"Gateway" by Ik-Joong Kang contains 5,400 unique 3 in.
This image was posted on September 28, 2016.
"Letter's Missing” is representative of the artist’s dramatic use of color, gestural strokes, elegant line, and the collaged remnants of everyday life to provide compositional, textural, and spatial contrasts. #publicart#RaymondSaunders @sfac #SFAC#BlackHistoryMonthThis tweet was posted on February 18, 2022.
"Parallel Portions" by Mike Henderson, part of the @SFAC collection of public art at @flySFO, is on view post-security in Harvey Milk Terminal 1. This tweet was posted on June 28, 2021.
#FrankLobdell began what has come to be known as the “Yale Portfolio” during a two-day printmaking workshop at Yale University on February 6 and 7, 1992. #SFAC#MuseumFromHomeThis tweet was posted on August 03, 2020.
#FrankLobdell was a significant artist in West Coast Abstract Expressionism and the Bay Area Figurative Movement and a popular instructor at the California School of Fine Art (now the San Francisco Art Institute) from 1957 through 1965. #SFAC#MuseumFromHomeThis tweet was posted on August 03, 2020.
#Onthisday in 1919, Lee Mullican was born in Chickasha, Oklahoma. Mullican’s paintings reflect the influence of his interest in and study of Native American art and culture. He evokes ritual and myth with his ornate, mosaic-patterned surfaces.
#PublicArt#LeeMullican@SFACThis tweet was posted on December 02, 2022.
#Onthisday in 1940, Vito Acconci was born in New York City’s Bronx borough. Acconci began his artistic career as a poet, and came to national prominence in the early 1970s as an artist working in performance and conceptual art. #PublicArt#VitoAcconci@SFACThis tweet was posted on January 24, 2022.
#Onthisday in 1948, artist Hung Liu was born in Changchun, China. Liu's signature painterly style was one that allowed the paint to drip across the image. https://t.co/LpTLyXB2MC #HungLiu#SFAC#PublicArtThis tweet was posted on February 17, 2022.
#SanazMazinani states, "I was always really interested in borders, and being an immigrant, and I found it really rewarding to look up at the sky and see these beautiful clouds moving — without any limitations, without checkpoints, without passports." #publicart@SFACThis tweet was posted on March 05, 2019.
:) MT @SFAC OMG! DJ Qbert is back and performing for FREE @flySFO on 12/2/11 at 7 p.m.! fb.me/1moiNTN54This tweet was posted on November 22, 2011.
@Alli_Burnie Apologies, that's frustrating. Pre-TSA in the IT are lace, vessels, & doors. Post-TSA is @SFAC art. IT-G links to T3's ceramicsThis tweet was posted on June 06, 2014.
@bettymcniel@SFAC Hi! You are correct, it is located near baggage claim in Terminal 3. This is the permanent location for this piece of art. Thanks for asking! https://t.co/uvvuh8QO9eThis tweet was posted on May 17, 2022.
@cburns_ORD2LAS Glad to hear that! You can learn more about Bob Zoell's "BFILRYD" via @SFAC: http://t.co/DGgLL2AxThis tweet was posted on December 19, 2011.
@intel_jim So glad you like the art! Will forward your signage request. When you're in T2, try the @SFAC audio tour: http://t.co/gJ8aqirGThis tweet was posted on September 16, 2011.
@janettwokay We also have various works of public art from the @SFAC in Boarding Area C & B, Pre & Post Security. We hope this helps! (2/2)This tweet was posted on July 30, 2015.
@supereric You found Lewis DeSoto's "On the Air," part of @SFAC's collection! Great explanation of it on their site: http://t.co/4UCJT5BfThis tweet was posted on April 09, 2012.
@x Hi! This piece of art is part of the airports permanent art collection, curated by the @SFAC. It will be on permanent display in the Harvey Milk Terminal 1. Thanks for asking!This tweet was posted on March 24, 2020.
Above it all in T2, the view from Janet Echelman's Every Beating Second. #sfac http://t.co/VsJwbOExgKThis tweet was posted on May 21, 2014.
Absolutely incredible!! RT @SFAC: Art can make possible what you may never have dreamed of. http://t.co/CyDx2GfIThis tweet was posted on August 09, 2012.
Acconci’s work is often characterized by a direct involvement of the viewer as an element in the artwork. At the end of each “light beam” in “Light Beams for the Sky of a Transfer Corridor” is a functional telephone.
#PublicArt#VitoAcconci@SFACThis tweet was posted on January 24, 2022.
According to the artist, Michael Dvortcsak, “Sublimens” is painted from the vantage point of an eagle in flight. Soaring high above such majestic terrain with the ability to see for miles, the image is intended to impart a sense of grandeur and freedom. #publiart@SFACThis tweet was posted on August 17, 2021.