Tuesday, May 24, 2011

Coming soon: The Invisible Method


The Invisible Method
June 3 - July 2, 2011
Opening reception: Friday, June 3rd, 7-10 pm


Featuring the work of Alberto Cuadros, Jamie Daughters, Phil Elverum, Laura Flippen, Barrett Gent, and Kanoa Zimmerman


The Invisible Method examines various entry points into the the ways we think about framing and defining our world. The participating artists consider the natural world in its developed and undeveloped states and how we choose to engage with it. In this collection of large scale photographs, images serve to illustrate the various ways in which we interact with a framed nature in our contemporary world of continued development and sprawl.

Curated by Alberto Cuadros


Support for this project is provided by Southern Exposure's Alternative Grant Program.

Monday, May 23, 2011

May 28th at Adobe Books Backroom Gallery


Man-o-Man-o-Man: Photographs by Raphael Villet

Exhibition reception and zine release
Saturday, May 28th, 7-10pm

Adobe Books Backroom Gallery presents a one-night only exhibition of photographs to celebrate the release of Raphael Villet's zine "Man-o-Man-o-Man." Published by Hamburger Eyes, the new photography zine looks into how men create, survive, and reject constructed definitions of their gendered identities. The project compiles photographs taken in clubs, parks, buses, and dives during Villet's travels around Europe and the US, including San Francisco, Santa Cruz, Berlin, Budapest, Prague, Vienna, Lyon, and Rome. Raphael seeks to explore the different representations of being a man around the world and the different ways in which men express, reject or struggle with their identities. Ultimately the photos are self-reflective: Raphael seeks to log his insecurities through documenting others.

The reception will feature musical sets by the bands Meat Market and Indian Giver, from Santa Cruz, CA.


Raphael Villet is a film photographer from San Francisco. Born in Melbourne, Australia he moved around Africa before settling in SF in 1998. He recently received a BA in Sociology at UC Santa Cruz and his photography has been featured in Romka Magazine, fecalface.com, and in several group shows. He has interned at the Sesnon Gallery at UC Santa Cruz as well as the Harvey Milk Photo Center in San Francisco which everyone should be a member of! This is his first solo exhibition.

Hamburger Eyes Photo Magazine is based in San Francisco and published bi-annually. Hamburger Eyes is off-set printed in black and white on glossy stock, perfect bound with a cardstock cover, holding 150 pages at a run of 3000 copies. Hamburger Eyes is carried in shops, stores, libraries, galleries, and museums across the entire planet. www.hamburgereyes.com

Wednesday, May 11, 2011

Now online: From the Golden West Notebook on sale at the Publication Studio online store

Click the image below for a link to the Publication Studio online store. 

From the Golden West Notebook by Jason Morris, Jesse Schlessinger, and Jason Grabowski
$15 Softcover; $10 DRM-free ebook
100 pp.

Friday, April 15, 2011

From the Golden West Notebook + The Final George Spelvin Show

From the Golden West Notebook
Poems by Jason Morris
Illustrations by Jason Grabowski and Jesse Schlesinger
Published by Publication Studio Berkeley, Allone Co. Editions

Exhibition curated by Katie Hood Morgan and Colter Jacobsen

Adobe Books Backroom Gallery
April 29 - May 25, 2011
Book release and reception Friday, April 29th, 7-10pm
Arrive early for a reading with Jason Morris and Russell Dillon at 7pm 


Adobe Books is pleased to present an exhibition to accompany the release of the latest publication from Berkeley-based Allone Co. Editions. Inspired by the ACE Double books of the fifties, in which genre novels (especially Westerns and Science Fiction) were paired, From the Golden West Notebook brings together Jason Morris’ poetry and the first section of Thoreau's Walden, the chapter on “Economy.” Jason Morris’ serial poem (also called “From the Golden West Notebook”) follows a character named “I” through a hallucinogenic western landscape populated by the ghosts of Melville, Spicer, Thoreau, and the distressed magnetic reels of Bob Dylan’s Basement Tapes.

Thoreau’s account begins on July 4th, 1845, when he moved into the cabin he built. In the “Economy” section, he details the building of the cabin and lists his costs. From the Golden West Notebook is bound so the two writings mirror one another, tĂȘte-bĂȘche (head to toe), and features the artwork of Jason Grabowski and Jesse Schlessinger.

The exhibition will feature artworks related to the publication as well as a small reading room with relevant texts chosen by the artists and writers and friends of the gallery.

Allone Co. Editions is Colter Jacobsen's Publication Studio Berkeley imprint. Publication Studio is an online, print-on-desire publishing outfit that was started in Portland, Oregon, and has spread north to Vancouver and south to Los Angeles, and elsewhere.  More info: www.publicationstudio.biz.


