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Visual artists

Your Guide to This Summer’s Not-To-Miss Visual Art


As an added treat, Christopher Robin Duncan (an artist whose work regularly lists the medium of “time”) opens The Space Between Years at pt.2 at the same time — two cosmic, mind-expanding shows for the price of one gallery visit.

Person with animal puppet on shoulder looks at computer in messy room
Still from ‘Dirt Castle’ by Jibz Cameron a.k.a. Dynasty Handbag. (Courtesy the artist and Shapeshifters Cinema)

June 14, 2024, 7–10 p.m. at Shapeshifters Cinema, Oakland
June 15, 2024, starting at 6 p.m. at the Balboa Theater, San Francisco
June 16, 2024, 1–3 p.m. at the Roxie Theater, San Francisco

The San Francisco Art Institute may have closed its doors, but the artists it nurtured continue to deliver their special blend of visionary weirdness to Bay Area audiences. Now, a celebration of the art school’s filmmaking stars (past and present) arrives in the form of a three-day film festival named after the on-campus studio where so many got their start. The programs includes alumni-made shorts, work by Los Angeles performer Jibz Cameron, a.k.a. Dynasty Handbag, a Juneteenth-themed slate of films and, closing it all out, a George and Mike Kuchar bonanza.

Carlos F. Jackson, ‘August 29, 1970,’ 2016. (© Carlos F. Jackson)

June 14, 2024–Jan. 26, 2025
Oakland Museum of California

OMCA’s big summer show centers on Xicanx artists and themes, presenting intergenerational, feminist and queer approaches to the shifting identity of “Chicano” in the Americas. The show will open with an adobe temple installation by Los Angeles artist rafa esparza (recently featured in the SFMOMA show Sitting on Chrome), and includes work by Consuelo Jimenez Underwood, Laura Aguilar and Melanie Cervantes alongside a collection of posters from the Third World Liberation Front movement.

TT Takemoto, Still from ‘Looking for Jiro,’ 2011; Single-channel digital video. (Courtesy of the artist and Catharine Clark Gallery, San Francisco; Photo by Maxwell Leung)

June 19–Dec. 1, 2024
Cantor Arts Center, Stanford

In this small but mighty show, Bay Area artist TT Takemoto presents art made between 2009 to 2023, a combination of videos, sculpture and works on paper that ask how we represent stories that were never documented. Looking for traces of queer Asian American experiences in archives, Takemoto blends experimental film tactics, pop music, drag king performance, craft practices and even “homoerotic baking” to imagine what life might have been like for queer and gender-nonconforming Japanese Americans before and during incarceration.

Kara Walker working on ‘Fortuna and the Immortality Garden (Machine)’ in 2023. (© Kara Walker; Photo by Ari Marcopoulos)

July 1, 2024–May 2026
San Francisco Museum of Modern Art

A new site-specific installation by Kara Walker is coming to SFMOMA’s Roberts Family Gallery (most recently home to Diego Rivera’s Pan American Unity mural). The “complex landscape of mechanized sculptures and elaborate displays” will be the artist’s most ambitious large-scale public project to date. That’s no small feat, considering the scale of her 2014 installation in Brooklyn’s Domino Sugar refinery. Walker’s SFMOMA installation includes a complex world of automatons situated within a garden of black obsidian, and has involved collaborations with an engineering company, a couturier and a fabrication studio. Given how multifaceted (and kinetic) the piece promises to be, we might be returning again and again during its nearly two year run.

Keith Andrews, ‘Fishing from a Hole in a Wall,’ 2023; Acrylic on parachute cloth. (Philadelphia Mural Arts at SCI Phoenix)

July 3–Aug. 17, 2024
Richmond Art Center

Over the past year, incarcerated artists at San Quentin and Philadelphia’s State Correctional Institution (SCI) Phoenix have exchanged letters — but not through ordinary means. Using their arts programs (the William James Foundation and Philadelphia Mural Arts) as intermediaries, letters were scanned, emailed and printed out to facilitate a creative exchange. The results in this group show includes both imagined and literal views (of daily prison life, of a landscape seen through bars), alongside some of those letters. Art can transport us to other places and into others’ experiences, the show argues, but that is true for both the makers and viewers of that work.

Sister Corita Kent, ‘with love to the everyday miracle,’ 1967; Serigraph, 23 x 35 inches. (Courtesy BAMPFA)

Aug. 14, 2024–July 6, 2025
Berkeley Art Museum and Pacific Film Archive

Through a combination of art and film from the museum’s holdings, this semi-meta exhibition gets into the tricky business of collecting, caring for and exhibiting the work of artists who embrace a conservator’s greatest nemeses: entropy and decay. And though it may sound a bit wonky, this premise means we’ll be getting to see things that don’t often get seen — because of their fragility, or their organic or non-archival mediums. The artist list for this exhibition is reason alone to mark it on your calendars. Among them are James Lee Byars, Sarah Charlesworth, Felix Gonzalez-Torres, Rosie Lee Tompkins and Martin Wong.

Nicki Green among her sculptures. (Courtesy the artist)

‘Nicki Green: Firmament’

Aug. 29, 2024–Feb. 2, 2025
Contemporary Jewish Museum, San Francisco





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