CHESTER ARNOLD
(SONOMA) is deeply committed to painting as a vital language
and craft, and uses his content to explore the environmental and political
life of our times. He has exhibited since the mid-eighties, and his
recent solo exhibits include the Catharine Clark Gallery Reconstruction,
Sonoma Valley Museum of Art Destinies Manifest, Salt Lake Arts Center,
San Jose Museum of Art In Memoriaum, and Tacoma Art Museum; and group
shows at Pasadena Museum of Art, Palo Alto Cultural Center, Bruce Museum
in Greenwich, Connecticut, Tamarind Gallery at the University of New
Mexico, Hempel Fine Arts in Washington, D.C., and Galleria Milan in
San Paulo, Brazil, among others. His work has been written about in
the San Francisco Chronicle, Artweek, San Jose Mercury News, and Artforum.
He has a MFA from the San Francisco Art Institute (1987) and teaches
drawing and painting at the College of Marin.
THOMAS CHANG
(San Francisco) is a photographer who received his MFA from
the San Francisco Art Institute (2000) where he received the David S.
McMillan Memorial Award. He is also the recipient of a J. William Fulbright
Foreign Scholarship Award, a Jury Award from Artadia (formerly known
as The Art Council, Inc.), a MFA Studio Award from the Headlands Center
for the Arts, and a Murphy Fellowship from The San Francisco Foundation.
His works have been exhibited in group and solo exhibitions at Southern
Exposure Gallery Landing, Yerba Buena Center for the Arts Bay Area Now
3, SF Camerawork Same/Difference, Andrea Schwartz Gallery Chromogenic
Prints, GenArt/SF Emerge, Charles H. Scott Gallery in Toronto American
Artists, and M.Y. Art Prospects in New York Absence/Presence. Currently
he is a docent at Angel Island Immigration Station, where his work examines
the use of photography as “document” in the way exotic representations
are created through tourism.
AMY FRANCESCHINI
(San Francisco) is a new media artist working with notions
of community, sustainable environments, and the conflicting rituals
of humans and nature. Her work manifests "on-" and "off-line"
worlds in the form of dynamic websites, installations, and printed matter.
Her work has shown in solo exhibitions at the University of the Pacific,
Jack Hanley Gallery in San Francisco Fiction of Mass, RAMP Gallery in
New Zealand We Are All Meteorites, Electronic Orphanage in Los Angeles
Utopia, Gallery 16 in San Francisco Tention, Sapporro Art Park in Japan
Oguchi Happening, and the Luggage Store Gallery in San Francisco SF
Fashion Show. Recent group shows include the California Biennial 2004
at the Orange County Museum of Art, Yerba Buena Center for the Arts,
and the Whitney Biennale 2002, among others. Franceschini received a
BFA from San Francisco State University (1992) and a MFA from Stanford
University (2002). In 1995 she founded Futurefarmers, a vehicle for
bringing together multidisciplinary artists to create new work. She
currently teaches New Media courses at the San Francisco Art Institute
and Stanford University.
PAUL
KOS (San Francisco) is a sculptor whose work includes video,
installations, and public art. Since 1969 his work has been shown internationally
and domestically in group and solo exhibits. A 2003 show, Everything
Matters, Paul Kos, A Retrospective, was exhibited by the Berkeley Art
Museum. This exhibition traveled to the Grey Gallery in NY, the Museum
of Contemporary Art in San Diego, and the Contemporary Art Center in
Cincinnati. Among his commissions are Poetry Sculpture Garden (with
poet Robert Hass) in San Francisco and Tunnel/Chapel (with Isabelle
Sorrell) at the di Rosa Art Preserve in Napa, CA. He has been reviewed
in The New York Times and The Los Angeles Times. Among his grants and
awards are a Flintridge Foundation Grant, six National Endowment for
the Arts grants, a Rockefeller Foundation Fellowship, and a Guggenheim
Fellowship. His work is in the collections of the San Francisco Museum
of Modern Art, the Institute of Contemporary Art in Philadelphia, the
Wallraff-Richartz Museum in Cologne, the Museum of Modern Art in New
York, and the Stedelijk Museum in Amsterdam, among others. He has a
MFA from the San Francisco Art Institute (1967) where he currently teaches
in the New Genres Department.