***

Also, don't miss the final evening in our performance series, The George Spelvin Show, organized by Rod Roland and David Kasprzak. Part II will take place Saturday, April 30th, at 7pm.

George Spelvin is the traditional pseudonym used in programs in American theatre. The reasons for the use of an alternate name vary. Actors who do not want to be credited, or whose names would otherwise appear twice because they are playing more than one role in a production, may adopt a pseudonym.

The George Spelvin Show gives artists the space to create a dual role, act outside of traditional mediums, and experiment with a new name.























Support for these projects is generously provided by Southern Exposure's Alternative Grant Program.

Tuesday, March 22, 2011

Current exhibition "stacked/multiplied" extended until April 1

stacked/multiplied has been extended for one week and will be on view until April 1st. Check out exhibition images on our Flickr page or, better yet, come see the show before it's gone!



Saturday, March 19, 2011

Coming soon to Adobe: From the Golden West Notebooks

From the Golden West Notebooks

An exhibition and book release event in collaboration with Allone Co. Editions


April 29 - May 25, 2011
Book release and reception Friday, April 29th, 7-10pm
Come early for a reading with Jason Morris and Russell Dillon


Poems by Jason Morris
Illustrations by Jason Grabowski and Jesse Schlesinger
Published by Publication Studio Berkeley, Allone Co. Editions

PUBLISHED: A Night At The Opera With Hosni Mubarak Hosted By Dave Eggers By The SF Guerrilla Opera Company

A collection of text and image surrounding "A Night At The Opera With Hosni Mubarak Hosted By Dave Eggers" by the San Francisco Guerrilla Opera Company (first performed February 26, 2001 as part of The George Spelvin Show at Adobe Bookstore, SF). Many texts transform or are transcriptions of sound and video recorded at the event. 


Contributors: Samantha Boudrot, Ashley Brim, Tom Comitta, Les Gottesman, Mena Kamel, Laurence Padua, and Steven Trull. Book cover by Samantha Boudrot. 


Video of the event can be found at http://www.youtube.com/tomcomitta. Free PDF download. Paperback book sold at cost value.

Friday, March 11, 2011

stacked/multiplied on ArtBusiness.com and our new Flickr account

Kyle Knobel in the gallery
Mr. Alan Bamberger stopped by the opening reception for stacked/multiplied and wrote a nice little post that you can view here (scroll down).

In related news, the gallery now has its own Flickr account. Stop by our page and view images from exhibitions and projects dating back to August 2009. More to come soon!

Friday, February 25, 2011

The George Spelvin Show at Adobe Books this Saturday

Adobe Books and the Backroom Gallery are pleased to present The George Spelvin Show, the first of three monthly performance nights. This Saturday's event includes "A Night At The Opera With Hosni Mubarak Hosted By Dave Eggers" and live music by The Mallard. Hope to see you there!


The George Spelvin Show
Saturday, February 26, 7-10 pm
Adobe Books
3166 16th Street





Monday, February 21, 2011

stacked/multiplied


Image credit: Gareth Spor, Borromean Study #2, Courtesy Eleanor Harwood Gallery

stacked/multiplied: a group exhibition featuring new work that explores categorical arrangement and multiples


February 24-March 25, 2011

Opening reception: Thursday, February 24, 7-9pm

Featured artists:
Elisheva Biernoff
Julie Cloutier
Randy Colosky
Sonya Derman
Patricia Diart
Lydia Greer
Packard Jennings
David Kasprzak
Scott Kildall
Kyle Knobel
Greer McGettrick
Winston Morris
Alexis Petty
James Sterling Pitt
Jesse Schlesinger
Victoria Scott
Gareth Spor
Carolee Gilligan Wheeler
Keith Wilson
Daniel Yovino

Stacked/multiplied follows The 770 Show as the second phase of a two-part series and curatorial endeavor that builds its concept from Adobe Books as a potential site of artistic production and exploration. A group of emerging and established artists were invited to develop new work based within Adobe's categorical arrangement, and develop a dialog surrounding the relative qualities between art multiples and book publishing. The main interest of the project lies in the accretive collection of second-hand books at Adobe that have become a record, if not an archive, of our contemporary, entropic experience of information. The proliferation of books en masse, and the dialectical tension of order and disorder are both intended as framework for the exhibition.

At the outset of the project, the exhibition curators, Devon Bella and Katie Hood Morgan, mapped the store according to all of the labeled sections, including arrangements such as 'Self-Help', 'Science Fiction', 'Architecture'. The objective was for each artist to choose a section (or sometimes more than one) for reinterpretation, whether it was a single title in the stacks or all of the subject contents in visual and/or physical forms of a multiple, grouping, or small collection of artworks. With such work in mind, a specially-designed shelving system, created by artist Winston Morris, was built for the gallery to house the pieces, where they may, or may not appear in their original groupings. The intent of this system was to further the premise of exploration into the gallery, where the installation of the works and the curatorial process could raise questions around arrangement and contextual conditions of display.




