni Group is no longer asking for dues. All art alumni and artist alumni of U.C.Berkeley are invited to join us. How can you join?

Send email to send news, or update your address.

Support the Art Alumni Group and its activities by making a donation.
We happily accept tax-deductible donations of any amount.

You may make secure on-line donations via PayPal  where we even accept credit cards!




You may also send us good old-fashioned paper mail, checks, and announcements to this address:

Art Alumni Group
c/o Department of Art Practice
345 Kroeber Hall, UC Berkeley
Berkeley, CA 94270

make checks payable to "Art Alumni Group"

We want to hear from you!

Sunday, May 25, 2008

Congratulations to the Class of 2008

It was my pleasure once again to attend the 2008 Commencment in the sculpture garden of BAM and personally welcome to the real world, these artists, our newest alumni:

Gabriel Agee, Christopher Alarie, Gilberto Armendariz, Stephanie Barringer, Erika Bird, Ben Bracamonte, Jessica Bracamonte, Shannon Braziel, Christopher Breithaupt, Erik Bro, Sarah Brock, Emily Brundige, Rebecca Bush, Crystal Carlson, Faheema Chaudhury, Crystal Chen, Jayson Cheung, Kristie Chow, Yve Laris Cohen, Cecilia Contreras, Madelyn Covey, Ashley Davidson, Natasha DeAlmeida, Laura DeNardo, Daniel Edery, Nathan Finney, Gabriel Fischer, Emily Frost, Aaron Fung, Katherine Greenman, Carson Grubach, Wen Dong, Tony Guan, Olga Gutierrez, A Han, Amber Handal, Karen Henderson, Anna Hoffman, Clare Hutchinson, Mattie Kahren, Bryan Kato, Tricia Kim, Ping Kuang, Lynn Seohong Lee, Adrienne Levoy, Shang-Wuen Liu, Edwin Lo, Brendan Luce, Steven Lybeck, Katherine Madrigal, Makai Magie, Jason Maze, Robert McCluskey, Zoilita McKeon, Kelda McKinney, Sonia McNally, Lucia Mendoza, Tina Moreno, Oliver Mork, Sheau-Wha Mou-Keefe, Amber Morrison, Amber Mueller, Jenifer Nelson, Jean Linh Chi Nguyen, Khang Nguyen, Hilary Pollack, Allison Porterfield, Joanne Rademacher, Nick Reid, Carolina Reyes, Rebecca Richards, Gabrielle Roussos, Hayley Rucker, Jon Running, Lillian Sabersky, Christina Salazar, Asaki Sano, Kelly Seldan, Youna Shin, Matthew Siemonsma, Jenny Song, Keiko Stong, Jingqin Su, Hongyun Suriwong, Jessica Tatara, Maile Thompson, Michelle Tingen, John Torrens, Sharita Towne, Elizabeth Tran, Justine Travers, Minisha Trivedi, Katy Tsai, Wan-Ling Tsai, Enrique Unzueta, Kate VandenBerghe, Greg VanHoesen, Julia Wiener, Stacy Wilkinson, Nicole Wilson, Eric Wong, Michael Wooten, and a special repeat performance from Sierra Helvey.

MFA graduates: Adrianne Crane; Renee Davis- awarded a UAM Council Founders Prize and an Eisner Prize; Rosalyn Khor-Eisner Prize; Emily Prince - awarded a Headlands Graduate Fellowship Program (1yr. residency 2008-2009); Wenhua Shi- awarded a Javits Fellowship; Sunny Taylor awarded the Kelsey Travel Award and an Eisner Prize; Indira Morre left us with the Harry Ford Lord Award.


Shannon Jewel Braziel was the recipient of this year's Art Alumni Award for the Leadership in the Art Community. Shannon also garnered the Doris Nichols Sculpture Award.
The Theresa Hak Kyung CHA prize was awarded to Jingqin Su.



~Lynne Rutter, BA 1985

Monday, May 5, 2008

Farewell to Tony Shultz BA 1969

Tony Shultz was happily quoted as saying he showed up at Free Speech and left Berkeley at People’s Park. In the midst of all of that, Tony was a student in the Residence College, working in the theatre shop building sets and hanging lights and working in the Ceramics studio under Peter Voulkous and Ron Nagle. He set up kilns, fired his own stuff and created work independent of class time as well formal study. He had previously studied with Helen Slater in Los Angeles.
Leaving Berkeley in '69 with his degree in Theatre (cum laude) and a one-way ticket to London, he spent three years with the Moving Being Company as actor and technician, working with Charles Marowitz at the Round House Theatre. Returning to the states he worked as a technician for the studios and then headed to New York to star in the original production of Grease, and as a featured player in The Bakers Wife with Paul Sorvino and Platinum with Alexis Smith. In 1986, Tony decided to move into real estate in Los Angeles, marrying actress Susan Merson in 1987. Their daughter, Sofie, was born in 1991.
Tony was diagnosed with mesothelioma, an asbestos exposure disease, on January 2 of this year and died unexpectedly after surgery on March 15, 2008. There is a blog detailing the last few months of his life at www.thejourneyoftheprince.blogspot.com His family would very much appreciate hearing from anyone who knew or worked with him the ceramics studio. Susan can be reached via email at susan@susanmerson.com.

