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Fall Arts Preview 2021 - Sactown Magazine

Fall Arts Preview 2021 - Sactown Magazine
sactownmag.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from sactownmag.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

Nut Tree Forever - Sactown Magazine

Nut Tree Forever - Sactown Magazine
sactownmag.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from sactownmag.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

Art Patrons Create New Exhibitions Endowment at Manetti Shrem Museum

The art scene at the University of California, Davis, just got even better. In their first major commitment to UC Davis, philanthropists Kellie and Jeff Hepper ’79 have pledged $1 million to create the Hepper Family Exhibition Fund, an endowed gift to support the core exhibition work of the Jan Shrem and Maria Manetti Shrem Museum of Art. This is the largest gift made to the museum by an alumnus, and it will help create public exhibitions and exhibition-related programming for all to enjoy at the Manetti Shrem Museum. “Kellie and Jeff Hepper embody the spirit of UC Davis: They are serious about playful creativity, and it shows in their wonderful contemporary art collection,” said Rachel Teagle, founding director of the Manetti Shrem Museum.

William T Wiley, Funk Artist Who Spurned Convention, Dies at 83

William T. Wiley, ‘Funk Artist’ Who Spurned Convention, Dies at 83 Rooted in the Bay Area, he disdained commerce (and the New York scene, mostly), produced an eclectic kind of figurative art and imparted his “Wiz-dumb” to disciples. William T. Wiley loaded up his art as if it were his scrapbook, depicting figures, landscapes, perhaps images of nuclear reactors and the despoliation of the natural environment.Credit.William T. Wiley/Hosfelt Gallery By Deborah Solomon Published May 5, 2021Updated May 18, 2021 William T. Wiley, the influential artist and educator who helped found the funk art movement and establish the San Francisco Bay Area art scene as an unfiltered alternative to what he saw as the flagrant commercialism of New York, died on April 25 in a hospital in Greenbrae, Calif. He was 83.

William T Wiley, multi-faceted artist and educator integral to Bay Area art scene, dies at 83

Sam Whiting April 28, 2021Updated: April 28, 2021, 8:00 pm Artist William Wiley is interviewed in 1996 at his Woodacre studio in Marin County. Photo: Jerry Telfer, The Chronicle 1996 William T. Wiley a founder of the Bay Area Funk art movement who expanded into every medium and style of creation from watercolor to printmaking to giant sculptures in a career that lasted from 1960 until just a few months ago died Sunday, April 25, at Marin General Hospital. His death was due to complications from Parkinson’s disease, which he’d suffered from since 2014, said his son, Ethan Wiley. He was 83. A painter with a unique style developed at an early age, Wiley had exhibited at the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art in 1960 when he was 23 and still an undergraduate at the San Francisco Art Institute. Since then, SFMOMA has come to own 50 of his pieces, with eight of them in mediums from ink on felt and leather to etching on paper on display in a designated gallery s

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