Support for this project is provided by Southern Exposure's Alternative Grant Program.

Saturday, January 29, 2011

Press for The 770 Show

"In an exhibition predicated upon the dance between the reign of categorization and the profusion of clutter, it might be just as instructive for the viewer to check out the show and then dive head first into Adobe's labyrinthine stacks. Wonder, after all, is a child of chaos. If nothing else, “The 770 Show” suggests an untamed world, ripe for the wrangling." - from Picture Books by Brady Welch in ArtSlant. Read the full article here

Tuesday, January 4, 2011



Opening reception: Thursday, January 13, 2011, 6-9pm

Adobe Books Backroom Gallery is pleased to announce its 2011 inaugural exhibition, guest curated by Arden Sherman. The 770 Show is the first in a two-part series dealing with the site of the bookshop itself — as inspiration, illumination, and artistic material.

For the first installment of the series, The 770 Show, seven artists were invited to spend time in the bookshop stacks, discovering the wealth of ideas that present themselves when organization does not follow tradition. From the huge quantity of subject matter on hand at Adobe, each artist selected a singular image found in a book and responded to this image through photography. Both the book image and the photograph are on display in the Backroom Gallery.

In his short story "The Library of Babel," Argentine author (and librarian) Jorge Luis Borges wrote that if one looks at the repetition of disorder long enough, what was originally perceived as chaos eventually becomes the order of things. 770 is the number for Photography and Photographs within the Dewey Decimal System, the system of classification used in most libraries. At Adobe Books, the organizational system is loose at best, and sections often blend and overlap. The Adobe system, akin to that of The Warburg Institute or the San Francisco-based Prelinger Library, is predicated on the notion that the significance of every book depends on its context within the library and its neighborhood on the shelf—a notable departure from the system of John Dewey.

The artists in The 770 Show take up the complicated idea of order and organization through the simple act of selection and interpretation. Their response through photography further contest traditional ideas of order since the medium of photography is, by definition, temporal and variant. The 770 Show encourages exploration in the bookshop stacks and allows the visitor to make connections among the varied subjects and, like the exhibition artists, encounter unexpected treasures.

Artists in the exhibition include Eric William Carroll, Sarah Hotchkiss, Sean McFarland, Paul Schiek, Parker Tilghman, Suné Woods, and Kelli Yon. Exhibition dates are from January 13 - February 13, 2011.

Thursday, December 16, 2010

ADOBE BOOKS HOLIDAY PARTY!


Sunday, December 19, 2010
Open house 5-10pm

On the evening of Sunday, December 19, the Adobe Books staff are celebrating the 2010 holiday season from 5-10pm with spiked cider, hot popcorn, mulled wine, cookies and spirits. Photo-booth in the Backroom at 7pm, following a gift raffle and champagne toast at 8pm. Join us!

Interview with Carrie Hott on her exhibition at Adobe Books

Tuesday, October 26, 2010

City Reader: threnody for a lost landscape, Video by Justin Carl Hurty

city reader: threnody for a lost landscape from justin carl hurty on Vimeo.

City Reader is a publication for the pedestrian intending to expand the frame we live within, and to focus on the scale of the neighborhood. City Reader: threnody for a lost landscape a video by Justin Carl Hurty was produced during the Reading Conventions residency in the Adobe Books Parlor.

Carrie Hott's exhibition featured on the Artslant Picklist

"The exhibition warrants unexpected discoveries and encourages one to spend time wandering and observing throughout the store in a way that such time and patience can be obliterated with current technologies. Hott’s work echoes that of its surrounding: an independent bookstore, loosely organized and stacked high with things (good old-fashioned, tangible, musty books) to discover." – From a Sub-Sub by Kara Q. Smith

Read full article here.

Closing Event: Whale Watch


Saturday, November 6, 6-9pm

In the Adobe Books Parlor, the installation Whale Watch refers to the human inclination towards whale watching, and watching in general, which often elicits patience, reverence, and a sharp attentiveness, in order to allow for discovery. Within this clear objective, however, is the act of open-ended observation. As a visual and participatory project, Whale Watch is meant to echo the act of searching and orienting present in the process of Understanding A Whale Fall by concentrating on the act of observing, through both representations and visitor contributions in logbooks in the store. By bringing a focus onto the surrounding neighborhood and store visitors, Whale Watch weaves aspects of the current environment and local history with the broader investigations conveyed in the backroom.