Thursday, February 21, 2008

Alumni News Winter 2008

Thanks to all who participated in our fall symposium, which was well-attended and a great success!
Time once again to catch up with our alumni..... News has been coming to us via postcards, email, and our special operatives which as everyone knows, are everywhere that matters.


Our newest alumni of the class of 2007 deserve some mention here:
MFA graduates Kara Hearn and Jennifer Wofford, received a 2006 Jack and Gertrude Murphy Fellowship of $2,500 each from the San Francisco Foundation.
Joe McKay, MFA 2007, was the 2006 Anker Fellow Award recipient.
Javier Aros, Brad Aldridge, Chau Nguyen, Issac Quigley and Cynthia Silva, undergraduate students were each awarded 2006 Sargent Merit Scholarships in Art, for $3,000 each. Issac Quigley was also the 2007 Art Alumni Award honoree, and we hope he spent all $200 of that in one place.
Kelly Seldan was awarded the 2006 Sussman Award in Painting of $6,000.
Lettie McGuire helped us establish this blog, as well as organizing the Art Group at Berkeley- with Aisling Maguire, they also facilitated the Cal Artist Empowerment Workshop- a DECAL class introducing art majors to the business of the art life.

Also last May, there was a reception to honor distinguished CED design alumni and a group of art alumni were invited to attend, at the lovely Maybeck Recital Hall in Berkeley.

Professor Katherine Sherwood had a show at The National Academy of Sciences in Washington, D.C. with a catalog designed by graduate Lisa Solomon. Lisa also participated in the Monster Drawing Rally at Southern Exposure in SF this year.

In the left bay, Tina Takemoto took San Francisco's Trannyshack by storm with one of her performances; who knows how many times popular demand with bring back the Bjork-Geisha!
check this out, we can embed videos here. heh.





In what could possibly be the most perfect match up of artist and pile of seemingly useless stuff ever conceived, Nemo Gould wrapped up a 4 month stint as artist in residence at the San Francisco Dump with a fabulous solo show called "Waste Deep."
Pat Rose has been invited the National Society of Arts and Letters, and her company for the artistically gifted is thriving- visit their website at www.artodyssey.org
Leslie Cheney-Parr (BA '69, MA '71) has been blessed with an award from National in New Mexico as well as twin grandchildren!
Phyllis Shafer had an exhibit of paintings from the Sonoran Desert at the Stremmel Gallery in Reno, NV last year. Jim Melchert's show "Eye Sites" featured a lot of new work, in October at the Paul Kotula Projects in Ferndale, MI. "To Be Someone" paintings by Mary Heilmann at the Contemporary Arts Museum of Houston showed though January 2008. Beatrice Caracciolo showed at the Charles Cowles Gallery, NY in October.


The opening of
Charles Linder
's show at Gallery 16 was well attended as well. Lynne Rutter and David Jones were both there, as were a lot of other people, and wine was consumed.
Stephanie Peek "Garden Camouflage" 20x20" oil on panel
Paintings by Stephanie Peek MFA ’96 were shown at Triangle Gallery SF last October as well as the Thoreau Gallery in San Francisco in November. She has been teaching painting at Dominican College in San Rafael, CA, and curated “The Camo Show” at Dominican which showed Nov-Dec 07. Her work can be seen at the Friesen Gallery in Seattle and Sun Valley.
After many years, Edythe Bresnahan will be retiring as Chair of the Art
Dept. at Dominican University at the end of this spring semester 2008.
Paintings by Kevin Bean MFA 95 were exhibited at Charles Campbell Gallery in San Francisco. Work by Aida Gamez showed at Barry Sakata Gallery in Sacramento, CA last summer.

Roy Tomlinson showed some of his photographs at Lost Canyon Winery in November. Yuriko Yamaguchi's show "Interdigitate" was displayed at the University of Maryland through December.
Frances Spencer MA '68 received Special Recognition for painting in national juried competition of Emerald Art Center, Springfield, OR. "The Visionary Art of Frances Spencer" was featured at the Albatross Pub Gallery, Berkeley, November 2007 through January 2008. Sharon Lloyd BFA '79 has been living in the Monterey Peninsula area working (architecture), writing, raising a family, and making art. Music, art , and intention... in Sebastopol, CA. find out more by subscribing to the Fish Rap newsletter from Sandy Eastoak.

