TAUBA AUERBACH (San Francisco)
makes art about language and logic. Though her work usually takes the
form of paintings and drawings, she sees herself as a conceptual artist
for whom these formats happen to be most useful. Auerbach's training
as a traditional sign painter cultivated her aesthetic love for words
and letters; her work is equally focused on the internal workings of
language (and its contractions and continuities), and its formal elements.
Recent work has probed the limitations of binary language and the distortive
properties of such highly rational structures. Solo shows were mounted
at Deitch Projects in New York, and Jack Hanley Gallery in San Francisco.
Her work has been included in group shows at Gagosian Gallery and the
Museum of Contemporary Art in Detroit, among others, and is in the collections
of the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art and the Deste Foundation.
In 2006 her first book, How to Spell the Alphabet, was published by
Deitch Projects. Auerbach received her BA from Stanford University in
2003.
ADRIANE COLBURN (San Francisco) has
been working on a series of installations and maps that seek to organize
and chart changes in natural and urban landscapes. These constructions,
made of layers of hand cut paper, illustrate systems that are submerged
underground, in our bodies, or within urban infrastructures. Colburn
maps out these “inaccessible” places by systemizing information,
often based on landscapes or history, to create an abstraction that
can be both informative and ambiguous. Her work has been shown in San
Francisco at Gallery 16, Bay Area Now 4 at Yerba Buena Center for the
Arts, New Langton Arts, Southern Exposure, San Francisco Arts Commission
Gallery, Stephen Wolf Fine Arts, and The Luggage Store, where she also
co-curated the No War show in 2002. Her work has been reviewed in Artforum
and her awards and distinctions include a 2005 Artadia Award, 2006/07
MacDowell Colony Residency, and a 2007 Kala Institute Fellowship. Colburn
received her BFA from The School of the Art Institute in Chicago and
her MFA from Stanford University. She is a visiting lecturer at Stanford
University and The San Francisco Art Institute.
BINH DANH (San Jose) invented a process
for transferring images onto leaves via photosynthesis, yielding what
he terms "chlorophyll prints." His work has been exhibited
nationally at the Asia Society and Drawing Center in New York City,
the Orange County Museum of Art, San Francisco Camerawork, San Jose
Museum of Art, American University Museum at the Katzen Art Center in
Washington D.C., and the George Eastman House in Rochester, NY. His
work is in the public collections of the M.H. deYoung Museum, Corcoran
Art Gallery, Harry Ransom Center, Oakland Museum of California, and
William Benton Museum of Art. Danh has had residencies at Light Works
in Syracuse, New York, the Artist Diversity Residency Program at the
University of Nebraska, and the Cite International Des Artes in Paris.
He has lectured at Rutgers College, San Francisco Art Institute, Arizona
State University, Alfred University, Cal Arts, and the Harry Ransom
Humanities Research Center. Danh received his BFA in Photography from
San Jose State University and his MFA in Studio Art from Stanford University.
He teaches photography around the Bay Area and his work can be seen
at Haines Gallery in San Francisco.
AMY ELLINGSON (San Francisco) addresses
issues of formal repetition, variation, and mutation within limited
serial systems and networks. Using ephemeral, computer-generated images
exclusively as her source material, she creates groups of interrelated
paintings that physically assert themselves through the materiality
and permanence of historical painting media. Her paintings have been
shown locally and nationally, most recently at Haines Gallery in San
Francisco and Charles Cowles Gallery in New York. Notable group exhibitions
include Bay Area Now 3 at Yerba Buena Center for the Arts in San Francisco,
Neo Mod: Recent Northern California Abstraction at the Crocker Art Museum
in Sacramento, and Matter & Matrix at Scripps College in Claremont,
CA. Ellingson is the recipient of a 2007 Civitella Ranieri Foundation
Fellowship and a 1999 Artadia Award. Her work is held in various public
and corporate collections including the Oakland Museum of California,
the U.S. Embassies in Tunisia and Algeria, and the Contemporary Museum
in Hawaii. Her paintings have been reviewed in The New York Times, Chicago
Tribune, San Francisco Chronicle, NYArts Magazine, Art issues, and Kunstbeeld.
Ellingson received her BA in Studio Art from Scripps College and her
MFA from CalArts. She is Associate Professor of Painting at the San
Francisco Art Institute.
KOTA EZAWA (San Francisco) uses animation and drawing
processes to create abstractions of existing films, videos, and photographs.