GEORGE KUCHAR
(San Francisco) began making films in the 1950’s with
his twin brother Mike, and since then has made over 200 films and videos
in every format known. Active in the underground film movement in the
early 1960’s, his titles include Hold Me While I’m Naked,
Corruption of the Damned, Color Me Shameless, and Lust for Ecstasy.
With the advent of 8mm camcorders in the 1980’s he jumped formats
and produced a body of works including video diaries, dramas, and portraits
of places that include Vile Cargo, Fill Thy Crack with Whiteness, Kiss
of the Veggie Vixon, and The Migration of the Blubberoids. His solo
exhibitions include the San Francisco International Film Festival, the
National Gallery of Art in Washington, D.C., the Andy Warhol Museum,
the Museum of Modern Art in New York, the Whitney Museum of American
Art, and the Centre Pompidou in Paris. He has received awards from the
National Endowment for the Arts, Chicago Underground Film Festival (Lifetime
Achievement Award), and The American Film Institute (Maya Deren Award
for Independent Film and Video Artists). With his brother Mike he co-authored
a memoir, Reflections from a Cinematic Cesspool (Zanja Press, 1997),
and they were both recently honored at the New York Film Festival with
a retrospective of their early Super-8mm films. He teaches filmmaking
at the San Francisco Art Institute.
JOSH LAZCANO
(San Francisco) is a mixed media artist whose work combines
an edgy street sensibility with self-irony. His work has been exhibited
at the San Francisco Arts Commission Gallery Untitled Show, Yerba Buena
Center for the Arts Ten By Twenty, Contemporary Arts Center in Cincinnati
Beautiful Losers: Contemporary Art and Street Culture which traveled
to the Orange County Museum of Art, Gazonrouge Gallery in Athens, Greece
The Sneeze 80 x 80, and the 3 More Gallery in Brooklyn Todd James Presents.
His work has been written about in numerous publications including Stephen
Powers’ The Art of Getting Over (St. Martin’s Press, 1999).
He has an Associate Degree in Art from Skyline College (1996) and is
currently an artist-in-residence at Headlands Center for the Arts.
MADS LYNNERUP
(San Francisco) bases his work on simple ideas and actions
that are primarily conceived through sculpture, photography, performance,
and video. His recent shows include the Orange County Museum of Art
The California Biennial 2004, Bergstulb Projekte in Berlin Something
in Between, Jack Hanley Gallery in San Francisco 17 Reasons, Suite 106
Gallery in Torino Artissima, Riga Art Hall in Latvia The Project, San
Francisco Arts Commission Gallery Construct 3, San Francisco Museum
of Modern Art Grapefruit, Yerba Buena Center for the Arts Slowdive,
and GenArt/SF New Fangle 2001. His work has been written about in Artweek,
The San Francisco Chronicle, The New York Times, and Flash Art International,
among others. He is the recipient of numerous awards including The Bay
Area Visual Arts Award 2002 presented by New Langton Arts. His works
are in the permanent collections of the Miami Museum of Art and the
San Jose Museum of Art as well as private collections in the U.S. and
Europe. He has a BFA from the San Francisco Art Institute (2001).
LOURDES PORTILLO
(San Francisco) is a filmmaker whose works focus on the search
for Latino identity and include Las Madres: The Mothers of the Plaza
de Mayo, Columbus on Trial, The Devil Never Sleeps, and Senorita Extraviada.
Her work has screened in numerous domestic and international film festivals
including Sundance, San Sebastian, Toronto, and Sydney as well as the
American Film Institute and New Directors/New Films. Her work has also
been shown at major American museums including the Walker Art Center,
the Museum of Modern Art in New York, the Guggenheim Museum, the Metropolitan
Museum of Art, and the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, as well as
being aired on public television nationwide. There have been retrospective
screenings of her work at the Fine Arts Museum in Berkeley, the Cineteca
National de Mexico, Buenos Aires Museo de Arte Moderno, Stanford University,
and the Smithsonian National Portrait Gallery. Among her numerous awards
and distinctions are Special Jury Prize at the Sundance Film Festival,
Distinguished Documentary Achievement Award from the International Documentary
Association, Women of Vision Award from Amnesty International, three
Rockefeller Foundation Fellowships, a Guggenheim Fellowship, and five
National Endowment for the Arts grants. She has a MFA from the San Francisco
Art Institute (1978).
