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Home News  Great Shows This Weekend
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Written by Trippe
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Wednesday, 08 September 2010, 11:33am
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| Opening Thursday September 9, 2010 (7:00 to 10:00 pm) at Needles & Pens
A Collaborative Art Exhibition & Book Release,
~ MORPH TRAITS ~
by
DANIEL HIGGS & KYLE RANSON

 INFO: The MORPH TRAITS exhibition will display a collection of 44 drawings that are the result of a collaborative exercise between Kyle Ranson and Daniel Higgs. Consummated in 1991 and set aside, this back and forth practice continued intermittently over the next 16 years through brief encounters and the postal system. In 2007, the two geographically separated artists reinitiated the game and it was decided to create a volume of these works. Three years in the making, this assemblage evolved into what became known as the Morph Traits. The Morph Traits Book (a 4-color, 60 page, off-set printed book in an edition of 500 copies), published by Needles & Pens, will also be released the night of the opening. All images from the book will be displayed on the the gallery walls. Both Higgs and Ranson will be in attendance.
SEE YOU THERE!
* On display through October 4, 2010
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Needles & Pens 3253 16th Street San Francisco, Ca. 94103 OPEN DAILY 12-7pm WWW.NEEDLES-PENS.COM ____________________
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Saturday, September 11th kicks off the official art season and we are all very excited to be hosting Aaron Noble and Greg Lamarche. Both artists will be in attendance and to make this a bigger celebration this evening we are hosting an after party along with artists, Andrew Schoultz and Chris Duncan. Join us for an extraordinary evening of great work, music and great company. Bands go on at 9:30pm.
Guerrero Gallery is pleased to announce Materialism, an exhibition by Greg Lamarche and Aaron Noble. This show presents the unique stylistic design of each artist, where meticulousness, flow and composition are a common characteristic. The artists’ re-appropriation of images through collage work and other mediums, drawing influence from graffiti to comic books, seem to evoke a sense of reminiscent nostalgia. Materialism is an examination of the love and thoughtful consideration that Lamarche and Noble give to the raw materials utilized in their work, all reused and pieced from other items that had been produced for consumption.
Greg Lamarche’s collage work is inspired from many years of writing graffiti in NYC and The City itself, where letters and words are his primary source of imagery. He employs graffiti elements through the deconstruction of letters, movement, repetition and layering. Utilizing vintage paper, Lamarche gives discarded, forgotten things a second life and new meaning. The exhibition will feature new works from his O Series, consisting of controlled graphic collages; Remnant Series, composed of abstract letterforms, created from leftover shards of paper from previous collages, which create the O Series; and Diamond Series, which explores the negative shapes created by letters and their resulting abstract quality. Lamarche’s continued interest in expanding and transforming letterforms into endless possibilities is evident in his featured works.
Aaron Noble’s work is an investigation of superhero cartooning. His practice begins with a literal dissection of contemporary superhero comics, where he looks for interesting forms embedded within printed figurative artwork. He progresses by creating new forms out of those fragments. The resulting collage is the first iteration of the work, and the model for subsequent versions on paper, canvas, and/or wall. Noble developed this practice in the Mission district of San Francisco, as a synthesis of three distinct forms: murals, collage, and comics. The exhibition will feature new works by Noble that consist of multiple iterations of ideas, including, for the first time, the original collages. Several works will appear in at least three forms: as collage; as ink on bristol board; and as gouache on watercolor paper.
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Greg Lamarche, born and raised in New York City, has been making collages since the sixth grade. He began writing graffiti in 1981 and published Skills magazine during the early 90s. His work plays with a profusion of font styles, word fragments and multiple layers and employs characteristics from graffiti such as repetition, bold colors, multiple perspectives and movement. He has worked both as a designer and artist since 2000. His work has been featured in numerous magazines including, New York Times Magazine, Print Magazine, Juxtapoz Modern Painters and Arkitip, among others. His artwork has also been published in several new books including, Graffiti New York, Ornamental Type and Piecebook Reloaded for which he created the cover graphics.