He has had solo exhibitions at The Hayward Projects Space in London,
Williams College Museum of Art, Santa Monica Museum of Art, Wadsworth
Atheneum Museum of Art, and New Langton Arts in San Francisco. Recent
group exhibitions include On the Scene: Kota Ezawa, Sarah Hobbs, Angela
Strassheim at The Art Institute of Chicago, Out of Time at The Museum
of Modern Art in New York, Down by Law at The Wrong Gallery, Whitney
Biennial, Whitney Museum of American Art in New York, Seeing Double:
Encounters with Warhol at The Andy Warhol Museum in Pittsburgh, 2004
California Biennial at the Orange County Museum of Art, 2004 Shanghai
Biennial at the Shanghai Art Museum, and Bay Area Now 3 at Yerba Buena
Center for the Arts in San Francisco. Ezawa’s work has been reviewed
in The New Yorker, The New York Times, Art in America, Artforum, and
The San Francisco Chronicle, among others. He received a 2006 SECA Art
Award, 2005 Artadia Award, and a 2003 Louis Comfort Tiffany Foundation
Award. He received his BFA from the San Francisco Art Institute and
his MFA from Stanford University. Ezawa is Assistant Professor of Media
Arts at California College of the Arts.
KAREN HAMPTON (Woodacre) is a mixed
media textile artist whose work is steeped in oral history and is an
expression of the narrative. A storyteller at heart, she imparts conceptualized
tales about the “other” in society. She views herself as
a vehicle for ancestral voices to transcend history and remain as historical
memory. The canvas of her work is coarsely woven cloth that is aged
and imbued with conceptualized images and text from a forgotten part
of the American story. Her intention is to embed the cloth with the
hopes and visions of African American lives, telling their stories from
a maternal perspective. Hampton has been exhibited since 1993, most
recently at Material Matters at the Museum of Folk and Craft Art in
San Francisco, and Looming Large: Contemporary Weavers of the Vanguard
at the Bedford Gallery in Walnut Creek. Hampton received her MFA from
the University of California at Davis. She teaches and lectures on Cross
Cultural Textiles and Historical Memory in Art at the College of Marin
and California College of the Arts.
DAVID HUFFMAN (OAKLAND) is a narrative
painter whose practice is drawing and painting. His technique involves
laying down a wash populated with drawing, collage, and paint that chronicles
a story. The paintings include both formal considerations and social/political
sci-fi. Huffman’s work gained attention during the The Studio
Museum in Harlem's noted 2001 Freestyle exhibition. Other exhibitions
include the Institute of Contemporary Arts and Institute of Visual Arts
in London, the Wattis Institute at the CCA, Yerba Buena Center for the
Arts, Luggage Store Gallery, and New Langton Arts in San Francisco,
Santa Monica Museum of Art; de Saisset Museum at Santa Clara University,
and the Crocker Museum in Sacramento. Huffman’s work has been
reviewed and written about in Frieze, Artforum, Art Papers, Flash Art,
The San Francisco Chronicle, The New York Times, The International Review
of African American Art, NY Arts, Art Journal, and the San Francisco
Bay Guardian. He received a 2005 Artadia Award. Huffman received his
BFA and MFA from California College of the Arts. He is currently an
instructor at California College of the Arts.
MARTIN MCMURRAY (Berkeley) is a painter
whose most recent project, The Procession, features over forty paintings
of former heads of state and exiled or dethroned leaders. They are portrayed
squeezed into their stately automobiles and taking part in a ceremonial
procession. Accompanying the paintings is a series of faux books titled
The Order of Succession where McMurray conflates the role of tyrant
and author. He has had solo exhibitions of his drawings and paintings
at Susanne Vielmetter Los Angeles Projects, Jeff Bailey Gallery in New
York, Katharine Mulherin Contemporary Projects in Toronto, and Gallery
16 in San Francisco. His paintings have been featured in group exhibitions
at LFL/Zach Feuer, Greenberg Van Doren, and Freight & Volume galleries
in New York. His work was included in the 2006 California Biennale at
the Orange County Museum of Art. McMurray’s work has been reviewed
in The New York Times, ArtWeek, Artnet, Time Out New York and LA Weekly.
His works are in numerous private collections throughout the U.S and
Europe. He received his BFA from the Center for Creative Studies in
1983.