RIGO 23 (San
Francisco) is an interdisciplinary artist known for large-scale
public artworks where he appropriated traffic sign imagery and invested
it with poignant ecological and political messages. He has had solo
exhibits at Gallery Paule Anglim in San Francisco, Artists Space in
New York, IT Park Gallery in Taipei, the Museum of Contemporary Art
in Santiago, Chile, the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, Gallery
54 in Gotheborg, Sweden, and The Lab in San Francisco. His commissioned
and mural work is in public spaces in Porto, Portugal, Havana, Cuba,
Belfast, Northern Ireland, Los Angeles, San Francisco, and New Orleans.
Among his awards are the Biennial Award from the Louis Comfort Tiffany
Foundation, the SECA Art Award from the San Francisco Museum of Modern
Art, and Best Public Art Project of the Year from The San Francisco
Bay Guardian. Public collections holding his work include the di Rosa
Preserve in Napa, California, the Los Angeles County Museum of Art,
and the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art. His work has been written
about in The San Francisco Chronicle, The Los Angles Times, The New
York Times, and Mother Jones Magazine, among others. He has a MFA from
Stanford University (1997).
CLARE ROJAS (San
Francisco) is a mixed media artist who also creates films,
record albums, and performances. She has presented her work in solo
and group shows at Deitch Projects in New York Table Turners, the Belkin
Satellite Gallery in Vancouver, the Museum of Contemporary Art in Chicago
Doing my Day, White Columns in New York East of the Sun West of the
Moon, the Luggage Store Gallery in San Francisco Outerspace, and the
Institute of Contemporary Art in Philadelphia Scratch Off the Serial.
Her films have screened at the New York Underground Film Festival, the
Ann Arbor Film Festival, the Big Muddy Film Festival, and the Chicago
Underground Film Festival. She has performed at Noise Pop and the In
the Street Festival in San Francisco, and at the Material Clothing Company
in Tokyo. She has released four record albums under the name “Peggy
Honeywell.” She has a MFA from the School of the Art Institute
of Chicago (2002).
PHILIP ROSS (San
Francisco) is a sculptor known for his installations using
diverse organic materials including fungus, shellfish, and table scraps,
which he transforms into sculptural artifacts. His work has been exhibited
in solo and group exhibitions at the Catherine Clark Gallery in San
Francisco Lineaments of Gratified Desire, the Biennial of Electronic
Arts in Perth, Australia, at Machine in Los Angeles Organized, Vox Populi
in Philadelphia Flipping the Bird, GenArt/SF New Fangle, the Oakland
Museum Mycological-Fair, and the Luggage Store Gallery in San Francisco’s
Annual Juried Show. Among his awards are The Art Council Grant, the
Bay Area Visual Arts Award 1996 presented by New Langton Arts, and artist
residencies at The Exploratorium and the Headlands Center for the Arts.
He has a MFA from Stanford University (2000).
CHRIS SOLLARS
(San Francisco) is an installation artist who graduated from
the Rhode Island School of Design with a BFA in Sculpture (1998) and
received a Skowhegan Fellowship from the Skowhegan School of Painting
and Sculpture. His recent group and solo shows include Exit Art in New
York The Choice, the Mercer Union in Toronto Placecards, New Langton
Arts in San Francisco Closed Circuit, the Berkeley Art Museum Fast Forward
II, Art Basel Miami Beach Free Spirits Artist Lounge, the Center for
Maine Contemporary Art Bjorn Again, and the Soap Factory in Minneapolis
Your Heart Is No Match for My Love. His work has been written about
in the SF Weekly, NY Arts Magazine, and The New York Times, among others.
Sollars’ work is in the collections of the Berkeley Art Museum
and the Miami Art Museum. He is also the director and curator of 667Shotwell,
an artists’ project space.
For additional information, contact:
The Fleishhacker Foundation
Christine Elbel, Executive Director
1016 Lincoln Blvd. # 12
San Francisco, CA 94129
415.561.5350
www.fleishhackerfoundation.org