Aaron Noble attended the San Francisco Art Institute in 1981-82. He cofounded the Clarion Alley Mural Project (CAMP) in San Francisco, which he directed from 1997 to 2001. He has done permanent outdoor murals in San Francisco, Los Angeles, London, Indonesia, Taiwan and Beijing; and temporary wall paintings at the UCLA Hammer museum in Los Angeles, White Columns in New York and the Davis Museum at Wellesley College, among others. He has shown at Blum & Poe and Track 16 in LA, PeerUK in London, Pavel Zoubok Gallery in New York, and many others. He is represented by Kaycee Olsen Gallery in Los Angeles and Guerrero Gallery in San Francisco, and is a member of Brooklyn Artists Alliance and the Artists Pension Trust. Aaron Noble lives and works in Los Angeles.
Guerrero Gallery. 2700 19th Street. San Francisco, CA 94110. 415.400.5168. www.guerrerogallery.com.
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CHRIS DUNCAN - EYE AGAINST I
September 11 - October 16, 2010 Opening Reception: Saturday, September 11th, 4-7pm
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Baer Ridgway Exhibitions is pleased to present EYE AGAINST I, a solo exhibition and large scale installation by Bay Area artist Chris Duncan. Taken from the title of the incredibly influential punk/hardcore record I AGAINST I by the Washington DC based Bad Brains, this moniker references Duncan's early influences of the punk/hardcore community and his current concepts in regards to optics, self-reflection and perception. Building upon op-art and the work of color theorists, this new body of work is about seeing, both literally and metaphorically. While questioning the objectivity of sight, Duncan provides a platform of contemplation of what is real.
For his most elaborate installation to date, Chris Duncan will alter the gallery space through a dizzying array of mirrors, string installations, new walls and scrims. In addition, Duncan has curated a series of readings and performances to be held in the gallery during the course of the exhibition. All are free and open to the public.
SEEING Wednesday, September 15th, 6-9pm An Evening of Readings by Whitney Chadwick, Max Goldberg, Colter Jacobsen, Jessica Lanyadoo,Miranda Mellis, Larry Rinder, Ryan Wallace, Lindsey White and Matthew Zapruder
BELIEVING Friday, September 17th, 7-10pm Ghost Stories as told by Donal Mosher with musical companionship from Danny Grody Followed by a screening of October Country, a film by Michael Palmieri and Donal Mosher
BELIEVER Friday, September 24th, 6-9pm Live Performance by Believer Treats will be provided by The Donut Field Research Team
SHOCK and ORBLESS Saturday, October 2nd, 6-9pm Live Musical Performances by Shock (a new band by the members of Rubies & Sorcerer) andOrbless. Very best,
Kent Baer & Eli Ridgway
Baer Ridgway Exhibitions 172 Minna Street, San Francisco, CA 94105 www.baerridgway.com,
This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it
415.777.1366
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COMPOUND EYES ON THE WORLD: NEW WORK BY ANDREW SCHOULTZ SEPTEMBER 11 - OCTOBER 23, 2010 Opening reception for the artist: Saturday, September 11 beginning at 5:00 PM
Website: www.marxzav.com Marx & Zavattero is proud to announce Compound Eyes on the World, Andrew Schoultz's ambitious second solo exhibition at the gallery. Inspired by the shifting nature of history as record in the past, present, and future, Schoultz's latest exhibition alludes to the tornado of information present today and the assumption that we are able to sift through the detritus to find clarity and meaning. The driving force behind this body of work straddles a line of duality between perceived reality and fiction, creating a theatrical tour de force of mixed media paintings, drawings, monotypes, and sculpture.
Schoultz's expansive and sometimes mystical vision continues to investigate the ways in which we receive and process information about the world from a political and social perspective. His acrylic, metal flake, and collage paintings have reached a feverish pitch in both color and density, and he has tellingly chosen the iconic eye found on the American one dollar bill as a recurring image; it permeates this body of work. Toggling between abstraction and graphic imagery, Schoultz creates densely layered images that read abstract at a distance, and become clearer at close range. His new body of work shares an intense sense of action that is cinematic in scope, depicting enveloping worlds, moods, and atmosphere that is as lyrically mesmerizing as it is unsettling. Energetic bursts of bright, full-spectrum color, expansive surfaces, and radioactive lines combine with some of his established imagery - pools of water rippling out, cyclones, broken bridges, and blasts - producing a combination of beauty and chaos, despair and hope that is expressly linked to natural disasters, economic turmoil, war, and misuses of power.
In the middle of the gallery Schoultz will construct a giant brick wall fabricated from wood, installed to appear as if it is tumbling down and crumbling before our eyes. Loaded with historical significance, the wall symbolizes centuries of power, war, and international borders. Schoultz's energy is beautifully devastating and places him at the forefront of a new category of practice in which abstraction and imagery fuse and dissolve before our very eyes. Much like the tenuous state of the world today, Schoultz has created his own aesthetics of imminent calamity.
