@SFOMuseum Twitter Posts Tagged publicart This is SFO Museum's archive of the @SFOMuseum Twitter account. There are 230 posts and this is page 17 of 20. See all the tags or all the Twitter posts that have been archived so far.
“Strangerhood” by #LordyRodriguez is online at: https://t.co/uvvuh98pxO #publicart #MuseumFromHom
This tweet was posted on January 12, 2021.
“Strangerhood” by #LordyRodriguez focuses on Chinatown, North Beach, The Mission, The Castro, Haight-Ashbury, and Fisherman’s Wharf, neighborhoods chosen because of their strong cultural identities and tourism economies.#publicart #MuseumFromHome
This tweet was posted on January 12, 2021.
Using the language of cartography, “Strangerhood” by #LordyRodriguez features maps depicting six iconic San Francisco neighborhoods reimagined as independent countries.
#publicart #MuseumFromHome
This tweet was posted on January 12, 2021.
Just as arrival at SFO is the beginning of a new life for many immigrants, it is also refuge to many shore birds that flock annually to surrounding wetlands.
See “Sanctuary/Sanctuario” by Juana Alicia & Emmanuel C. Montoya at: https://t.co/QTh0ZK0Bsc #publicart #MuseumFromHome
This tweet was posted on January 05, 2021.
“Sanctuary/Sanctuario” by Juana Alicia & Emmanuel C. Montoya is a family portrait of the #BayArea, a place with many cultures. The #mural is painted in traditional “fresco buono,” a painting technique that mixes pigment directly into wet plaster. #publicart #MuseumFromHome
This tweet was posted on January 05, 2021.
See “Ether” by #KoheiNawa online at: https://t.co/V7H2wKqfr6 #publicart #MuseumFromHome
This tweet was posted on November 10, 2020.
“Ether” by #KoheiNawa changes shape as gravity propels it downward, but encounters an equal counter force thrusting skyward. The resulting form is a symmetrical and potentially infinite column created within a space of zero gravity. #publicart #MuseumFromHome
This tweet was posted on November 10, 2020.
Resonating with the movement of nearby airplanes, “Ether” by #KoheiNawa explores the concept of gravity, defied during takeoff, but used during landing. The form of the sculpture visualizes a droplet of liquid falling from sky to earth. #publicart #MuseumFromHome
This tweet was posted on November 10, 2020.
Standing thirty-five feet tall, “Ether” is the first permanent artwork in the United States by Japanese artist #KoheiNawa. #publicart #MuseumFromHome
This tweet was posted on November 10, 2020.
Here, #ClareRojas transforms the wall in the International Terminal, near gate G91, into a space more reminiscent of home. Blue Deer is based on a children’s book Rojas wrote and illustrated, “Blue Deer and Red Fox”. https://t.co/2jKzkGw74r #publicart #MuseumFromHome
This tweet was posted on October 27, 2020.
See “California (1)” by #JamesChronister online at: https://t.co/DzElb8zO07 #publicart #MuseumFromHome
This tweet was posted on October 06, 2020.
#JamesChronister digitally changed the source photo into black and white, bumped up the contrast, and projected the image onto the canvas. Using a very small brush, he painted with black oil paint directly from the projection #publicart
This tweet was posted on October 06, 2020.