Kara Maria recently had a solo show at Catherine Clark's new gallery in San Francisco, and has been selected as a 2008 Masterminds finalist by the SF Weekly.
Enrique Chagoya's work "Borderlandia" is now at the Berkeley Art Museum through May 18, as well as Gallery Paule Anglim through March 2008.
Sonya Rapoport MA '49 is showing graphic pieces from her work Shoe-Field in the exhibition Imaging by Numbers: A Historical View of the Computer Print being organized by The Block Museum of Art at Northwestern University, through April 6, 2008. She will be discussing the work at the symposium that coincides with the exhibition. An article about the interactive Shoe-Field is being published this year by Berg Publishing, a branch of Oxford Press, London.

 

Monday, October 15, 2007

Symposium V - October 27, 2007

The More Things Change- The More They Stay the Same
any truth in this?

Please join us for our fifth all-day symposium, in which we will examine contemporary art-making, including interactive media and social practice.

Saturday, October 27, 2007
9:30 am - 4:30 PM
160 Kroeber Hall, UC Berkeley

Schedule and description of the event:

9:30 AM - 12:30PM - The morning session will address how the teaching of art has changed as reflected by new curricula, mediums, and philosophies at both Cal and CCA. It will open with clips from the two interviews that the Regional Oral History Office has done with Sonya Rapoport and Fred Martin about the education of visual artists in the 1950s. We'll then hear from Tina Takemoto, Mark Thompson, and Guillermo Galindo who are teaching at CCA, and Katherine Sherwood who is Professor of Art Practice at Cal.

12:30 - 2:00 PM- Lunch! We'll have sandwiches and drinks available for $7.

2:00 - 3:30 PM - Deborah Oropallo, Enrique Chagoya, Don Aaron, Brody Reiman, and Richard Shaw will talk and show images about the terrains they crossed to get to what they're doing now.

3:30 - 4:30 PM - Reception in Worth Ryder Gallery 116 Kroeber Hall

$20 suggested donation - please help cover the costs of documenting this event
Admission is free to Art Alumni Group members and students of UC Berkeley
(Membership in AAG is $25 per year)

Here is a map and driving directions to Kroeber Hall.

Our thanks to Marion Gray who chaired this year's committee.

Saturday, September 15, 2007

Fall 2007 Alumni News


Our new presentation allows us to link to the websites of those mentioned. Click on any highlighted words to navigate to those sites.

If you have questions about our new format, please read this post.

What have our alumni been doing this last year? Read on...

Claudia Steele’s work was shown in a group exhibition at The Art Center in Claremont, CA in March. Inez Storer’s paintings and family photographs were shown at Donna Seager Gallery in San Rafael. Her work is also shown at Anne Reed Gallery, SunValley; Catharine Clark Gallery, SanFrancisco; Grover/Thurston Gallery, Seattle; Nathan Larramendy, Ojai; and Sue Greenwood Fine Art, Laguna Beach. Nancy Genn '52 attended a reception September 6, 2007 at the MoMA in New York, which honoured artists included in the permanent collection of the museum.
Rick Bennett’s BA'50 MA'53 watercolors were exhibited at the College of the Redwoods, Del Norte, CA last fall. Jo Sandman MA'54 is exhibiting her new work "Heat/Light" in a solo exhibition " at Gallery Kayafas, Boston, MA. Her portfolio entitled "Light Memory", recently published by Palm Press will be featured. The
exhibition runs from September 5 - 29. One of her photographs will also be included as part of the "13th Annual Juried Exhibition" at the Griffin Museum of Photography,
Winchester, MA from September 23 - October 28,2007. Edythe Bresnahan BA’61 exhibited new paintings in a group exhibiton at Triangle Gallery this summer in SF; she continues as Chair of the Art Department at Dominican College in San Raphael, CA. Gilah Yelin Hirsch BA '67 has been a Professor or Art at California State University, Dominguez Hills since 1973, and has been Visiting Artist in many universities, institutes, countries, have had many residencies at prestigious artist colonies. Her work is collected in major museums, corporate and private collections.
The Orange Country Museum of Art has just published “Mary Heilman: To Be Someone” a catalog with essays by Elizabeth Armstrong, Johanna Burton, and Dave Hickey presenting a comprehensive overview of the career of Mary Heilman MA’67. Accompanying the first traveling retrospective exhibition of Heilman’s work, it details her impact on successive generations of artists and her substantial role in the revitalization of abstraction by a new generation of painters. The art of Diane Chambers, BA'69 has evolved from costume design to writing; she currently lives in San Francisco and is the author of a number of thrillers! Frances Spencer, MA ’68 Design, received 3 awards in the Roswell Art League's National juried competition held August '06 at the Roswell Museum and Art Center. This included an Award of Excellence for a block print, and two Sponsor awards for a print and an oil painting. In July and August two of her block prints were juried into a Los Angeles Printmaking Society members exhibition held at the Tang Gallery in Bisbee, Arizona.