For the closing of the exhibition, you’re invited to actively watch in the surrounding neighborhood of Adobe Books. Carrie Hott will lead participants on a short walk through the Mission along a route of historical landmarks and sites of interest. Participants are invited to fill in the gaps with their own knowledge, stories, and histories to the walk as it goes, alternating their experience as guide and observer.

Following the walk will be a reading about whales and whaling at Adobe Books. In addition to original pieces read by Carrie Hott, Kevin P. Clarke, and Christine Choi, Invisible City Audio Tour authors from their upcoming tour, The Armada of Golden Dreams, will preview their pieces. Armada readers will include Amanda Davidson, Jennifer Hasegawa, Jason Bucholz, and Dave Seter. Logbook contributors are invited to read their pieces as well.

Wednesday, October 13, 2010

Adobe Books featured in the 3rd issue of SFAQ

Michelle Broder Van Dyke, San Francisco Arts Quarterly (SFAQ) contributer (and Adobe Books staff member) Andrew McKinley, Adobe Books' proprietor, and Devon Bella , Adobe Books Backroom Gallery Director and Curator talk about the role of Adobe Books in the local arts community.

Sunday, September 26, 2010

Understanding a Whale Fall/Whale Watch


Understanding A Whale Fall/Whale Watch by Carrie Hott

Exhibition dates: September 30-November 6, 2010

Opening reception: Thursday, Sep. 30, 7-9pm

Closing event: Saturday, November 6, 6-9pm

Understanding A Whale Fall/Whale Watch is a store wide exhibition at Adobe Books by Carrie Hott that represents a process of inquiry, primarily into whales, with occasional tangents taken to related topics and site specific investigations. Through the representation of research and its methods, Hott makes visible the action searching and being guided by curiosity in order to orient and understand. In the back room, Understanding A Whale Fall represents an interior space that is the site for a personal ongoing investigation into whales and their history. Whale Watch, in the windows of the Adobe Books Parlor, is a two-part installation and participatory project that broadens the scope of the backroom investigation and brings an additional focus onto the surrounding city and its history. The storewide exhibition nods to the communal atmosphere of Adobe Books, which draws inquisition and reflection in various forms, by visualizing the process of searching and inviting visitor contributions in the form of log recordings throughout the store.

Understanding a Whale Fall
Whale Fall is the term used for a whale carcass that sinks to the ocean floor after its death. The phenomenon occurs when a whale dies in deep water, and its remains becomes the subsistence for bottom dwelling sea creatures for up to a century. That whales extend their impact and vitality beyond death for a period of up to 100 years, and provide for the most basic organisms in the ocean, is a cyclical concept that is large in scope and profound in generosity.

Understanding a Whale Fall grew not only out of Hott's own ongoing interest and effort to grasp and understand whales and phenomenon such as this, but also a curiosity about a complex human history in which whales are featured prominently. As sources of myth, folklore, food, tools, light, energy, money, and fascination, whales have as much of a presence in the physical world as they often do in human imagination as heroic, mysterious, and intelligent animals.

Through the installation of Understanding A Whale Fall, this action of study, as well as Hott's curiosity about the motivation to do so, was translated into a visual representation of a private, engaged, and personally motivated inquiry. The installation is meant to be specific in topic, but generally represent common tools used for human research and contemplation, such as a study room, a desk, a mirror, notebooks, and various office supplies. Through unremarkable objects, the artist intends to call attention to the study and the objects as tools for discovering and orienting oneself in both time and place. Many elements of the installation are existing found objects that are covered and masked in various materials and are painted over in order to become representations of themselves. This process is completed with the intention of creating a scene that acts as a theatrical set; objects are existing and three-dimensional but are also props and stand-ins for the entity that they represent.

On Whale Watch
The first commercial whale-watching trip was launched in 1955 in San Diego, California. Passengers were charged $1 each for a chance to board the boat in the hopes of having an experience that would narrow the gap between reality and their imagination. In the Adobe Books Parlor, Whale Watch refers to the human inclination towards whale watching, and watching in general, which often elicits patience, reverence, and a sharp attentiveness, in order to allow for discovery. Within this clear objective, however, is the act of open-ended observation. As a visual and participatory project, Whale Watch is meant to echo the act of searching and orienting present in the process of Understanding A Whale Fall by concentrating on the act of observing. By bringing a focus onto the surrounding neighborhood, Whale Watch weaves aspects of the current environment and local history with the broader investigations conveyed in the backroom. Tools that aid seeing, looking, and orienting are represented in order to act as guides for visitors to the immediate geographical area, as well as the time in which they are situated. Visitors are invited to look outside the store, as well as within it, while having a heightened awareness of the devices and tools that enable us to do so.

