Listen Up: It’s Friday. And Time For the Latest #NIADathome Playlist//

We have a solution for your weekend. Are you ready? Why not check out out latest playlist on Spotify? We’ve asked our artists, our staff, artists we’ve exhibited or worked with or just people we really like to create playlists (on Spotify) for all of us to enjoy at this moment. Last week, we offered you the first three mixes created in our series. Every few days, we will release a new one. Our latest is selected by Nan Collymore. Nan is an amazing artist and a facilitator for our artists. Oh, and she’s a terrific writer, too. Enjoy!

Interesting Reading: Peter Plagens Covers Remote Teaching Online//

From Two Coats Of Paint: Plagens writes “While this plague is upon us, however, and students and faculty have been driven from the classroom, necessity must be the mother of pedagogical invention. Several artists I know who also teach are venturing into the breach with different solutions…” Plagens than interviews several educators on their methods, successes and pitfalls. Read it here.

Rest In Peace: Germano Celant//

Germano Celant, the towering Italian critic, curator, and scholar whose wide-ranging interpretations and exhibitions altered the trajectory of contemporary art and made him a leading voice in the field, has died in Milan at eighty years old due to complications from Covid-19. The author of hundreds of books, essays, and articles that coincided with as many large-scale exhibitions, Celant is most closely affiliated with arte povera, a term he coined in 1967 for the association of Italian avant-garde artists who made meaning from mundane materials and challenged the role of art itself. (via Artforum)

Online Exhibition: EVIL ROBOTS!, Selected By Miles Rodriguez//

We’re in a bit of a dystopic moment right now. And it sure would be great to blame some evil robots for it. But, we can’t, right? Well, Miles Rodriguez – a big fan of the Terminator franchise films — has a crafted a superb show that reminds us COVID-19 is not the only thing to fear. View the exhibition. And/ or read Miles’ blog post about his experiences during this pandemic.

Interesting Read: Online Exhibition Selector Miles Rodriguez Talks About His Pandemic Experiences//

Miles Rodriguez, a barista-in-training in Portland Oregon, has selected the next in our weekly series of online exhibition. His show, “EVIL ROBOTS!,” will post in a few days (if you cannot wait, you can see it here, now). Miles is also the son of Amelia Opie, an artist who has had several exhibitions at NIAD. Miles talks about his recent experience with sheltering-in-place: On March 6th I showed up to the coffee cart where I had been working, learning how to make and serve specialty coffee drinks to people. When I got there it was closed, and nobody was there. Read More …

Listen Up: A New Series of #NIADathome Playlists, Just For You//

Like us, you’re very likely sheltering-in-place and looking for something to do. And, since, maybe, you’ve already completed our free downloadable coloring books, we have a new project to help you pass the time. We’ve asked our artists, our staff, artists we’ve exhibited or worked with or just people we really like to create playlists (on Spotify) for all of us to enjoy at this moment. Last week, we offered you the first one created by our artists (it was embedded in our newsletter.) Every few days, we will release a new one. Here’s our second mix. It was created Read More …

Don’t Know About You, But We Just Had a Prom//

Hey… It’s Spring and we had a prom! It was a bit different than the usual shindig. Since we’re sheltering-in-place, we held this one on the Internet (via Zoom.) But it was also quite conventional. Everyone in attendance was dressed to the nines (including corsages made from recycled materials). And there was a prom theme (Starry Night), a deejay and dancing! Alycia Cowen, one of our NIAD artists, came up with the whole idea. And it was perfect!

This Week’s Update From Our Executive Director//

Now that NIAD is heading into week six of offsite services, our work is focused on maintaining and improving supports for artists to continue their contemporary art practices. If you’ve donated to NIAD’s Mobile Art Fund, purchased art, reached out to stay connected with us on social media or in an email, or kept up with our updates, this work is happening thanks to you.  We’re closing the technology gaps in our community, ensuring access to hygiene masks and gloves, and stepping up our learning to support the community through crisis and transition, so that we know artists and their Read More …

Interesting Reading: Take-Home Kits, Virtual Studio Time a Lifeline for Artists With Disabilities//

From KQED: “NIAD, Creative Growth and Creativity Explored, all rooted in hands-on art-making and face-to-face interactions, are turning to technology in an effort to reach their artists at home. Those “at home” situations vary: artists live in group homes, with family members or alone. Not everyone has access to a phone. Not everyone is verbal. The de facto video conferencing software may be inaccessible. For those able to join, NIAD has instituted a daily 11am check-in via Zoom to maintain the sense of community; some of those meetings are followed by games of bingo. “Twenty to thirty-five people every day Read More …

An Update From Our Artist Advisory Committee//

Did you know that we have a group of NIAD artists that plan and strategize weekly about the future of the Art Center? We do. They’re call the Artist Advisory Committee? On Zoom, this week, the Artist Advisory Committee ran deep: artists noted the difficulty of confronting this moment without the usual supports of the studio, the need for some things to continue as normal, and — in a relatively short time for such a large group of collaborating artists — NIAD’s studio artists began to innovate new studio offerings to access online. The coming weeks will see a Spanish Read More …

An Update From Our Executive Director//

As we all settle into new routines, the reality of life in these new patterns is starting to set in: we’re going to be here for a while, and it’s not always easy to get comfortable.  We’ve tried to make it a little easier – the same coloring books, online exhibitions, playlists, and #NIADathome you see here goes out to all our artists too, and it becomes fuel for new art practice conversations. In the virtual studio for the past three weeks, NIAD staff have been working with artists and their care providers to ensure access to digital tools for Read More …

Interesting Viewing: NIAD’s Jean McElvane Selects Some California Favorites//

Jean, a resident of Richmond (born and raised), explains this week’s selections, “Here are some musical tunes featuring the state of California, just ‘cuz it’s home to me, though I’ve been to about over ten cities of my life, the farthest cities I’ve been in California are Santa Clara, Sacramento & Millbrae (on BART), and never been anywhere out of California either.” Here’s her Top Ten of Golden State songs… And her Top Ten, California City Tunes (or a few mention in the lyrics)…

Opportunity: Calling All Artists//

SaveArtSpace has partnered with NIAD Art Center, Creative Growth, and Creativity Explored to bring more public art to the Bay Area. We invite artists of all ages and talents to submit their work for consideration of placement on a billboard. The selected artists will be on view with artists from our centers in a Bay Area-wide public art exhibition on ad spaces beginning in Summer 2020. The deadline to submit is now May 31.