A retrospective of the paintings of Ray Burggraf MA ’70 was shown at Museum of Fine Arts at Florida State University spring 2007. Susan Cooper's BA'69 MA'70 most recent public art commission is a three-part multi-media art installation at the LaVilla Museum and the Ritz Theater in Jacksonville, Florida. Gyöngy Laky ’71 MA, 70 BA had a solo show at Braunstein/Quay Gallery, San Francisco, CA this spring. Rosalie O'Donnell BA ’71 is the Director of The Art League Gallery in the Torpedo Factory Art Center in Alexandria, Virginia; a membership gallery with over 900 members who submit work into monthly juried shows. She recently exhibited my monoprints and etchings in a group show at the Mattawoman Art Center in Maryland. Zea Moritz MA ’72 exhibited a series of worked books at the Sonoma Valley Museum of Art. A founding member of Gallery Route One in Pt. Reyes Station, she lives in Inverness with her husband Tim Graveson; they will be residents at the Armagh Cultural Center in Northern Ireland in August ’08. Also in the group show at the SVMA was work by Pearl Jones Tranter MA ’72 ; she makes digital prints and photography. Sandy Eastoak opened the Sebastopol Gallery in April 2007 Rudy Serra MA'75 reports two recent shows, one at the Charles Cowles Gallery in NYC in June, the other at Art Sites on Long Island. “Web/Seeds and Bones,” a solo sculptural installation by Yuriko Yamaguchi BA’75 was exhibited at Koplin Del Rio Gallery in LA last spring. Her work has been shown at the Fowler Museum in UCLA and the LA County Museum, the American Academy of Arts and Letters in NY, Hirshhorn and Smithsonian in DC. She was the recipient of the American Academy of Arts and Letters award in 2006 and the Joan Mitchell Foundation award in 2005. Eve Ascheim had a drawing show at Lori Bookstein Fine Art in NYC in February and was artist-in-residence at the Vermont Studio Center for the month of June. The 2006 Day of the Dead exhibition “The Columbarium” at the Oakland Museum of California showed work by Diane Dame Shepp BA '77. Caitlin Mitchell-Dayton BA'79 had a solo show at Gallery Paule Anglim in SF during June. Shirin Neshat BA'79 has recently been awarded the $300,000 Lillian Gish Prize.

Pauletta Chanco BA'82 MFA'84 has a solo show at the Joyce Gordon Gallery in Oakland through September 30, 2007. Robert Poplack MFA ’85 is the curator of the Wiegand Gallery at Notre Dame de Namur. Between traveling the globe and painting murals for celebrity clients (wink wink) Lynne Rutter BA'85 designed a room for this year’s invitation-only 30th anniversary San Francisco Decorator Showcase House. New paintings by Rick Arnitz MFA ’83 were shown at Stephen Wirtz Gallery, opening to rave reviews. New prints accompanied by a book by Deborah Oropallo, MFA ’83 and AAG board member, were shown at the De Young Museum in Golden Gate Park in San Francisco. A retrospective of the paintings of Frances McCormack MFA’83 ,who teaches at the San Francisco Art Institute, was held this summer at the Palo Alto Art Center in Palo Alto, CA. Work by Dean Smith, ’84, MFA’88, was included in “GRAPHIC:New Bay Area Drawing" at the diRosa Preserve, Napa, CA this spring. Casey Chalem Anderson continues to paint and teach in Sag Harbor, and was recently featured on the cover of Dan's Papers. Paintings by John Zurier MFA’84 at Blum & Poe, New York and in a group show “The Good, the Bad and the Ugly” at New Langton Arts, San Francisco, CA early spring. The Des Moines Art Center is sponsoring a national and international traveling retrospective show of work by Enrique Chagoya ’87 MFA, 84’MA, through 2008. His work was exhibited at Gallery Paule Anglim, San Francisco, CA this year. Also his work was seen at “Drawings: Visions, Surfaces, and Beyond” at the Triton Museum of Art in Santa Clara, CA last spring, and in the summer in La Presencia: Latin American Art at the United States Museum of Latin American Art in Long Beach, CA. MFA ’89 Jack Hanley’s Gallery continues to be the heart of the Mission District on Valencia Street in SF. Jennifer Faist BA ’89 showed in “Chromaluxe,” abstract paintings and sculptures packed with the power of pigment, last October ’06 at California State University, Los Angeles, Fine Arts Gallery.

