Business Listing - Museums |
|
SFMOMA151 Third StreetSan Francisco, CA 94103 map cross street: between Mission & Howard district: SoMa Tel. 4153574000 Website |
![]() | Sat Jun 14 - Sun Sep 28 Exhibit showcases 50 paintings from the beginning of Frida Kahlo's career in 1926 to her death in 1954.
Mexican artist Frida Kahlo began painting in 1926, while recovering from a near-fatal bus accident, and soon became captivated by the medium's ... More |
![]() | Tue Jul 01 - Sun Sep 21 Exhibit showcases the greatest photographs, some never seen before, of Lee Miller and her unconventional life.
One of the most unconventional female artists of the 20th century, Lee Miller was admired for her classical beauty, intelligence, and ph... More |
| Thu Jul 10 - Sun Oct 05 Exhibit contains 50 paintings, sculptures and installations that explores the transition of art since the post-Mao era.
This selection of contemporary Chinese art from the Logan Collection reveals a spectrum of individual responses to the utopian ... More |
| Thu Jul 10 - Sun Jan 04 Exhibit showcases books, posters, furniture and other objects acquired since Henry Urbach joined the museum staff.
This unorthodox exhibition showcases 246-plus objects acquired by SFMOMA's Architecture and Design Department since curator Henry Ur... More |
![]() | Thu Jul 10 - Sun Oct 05 Computer-generated video installations by Alexander Hahn and Yves Netzhammer.
Computer-generated video installations by Swiss artists Alexander Hahn and Yves Netzhammer reveal a fascination with internal landscapes of the mind. Hahn's interactive ... More |
![]() | Fri Aug 01 - Tue Nov 04 Working in distinct styles and media, Zilvinas Kempinas, Alyson Shotz, and Mary Temple explore the transformative properties of light, underscoring its ability to inform our perception of space. Temple's installation casts trompe l'oeil shadows from ... More |
![]() | Thu Sep 18 - Sun Jan 04 Exhibit juxtaposes video works by Olivo Barbieri and Stephen Dean.
This exhibition presents a complex portrait of America's most spectacular urban environment — and fastest growing city — through the juxtaposition of two recent films: Olivo Barbie... More |
| About SFMOMA The San Francisco Museum of Modern Art is a private, not-for-profit institution supported by its members, individual contributors to Donor Circle, corporate and foundation support, federal and state government grants and admission revenues. Annual programming is sustained through the generosity of Grants for the Arts/San Francisco Hotel Tax Fund and The James Irvine Foundation.
Hours Sunday: 10am - 7:45pmMonday: 10:00am - 5:45pm Tuesday: 10:00am - 5:45pm Wednesday: closed Thursday: 10am - 9:45pm Friday: 10am - 5:45pm Saturday: 10am - 7:45pm
|
|
| Articles for SFMOMA | 4 to 6 of 13 | Previous Page 1 2 3 4 5 Next Page |
Editorial Review Richard Tuttle @ SFMOMA The Hardest-Working Man In The Art World By Maureen Hanratty (07/08/2005)" The exhibit of approximately 300 pieces spanning the forty plus years of Richard Tuttle's artistic output begins with a group of twelve paper octagonals pasted directly to the wall. Barely perceptible they teeter on the edge of being and nothingness. Richard Tuttle is not a master craftsmen or virtuoso painter. He wills his works into being. His personality can be felt in each one of his pieces. It's a quality that separates him from so many of his peers and the reason why The Art of Richard Tuttle will be enjoyed by a broad-range of museum visitors. " |
Editorial Review Marilyn Minter @ SFMOMA The Body Horrific By Nirmala Nataraj (05/06/2005)" It's no surprise that artist Marilyn Minter, whose current body of photorealist paintings seductively grace the austere walls of the SFMOMA, was influenced by Diane Arbus, that most lauded archivist of the macabre. In fact, Minter, while an undergraduate at the University of Florida in the 1960s, studied under the auspices of Arbus. Minter's eye for both eeriness and irony was blatant in her photographic documentation of her mother, an aging beauty and drug addict whose haggard demeanor was only matched by her cosmetic obsessions " |
Editorial Review Jeremy Blake: Winchester at SFMOMA An Evocative, Visually Ravishing Trilogy By Maureen Hanratty (02/24/2005)" Jeremy Blake conjures up the ghosts of the Winchester Mystery House in his evocative, visually ravishing trilogy 'Winchester'. Presented as a triptych and screened simultaneously 'Winchester, 2002', '1906', 2003 and 'Century 21', 2004, explore the paranoia and madness that drove the Winchester rifle heiress Sarah Winchester to build a sprawling mansion in San Jose to pacify the spirits of those killed by her family's famous firearms. " |
| Articles for SFMOMA | 4 to 6 of 13 | Previous Page 1 2 3 4 5 Next Page |