The deYoung Museum's triennial competition, the deYoung Open, began a four-month run last week in Golden Gate Park. Bay Area artists were invited to submit JPG photos of single art works created in the last two years to a jury.
The jurors were Bay Area artists Clare Rojas, Stephanie Syjuco, Sunny A. Smith, and Xiaoze Xie, along with eight curators from the museum.
Submissions were capped at 12,000 with 800+ artists making the final cut.
The show is presented salon style, meaning art on the walls from floor to ceiling. Reportedly, the curators started with a computer program that mapped out sizes and color combinations for each room, and then they edited it.
There is also a bit of sculpture, including Hollow by Pacifica sculptor James Shefik.
There wasn't much political art in the exhibition but there were a few standouts, including America by photographer Christopher Simmons.
There is a lot of fine portraiture, including Maggie and Cody by K.Dilley that looks like an Alice Neel painting for the 21st century...
...and painter Tori Berghoff's depiction of a sweet-souled San Rafael neighbor, Daniel Waiting for the Bus.
A couple of acquaintances had paintings in the show while quite a few other acquaintances were not selected.
The Foggy Trail is by Karen Ames who I met in the classical music world. She explains on her website, "Karen began painting at the start of the pandemic when the cultural world closed down and her forty-year career as a senior communications executive came to an end. At that point, she picked up a brush for the first time and began the journey of becoming a painter."
Three Windows is by another acquaintance, San Francisco painter Mark D. Powers, who usually specializes in hyperrealistic street scenes that I love.
The huge exhibit is eventually overwhelming since there is no way to absorb 800+ images in one walkthrough. My only advice is to find a few of your own favorites the first time around and then use them as anchors for a second visit.
3 comments:
Thanks so much for including me, Mike. It was great to see you at the Symphony. Such an honor to be among the many artists at the deYoung.
Congratulations on the public confirmation of your painting talent, Ms. Ames.
Hi Michael, I'm glad you got a chance to see the exhibit. I truly enjoyed it, and was truly honored to have been a part of it. (My entry was #117--a 3D illustration of the Milk Farm restaurant in Dixon, CA).
I hope you and yours are well!
Your once-fellow SF Opera Super, John Atkinson
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