Public Calendar Events

Curatorial Practice Thesis Exhibition

April 17–June 29

Wattis Institute, San Francisco Campus
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New location! 360 Kansas Street (between 16th and 17th Streets)
Reception: Wed., Apr. 17, 6-8 p.m.
Gallery hours: Tues.-Fri., noon-7 p.m.; Sat., noon-5 p.m.; closed Sun. and Mon.
Info: 415.355.9670

This is the first large-scale institutional exhibition of work by the Lebanese writer, poet, and painter Etel Adnan, spanning six decades of her artistic practice. It is the thesis exhibition of the graduating students in the Graduate Program in Curatorial Practice.

Born in Beirut in 1925 to a Christian Greek mother and a Muslim Syrian father, Adnan has spent her life between places -- Beirut, Paris, and the Bay Area -- negotiating their different cultures and language as well as her distinctive position among them.

This experience of displacement deeply informs her work, which similarly ranges between mediums and formats. Her recent exhibitions include dOCUMENTA (13) (Kassel, Germany, 2012) and the Serpentine Gallery Map Marathon (London, 2010).

The exhibition explores Adnan's complex negotiation between verbal and visual forms of expression. Some of the featured paintings include elements of geographical specificity, whereas others are more ambiguous depictions of "nonplaces." Adnan's leporellos, or folding books, offer a compelling fusion of written texts and painted or drawn images.

The exhibition also includes selected articles written by Adnan for the francophone daily newspaper Al-Safa as well as film and video works by Chris Marker, Rabih Mroué, and the Otolith Group that relate directly or obliquely to Adnan's practice.

Marker's eerie footage of sculptures at the fringe of San Francisco Bay; Mroué's conflations of destruction and construction, future and past in an unspecified city; and the Otolith Group's portrait of Adnan reading her own poetry in her Paris home all present a melancholic counterpoint to Adnan's work, deepening the exhibition’s logic of place and displacement.

See wattis.org for a schedule of accompanying public programs that include poetry readings, workshops, film screenings, and lectures.

Founding support for CCA Wattis Institute for Contemporary Arts programs has been provided by Phyllis C. Wattis and Judy & Bill Timken. Generous support provided by Grants for the Arts/San Francisco Hotel Tax Fund and the CCA Curator's Forum.

Featuring numerous fine arts faculty members from CCA

June 14–August 17
Suzanne M. Long, "Orphans"

Falkirk Cultural Center | 1408 Mission Avenue (at E Street) | San Rafael

Reception: Friday, June 14, 5:30-7:30 p.m.
Gallery Hours: Tuesday-Friday 1-5 p.m.; Saturday 10 a.m.-1 p.m.

Visit the Art at the Cheese Factory blog for more info.

Artists create for the twenty-first century, Splendid Objects is an exhibition of new Bay Area craft curated by Kathleen Hanna, who defines craft as "a set of skills highly refined over time -- knowledge of materials and tools and a vision for the possibilities they offer."

She has chosen to show new works by 19 artists -- many of whom are among the CCA faculty -- of all the generations currently working in the Bay Area -- descendents of the post-war contemporary craft movement in California.

The work in this exhibition reflects what artists are thinking and doing in the new millennium.

Featuring work by: James Aarons, Sonya Lee Barrington, Carly Borman,Tripp Carpenter, Suki Diamond, Mateo Hao, Barbara Holmes, Evan Kolker, David Lewin, Suzanne M. Long, Jane McDonald, Allison McLennan, Gary Marsh, Mark Oldland, Leslie Podell, Jean Salatino & Steven Gandolfo, Pamina Traylor, and Mardi Wood

August 2–4
CCA's booth at the 2012 American Craft Council SF Show

Fort Mason Center Festival Pavilion | Marina Boulevard at Buchanan Street (along the northern waterfront between Aquatic Park and Marina Green | San Francisco

Hours: Fri., 8/2 (10 a.m.-8 p.m); Sat., 8/3 (10 a.m.-6 p.m.); Sun. 8/4 (11 a.m.-5 p.m.)

Free admission for American Craft Council members and children (12 and under)
Onsite ticket sales: $14 one-day pass / $20 three-day pass
Advance Tickets: $12 one-day pass / $18 three-day pass | available online
Special Friday evening admission: $5 (after 5 p.m.)

Driving directions | map
Paid parking at Fort Mason Center or free street parking around Marina Green

Shuttles will run from Marina Green to the show on a regular basis.

More info: 510.594.3648 or email school-to-market@cca.edu
Visit the American Craft Council website

Visit CCA's booth at the Fort Mason Center Festival Pavilion!

CCA students and recent grads will once again be exhibiting their fine craft works at the prestigious American Craft Council Show in San Francisco this August.

Now in its third year, the School to Market workshop represents a partnership between CCA and the American Craft Council (ACC) to help bring hands-on entrepreneurial experience to young makers working in craft media.

Read about last year's event »

2013 ACC San Francisco Show

This year the CCA booth will feature select works from 29 artists in ceramics, wood, textiles, jewelry, and metal arts that were chosen through an open and rigorous jury process.

Learn more about CCA's School to Market program »

Course Offering

The spring School to Market course is offered as part of the interdisciplinary craft curriculum initiative and is cotaught by David Cole (Jewelry / Metal Arts Program) and Anne Wolf (Textiles Program).

Over the course of the semester, they guide students through the process of producing, displaying, and presenting their work and that of their peers.

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Join us at the Facebook page Craft Forward at CCA for news and links to craft-related happenings on campus and beyond!

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