Lorene Anderson MFA'90 is currently one of three showing at the Artists Gallery of SFMOMA at Fort Mason. Recent sculpture by Shirley Tse MFA ’91 was exhibited at Shoshanna Wayne Gallery in Santa Monica this summer. Cynthia Ona Innis BA'91 is currently in a two-person show at the Oakland Museum's Gallery 555, through November 9, 2007. Gale Jesi, BA ’90 has taught photography and sculpture in the Bay Area since 1994. Most recently, she was one of seven artists chosen to commemorate the 90th Anniversary of the Legal Aid Society of San Francisco. Kerel Nel MFA'91 had a major solo show titled /Lost Light/ in Johannesburg in April and May 2007. The catalog is a work of art in itself. Jeff King MFA ’92 has opened the Y2Y Gallery as part of his office space on Balboa St in San Francisco. This summer a show including work by David Jones MA '71 MFA'73. Work by Elise Brewster, MFA sculpture ’91, was shown in FOG BAY TREE in November of ’06 at Thoreau Center for Sustainability in the Presidio of San Francisco. A multi-media exhibition exploring identity through wearable art and costumery featured collaborative work by Tina Takemoto BA'90 PhD, and Jennifer Parker at the Femina Potens Gallery in San Francisco. Tina repeated her performance at Trannyshack in May ’07, and now you can see her performance on YouTube. Drawings and paintings by Mark Grotjahn MFA ’95 were exhibited at the Hammer Museum in LA and in “Mark Grotjahn: El gran burrito,” at Boom, Chicago, and shows at Blum & Poe, Los Angeles; Anton Kern Gallery, New York; and Stephen Friedman Gallery, London. His work has been included in exhibitions at the Museum of Contemporary Art, LA, and the London Institute Gallery, in the “Fifty-fourth Carnegie International” at the Carnegie Museum of Art, Pittsburgh, AND he has a Wikipedia page. San Francisco painter Kevin Bean MFA ’95 has been made permanent faculty member at Stanford in Palo Alto. Paintings by Stephanie Peek MFA ’96 were shown at Triangle Gallery SF last October and are on view at the Thoreau Gallery in San Francisco through November 16, 2007; and her work can also be seen at the Friesen Gallery in Seattle and Sun Valley. Stephanie will be teaching painting at Dominican College in San Rafael, CA 2008. MFA ’97 Stephanie Sanchez’s paintings were included in “A Strong Vision,” a group exhibition at the Weigand Gallery at Notre Dame de Namur University, Belmont, CA; she is a permanent faculty member at Santa Rosa College. Paintings by Robin McDonnell MFA’96 were shown at Brian Gross SF and her work was shown with that of Aida Gamez MFA’96 and Kara Maria MFA’97 in a group show curated by Hung Liu at Barry Sakata Gallery in Sacramento. Aida Gamez MFA ’96 bought a studio building in Berkeley (One of co-owners is former UCB faculty member Kim Anno). Her work was exhibited at Barry Sakata Gallery and will be there again in February 2008. Also she has been invited to create an installation for the Day of the Dead show at the Oakland Museum this year. MFA’96 Carla Paganelli’s artist’s book with prints was exhibited in a group show “Our Planet Our Home” at SFMOMA Artists’ Gallery last December. Charles Linder MFA ’97 is the director of Lincart Gallery in SF. His own work was shown at Gallery 16 in SF earlier this year. David Molesky BA ’99 had a residency with Odd Nerdrum in Iceland in'06-07 and exhibited in the Spring Exhibition Gallery, KS Tønsberg, Norway; an exhibition of his paintings opened Sept.23,2007 at Terrence Rogers Fine Art, Santa Monica CA.

Nemo Gould MFA '02 has been creating art from your refuse, as artist in residence at the San Francisco Dump this summer. Amanda Hughen MFA ’03 had a solo show at the Marcia Wood Gallery in Atlanta in February 2007. Molly Springfield, MFA'04 had a solo show at Transformer in Washington, D.C last fall, and is showing Oct. 21-Dec. 22, 2007 at the Bedford Gallery, Dean Lesher Center for the Arts, Walnut Creek, California as well as a solo show in New York City at Mireille Mosler Ltd., November 30, 2007 - Februrary 2, 2008.
___________________________________________________________

MFA 2007 Graduates

Kara Hearn, video; Jenifer K. Wofford, drawings; Lindsay Benedict, photographs; Bill Jenkins, installation; Joe McKay, photographs; Ali Dadgar, installation; Alicia McCarthy, drawings and paintings.

Fall Faculty News

“A Strong Vision: Three Decades of Exhibitions” included ceramics by James Melchert at Wiegand Gallery at Notre Dame de Namur University, Belmont, CA last spring ’07.
Prints by Katherine Sherwood were exhibited at Electric Works in San Francisco in May and her paintings were on exhibit at The Townsend Center on the UCB campus.

Richard Shaw
’s sculpture was on exhibit at Braunstein Quay Gallery in SF this past summer.
New work by Randy Hussong MFA ’80 was shown at Gallery Paule Anglim in SF.
Drawings and sculpture by Jane Rosen were shown at Gwenda Jay/Addington Gallery, Chicago and Sears-Payton Gallery, New York; her work can be seen at the Friesen Gallery in Seattle and Sun Valley.

The Department of Art Practice has a new website! check it out!

Friday, August 31, 2007

ArtLetter on-line!!

Starting this year the ArtLetter has been moved to this blog. In this way we can keep making continuous announcements of alumni news and interesting art happenings and help keep in touch all year round.

We have been collecting the alumni news to publish, and will do so in this space in September 2007.
After that, we will make periodic, regular updates here, so do keep sending us your news, announcements, etc.