Schoultz has exhibited in numerous museum and gallery exhibitions in international and national venues, including the 10th Havana Biennial, Havana, Cuba; Roberts & Tilton, Los Angeles, CA; Morgan Lehman Gallery, New York, NY; V1 Gallery, Copenhagen, Denmark; Jerome Zodo Contemporary, Milan; MAMA, Rotterdam, the Netherlands; European Kunsthalle and Linn Luhn, Cologne, Germany; the Torrance Art Museum; and the House of Campari, Los Angeles, CA, among many others. He was the winner of the Campari Art Award in 2009. His work has been featured in Playboy, Whitewall, The Los Angeles Times, LA Weekly, Artforum.com, San Francisco Bay Guardian, Juxtapoz, Arrow, Alarm, SF Weekly, The San Francisco Chronicle, and several other publications. His work is in the permanent collections of the Frederick R. Weisman Art Foundation, Los Angeles; The San Francisco Museum of Modern Art; and The Progressive Art Collection, Mayfield Village, OH. His street murals can be found in San Francisco and Indonesia. The artist lives and works in San Francisco.
The Shooting Gallery Presents
We're Not As Colorful As We Think We Are
New works by Joshua Petker
Opening Reception: Saturday, September 11, 2010 7-11pm
On View: September 11 - October 2, 2010
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WE'RE NOT AS COLORFUL AS WE THINK WE ARE: New works by Joshua Petker
View Media Kit
SAN FRANCISCO, CA - July 2nd, 2010 - The Shooting Gallery is pleased to present We're Not As Colorful As We Think We Are, a solo exhibition by Los Angeles-based artist, Joshua Petker.
The new body of work continues the artist's ongoing exploration of
color abstraction, negative space, and the human form. The exhibit
will be the fourth solo show with The
Shooting Gallery and will be comprised of 12-18 small to medium pieces
rendered in both mixed media on canvas and gouache and ink on paper.
The opening reception of We're Not As Colorful As We Think We Are will
be held at The Shooting Gallery on Saturday, September 11, 2010 from
7-11 pm. The exhibit will be on display through October 2, 2010 and is
free and open to the public.
Strongly reminiscent of Gustav
Klimt's ethereal portraits from the turn of the 20th century, Joshua Petker consciously continues the art historical practice of exploring the nuance of human emotion through the female form. Petker suspends his female figures between intense color fields
and quiet spaces of monochrome, liberating them from the confines of
everyday life and setting them free in a color-laden world of his own
imagination. In We're Not As Colorful As We Think We Are,
Petker explores the way humans use color to manipulate their physical
appearance in order to transcend their reality. People use color with
makeup to enhance their beauty, men use war paint to mark their
transformation into warriors, shamans use body paint to demarcate the
transition from body into spirit. Through these new works, Petker's
colors expose the desire for human metamorphosis all the while
reminding us that underneath the layers of color, we are more alike
then we may think. The exhibition will be comprised partly of mixed
media on canvas (acrylic, gouache and ink) and partly of gouache and
ink on paper. This is the first time that the artist will be showing
works on paper in a gallery.
Joshua Petker was
born in Los Angeles, CA in 1979 and received a BA in Western History
from The Evergreen State College in Olympia, Washington. After
studying abroad in 2001 at the Lorenzo de'Medici Institute of Florence,
he decided to pursue a career as a fine artist upon completion of his
studies back in the U.S.A. He has exhibited nationally in Los Angeles, San Francisco and Seattle, and internationally in London. His work can be found in private collections throughout the world.
Media Opportunities Interview with artist, Joshua Petker Interview with Justin Giarla, Owner/Founder of 941 Geary, White Walls, The Shooting Gallery and G3
Calendar Editors: What: We're Not As Colorful As We Think We Are, exhibition by
Joshua Petker
When: Opening Reception: Saturday, September 11, 2010, 7-11PM
Show runs through September 11 - October 2, 2010
Where: The Shooting Gallery
835 Larkin St.
San Francisco, CA 94109
FOR MORE INFORMATION VISIT: www.shootinggallerysf.com
The Shooting Gallery
opened it's doors in 2003 to the edgy Tenderloin district of San
Francisco; one known for it's diverse culture and history. Owner and
curator, Justin Giarla, founded the space to offer a welcoming
environment for viewing the art he loves.
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| Your SF Photos
Last week we did our first themed Photo of the Day asking you to email in your quintessential San Francisco photos. We got so many great entries and couldn't squeeze them all in. So, here's a bit of overflow from the images emailed in.
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| Hola from Tequisquiapan Mexico
Hey there, I just got back from a short residency down in a small town two hours north of Mexico City called Tequisquiapan. I was asked to come down there to meet some of the crew of the Clipperton Project, which basically is going to be a crazy boat trip in March with scientists and artists going out to a very remote atoll in the Pacific called Clipperton Island. Anyways, I thought you might like to see some photos of the town and the graffiti that I was surprised to find there.
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| FFDG's Permanent Home
We can finally shut up about FFDG's fire, about FFDG's temp space, about all the transitions, because we signed a 2 year lease on a new space in the heart of the Mission District last night!
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| Real Etheral by Evan Mann