Charles Scammon, 19th century whaler turned naturalist from San Francisco, made some of the first recorded observations of marine mammals, which were initially motivated by commercial interest, but later driven by an effort to save gray whales from extinction. His recordings were published in 1874 and made into a book, Marine Mammals of the Northwestern Coast of North America, which was the first book of its kind and at the time, revealed what was once unknown about sea mammals. Whale watchers, and observers in general, consistently log sightings and observations in order to remember, recognize patterns, and make a record for those who follow. Their record of what was observed acts as a guide for subsequent watchers, studiers, and observers. In the installation Whale Watch, visitors are invited to account for their own experience and expertise in the form of records- their historical knowledge, personal narratives, book passages, advice, recommendations, recipes, hikes, etc in logbooks located in the bookstore shelves. Through a 'wanted' sign on displayed in the front window, this participation is invited from observers, watchers, and researchers of all kinds.

Closing/Whale Watch
The exhibition will conclude with a closing whale watch event that will begin with a casual walk, or land 'whale watch', in the area surrounding Adobe Books. Following the walk, a reading will take place in the store in collaboration with Invisible City Audio Tours, a Bay Area project that aims to provide alternative ways to experience urban landscapes. Among other readers TBA, the artist Carrie Hott will read, in addition to author L.J. Moore, who will read a new piece written specifically for the exhibition, and visitors can volunteer to read their log entries or other pieces. **Closing event on Saturday, November 6, 7-9pm.




Support for this project is provided by Southern Exposure's Alternative Grant Program.

Reading Conventions, A performance by Kelly Lynn Jones & Collin McKelvey



This video is a documentation of a collaboration between Kelly Lynn Jones and Collin McKelvey in response to the City Reader Project curated by Julie Cloutier.

Press for Untitled Landscapes (California)

"Written in miniature and taken in aggregate, Untitled Landscapes (California) pulls off an affecting narrative sweep—one that might find you lost in the many moments that seem like memories you've had, but are actually those we all somehow share." –Brady Welch, Shotgun Review for Art Practical, 2010.

Read the full review here

Monday, September 20, 2010


Understanding A Whale Fall/Whale Watch, a storewide exhibition by Carrie Hott at Adobe Books. Opening reception Thursday, September 30 and closing event/Whale Watch on Saturday, November 6 (details to follow soon).




Monday, August 30, 2010

Press for Untitled Landscapes (California)


"The paradoxes of representation get writ small in landscape imagery: The unframeable framed, a frozen moment betokening time's passage, whereas only shifting shadows can inscribe it.

Sean McFarland has this and much else nailed in his one-wall show of minuscule landscapes in Adobe Books Backroom Gallery."

Kenneth Baker for the SF Chronicle

(click here for full article)

Thursday, August 12, 2010

Sean McFarland


Sean McFarland
Untitled Landscapes (California)
Exhibition dates: August 20 - September 19, 2010.
**Opening Reception: Saturday, August 21, 7-9pm

The Adobe Books Backroom Gallery is pleased to present a new installation by artist Sean McFarland. A fourth-generation Californian, McFarland calls up the history of Western landscape painting with a grid of hundreds of miniature landscapes, covering an entire wall of the gallery. Yet the perceived preciousness of these scenes is deceiving. What appear to be hundreds of tiny landscape paintings are actually photographs painstakingly mounted and coated with wax. He has stated that his images of the landscape are, in fact, "pictures of us;" alterations we make to the landscape reflect changes within us. Untitled Landscapes (California) is an investigation into California's unique landscape and an elegiac collection of images that attempt to hold onto wilderness and vanishing open spaces. McFarland's images of roadside landscaping and pocket parks reflect on his desire, though futile, to make beloved souvenirs of these rare places.

An artist-made booklet in an edition of 50 will be available for sale at the reception and throughout the run of the show. Stay tuned for upcoming events that will accompany this exhibition.

Curated by Katie Hood Morgan

Sean McFarland's work is in the collections of the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, the Whitney Museum of American Art Library, the Oakland Museum of California, the University of California, Davis, and Humboldt State University. He is the recipient of the 2009 Baum Award for Emerging American Photographers, the 2009 Kala Fellowship from the Kala Institute and the 2009 John Gutmann Fellowship Award. Visit daily-polaroids.blogspot.com.
For inquiries, please contact Katie (adobebooksbackroom@gmail.com)





Support for this project is generously provided by Southern Exposure's Alternative Grant Program.

Wednesday, August 11, 2010

Reading Conventions; A City Reader



In residence at Adobe Books Parlor (storefront windows): August 14 - September 19, 2010

Reading Conventions is an emerging publication and distribution project curated and edited by Julie Cloutier based on the sidewalk and intended for the pedestrian only. From August 14 to September 19, 2010 the Adobe Books Parlor will serve as an annex and research site for the launch of Julie Cloutier's publishing endeavors where she and Reading Conventions contributors will collect data from the 16th Street sidewalk in front of the Adobe Bookshop and dispatch reader materials for the first edition of Reading Conventions; A City Reader.