Why are we not printing the ArtLetter anymore?
In the past we have had financial assistance from CAA to help pay for postage, and the generous donation of printing to help offset the cost of publication. As of this year our printer is no longer available, and due to funding cuts CAA has withdrawn postage support to clubs. In the last two years, over 80% of all of our funds were spent on the ArtLetter. We do not collect enough in dues or donations to continue to pay for this increasingly expensive publication.
Publishing on the internet is affordable, fast, and reaches a wider audience, especially among our younger alumni who are so difficult to reach by mail.


Benefits of web publishing for Art Alumni Members.
The calartalumni.org website receives a fair amount of traffic already, and has a very high pagerank with search engines. This is due in part to the concentrated number of artists names appearing on the site in connection with each other. For those of you trying to get some name recognition or visibility, being mentioned on this site is of enormous value. This is just one of the ways we can use the strength of our community to help get positive attention for the department, and each other.

Thanks... to Lettie McGuire '07 of the student-run Art Group at Berkeley for her help in enabling this blog, Lisa Krieshok for graphic assistance, and to Stephanie Peek, who edited the news this year.

--- Lynne Rutter 9.07


Sunday, June 3, 2007

ArtLetter- Back Issues

Previous issues of our acclaimed ArtLetter are available for free download in PDF form.
Please not they are oversized and require 11" x 17" paper in order to print legibly.

ArtLetter 2003
ArtLetter 2004
ArtLetter 2005
ArtLetter 2006


Thanks once again to the editors and volunteers who worked to create this marvelous publication.

Friday, November 3, 2006

Symosium IV: Art-making in Times of Change

ART MAKING IN TIMES OF CHANGE
the late 1960s and early 1970s



October 14, 2006




This distinctive period was framed in the tumult of the Civil Rights Movement, the Vietnam War, and a broad counter-cultural revolution felt strongly in the Bay Area. Many students at Berkeley sought ways of making art that would resonate with the times and forces of change. They broke the mold of traditional materials and categories of expression. In the 4th Symposium, alumni will discuss how this period affected their sense of purpose and how discoveries they made during their years at Cal led to the work they are doing today.


Mary Heilmann, now living in New York, was among the many speakers. Historian and art writer Terri Cohn commented on Cal alumni Paul Cotton, Jim Pomeroy, and Sam’s Café. Polly Frizzell (aka Marty Carstens) joined in conversation with colleagues about the social and esthetic phenomenon of the Colby Street House and the circle of alumnus Michael Haimowitz.

timeline graphic by Lisa Krieshok ---click on image to view larger.

Sunday, May 28, 2006

Conversations About Art - at the Berkeley Art Museum

Jim Melchert and Fred Martin, both alumni artists and educators who went on to become major figures in the Bay Area art world and beyond, talked together about pieces in the BAM exhibition "Measure of Time."

Tuesday, March 28, 2006

Jesse Reichek Exhibit in Marin



On Saturday March 11, 2006 some alumni attended the opening of the latest installment of the Jesse Reichek retrospective at the Marin French Cheese Co. in Petaluma CA. In addition to being a prolific painter, Jesse Reichek was one of the most popular professors of design in Berkeley's College of Environmental Design, and influenced a generation of artists and designers. The exhibit ran in stages through the end of 2006.
Check the website for more information.www.reichekretrospective.org/

Tuesday, November 8, 2005

Symposium III: Painting in the 1980s

October 29, 2005 Painting in the 1980's
Discussion and presentations by alumni of the early 80's, featuring Jack Hanley MA'82; Randy Hussong BA'78, MA'79; Luz Ruiz BA'83, MA'85;
Enrique Chagoya MA'86, MFA'87; Deborah Oropallo MA'82, MFA'83.
part of our day included a heartfelt alumni tribute to the teaching of Robert Hartman.

Wednesday, September 28, 2005

Group Show and Sale to Benefit Worth Ryder Gallery

September 14 - 29, 2005 - Worth Ryder Gallery - This year's show featured the artwork of 64 alumni artists from the class of 1938 through class of 2005 and raised a significant amount of money for improvements to the gallery. The show closed with a champagne party.

Tuesday, June 28, 2005

Conversations About Art - at the Berkeley Art Museum


December 3, 2005 Tina Takemoto BA'90, PhD, discussed video work of Theresa Hak Kyung Cha in the BAM collection.

Friday, May 20, 2005

“One True Art World”

Berkeley Commencement 2005
“One True Art World”
by Lawrence Rinder

I recently conducted a search for the Chair of CCA’s grad fine art program. In the course of the interviews one of the leading candidates stated that he believed that there is ‘one true art world,’ embodied by the leading international galleries, the major art
magazines, and, above all, the international biennial circuit. The
lingua franca of this art world, in his opinion, is conceptualism in
all its various manifestations. In his view, an art school that does
not prepare students to compete in this world is doomed to
irrelevance.