Real Ethereal embraces our mysterious relationship with life. It blends the physical with the metaphysical on a journey through an ever-transitioning space where common interactions become extraordinary and perception ventures into the otherworldly. Real Ethereal examines possibilities of unseen realities and metaphorically represents the winding path that reveals before us and conceals behind us; the future remains a mystery while the past fades quickly into the recesses of our mind. We are left with the present: the mysterious reality of our existence; the hair of time difficult to grasp.
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| High 5s: As The World Turns
... we look forward to the new year.
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| Josh Peters Interview
Josh Peters is a La based painter/ curator/ cool guy/ I chatted with him recently about his work, here it is.
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| Scanner Photography by Sean Vranizan
Recent UC Santa Cruz photography graduate Sean Vranizan emailed over this series of images he creates by using a scanner as a camera, upon which found and collected objects, both two-dimensional and three, were used in collage format.
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| Interview w/ Alex Ziv & Quinn Arneson
SF based artists Alex Ziv & Quinn Arneson are in their final year at the San Francisco Art Institute and open the two person show UNIBROW: BRIDGING THE GAP Thursday, Dec 8th at Gallery Heist.
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| Post War Years - All Eyes
Great new video by Philadelphia based director Tobias Stretch whose videos feature his puppet work - If you have some time, browse his other great bizarre dreamlike videos.
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| Double Breaks @Double Break
A few November weekends back, I headed down with Travis Millard and Jim Dirschberger for o Breaks, a group show curated by Jay Howell and Louis Schmidt, which opened 11.11.11 at Double Break store and gallery in San Diego, CA.
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| Dream Team in Sao Paulo - Part 2
Before the show it was pretty much just me and Pacolli painting the whole gallery and doing all the instalations and hanging all the work. lots of shit to be done. I also painted the front of Choque the week after the opening. And we had a little concert at Choque in which I played keyboard and two other folks played guitar and sang. Ephameron went there the day before the opening and did a tape installation as well. During the month we also had a zine/print/shirt sale at Choque as well. It all went very well and we had a blast! -Mildred
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| Pseudo-Advertising by Alexandros Vasmoulakis
I am dealing with a new series called "Pseudo-Advertising", where I focus upon the relationship between today’s muralism and the contemporary outdoor advertising.
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| Nick Howard
Got an email from Minneapolis, MN based artist Nick Howard with some works attached. Love the pieces.
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| Charles Martin for 11.11.11
Charles participated in the group show 11.11.11 at FFDG in Nov/ Dec 2011. He studies at Cooper Union NYC.
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| A Visit w/ Strange Bird
Last week, after swinging by Rebel 8 clothing's HQ in San Francisco, we swung by the HQ of Strange Bird Distribution distributors of Low Card, Think Skateboards, Hubba Wheels, etc...
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| A Visit w/ Rebel 8
Stopped through Rebel 8 clothing HQ last week to see what their up to. We've known Joshy D. 10 plus years back when he was doing the SF graffiti site, HiFiArt.com in the early days of the internet when Fecal Face was just getting its start. Nice to see Mike Giant, whose designs adjorn many of Rebel 8's clothing, and Josh doing so well.
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| Steven Riddle @Water McBeer
Water McBeer Gallery is proud to announce its curent solo exhibition "Dinner Guest" featuring work by Steven Riddle
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| Nathan Brown for 11.11.11
Nathan is curently showing in the group show 11.11.11 up now @FFDG here in San Francisco through Dec 17th.
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| Sage Vaughn @Fifty24SF
Los Angeles based Sage Vaughn opened up Runaways at SF's Fifty24SF last Saturday.
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| BIG DEATH SPANK
Photos from Check Your Ponytail tour featuring Spank Rock, Big Freedia and the Death Set.
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| Chicago's Andrew Mongenas
Chicago based artist/ craftsman and Chicago Art Institue graduate Andrew Mongenas' sculpture works.
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Mark Whalen & Autolux
Wednesday, 08 February 2012, 10:59am
Mark Whalen (Kill Pixie), who's showing with Jay Howell at FFDG w/ an opening set for Sat., Feb 18th (6-9pm), did paintings for Autolux's new video for The Science of Imaginary Solutions which was animated & directed by Thomas McMahan. The video premieres online Feb 12th at midnight.
Before the online release, they're hosting a preview party Sat evening across from LACMA in LA to celebrate and screen the new video. ~complete details.