The project focuses on the scale of the neighborhood with altered observations, short essays, city mappings, facade studies, conversations, stories, data, letters, diagrams, and collages by local artists and residents of San Francisco. The printed pamphlets are free to the public and will be delivered into public environments on one day in the month of October through various modes of insertions with hopes for new relationships formed between the pedestrian and the city.

Support this project on kickstarter.

Thursday, August 5, 2010

Upcoming: Sean McFarland


Untitled Landscapes (California)
Sean McFarland solo exhibition

Exhibition dates: August 20- September 19, 2010.
*Opening reception: Saturday, August 21, 7-9pm

Kyle Ranson: Portraits exhibition is an Art Practical Pick!

Adobe Books Backroom Gallery featured on Bad at Sports

Bad at Sports' correspondent, Brian Andrews and Art Practical's editor, Patricia Maloney interview Adobe Books' proprietor, Andrew McKinley and the Backroom Gallery's director and curator, Devon Bella. Listen to the interview on the weekly contemporary art podcast or read the transcript on Art Practical.

Friday, July 9, 2010

KYLE RANSON: Portraits



Exhibition dates: July 16 - August 14, 2010

Opening reception: Friday, July 16, 2010 7-10pm
with music performances by Little Wings and WR/DS

KYLE RANSON: Portraits is an exhibition of nearly two-dozen paintings of friends, artists, and other distinguished characters by Kyle Ranson. In his new body of work, Ranson creates a focal point of the time-honored artistic engagement with portraiture, dedicating each picture to a single sitter, artfully posed and cropped. Many of the portraits on view were commissioned by Andrew McKinley, proprietor of Adobe Bookshop, but rather than create an exact or idealized rendering Ranson retains his artistic style. The artist balances realism with mystery and distortion, focusing the portrait as a mode of artistic exploration as well as a contemplative marker of time.

During the course of the exhibition, Kyle Ranson will set up a portrait studio in the storefront windows. Come down to Adobe Books and have your portrait drawn by the artist. Portrait sittings dates are July 19 to August 5 on Monday afternoons, 1-4pm and Thursday evenings, 7-9pm.

Curated by Devon Bella

Monday, June 21, 2010

Friday, June 18, 2010

"Adobe isn't just a bookstore"

Based on Beard's invitation to develop ideas on how an exhibition, or library, represents the search for knowledge, combined with the artist Torres' front-window examination of how urban renewal is experienced, the Backroom Gallery energizes profound reflections of the meaning and value of Adobe Books in the SF arts community. Brandon Brown, an SFMOMA Open Space columnist reflects on his past and present experiences of the store.

Elyse Mallouk on Lending Library

Dena Beard's Lending Library is featured on Art Practical with a review by Elyse Mallouk. The writer successfully draws attention to the context of the bookstore; highlighting the nature of Adobe Books and the place that in effect frames the artwork the gallery engages.

Thursday, May 27, 2010

SF Appeal

Aimee Le Duc, writer and SFAC staff member writes a small event announcement about Lending Library on SFAppeal.com

Wednesday, May 26, 2010

Lending Library



Lending Library is a group exhibition curated by Dena Beard featuring tools, materials, and resources from artists Amy Franceschini, Colter Jacobsen, Kevin Killian, Tom Marioni, Emily Prince, Stephanie Syjuco, and Christine Wong Yap.

Exhibition dates: May 28, 2010 - July 2, 2010

Opening reception: Friday, May 28, 2010, 7-9pm


We browse the bookshelves of the Lending Library as cross-sections of artists’ studios or as a medium for us to consider how we navigate and reclaim information in our own research practice. Experiencing the scribbled margins of a Xeroxed essay alongside modified found photographs changes their context, allowing for more dynamic images and learned connections to arise. Although the originals cannot be borrowed, scans of the artists’ materials will be available to takeaway and appropriate. Nestled in the back of Adobe Books this, the second iteration of Lending Library, develops some of the ideas brought forward with Oakland artists last February at the Royal NoneSuch Gallery. As such, Lending Library joins the landscape of open-source, browser-friendly experiences available in the Bay Area, expanding the idea of how an exhibition, or a library, can respond to a personal, anarchic search for knowledge.

Best Gallery Renovation

7x7 San Francisco Magazine's Kimberly Chun picks Adobe Books Backroom Gallery as 2010 Best Gallery Renovation. Last year's gallery expansion was made possible by the generous support of local artists who donated their work to Adobe's 20th Anniversary art auction in March 2009. The Backroom Gallery renovation was achieved by artists and friends of store including Randy Colosky, Andy Vogt, Chris Corales, Kyle Ranson, and Phil Crumar, and accomplished under the direction of Gallery Director, Devon Bella.

