Showing posts with label bird paintings. Show all posts
Showing posts with label bird paintings. Show all posts

See This Art Exhibit Before It Migrates. Borderland Birds By David Tomb.




There's only a few more days to visit this amazing art exhibit/installation at the San Francisco Electric Works gallery. The Borderland Birds / Aves Fronterizas, works on paper by David Tomb, featuring work inspired by Tomb’s birding trips to the borderlands of the United States and Mexico will close this Saturday, May 29th.

For this exhibition, Tomb, a celebrated painter of portraits of people, brings his rigorous attention to birds. Secondary to dealing with the subject matter of birds, Borderland Birds / Aves Fronterizas also highlights the impact of the US-Mexico border fence; a project environmentalists say spells disaster for the sensitive ecology of the region. Beyond simple cataloging and rendering of the splendid birds of the borderland region, Tomb's work calls to mind the plight of people who have to cross this border on a daily basis, a feat fraught with problems migrating birds do with relative ease.




Part drawing show, part installation, in the gallery Tomb recreates the sights and sounds of the borderland region by use of native vegetation and ambient sound recordings.



Viewers will be transported to two fragile and unique areas: the beautiful Sky Islands of Mexico/Southern Arizona and the Lower Rio Grande Valley that borders Mexico and Texas. While much of this habitat has been converted to corporate agriculture some remote hidden mountain canyons still harbor a rich trove of beautiful and rare creatures. Tomb’s exhibition will focus on the following species: Montezuma Quail, Aztec Thrush, Aplomado Falcon, and Coati.






Tomb combines experience in the field with research of bird specimens at the California Academy of Sciences and the Museum of Vertebrate Zoology at UC Berkeley. His final masterful renderings of the birds are life size and depict the birds in their natural habitat. As an avid birder, Tomb has been lucky enough to have his nerves rattled by the freaky chorus of Chachalacas in the thorny scrub and to have glimpsed the jewel-like Elegant Trogon during July monsoons.

Here are some photos from the exhibit:






all information and images courtesy of the gallery and the artist.

Tomb received his BFA from California State University Long Beach and has shown nationally and internationally.

Plants for the installation generously provided by The Dry Garden, Oakland.

The SF Electric Works Gallery site.
For purchasing information, please contact Noah Lang via email or at 415.626.5496. Prices and availability are subject to change.


if you're not familiar with Tomb's figurative work, check out my post on that here.

the artist's own website

See This Art Exhibit Before It Migrates. Borderland Birds By David Tomb.




There's only a few more days to visit this amazing art exhibit/installation at the San Francisco Electric Works gallery. The Borderland Birds / Aves Fronterizas, works on paper by David Tomb, featuring work inspired by Tomb’s birding trips to the borderlands of the United States and Mexico will close this Saturday, May 29th.

For this exhibition, Tomb, a celebrated painter of portraits of people, brings his rigorous attention to birds. Secondary to dealing with the subject matter of birds, Borderland Birds / Aves Fronterizas also highlights the impact of the US-Mexico border fence; a project environmentalists say spells disaster for the sensitive ecology of the region. Beyond simple cataloging and rendering of the splendid birds of the borderland region, Tomb's work calls to mind the plight of people who have to cross this border on a daily basis, a feat fraught with problems migrating birds do with relative ease.




Part drawing show, part installation, in the gallery Tomb recreates the sights and sounds of the borderland region by use of native vegetation and ambient sound recordings.



Viewers will be transported to two fragile and unique areas: the beautiful Sky Islands of Mexico/Southern Arizona and the Lower Rio Grande Valley that borders Mexico and Texas. While much of this habitat has been converted to corporate agriculture some remote hidden mountain canyons still harbor a rich trove of beautiful and rare creatures. Tomb’s exhibition will focus on the following species: Montezuma Quail, Aztec Thrush, Aplomado Falcon, and Coati.






Tomb combines experience in the field with research of bird specimens at the California Academy of Sciences and the Museum of Vertebrate Zoology at UC Berkeley. His final masterful renderings of the birds are life size and depict the birds in their natural habitat. As an avid birder, Tomb has been lucky enough to have his nerves rattled by the freaky chorus of Chachalacas in the thorny scrub and to have glimpsed the jewel-like Elegant Trogon during July monsoons.

Here are some photos from the exhibit:






all information and images courtesy of the gallery and the artist.

Tomb received his BFA from California State University Long Beach and has shown nationally and internationally.

Plants for the installation generously provided by The Dry Garden, Oakland.

The SF Electric Works Gallery site.
For purchasing information, please contact Noah Lang via email or at 415.626.5496. Prices and availability are subject to change.


if you're not familiar with Tomb's figurative work, check out my post on that here.

the artist's own website

A Transformation So Hip, It's Criminal. Police Station Turned Home.



Okay, I'm feeling some serious love for Apartment Therapy these days. Just this past week, they featured my sister's home AND they featured If It's Hip, It's Here on their Behind The Blog series.

