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Why the Exploratorium and some other Bay Area museums aren t yet reopening
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Sonic Border: Show at Hudson River Museum examines migration issues
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Shaquille Heath February 22, 2021Updated: February 22, 2021, 8:41 pm
Artist Woody De Othello Photo: Smeeta Mahanti
Long before the pandemic forced everyone to stay indoors, where many found themselves making friends with lampshades or that old wooden stool, Woody De Othello had made household objects his muse.
The Oakland artist has spent about a decade working with clay, creating ceramic vessels that subtly speak his personal truths. Though Othello is known for breathing new life into the ordinary, the metaphor becomes intentional. Ears materialize out of clay so naturally, you might wonder whether they are listening.
“Thinking Green” by Woody De Othello. Photo: Jessica Silverman
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Max Nesbet and Dorian Clair pose for a photo with the shop cat, Mike, who is frequently seen in the window.Lance Yamamoto/Special to SFGATE
Bowing his head over a tiny workstation cluttered with a mishmash of mysterious gadgets and appliances, Max Nesbet carefully takes apart a 14-karat gold pocket watch that is at least 200 years older than he is.
He ponders aloud while he works. Two initials E.B. are carved into the intricate design. Nesbet isn’t sure who or what that might be referencing, but judging by the hallmark stamped into the case, what he can tell is that the object in his hands was likely an English watch sold in New York sometime in 1786.
Sam Whiting January 15, 2021Updated: January 20, 2021, 12:19 pm
Overview of the new sculpture installation by Gay Outlaw at San Francisco International Airport Photo: Sam Whiting/the Chronicle
John Ong of Sacramento was awaiting a friend’s arrival at San Francisco International Airport when he leaned over a railing and was confronted by a sculpture garden.
“I’m not really much into art and all that. I love the colors, though,” he said, when asked to describe what he saw. “They could look good at my house for sure.”
Ong’s difficulty in summarizing what he was looking at is the point of this new permanent public art installation by Gay Outlaw, a San Francisco artist known for her dry Southern humor.
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