Everything Must Go?

Nicolas Torres' installation draws attention to the survival of independent bookstores and Reyhan Harmanci, Culture Editor/Writer at the Bay Citizen speaks with Andrew McKinley about the future of the store. SFist inquires further and calls out to readers to stop by Adobe and buy a book...

Tuesday, May 25, 2010

Nicolas Torres: Neighborhood Watch



Neighborhood Watch opens Friday, May 21, 7-9PM and runs through June 20, 2010.

In Adobe Books Parlor, an exhibition venue in Adobe Book's storefront windows, Nicolas Torres presents Neighborhood Watch, an installation by the artist exploring – and exploiting – the accretive motion of a city’s attempt to eliminate urban blight.

In a city where rigid class and racial borders once prevented individuals from traveling through certain neighborhoods, you now have many neighborhoods where culture and demographics can shift with the crossing of a street. Along with the changing visual characteristics of neighborhoods, you have changing ideals. While one may see urban renewal as an attempt to beautify and improve previous conditions, another may feel that the benefits of urban renewal are disproportionately shared among its renewers. In any case, there are many stories to be told, and more importantly there are many stories being disposed of permanently. In his new installation, Nicolas Torres attempts to capture a few of the endangered ones.

Nicolas Torres was born in San Francisco in 1981 and has lived throughout the Bay Area. Torres received a BA in philosophy from UC Berkeley in 2008. His parents and their struggles, have been the fodder and inspiration for much of his work.

The Adobe Books Parlor is part of a long-term curatorial project that commissions artists to explore how the bookstore locates itself within the constant flux of the 16th Street environment. The series seeks to animate the intersections between private and public narratives, and among Adobe Books’ social and commercial spheres.

Adobe Books Parlor is curated by Devon Bella.

Wednesday, May 12, 2010

RGB Forever featured on Artslant

Parker Ito's solo exhibition, RGB Forever is featured on Artslant's gallery hop. Read Ava Jancar's review.

Tuesday, May 11, 2010

Multiple Interaction: One night exhibition curated by Susannah Magers



Multiple Interaction: A one-night only exhibition of multiples from the collection of Steven Leiber

Sunday, May 16, 2010, 6-8pm

Multiple Interaction is a one-night only exhibition exploring the potential of five multiples from the collection of Steven Leiber. These include: Relationships (1991) by Damien Hirst, A Collection of Rooms, parts 1 & 2 (1997) by Dave Muller, Interview Game (1996) by Heather Lenz, Dyke Deck (1996) by Catherine Opie, and Magnet Ball (1996) by Uri Tzaig. The curator, Susannah Magers, has filmed the activation of each of these works and will present her five films along with the five multiples.

The art term multiple can be defined as a work of art created for mass production, which can be produced in unlimited numbers without loss of quality or dilution of content. A multiple is commonly understood to be a small sculpture (an object) rather than a print or photograph. The multiples in this exhibition share this identity as smaller--but no less significant--extensions of their makers’ practice.

Multiple Interaction was inspired by the text that accompanies Dave Muller’s multiple which states: “This piece is not considered finished by the artist until it has been built (preferably by the owner).”

Curated by Susannah Magers

For questions please contact Susannah Magers at (831) 334-2178 or susannahmagers@gmail.com

Sunday, May 9, 2010

Fritos & Champagne Part III: DESSERT by Dori Latman



Opening event: Wednesday, May 19, 2010, 7-9pm

Exhibition dates: May 17- 23, 2010

Participating artists include Colby Claycomb, Elinor Domol, Steffi Drewes, Josh Keller, Dori Latman, Cathy Lu, Michelle Morby, Hilary Schwartz, Heather Van Winckle, and The Center for Experimental Practice.

Dessert is the moment of the meal when everyone is full. It is the time when conversation takes open-ended directions. Dessert is an opportunity for those who couldn't make it to dinner to stop by for a visit. It is a time of excess, pleasure and storytelling.

For Dessert, each participating artist has taken up a different aspect from taste to etiquette to preparation to service. Artists will show a range of work including public reading and presenting, sculpture, installation and drawing.