Mission Map Project
Tuesday, 07 February 2012, 12:46pm
A bunch of Mission district businesses here in SF (Mike Giant, Benny Gold, Joshy D, and others) got together to put together a Mission Map of businesses you should check out. Map and app release party goes down Saturday @111 Minna in SF (7-10pm)... We just moved FFDG to the Mission and didn't make the 1st version to be included. There are talks of a future V2 release.
 Mike Giant talking about the Mission Map project

MCD Prints Online
Saturday, 04 February 2012, 4:25pm
We still have a few prints left from the MCD show @FFDG. 4 color silk screens from the likes of Jeremy Fish, Aiyana Udesen, Matt Furie, and others for $75.
 Jeremy Fish 4 color silk screen print

Fecal Face's New Intern
Friday, 03 February 2012, 4:00pm
Say hi to Fecal Face & FFDG's new intern, Alexander Uhrich, who's in his last year at SFAI. He has to put in 90 hours of work, so you'll be seeing a lot of him.
Check his site to check his photography... Mucho eye entertainment to be viewed.
 Photo by Alexander Uhrich

Fecal Face Tumblr
Friday, 03 February 2012, 2:31pm
Hey, if you're a Tumblr fan, Fecal Face is on there as well. We'll be posting a taste of what you see here on the site... Tumblr was nice enough to give us fecalface.tumblr.com since someone had it but never made a post on it... You know what? Wonder if we claimed it years back and forgot about it. Hum.

Ryan Wallace & Chris Duncan - Toronto Fri
Wednesday, 01 February 2012, 10:13am
Ryan Wallace & Chris Duncan open Transmission Lines in Toronto at Cooper Cole Gallery Friday, Feb 3rd.
Wallace and Duncan's linear variations of shape explore the margins of time and space while echoing the unstable tension between vision, perception, and reflection. Both artists explore a variety of materials to great visual effect. ~complete show details.
 Polemic 5 by Ryan Wallace

The Story of Sue Nami
Tuesday, 31 January 2012, 9:36am
In the days following the Fukushima nuclear disaster, I was asked to make a poster for the Devo show at the Warfield Theatre in San Francisco. The image was a Japanese girl, wearing a nuclear t shirt, with the kanji character for earth tattooed on her shoulder. She was dead. I called her Sue Nami, and much to my surprise, the band liked it. ~keep reading Zolton's story of Sue.
Comments

Josh Short @Ever Gold, Tonight
Thursday, 02 February 2012, 11:18am
Ever Gold in SF opens a month long residency with Josh Short's Bomb Shelter Radio and Tenderloin Self- Defense Club tonight, Thurs (6-10pm). Check the video for a complete picture of what to expect.
Over the course of his residency at Ever Gold Gallery, Josh Short will build "Bomb Shelter Radio" and host several live sonic events that will include experimental noise transmissions, live metal and hardcore bands, and subversive FM radio interventions. This will also be aided by guerrilla public installations of radios installed around the Tenderloin bringing his interventions directly to the street as a form of audio graffiti. During the day the gallery will become the "Tenderloin Self-Defense Club", where Short will offer martial arts instruction to the neighborhood inhabitants, artists, and musicians. ~show details
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Poo's chillin' watching Tora Tora Tora tonight. -as of 10pm

| Your SF Photos
Last week we did our first themed Photo of the Day asking you to email in your quintessential San Francisco photos. We got so many great entries and couldn't squeeze them all in. So, here's a bit of overflow from the images emailed in.
 |

 |
| Hola from Tequisquiapan Mexico
Hey there, I just got back from a short residency down in a small town two hours north of Mexico City called Tequisquiapan. I was asked to come down there to meet some of the crew of the Clipperton Project, which basically is going to be a crazy boat trip in March with scientists and artists going out to a very remote atoll in the Pacific called Clipperton Island. Anyways, I thought you might like to see some photos of the town and the graffiti that I was surprised to find there.
 |