There is something appealing about this perspective. For one
thing, it has the virtue of clarity. These days—thanks to President
Bush’s no-child-left-behind initiative--educational institutions are
being held ever more accountable for their goals, objectives, and
above all, metrics. This mandate is spilling over from federally
funded institutions into privately funded institutions like CCA. I
was, for example, recently asked to fill out a form titled
“Educational Effectiveness Indicators,” as part of our accreditation
process. The big question is how do we know that our students are
learning what they are supposed to be learning? First, though, one
has to know what they are supposed to be learning. Which is where
the ‘one true art world’ comes in handy. To compete in the ‘one
true art world’ one needs to know about a relatively fixed set of
methods, artists, institutions, writers, and curators. The knowledge
and skills a student obtains in art school can become tools to enter
into and succeed in this world.


Imagine how simple it would be if we really could identify
some set of galleries, alternative spaces, museums, biennials, and
art magazines which could then be calibrated according to the
degree of ‘success’ participation in each conferred. We might
identify, for example, 100 galleries that legitimately signal an
artist’s entry into ‘emerging artist’ status—‘emerging,’ that is, into
the ‘one true art world.’ Another much smaller set of, say, 25
galleries could be used to identify artists who had attained ‘one
true art world’ citizenship. Each art magazine, meanwhile, would
carry a numerical weight: being mentioned in Artforum would
carry the highest reward, followed by Frieze, Art in America, and
so on, down to Coagula, for which points would be deducted. To
make the system even richer and more statistically meaningful,
imagine that every curator, too, came with a certain numerical
rating. To be curated by Hans Ulrich Obrist might get you a score
of 100; to be put in a show by me, for example, perhaps only 50.
Using this matrix, one could, hypothetically, arrive at a quasi-
mathematical means of calculating an artist’s success at various
stages of their career after graduation. By pooling such information
from a cohort of graduates one could accurately gauge the
effectiveness of an art school’s educational program.
Besides providing a clearly measurable standard of success,
the ‘one true art world’ has other things going for it. Fame and
fortune, for example. Contemporary art has become a hot
commodity. My father regularly sends me articles from Barron’s
and other financial journals extolling the rise of art as a sound
investment vehicle. Having attended several leading art fairs over
the past year, I can honestly say that what I witnessed was a
‘feeding frenzy.’ The prices of even entry-level artists were double
or triple what they might have been a year or two ago. Although
speculation on contemporary art has extended beyond the handful
of well-known names—Matthew Barney, Jeff Koons, Cindy
Sherman, and so on—it must be said that the boost in prices is
circumscribed within a tightly ordered institutional frame. What
matters most is which gallery you show with and your gallery’s
ability to be selected—and it is a highly competitive selection
process—into one of the handful of leading international art fairs
such as New York’s Armory art fair (which is, confusingly, not
held at the Armory), or the Basel Art Fair (the one, even more
confusingly, held in Miami). The parents in the audience will be
pleased to know that artists who successfully enter into this world
have a very good chance of being able to pay off their student
loans.


Participating in the ‘one true art world’ also has the virtue of
drawing one into a global conversation. Because, as my fine arts
chair candidate observed, the ‘one true art world’ shares a common
language, those who participate are naturally invited into a
dialogue with others who share that language. Indeed, the mode of
conceptualism—characterized today by an interplay of text
(English only please) and image and an emphasis on content over
form--has reached even the most remote territories of the world. A
few years ago I traveled to 25 countries on four continents, doing
research for an exhibition at the Whitney Museum. I found that
artists in places as remote as Cuba, Vietnam, Colombia, and the
Philippines were doing work that would be as easily accessible to
an American art audience as to audiences of artists in their own
countries. Working with conceptual methods per se is not what
makes this art world so unified as much as simply the fact of a
shared vocabulary of forms, methods, and references. To avoid
working with these means is to effectively shut oneself off from an
extremely engaging global dialogue.


The apotheosis of the ‘one true art world’ is the international
biennial exhibition. Such exhibitions, which have proliferated
extraordinarily over the past decade, are global round-ups of work
identified by a coterie of peripatetic curators who scour the globe
for the most engaging new art. Seeing works of art in various
global contexts has the benefit of exposing images and ideas to
broad audiences as well as testing the relevance of works of art in
various cultural contexts. Furthermore, we have clearly entered an
age where everyone on the globe is engaged in common concerns,
from climate change, to terrorism, to mass migration, to the spread
of infectious disease. International biennials have become, in part,
forums for engaging in debate on such timely themes. In some
cases, as with the recent Documenta, such discussions nearly
eclipse the presentation of the artworks themselves. As has been
frequently observed, one shortcoming of the current international
exhibition system is that, for reasons of efficiency—the world is a
very big place--curators’ searches for art works often takes place in
biennials themselves, leading to a rather incestuous condition in
which a limited set of artists and even artworks cycle again and
again through this international exhibition circuit. Yet, it is clear
that the compounding effect of such multiple exposure has a
salutary impact of the careers of those who are welcomed into the
‘one true art world.’