Friday, April 16, 2010

Hyperallergic Is JSTChillin’ in San Francisco This Weekend


Parker Ito, “The Most Infamous Girl in the History of the Internet” (2010)

Hyperallergic contributor Artie Vierkant is in San Francisco this weekend and includes the Adobe Books exhibition, RGB Forever by Parker Ito in his top picks for art events that are not to be missed... (www.hyperallergic.com)

Monday, April 12, 2010

RGB Forever - Opening reception this Friday, 6-10 pm

Exhibition dates: April 15- May 15, 2010
Opening reception: Friday, April 16, 2010, 6-10pm


Adobe Books Backroom Gallery is pleased to present RGB Forever, Parker Ito's first solo exhibition. The title refers to RGB color space, an additive color mode viewed on all computer screens in which red, green and blue, combine to create over 16 million different colors. RGB is also Ito’s metaphor for new mindsets and attitudes about contemporary culture that have emerged out of the pervasiveness of the Internet. For Ito, the Internet is an abyss of readymade artifacts open for excavation, interpretation, and reclamation. In the Backroom Gallery, he will present painting and video works in which Internet ephemera salvaged from both high and low Web culture is translated into new forms.


Curated by Katie Hood Morgan


Parker Ito lives and works in Berkeley, CA. Recently his work was exhibited at Roots and Culture Contemporary Arts Center, Chicago, and in New Wave, the Internet Pavilion for the 53rd Venice Biennale. He also showed work in mybiennialisbetterthanyours.com for the 10th Lyon Biennale. He is co-curator of the online exhibition series Serial Chillers in Paradise at JstChillin.org. Visit his website at www.parkerkooito.com




Support for this project is provided by Southern Exposure's Alternative Grant Program.

Tuesday, April 6, 2010

"Fritos and Champagne" artist Dori Latman at Yerba Buena Center for the Arts

TASTE! is an exclusive, all-sensory tour sure to give you something to talk about. Three Bay Area-based artists converge in YBCA's Grand Lobby Apr 6-11 for a site-specific, collaborative installation using food, art and conversation to respond to the exhibitions on view in our first floor galleries. Each day the menu take you somewhere new, as will the topics for discussion. TASTE! is FREE w/ YBCA Gallery admission, and includes an interactive salon hosted by NIKI KORTH, handcrafted spring lemon elixirs by DORI LATMAN and a global papaya excursion with Chef TA-WEI LIN, curator of the "cultural liberation" brunch at Doc's Clock.

Also on view in the Grand Lobby, unique furniture from select students in the graduate Furniture Program at CCA.

Monday, April 5, 2010

Dori Latman's Fritos & Champagne Part II: Dinner



Dinner can be solitary, in front of the television with a reheated slice of pizza. It can be on the go, with crumpled paper bags strewn across the back seat. It can be a meal shared with family and friends. Dinner, a live cooking event and exhibition, is a celebration of the moments when a simple plate of food becomes a landmark in one’s own life. The event and exhibition respond to the culinary and social means through which one is nourished. The exhibition includes drawings and video works. The live cooking event will showcase a three-dish menu freshly cooked by Radio Africa and Kitchen. Together, these pieces highlight a range of approaches to cooking dinner.

Chef Eskender Aseged, a Bay Area chef with over 20 years of restaurant experience, began Radio Africa and Kitchen by cooking meals for people out of his home. Though, Eskender’s project is of a scale larger than an intimate domestic space. He moves and adapts his operation for a variety of situations and places, from large dining halls, to outdoor spaces, to small cafes. It is those who participate in Radio Africa’s events that promote it. First, Dori Latman knew Eskender as her neighbor, though it was through word-of-mouth that she learned about his project.

Dori Latman's interest in Radio Africa and Kitchen relates to the series of vending carts that she has developed for art exhibitions, serving food and beverages to gallery visitors. Latman experiments with intersections of art, food, and business as a vehicle for fund raising and social networking. She creates multiple versions of the vending cart for different types of events. The foundation of this series has been built through experience in food service at cafes, bakeries, and outdoor festivals and with stretching the meaning of drawing and performance. The artist explores ideas of entertainment, consumption, labor, and culinary creativity. Learning about Radio Africa and Kitchen’s development and processes has been an invaluable education and source for inspiration.

Chef Eskender Aseged shares with Dori Latman's project the possibity to eat well in any space. In that spirit, he brings his nomadic kitchen to Adobe Books Backroom Gallery to celebrate a neighborhood with rich history, dynamic people, and delicious food.As stated on Radio Africa’s Website (www.radioafricakitchen.com): “RADIO AFRICA & KITCHEN is a nomadic restaurant with sustainable products and methods. The food is inspired by old world recipes of Mediterranean and Red Sea countries. The goal of Radio Africa is to create extraordinary meals out of organically grown ordinary ingredients. In the tasting menu we offer weekly, the theme is to create a nutritionally well balanced dinner by including seasonal vegetables, greens, grains, nuts, wild fish, shellfish and fruit.”

Many thanks to chef Eskender Aseged and Bi Rite Market for their generous donations of time and delicious food!