Civi Group Option Value ID: 
573

Artist: ROCKY MCCORKLE (authored by rockymccorkle)

Mediums: 
Artist Display Name: 
ROCKY MCCORKLE
Artist Statement: 

**Fyi, Please call Rocky at (240) 257-6259 upon arrival, so that I can let you into the Warrington Building.

Come see for yourself! The untouched movie set for Rocky McCorkle's You & Me On A Sunny Day. Enter the never-before-seen fictional setting and experience Rocky's art making process, set intricacies, and sharper-than-real-life photographs!

Rocky McCorkle's Movie & Marathon is in the permanent collection at the Berkeley Art Museum (BAM/PFA) and on display in their current exhibition "At The Edge: Recent Acquisitions."

Rocky McCorkle’s You & Me On A Sunny Day is a feature length non-motion picture comprised of 135 large scale photographic stills. A five year project started in 2007, McCorkle’s sequential series follows the life of 84 year-old widow Millie Holden as her everyday routine gets run off course by a reminiscent 1950’s movie marathon. From the deepest folds of memory, flashbacks of her late husband propel her into a vivid narrative that gets stranger and more claustrophobic with each turn. Based on Millie’s own experience of an event centered elsewhere, You & Me is a psychological thriller about the malleability of memory and the impact that fictional media has on her way of life.

Echoing the big screen, the exhibition prints are 40” x 80". Each photograph’s rich color and clarity reveal a technical prowess hidden behind McCorkle’s compelling aesthetic. The entire body of work was shot with a Cambo 8 x 10 camera using a specific combination of chrome and negative film. Shooting and scanning thousands of sheets of film, McCorkle digitally assembled the high resolution images—upwards of 22 in a single still—into unique full focus photomontages. With You & Me On A Sunny Day, McCorkle has created an emotionally charged counterpoint to modern day cinema.

Primary Artwork Thumbnail: 

Artist: Doug Rhodes (authored by DougRhodes)

Mediums: 
Artist Display Name: 
Doug Rhodes
Artist Statement: 

 

I believe art changes our perceptions of the people and world around us, broadening our perspectives in ways that cultivate greater respect for humanity and nature.

I work mostly with acrylics, but lately I have been mixing photography and other media into my paintings, using real world subjects to create images of worlds I imagine. Currently, I find myself depicting humanity coming to terms with the immutability of Mother Nature: jungles overtake urban settings and cityscapes grow out of trees. 

In 2012 I returned to San Francisco after living in Costa Rica for four years where I opened an art gallery in an isolated village visited by international travelers drawn to the unspoiled  jungle and beaches. There I was able to immerse myself in painting, selling not only my originals, but also, more than a thousand travel-friendly reproductions. This has given me a good sense of what people like in my work. 

My studio is in the Mission District on Clarion Alley, a location covered with murals and frequented by art-loving tourists from around the world. I am almost always there Thursday through Sunday in the afternoon. Stop by and take a look.

 

Primary Artwork Thumbnail: 

Artist: Jennifer Loomis (authored by jenniferloomis)

Mediums: 
Artist Display Name: 
Jennifer Loomis
Artist Statement: 

I have spent my career studying this unique shape. With my most recent series, I look at the landscape, the roadmap to motherhood. By creating an unfamiliar landscape and printing the photos very large, I hope for the form to be examined and, once understood, open discussion. This shape represents an area of the women's body that is surrounded by debate of ownership, degradation by toxic environments, and depravation of corporate fertility centers charging exorbitant fees for women who want to become pregnant.

Artist: Julie Sparenberg (Julie Michelle) (authored by juliemichelle)

Mediums: 
Artist Display Name: 
Julie Sparenberg (Julie Michelle)
Artist Statement: 

I think photography is an incredible way of telling stories.
The reward of finding moments and distilling feelings, to me, is like making magic. I don’t know about you, but I see pictures wherever I am.

Please Stay on Paths is a collection of images that detail the nature, the unexpected, inside the city. Golden Gate Park has always provided a wealth of secret, quiet intense images for me and has been an oasis and a refuge from city life.

My photography has been seen in the San Francisco Chronicle, SF Weekly, San Francisco magazine, the San Francisco Bay Guardian, the San Francisco Examiner, SHOTS magazine, The Urbanist, SFist.com, The Huffington Post, The Bold Italic and 7×7.com. My work has appeared in juried shows and galleries in San Francisco, Los Angeles, Vermont, Minneapolis, Virginia, and New Orleans.

Artist: Candace Loheed/orangeland (authored by orangeland)

Mediums: 
Artist Display Name: 
Candace Loheed/orangeland
Artist Statement: 

Candace Loheed's orangeland is a small jewel of a gallery on Mason Street at Jackson, in what she refers to as "Nob Valley". The gallery is currently hosting the orangeland Botanical exhibition showcasing a wonderful collection of Bay Area Artists in many mediums. Drawing on nature produced a great variety of interpretations and the show is varied and exciting.

Primary Artwork Thumbnail: 

Artist: Tim Burns (authored by [email protected])

Mediums: 
Artist Display Name: 
Tim Burns
Artist Statement: 

 

My work begins with a captured image – a photograph - of something external in the perceived world which is then modified through techniques and media to provide an altered perception, an internal reaction, to that reality my methods produce images of surreal luminosity where the blurring and graying and softening of lines creates an ethereal emanation of internal light.

They are glowing from within.
 

Movement- water mist -flow
The fog rolling in from the ocean along the coast
gently softening everything and the world quiets down.

We humans are always drawn to bodies of water.
It doesn't seem to matter whether it’s the vastness of our oceans,

the stillness of a small pond, with the wind dancing on it.
It’s ever changing like life is.
We love to spend hours pondering before it.
It’s a great place to think and clear out our head and explore with our heart and soul.

We owe everything to water and light, the power of life.   

Artist: Ethel Jimenez (authored by etheljimenez)

Mediums: 
Artist Display Name: 
Ethel Jimenez
Artist Statement: 
I agree with Paul Strand who wrote "An artist's world is limitless. It can be found anywhere, far from where he lives or a few feet away. It is always on his doorstep." It is not necessary to travel far to find interesting subjects. I enjoy shooting everyday places and objects that are transformed into abstract compositions by focusing on color, texture, and shape. We are suddenly aware of the gracefulness of a shadow or the beauty of a fire excape when we stop to look at our surroundings. For the "Abstract Portfolio", I shot scenes in extreme close-ups to draw the viewer in.
Agora Gallery wrote of my work "Jimenez' primary inspiration and the unwitting canvas for her compositions are urban landscapes.  Walls provide flat expanses of colors - whites, ochres, vivid brick red - and the walls and their angles, are bisected by windows and fire escapes, lamp posts and wires.  The extraordinary qualities in ordinary things are revealed."
 

 
Primary Artwork Thumbnail: 

Artist: Jim Burnett (authored by Jim Burnett)

Mediums: 
Artist Display Name: 
Jim Burnett
Artist Statement: 

  i've always been attracted to the snapshot and documentary aesthetic: casual photos capturing something of interest. In every photograph, something about the subject matter captured my interest but,  being a photographer , i also take in mind composition and color without making it seem too traditionally "artistic". The wax and textured Tracing paper are meant to make these images reminiscent of an old snapshot; faded and worn yet still having the power and message of what a good photograph can convey.

 

 

 

Primary Artwork Thumbnail: 

Pages