 |
| FFDG's Permanent Home
We can finally shut up about FFDG's fire, about FFDG's temp space, about all the transitions, because we signed a 2 year lease on a new space in the heart of the Mission District last night!
 |

 |
| Real Etheral by Evan Mann
Real Ethereal embraces our mysterious relationship with life. It blends the physical with the metaphysical on a journey through an ever-transitioning space where common interactions become extraordinary and perception ventures into the otherworldly. Real Ethereal examines possibilities of unseen realities and metaphorically represents the winding path that reveals before us and conceals behind us; the future remains a mystery while the past fades quickly into the recesses of our mind. We are left with the present: the mysterious reality of our existence; the hair of time difficult to grasp.
 |

 |
| High 5s: As The World Turns
... we look forward to the new year.
 |

 |
| Josh Peters Interview
Josh Peters is a La based painter/ curator/ cool guy/ I chatted with him recently about his work, here it is.
 |

 |
| Scanner Photography by Sean Vranizan
Recent UC Santa Cruz photography graduate Sean Vranizan emailed over this series of images he creates by using a scanner as a camera, upon which found and collected objects, both two-dimensional and three, were used in collage format.
 |

 |
| Interview w/ Alex Ziv & Quinn Arneson
SF based artists Alex Ziv & Quinn Arneson are in their final year at the San Francisco Art Institute and open the two person show UNIBROW: BRIDGING THE GAP Thursday, Dec 8th at Gallery Heist.
 |

 |
| Post War Years - All Eyes
Great new video by Philadelphia based director Tobias Stretch whose videos feature his puppet work - If you have some time, browse his other great bizarre dreamlike videos.
 |

 |
| Double Breaks @Double Break
A few November weekends back, I headed down with Travis Millard and Jim Dirschberger for o Breaks, a group show curated by Jay Howell and Louis Schmidt, which opened 11.11.11 at Double Break store and gallery in San Diego, CA.
 |

 |
| Dream Team in Sao Paulo - Part 2
Before the show it was pretty much just me and Pacolli painting the whole gallery and doing all the instalations and hanging all the work. lots of shit to be done. I also painted the front of Choque the week after the opening. And we had a little concert at Choque in which I played keyboard and two other folks played guitar and sang. Ephameron went there the day before the opening and did a tape installation as well. During the month we also had a zine/print/shirt sale at Choque as well. It all went very well and we had a blast! -Mildred
 |

 |
| Pseudo-Advertising by Alexandros Vasmoulakis
I am dealing with a new series called "Pseudo-Advertising", where I focus upon the relationship between today’s muralism and the contemporary outdoor advertising.
 |

 |
| Nick Howard
Got an email from Minneapolis, MN based artist Nick Howard with some works attached. Love the pieces.
 |

 |
| Charles Martin for 11.11.11
Charles participated in the group show 11.11.11 at FFDG in Nov/ Dec 2011. He studies at Cooper Union NYC.
 |

 |
| A Visit w/ Strange Bird
Last week, after swinging by Rebel 8 clothing's HQ in San Francisco, we swung by the HQ of Strange Bird Distribution distributors of Low Card, Think Skateboards, Hubba Wheels, etc...
 |

 |
| A Visit w/ Rebel 8
Stopped through Rebel 8 clothing HQ last week to see what their up to. We've known Joshy D. 10 plus years back when he was doing the SF graffiti site, HiFiArt.com in the early days of the internet when Fecal Face was just getting its start. Nice to see Mike Giant, whose designs adjorn many of Rebel 8's clothing, and Josh doing so well.
 |

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| Steven Riddle @Water McBeer
Water McBeer Gallery is proud to announce its curent solo exhibition "Dinner Guest" featuring work by Steven Riddle
 |

 |
| Nathan Brown for 11.11.11
Nathan is curently showing in the group show 11.11.11 up now @FFDG here in San Francisco through Dec 17th.
 |

 |
| Sage Vaughn @Fifty24SF
Los Angeles based Sage Vaughn opened up Runaways at SF's Fifty24SF last Saturday.
 |

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| BIG DEATH SPANK
Photos from Check Your Ponytail tour featuring Spank Rock, Big Freedia and the Death Set.
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| Chicago's Andrew Mongenas
Chicago based artist/ craftsman and Chicago Art Institue graduate Andrew Mongenas' sculpture works.
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