Why, then, did I not hire this particular candidate? What art
school would not want to prepare its students to compete in such a
cosmopolitan, remunerative, and intellectually stimulating mileau?
To begin with, the ‘one true art world’ is a lie. There is no
more ‘one true art world’ than there is ‘one true music world’ or
‘one true writing world.’ Certainly there are many whose financial
and professional interests compel them to profess such a thing, yet,
thankfully, despite appearances, the scope of global creativity has
not yet narrowed to such a radical point. While I think there are
dangers in making analogies between politics and artistic practice,
I can’t help but note the similarities between the ‘one true art
world’ doctrine and that of America’s triumphalist neo-
conservatives.

In the aftermath of the Cold War, when it seemed that the
world was on the verge of at last obtaining a peaceful, multilateral
status, American neo-cons laid the foundation for what has become
the age of American Empire. At the heart of neo-conservative
ideology is the notion that America’s ‘way of life’ is the best in the
world and that no one in their right mind would not want to live the
way we do. At least in principle, this doctrine asks us to imagine a
world that enjoys all the freedoms and economic opportunities that
we enjoy right here at home. However, evidence suggests that this
appeal to global equality cynically masks a more rapacious agenda.
In fact, neo-conservative doctrine is based on the unassailable
superiority of America’s military (including the once repugnant,
now-official policy of pre-emptive military strikes), neo-liberal
economic theory (the selective application of which has greatly
benefited American businesses while ruining the economies of
poorer countries around the world), and the international export of
American-style democracy (a praiseworthy ideal that seems to be
executed only whenever it is immediately beneficial to American
business or strategic interests.) The Bush administration’s support
for Uzbekistan’s brutal regime alone indicates the hypocritical
selectivity of our country’s ‘democratizing’ agenda. At heart, the
neo-con game is to dress the wolf of American hegemony in the
sheep’s clothing of equality, democracy, and free-trade for all.
The neo-con American triumphalism that emerged in the
aftermath of the Cold War as an alternative to multilateralism,
finds an aesthetic echo in the ‘one true art world.’ Both phenomena
are marked by a profound narrowing of options at precisely the
moment when a radical openness seemed newly possible. In the
case of the neo-con agenda, the need for an American Empire
crowded out diverse opportunities offered by the end of the Cold
War. The ‘one true art world’ on the other hand has crowded out
the array of diverse possibilities that emerged at the fall of
Modernism. These possibilities are not just aesthetic—the diversity
of practices suggested by the once-fashionable term
Pluralism—but also institutional. The questioning of the single
aesthetic standard and historical trajectory that defined Modernism
brought about the creation of hundreds of so-called alternative
spaces, dedicated precisely to cultivating alternative visions of the
arts. The term post-Modern meanwhile came--initially in the field
of architecture--to stand for this new sense of openness and
possibility. With the emergence of new opportunities for
historically excluded populations such as women and artists of
color as well as an increasing interest in the arts of contemporary
non-Western cultures, it seemed to some as if we were on the
verge of a new age, vastly more dynamic and inspiring than what
had come before.


Yet where do we find ourselves today? Do we live in a world
where, liberated from the restrictions of ideological boundaries and
inspired by cultural difference artists are celebrated for the sheer
creativity and diversity of their work? Sadly, not. It seems we
have, instead, traded one set of restrictions for another. In today’s
‘one true art world,’ you are not welcome unless you speak the
common conceptual tongue, a tongue that is not as universal as its
champions would have. Indeed, while international biennials now
take place in Pusan, Dakar, Sharjah, and Shanghai, the works of art
one finds in them depend on a set of styles, methods, and themes
that are largely the product of Western, especially American
cultural institutions (i.e. schools, galleries, magazines, etc.). What
is this if not another form of neo-conservativism in which the wolf
of American hegemony and economic advantage is guised in the
sheep’s clothing of free-trade and cosmopolitanism? Just because
McDonald’s is everywhere doesn’t mean its good for you.
Is this really the art world we want to inhabit? Are the
measures of accomplishment in this ‘one true art world’ truly the
‘educational effectiveness indicators’ we should aspire to fulfill? In
my role as an art school administrator I will be dwelling on these
question for some time to come and, I trust, imagining alternatives.
As artists who are about to begin your professional careers, you too
may choose to resist the narcotic allure of the ‘one true art world.’
Unlike curators, dealers, collectors, and critics, you have the power
to create, and in your creativity lies the possibility for imagining
not one but countless diverse and dynamic art worlds.
I encourage you to confound expectations, make your own
rules, make your own institutions, and thrive in the margins. Show
the ‘one true art world’ a thing or two. And have a wonderful time
doing it.


posted with Mr. Rinder's permission

Sunday, April 17, 2005

Conversations About Art - at the Berkeley Art Museum

April 17, 2005 - Professors Emeriti George Miyasaki and Karl Kasten
BA '38, MA '39 discussed the making of the remarkable lithograph by Willem De Kooning printed in 1960 on the legendary giant press.