Wednesday, June 24, 2026

more miscellania from around the Bay

 



Aroumd Monterey Dunes


Negra Banderas ("They"), Black Flag, by Aaron Rosa


Negra Banderas  by Aaron Rosa  makes it to the Dunes; strapped now to dollies for a ride up to 206 courtyard 
a week or two later Negra Banderas moves to the courtyard (one dolly does not survive the transit)
only 20 feet from stardom - THB did not do a video of the installation, a good thing given it took two hours
many screws held the crate together, the head was encased in a separate space in the crate




maybe 875 pounds, the head is also very heavy!
15 minutes of discussion on best way to move the last 3 feet

chocolate biscotti for the crew: "They" is safe and sound 

the gourd is resting in place, THB will permanently attach it in a few weeks

Sandy gives new chairs and side tables a test drive, er, a test nap


the old bbq has rusted out, common at the Beach. New bbq (no pic, yet) arrives already assembled except  it doesn't work, it is a floor model....hmmmm


LB takes THB for an early Father's Day outing. Alta has a new breakfast treat: 9 grain pancakes. Yum-meeeee
giant spider or crab skeleton

snow at the shoreline?

the Dunes are a'bloom




Around town

NO ICE sign


Around E-ville

the first hint of the proposed Sutter Health Hospital construction, looks like they are drilling for oil!  Another hint: down a block  and a half on the right hand side is the giant 10 story parking garage

where to safely dispose of your meds (blue) and the injection devices (red)
how safe is it? Second floor of the E-ville PD

Looks like another new Seyed Alevi imprint on a Emeryville utility box (not in the 2010 post) at Park and Hollis. Maybe time for THB to update the 2010 post!!


Around SF

Hunan Restaurant on Natomas drastically slimmed down their menu in March; all of THB's faves are gone...oh, the times they are a'changin 



Asian Art Museum has two large shows

THB and DB saw Shigota's work in Istanbul; MM joins us at the Asian (she didn't fit in an extra day in Istanbul)
the big piece is a woven thread tunnel with diaries from soldiers mixed in





THB's fave, small print with thread, reminiscent of Kentridge 


the second show: pottery from the Asian's collection, approx 25 pieces in the show
DB's fave

POP QUIZ 
DB and THB have 5 pieces by 4 artists in the show...see if you can match the 5 with the  artists (one artist has 2 pieces in the DB and THB collection)

first, the artists (these are all photos of the artists when they were much younger)




second, their pieces in the show

Mihara Ken
Suzuki Goro
Michikawa Shozo
Nakamura Takuo

Third, the work in DB and THB's collection
(remember, 5 in the Loft, 4 in the show)

piece 1....artist?
piece 2....artist?
piece 3....artist?
piece 4....artist?

piece 5....artist?

Answers at the bottom of this post...if THB remembers to put them in. 

Around Berkeley

There is a show from the collection of two women we know through SC: all female artists, and very good!
poster highlighting Penny (lawyer) and Rena (poet)
Jennifer Barlett

Elizabeth Murray
Deloy Morelos (we saw a  huge installation by her in a Venice Biennale and almost made it to her studio when in Columbia)
Julie Mehretu
unknown
Agnes Martin
unknown
Marlene Dumas
Catherine Opie





Around San Ramon

the twins at the County Fair 

C moves across the hall, J redecorates 
C moves across the hall,  she hasn't finished redecorating




Around Italy

 THB is a big Grand Tour cycling fan, and the Giro is wrapping up
The Dolomites are featured in the last week

Jonas Vingegard (in pink) wins the Giro and now joins 7 other riders to ever win all three Grand (France and Spain the other 2) in his career

Around the Stanford Campus

THB and DB join EW and JW for an afternoon of touring around the large Stanford campus, looking for art and attending a presentation and discussion with Hamza Walker, the lead curator of the great Monuments show the four of us saw when it was it was up at the Geffen in LA. 

the Anderson Collection is closed (hmmm, who scheduled an evening with Hamza when the art center was closed?)


early dinner

Bing Concert Hall...what it looks like when the symphony is playing 
what it looked like before Hamza gave an overview of Monuments

Hamza Walker was the lead curator for the Monuments show at the Geffen in LA. Here is his lecture, it is long and very interesting if you want to learn (and see) more of the show.
Richard Serra must have influenced the architets

only sign missing: NOT FOR MEN


bringing the outside in



Around Alameda

soon to be re-commissioned and flown to Middle East
sunbathers
live crows and dead pinecones, well camouflaged 
It is Halloween all year round here

sad but true, our national government is not even good for fertilizer



Book Reviews: all highly recommended


Goodbye To All That, Robert Graves (read by Ben Allen, pub'd in 1929): Graves wrote his autobiography at age 33, and THB had read it a long time ago. The narrator gave trench warfare a bit more of neutral tone, it must have been horrific. Graves was one of those fortunate few to survive multiple years in the trenches of France. Vera Brittain wrote a terrific book, A Testament of Youth, about the missing generation - the million British men that died in a perfectly non-essential stalemate of a war. 

Niccolo Rising (book 1 of the House of Niccolo Chronicles, Dorothy Dunnett (read brilliantly by John Banks, pub’d 1986, audio version in2023). Eight books in all, (listened over the last 6 oonths)a charming coming-of-age story starting in Bruges and roaming eastward, then ending in Scotland. Accurate portrayal of the politics from the 1440s to 1490s. The other books: 

  • Spring of the Ram 1987

  • Race of Scorpions 1987

  • Scales of Gold 1989

  • The Unicorn Hunt 1993

  • To Lie With Lions 1995

  • Caprice and Rondo 1997

  • Gemini 2000


Fly, Wild Swans, My Mother, Myself and China**, Jung Chang (read by Adjoa Andoh): A follow-up to Wild Swans (not read/listened to by THB), Chang relates her life journey from 1952 to 2025. She ends up attending college in the U.K., then staying and becoming a best selling author. Most of this biography covers her deep relationship with her mother and the documenting the life of Mao as she makes frequent trips back to China, many with her husband, Jon Halliday (author and historian), to find source material and interview those that knew Mao and were still alive. Per Chang's estimate, Mao killed 70 million Chinese during peacetime.


Dangerous, Dirty, Violent, And Young, a Fugitive Family in the Revolutionary Underground, Zayed Ayers Dohrn (read by the author): Dohrn, the eldest son of two members of the Weather Underground, tells his parents’ story, then mingles his upbringing into their story. His parents were born in the early 1940s and the big events in their lives occurred in the late 60s and 70ss and the book triggered THB’s memories of the American War in Viet Nam and the big movements of those radical uprisings: civil rights, women’s rights, gay rights (all now under attack again). A great companion to Harriet Clark’s novel, The Hill;  Clark’s mother also was part of the Weather Underground.



The Polish Officer and Dark Voyage and, Alan  Furst (both read by by George Guidall, pub’d 1995 and 2004): set in Europe in the early days of WWII, these suspense thrillers affecting isolated and earnest individuals caught in the chaos of the beginning of a war way beyond their abilities to make sense of or control their destinies, are great reads and audiobooks.

The Pop quiz answers!! 

piece 1....artist is Suzuki Goro
piece 2....artist is Mihara Ken 
piece 3....artist is Goro (again)
piece 4....artist is Michikawa Shozo
 Piece 5: artist is Nakamura Takuo