Men With Hoops 16x20
Ann Chamberlin
Original Painting : Gouache
Size : 7x10 x1 in | 18x25 x3 cm
Framed : 16x20 in | 41x51 cm
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🔥Fabulous Framed Gouache - 8 Watchers - A Steal - Inquire $$$$$$$
Year1991
Hand SignedSigned lower right
Condition Excellent - The painting is in excellent condition. There is one very minor imperfection on the matting.
Framed with PlexiglassModern oak wood frame with white mat
Story / Additional InfoOriginal owner. Purchased at Robert Berman Gallery, Santa Monica, California.
Certificate of AuthenticityArt Brokerage
LID21290
Ann Chamberlin - United States
Art Brokerage: Ann Chamberlin American Artist: b. 1951-2008. She was born in Cleveland in 1951. After graduating from Smith College in Northampton, Massachusetts, she drove west to San Francisco in the summer of 1974. She first earned a master's in creative arts at San Francisco State in 1981, and then a master's in conceptual design in 1987. She was program director for the Headland Center for the Arts from 1989 to 1993, and also taught at San Francisco State and California College of Arts. She received National Endowment for the Arts grants and a Fulbright fellowship, among other honors. Ann Chamberlain was a much-loved San Francisco artist and teacher whose poetic installations in hospitals, libraries and other public spaces explored history, identity and the intersection of personal and communal memory. Her best-known work is probably the vast, three-story mural she and artist Ann Hamilton created for the new San Francisco Main Library. They literally papered the wall with 50,000 cards from the old library's obsolete card catalog, each annotated by hand with a quote from the book, a related source or a personal comment, in a dozen different languages, by about 200 people. Ann Chamberlain was on the faculty at the San Francisco Art Institute for many years, was also known for the Healing Garden she and designer Katsy Swan created at the UCSF/Mount Zion Cancer Center with patients, their families, friends, doctors and other caregivers. Conceived while she was a patient there, the garden features a wall composed of about 500 ceramic tiles, each containing an impression of a plant and personal stories and thoughts. Her many commissioned public works include a collaboration with Victor Zaballa on the Mexican Cultural Heritage Gardens in San Jose, which drew on the personal histories of 500 people from the neighboring community; a piece for the California Supreme Court Building in San Francisco and a collaborative work with artist Bernie Lubell to be installed in 2010 at Laguna Honda Hospital. In addition to these projects, Ms. Chamberlain also created installations and smaller works that were exhibited at various museums and galleries, including Yerba Buena Center for the Arts, the de Young Museum, Southern Exposure and Gallery Paule Anglim. Her most recent work is the Abraham Lincoln Brigade Monument on the plaza across from the San Francisco Ferry Building, a tribute to the Americans who volunteered to fight for the loyalists during the Spanish Civil War. Created with landscape designer Walter Hood, it's composed of translucent onyx panels etched with war photographs by Robert Capra and words about the conflict by Ernest Hemingway, Pablo Neruda and others. Listings wanted.