This Week’s Update From Our Executive Director//

For many people, NIAD continues to be their ‘happy place’ – we’re still working with our contemporary artists pursuing exceptional careers. However, this week, we’re also contemplating our role as advocates, activists, and organizers in the midst of undeniable truths. For our staff, artists, families, and care providers, it is a moment of action, as the California State Senate rejects budget cuts to our system. In the wider world, we must recognize the violence being done to our communities as our systems of power continue to brutalize black men and women. And in the Bay Area’s art world (and far beyond), we’ve Read More …

Interesting Read: California Art Schools Consider Hybrid Instruction Models For Fall Semester//

From Artforum: “Allan deSouza, the chair of the Department of Art Practice at the University of California Berkeley, told Hyperallergic that the school is discussing several teaching approaches for the fall semester and may focus on developing a new “hybrid model” of education, which would consist of a mix of online courses and limited access to labs and studios. “If we are able to follow a hybrid model, then we would have to meet a lot of practicalities regarding safeguarding staff, maintaining clean spaces, scheduling small groups of students to have time-allotted access, etc.” A hybrid approach to instruction is Read More …

This Week’s Update From Our Executive Director//

“Y’all are doing a good job.” – Arstanda Billy White, NIAD Artist Despite the clear discomforts of working at a distance from one another, this week it’s clear that we are getting used to this, even – thanks, Billy – good at it.  NIAD’s Virtual Studio is operating from 9AM to 3PM, Monday – Friday.  Individual artist outreach, four to six studio offerings daily, delivery of supplies and tech equipment, even dedicated tech support for each family: NIAD’s teams are working at full capacity, and it shows.  How can I tell?  NIAD’s artists approach us every day with feedback like Read More …

Rest In Peace: Susan Rothenberg//

via ArtForum: “Painter Susan Rothenberg, whose equine imagery countered the dominant Minimalism of the 1970s by infusing it with representation, has died at seventy-five. The news was confirmed by Sperone Westwater Gallery, which has shown her work since 1987. Discussing the emergence of her best-known symbol in a 2005 interview with Art21, Rothenberg said: “When I stumbled on the horse, I went, okay, this can be my Jasper Johns flag, this can be nothing to me because I don’t like horses. I can draw a line through it, make it flat . . . negate painting as much as possible Read More …

Interesting Viewing: Curator’s The COVID Diaries//

If you’re a fan of (merely just interested in) contemporary art, Curator has developed a new video series: “The COVID Diaries, Volume 1 brings together four very different female artists from around the world to voice unique perspectives on art and the spaces in which they are working during this unique moment. From Susan Feldman, who has built an entire city in her studio, to Rachel Walters who has been taken out of the city that inspires her, to Amanda Lucia Cote who fled New York to find solace in a rural place, to Camille Rose Garcia, an artist creating Read More …

This Week’s Update From Our Executive Director//

It might seem like getting tablets to artists is a straightforward materials project – we receive the equipment, we deliver it to where it needs to go.  But this week, I’m reflecting on the persistence of NIAD’s (new!) Online Services Team, and the work it’s taken to place tech tools in our artists’ hands today. Comprising staff from nearly all of NIAD’s program and admin areas, Online Services has made sure that despite scarce supplies, unpredictable shipping, and the challenges of working while isolated, artists are receiving: • not only tablets, but a zine on how to use them;  • Read More …

Interesting Read: At This Museum, Education Staff Prove More Vital Than Ever During Pandemic//

While museums across the country have chosen to lay off or furlough educators, at the Asian Art Museum the education department is busily at work. From Hyperallergic: “The museum is a site of cultural production for the community, Chen thinks. That is one of the reasons she feels it’s so important to keep education staff, whom she sees as intertwined with the curatorial staff and vital for engaging audiences. “I view the education department in a prominent role and position in art institutions and blending with the curatorial more seamlessly,” Chen said. “Taking action now is way more important than Read More …

From A Recent Staff Meeting: What We Miss The Most About Being On-site At NIAD//

Hugs Nonverbal Communication The wall full of messy fabric Hugs from Fifi Creativity Unfiltered unexpected love  Honest caring and nurturing Alan Sounds Stories in the garden Soundscape Silence together in the same space Garden full of folks Felicia’s questions Conversations with artists Daily interactions with artists Movement, music, laughter, comfort of being there Vista looking out at everyone working All of it Seeing art The morning studio Things to do – a sense of purpose Everything Joking around with buddies Walking by people working and seeing what they’re doing

More Free Stuff from #NIADathome: We’ve Created Some Zoom Backgrounds Just For You//

Using a selection of works from our artists, we’re offering a plethora of Zoom backdrops, perfect for a business meeting, social hour or family connection. There is likely one for every taste and preference (with the artist’s name embedded on the image, in case anyone asks you). And they are free! Here’s a step-by-step guide: 1. Download the NIAD background(s) to a folder on your computer. 2. In the Zoom app, click your profile in the top right corner, and click Settings.  3. On the menu to the left, click Virtual Background.  4. You’ll see a few default background options provided by Zoom, including Read More …

Interesting Reading: The CDC’s Misappropriation Of A Chinese Textile, And Why It Matters//

From Hyperallergic: “I had always assumed that the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) was a voice that could be trusted to guide Americans through the present global pandemic, save for its flip-flopping position on the efficacy of wearing face masks in public. After all, I had shared the CDC’s safety guidelines concerning the novel coronavirus with students in my Asian art history classes before we made the transition to virtual learning. Instead, it was with a mixture of shock and disbelief that I saw my colleague Michele Matteini’s Facebook post about a Chinese textile gracing the cover of Read More …

Interesting Read: California Galleries Flout Stay-At-Home Orders, Declaring Art Essential//

From Artforum: Despite the current shelter-at-home orders in effect in California, a number of businesses across the state are opening their doors, defying measures that were enacted to protect the public from the the novel coronavirus, which had infected more than 60,600 people and caused the death of 2,462 at the time of publication. Among those refusing to stay closed are two Bay Area art galleries who believe that shuttering for six weeks was enough.   “Public officials: know that we’re prepared to risk fines, arrest, or jail,” wrote dealers Quent and Linda Cordair of Quent Cordair Fine Art in Read More …

Interesting Read: Marilyn Chase’s New Bio Of San Francisco Artist And Educator Ruth Osawa//

From Hyperallergic about Marilyn Chase’s new biography of Ruth Osawa: “While raising six children, hosting friends and artists at her home, and spending countless hours making her own art, Asawa also dedicated her career to attending school board meetings and improving children’s experiences of the arts through a grassroots approach. “Where other people might have spent more time in the studio or [might have] given time and thought and energy and resources toward burnishing their image… she was all about just giving it away,” Chase explained in a phone interview with Hyperallergic. Throughout her text, Chase pulls out important milestones Read More …

Online Exhibition: Heart + Home, Selected By Kate Mothes//

During this pandemic, Kate Mothes has selected a show that explores her new sense of home. As she explains, “(M)y family has been more tender to one another; my cat has never been so spoiled; spring wildflowers are popping up in the backyard and I have the time to monitor their daily progress; and a weekly trip to the grocery store becomes an adventure.” Please, check out her exhibition.