Berkeley Art Scene

Preview of Woodcut Print Artist’s Entry

Café, woodcut, 2015, 21" x 23 1/2”  - Linda Lee Boyd

Café, woodcut, 2015, 21″ x 23 1/2” – Linda Lee Boyd

Café, Linda Lee Boyd’s, 2015 entry in the Annual Emeryville Art Exhibit (Oct. 3-25), was inspired by her trips to Paris with her late husband. In 2010 she captured these people in a café near Sacre Coeur, showing the cosmopolitan diversity of the wonderful city of Paris.

Linda is a longtime supporter and board member of the Celebration of the Arts – since 1992 – as an entrant in the exhibit and as a volunteer. According to Linda, “The Annual Emeryville Art Exhibit is a real celebration of the arts of the residents and workers in Emeryville. For me, it’s a chance to exhibit as well as a way to work with the community.” Linda’s woodcuts are in the collection of the Achenbach Foundation for Graphic Arts at the Palace of the Legion of Honor in San Francisco, the Janet Turner Print Museum in Chico and in the Fetterly Gallery collection at the Vallejo Community Arts Foundation. View more of her work.

“Linda Lee Boyd’s woodcut prints are a continuation of the figurative tradition. The most salient quality of Boyd’s woodcuts, aside from their technical finesse, is their personalness. What we are seeing is the quiet yet studied and thoughtful work of an artist who lives in an ordinary, day-to-day world inhabited by ordinary day-to-day people. Subjects are chosen and then rendered from a time consuming and labor-intensive process of woodblock printing to become anything but ordinary. Boyd’s technical abilities as an artist are readily apparent; her work has been described as ‘sonnets in wood.’ It is perhaps her ability to take her friends and co-workers and create poetry from them that is her highest achievement. “ Daniel Robesky, Curator & Director, Fetterly Gallery, Vallejo, CA

How do you create a woodcut print?

The twitter version: draw on a board, cut away the white areas, ink up the raised areas, put down a sheet of paper and run it through a press. Each color is a separate board. Learn more.

By |2015-08-31T09:24:11-07:00August 31st, 2015|0 Comments

Poetry and Modern Dance Ignite the 28th Annual Emeryville Art Exhibition

Celebrating visual arts, dance and poetry in Emeryville’s Heritage Square

On exibit, Susan Avila's "Garden of Delights", digitally printed silk backed with industrial felt and recycled muslin, free-motion machine stitching, 70"x78"x3.5", 2012

On exhibit, Susan Avila’s 2012 Garden of Delights, digitally printed silk backed with industrial felt and recycled muslin, free-motion machine stitching,    70″ x 78″ x 3.5″

Opening Night Fri., Oct. 10, 6-9pm, is already the buzz around town because local artist Tony DeMartile will create digitally evocative iPhone portraits of reception attendees* and an astounding 117 artists and craftspeople, who live or work in Emeryville, will transform the exhibition space into a fountain of creativity with their visions and talent. On Opening Night visitors can meet the artists and talk about their artwork (all pieces are for sale), as they nibble on tasty treats provided by local restaurants. A no-host bar will feature wine and beer and donate proceeds to the Emeryville Youth Art Program. Food and beverage donors include Doyle Street Café, Watergate Market, Townhouse Bar & Grill, The Broken Rack and Ruby*s Cafe.

Dance and poetry will amplify the visual arts element of the 28th Annual Emeryville Art Exhibition. Artwork includes woodwork, paintings, sculpture, photographs, ceramics, furniture and textiles, reflecting the artists’ engagement with a host of aesthetic, political and social concerns. One of these is UC Davis art professor (studio in Emeryville) Susan Avila’s textile piece. According to Susan, “I think it’s great to have a locally supported art exhibition. It affirms how important art and artists are to a community. I wanted to enter the piece Garden of Delights because while it was previously exhibited in China and in Canada, this is the first time it will be shown in the USA.”

The 2014 Annual Emeryville Art Exhibition proudly hosts the largest collection of artwork in its 28-year history. “This year’s collection is larger and more diverse than ever before.” Kathleen Hanna, independent curator and exhibition designer.

“We were overwhelmed this year with all the art entries submitted,” said Sharon Wilchar, Art Exhibition Coordinator.  “We have 40% more visual art pieces in the show and realize there is also a great wealth of artists in our community that reach beyond visual arts. Amazing writers, dancers, performers, and musicians enhance our arts culture in Emeryville. This year, in addition to the strong visual artwork, we are proud to include both a spoken word component and a dance performance choreographed specifically for our exhibition.”

Readings from Poet Laureates of the Bay Area will ignite the exhibit and highlight  Emeryville’s Poet Laureate Sarah Kobrinsky – A snippet: from her poem Emeryville, CA –

“Once the Rottenest City,
the City by the Bay.
Not that City over there,
but this one, …” read more

Visitors will also witness the dynamic site-specific dance performances by Emeryville dance troupe Nancy Karp + Dancers. From Nancy’s website: “I take life’s ordinary movements, strip them down to their essential components, and then combine them, recombine them, and elaborate on them. What emerges from these structural investigations, are vocabularies of movement.”

For the schedule of readings and performances visit www.emeryarts.org.