First off, I hadn't done a story on my own sister and her husband's cool home in San Francisco for fear of coming off as the nepotistic blogger. But their having turned an old San Francisco Police Station into a modern home is certainly blogworthy, at least Apartment Therapy thought so. They posted a very nice article and interview on the home in their House Tours section so now I figured it's safe to share it with you.

They did such a nice job I'm gong to reprint their post, only include all the slide show shots here with the article and break them into categories. Yes, my whole family is quite hip. I'm a lucky girl.

Name: David Tomb and Susan Sweet
Location: San Francisco
Size: Living area 1700 sq. ft., office/studio 700 sq. ft.
Years lived in: 10 years owned

Back in 1996, the architect Bruce Tomb heard about a 1950s dragnet-style police precinct coming up for public auction in San Francisco. At the time, Bruce's brother, the artist David Tomb, and his wife, Susan Sweet, were living in New York, but hoping to come back to the Bay Area to start a family. Together they bought the building at auction—Willie Brown's signature is right there on the deed—and Bruce redesigned the police station, envisioning a kind of compound with live/work spaces for both brothers' families. The result of the two-year renovation is a gorgeous, light-filled space unlike any home we have seen before.

Front entrance and main space:



Living room:


livingroom details:



Dining area:


Kitchen:




Visitors enter the "compound" down a long driveway lined with flowering vines. The live/work spaces are arranged around a parking lot that's been converted into a garden courtyard (with space for parking, too). A native plant garden offers inviting, dappled shade, and nearby a wide glass door leads into David and Susan's home.

exterior and parking:

Front door:

Atrium in the middle of the home.


The quality of the light inside is so spectacular that it almost feels like you're still outdoors. With its soaring ceilings, numerous well-placed skylights, and open central lightwell, the home is designed to take in natural light from every possible direction. David and Susan have arranged their space to make the most of their abundance of sun and space, painting the walls in bright but soothing yellows and greens and hanging large artworks (some of which are David's own) that would hardly fit in a room with standard ceiling height. They embrace the open plan of their living space, eschewing room dividers and closed-off vignettes in favor of an uncluttered layout in which one space flows easily into the next. Even their son's room, the smaller of the two bedrooms, has a wide-open feel, with an outer playroom leading into a skylit sleeping area.

Master Bedroom:



master bath:

My nephew's room with front playroom:






David's studio and Susan's office are just a short walk away, down an outdoor hallway. The arrangement seems ideal, though we're not sure how anyone could work with such an inviting place to relax nearby!

David's Studio:


To see David's stunning artwork, visit his site here.

AT Survey:

My/Our Style: Modern eclectic.

Inspiration: The building was the starting point—a modern utilitarian building.

Favorite Element: Open floor plan and amazing light quality, plus conversion and design of parking lot into California Native garden.

Biggest Challenge: Continuum of building maintenance (good luck in the boiler room).

What Friends Say: Where are the jail cells? (They’re still here, in the other part of the building.)

Biggest Embarrassment: Oh yeah, there was that time the neighbors didn’t really like the concrete cutter noise decibels at 8am.

Proudest DIY: Interior color design.

Biggest Indulgence: The custom-made bookcase in the family room.

Best Advice: Everything will take double the amount of time and money to complete that you think it will, but ultimately is hugely gratifying.

Dream Source: Bruce Tomb, designer and architect; David Tomb, artist; Matarozzi and Pelsinger builders.

Resources:

Main Room:
Knoll furniture (Barcelona chair, Gehry chair)
Herman Miller (Eames chair)
Umbra (Karim Rashid Oh Chairs)
Anthropologie (pillows)
Electric Works Gallery Store (ceramic owl piggy bank)
Marble 1965 dining table salvaged from East Bay bank

Main Room Art :
David Tomb (portraits and birds)
Cathy Liu (volcano print)
Lynn Beldner (sculpture, plaster with objects)
Steve Briscoe (glass bullhorn, pimp drawing)
Matt Gil (ceramic and metal sculptures)
Mata Ortiz (spider pot)
Donald Tomb (salvaged lighthouse lenses)

Atrium:
Yerba Buena nursery
Flora Grubb Gardens

Child’s Room:
Bachmann and Lionel Trains
Oakland school district salvaged map
Steve Briscoe (lamb print)

Master Bedroom:
Turn of the Century Fine Arts (Jane Bench)
Herman Miller (Eames chair)

Master Bedroom Art:
Barry Simons
Merav Tzur
Kenney Mencher
Jurek Bitter
Ethel Sweet
David Tomb
Lynn Beldner

Master Bath:
Bruce Tomb, Infinite Fitting (bronze cast sinks)
Steve Briscoe (plaster bear)

(Images: Susie Nadler for Apartment Therapy)



Wanna see The 'behind the blog' article on If It's Hip, It's Here?


It's on their Unplggd section here.


More on David Tombs' Art:

Meet David Tomb (His work is the Bomb)
David Tomb's First Non-Portrait Show in 20 Years Opens In San Francisco
Art That's For The Birds (Literally). And A Peek Into A Painter's Project Room.
Better Flock To David Tomb's Next Art Show: Birds Of The Sierra Madre