KATE POCRASS (San Francisco) produces
both independent and collaborative projects dealing with pedestrian
culture and social sculpture. She draws on the anonymity of daily experience,
reveling in common moments that randomly happen to us each day. Pocrass
develops systematic interaction through socially attuned and ephemeral
projects in the public sphere. Her work is often encountered outside
the gallery via hotlines, bus tours, audio tours, and participatory
websites. She received two Cultural Equity Fund grants from the San
Francisco Arts Commission to help self publish the books Mundane Journeys
and Mundane Field Guide to Color. She has exhibited work at Southern
Exposure, Rena Bransten Gallery, AIA, Spanganga, Pond, New Langton Arts,
and Yerba Buena Center for the Arts in San Francisco, the Nelson Gallery
at University of California, Davis, Artists Space in New York City,
Foundation De Appel in Amsterdam, Rooseum in Malmo, Sweden, and in the
2006 California Biennial at the Orange County Museum of Art. Her work
has been reviewed in The San Francisco Chronicle, San Francisco Bay
Guardian, Artforum.com, 7X7 Magazine, and ArtWeek. Pocrass received
her BFA from the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor and her MFA from
the California College of the Arts.
JUNE SCHWARCZ (Sausalito) is a sculptor
who works with vitreous enamel to create three dimensional objects and
wall pieces. Known as an innovator for her emphasis on technical process
and alternative methods of fabrication, she has the distinction of being
part of the 1956 inaugural exhibition of the Museum of Contemporary
Crafts in New York. She received three solo exhibitions from The American
Crafts Museum in New York. Other notable solo shows were at the Museum
Bellrive in Zurich, Schmuckmuseum in Pforzheim, Germany; and June Schwarcz:
Forty Years and Forty Pieces at the San Francisco Craft and Folk Art
Museum. Her work is in the collections of The Metropolitan Museum and
Museum of Art and Design in New York, the M.H. deYoung Museum in San
Francisco; Kunstgewebermuseum in Zurich, and the Detroit Museum of Art,
among others. Schwarcz’s work has been written about in American
Craft Magazine, Metalsmith, Glass on Medal, L’Atelier, Goldschmiede
Zeitung, and Journal of the Electroplaters Society. She is a Fellow
of the American Craft Council, as well as a recipient of their gold
medal, and was given a Living Treasure of California award from the
Crocker Museum in Sacramento. She studied Industrial Design at Pratt
Institute in New York.
LESLIE SHOWS (San Francisco) is a
painter who uses collage and mixed media in her work, which investigates
the dynamic relationships between landscape, geology, and culture. She
has had solo shows at Jack Hanley Gallery, both in San Francisco and
Los Angeles. Shows has recently exhibited at Murray Guy in New York,
the 2006 California Biennial at the Orange County Museum of Art, and
the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art’s 2006 SECA Awards Show.
She was the 2006 Tournesol Artist in Residence at the Headlands Art
Center in Marin County, and published a book, Heap of Elements, in conjunction
with her residency. Snows received a 2007-2008 Fellowship from the Kala
Art Institute in Berkeley. Her work has been written about in ArtReview,
Artforum.com, San Francisco Bay Guardian and the LA Weekly, among others.
She received her BFA from the San Francisco Art Institute and her MFA
from California College of the Arts.
JENIFER K. WOFFORD (Oakland) encompasses
installation, painting, drawing, photo, video, performance, teaching,
and curating in her creative practice. She has exhibited locally at
the Berkeley Art Museum, Richmond Art Center, Babilonia 1808, Southern
Exposure, and Kearny Street Workshop. Her work has also been seen at
New Image Art in Los Angeles, Nora Eccles Harrison Museum in Salt Lake
City, thirtynine hotel in Honolulu, Future Prospects in the Philippines,
and Galerie Blanche in France. Her awards include grants from the Art
Matters Foundation, UCIRA, the Pacific Rim Research Program, and a Murphy
Fellowship. Woffard has had artist residencies at The Living Room in
the Philippines, Skidmore College in New York, and Chateau de la Napoule
in France. She is the primary organizer of Galleon Trade, a multi-year
international arts exchange project focusing on California, Mexico and
the Philippines and is part of the artist collaboration Mail Order Brides/M.O.B.
She serves as adjunct faculty at Diablo Valley College, California College
of the Arts, and the University of San Francisco. She received her BFA
from the San Francisco Art Institute and her MFA from University of
California, Berkeley.
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