The Exhibition is open daily from 11am to 6pm Oct. 11 Nov. 2, 2014 and admission is free. Each year the exhibition location is generously donated by an Emeryville business. This year the space at 6121 Hollis St. in Heritage Square is donated by Wareham Development.         More details

* Opening Night is free and iPhone portraits are a $25 donation to benefit the non-profit Emeryville Celebration of the Arts.

More about the Art Exhibition

Linda Goodman, "Muse (Back)", color monotype, water based, 31"x25.5", 2010

Linda Goodman, “Muse (Back)”, color monotype, water based, 31″x25.5″, 2010

Contributing artists include Po Shun Leong and Dean Santner, wood; John W. Lund and Kirk Crippens, photography; Jeff Margolin and Rae Dunn, ceramics; Susan T. Avila and Ana Lisa Hedstrom, textiles; M. Louise Stanley, Ann Holsberry and Linda Goodman, painting; Jerome Ranft  and Jeffrey Hantman, sculpture; Kazuko Watanabe, prints; and LauraLe Wunsch, furniture design. Works on exhibit are for sale.

The collection of artwork for the annual exhibition was selected by a jury of art professionals through artist studio visits. For the fourth year, independent curator and exhibition designer Kathleen Hanna is serving as curator and juror. The other 2014 jurors are Donna Seager, partner Seager Gray Gallery, Mill Valley; and Anthony Torres, Exhibitions Director and Curator of Art, Richmond Art Center.

For the ninth consecutive year, the Emeryville City Council has approved a Purchase Award Program in connection with the Annual Emeryville Art Exhibition. The selected artwork will become part of the City’s permanent collection displayed at City Hall.

“Our Public Arts Advisory Committee purchases a piece of art each year. I like putting the sticker on the pieces. We have a selection panel that chooses one piece to go up in City Hall. Right before the doors open on opening night, we place award ribbons on the 1stplace winner and the honorary mentions.” Sharon Wilchar, Art Exhibition Coordinator

Sponsors for the 28th Annual Emeryville Art Exhibition include the City of Emeryville through a substantial grant; Pixar Animation Studios; Kava Massih Architects; Libitzky Holdings LP, Orton Development, Eric S. Schmier and Kenneth J. Schmier; and Ruby*s Cafe.

 

 

 

 

 

By |2014-10-22T17:39:44-07:00September 19th, 2014|0 Comments

Poetry In Motion

Sarah Kobrinsky, 2013-2015 Emeryville Poet Laureate, courtesy of emeryville.org

Sarah Kobrinsky, 2013-2015 Emeryville Poet Laureate, courtesy of emeryville.org

Ever imagined reading poems on the Emery Go Round? Now you can. Poetry in Motion launches in October with Poems from San Francisco Bay Area poets available on the Emery-Go-Round. Poetry in Motion, a Poet Laureate art initiative, is a partnership between the The City of Emeryville and the Emeryville Transit Management Authority (ETMA). Each month a new poem  will be printed and distributed on the buses for riders to read and take away. Poems submitted by Bay Area poets will surprise, delight and inspire readers. Janell Moon, an Emeryville-based poet will be the first poet honored on the Emery-Go-Round, as she was selected as the City’s first Poet Laureate for 2010-2012.

Sarah Kobrinsky was named the 2013-2015 Emeryville Poet Laureate for Oct. 15, 2013 until Nov. 2015. Poetry in Motion is one of Kobrinsky’s robust programs planned for her tenure. Others include:

  • Poetry Idol – a workshop for high school students with performances before supportive “judges” including teachers, poets. and local celebrities
  • Poetry & Play –  creative movement and poetry for elementary students
  • Poetry the Practice – writing workshops for adults at the library or senior center potentially culminating in book or public reading

 

By |2014-10-05T17:30:33-07:00September 18th, 2014|0 Comments

Luna Rossa Challenge Launches Second Foiling AC45 – Swordfish

big__MG_9288Both the Luna Rossa Piranha and Swordfish  are foiling about in Cagliari, after being modified with on-board systems that allow the AC45 catamarans to fully foil like the AC72s in the 2013 America’s Cup races. (take a look)

The new design protocol for the 35th America’s Cup allows for modifications of the AC45s of any sort, except for the shape of the hulls. Apparently these new catamarans will outperform the old ones and can simulate the sailing conditions of the new AC62s which will be used in the 2017 races. Practicing on the new AC45s will enrich the crews’ training program and better prepare them for maneuvers, boat handling and foiling techniques that will relate to the new AC62s. They are out at sea now testing all the boats’ components and systems in their full foiling modes.

“This is an important day for the team,” according to Max Sirena, skipper of Luna Rossa, “sailing with two boats offers a significant advantage not only for performance comparison but from all points of view. We participated in the last America’s Cup to set the basis for our 35th America’s Cup and now we can count on a solid team and a close collaboration between designers, sailing team and shore team. There is a constant exchange of information between these areas to address the design and optimize its applications.”

Watch Pirahna and Swordfish foiling in Cagliari.

Photo courtesy of lunarossachallenge.com

 

 

 

 

 

http://www.lunarossachallenge.com

By |2014-10-05T23:22:30-07:00September 16th, 2014|0 Comments

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