An eclectic evening of Arts & Culture in downtown San Jose's SoFA district (and beyond) every First Friday of the month
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  • September 2, 2011—South FIRST FRIDAYS art walk

    Posted on August 26th, 2011 ArtWalkSJ No comments

    JOIN US for the next South FIRST FRIDAYS art walk on SEPT 2nd
    with STREET MRKT.

    It all kicks off at 7pm! — ART WALK venues are free and open to the public

    • South FIRST FRIDAYS presents STREET MRKT. Come to the SoFA District from 7–11pm for an inspired evening of arts & culture. Free and open to all ages.
      www.southfirstfridays.com/street-mrkt

    • Anno Domini // the second coming of Art & Design – 366 South First St. map


      Opening Reception: Brett Amory White Light solo exhibition

      White Light is the next installment within Brett Amory’s Waiting series. Amory began the Waiting series in 2001 with paintings depicting commuter subjects seemingly detached from their fellow passengers and surrounding environments, inspired by the introverted culture of public transit and inhabitants of the Tenderloin neighborhood of San Francisco.

      This new group of paintings continues to capture an individual’s struggle to exist in the present moment and the continued state of detachment from one’s surrounding environment. However, this new body of work depicts an element of freedom, as the subjects strive to transcend consciousness and human existence: freedom of thought, freedom of perception, freedom to create one’s own narrative. If reality is relative and bound to the subject’s own existence and subject to the judgment of others, this work reminds us that there is a choice. While White Light exposes the limitations one faces when they are defined by their limited perceptions and the gaze of others, the viewer is reminded that there is hope for absolute freedom over our existence and essence.

      On view in galleryTWO: Dimitri Drjuchin The Melting Kingdom solo exhibition

    • Art Glass Center of San Jose – 465 South First St. map

      Listing unavailable at time of posting.

    • Higher Fire Clayspace & Gallery – 499 South Market St. map


      Higher Learning — Higher Fire presents work by emerging clay artists from SJSU’s MFA in Ceramics Program. Participating artists include Jonathan Huang, Malia Landis, Kat MacKinnon, Demetra Messoloras, Avery Palmer, David White, and Wesley Wright.

    • KALEID gallery – 88 South Fourth St. map

      Opening Reception for featured artists Leslie Ann Rice & Sara Tomasello


      Image by Leslie Ann Rice

      Circus Act by Leslie Ann Rice

      A mutt-ley crew of characters explore the circus of popular culture, touching upon the freakish tendencies of human nature.


      Image by Sara Tomasello

      Looking through the Glass by Sara Tomasello

      Through her paintings, Sara Tomasello builds on themes of intimacy and the unity of opposites. Her characters are symbols for the light and dark aspects of human nature. Using a vibrant color palette and inspired by universal mythological themes, Sara portrays the emotional impact of the world she sees and experiences it in her acrylic paintings. There is a story behind each piece and it begins; Once upon time. Viewers are invited to look through the glass that Sara views the world and reflect on your own experiences of the world.

    • MACLA Movimiento de Arte y Cultura Latino Americana – 510 South First St. map


      Photograph by Victor Cartagena

      Join MACLA for an extraordinary evening of art and performance:

      In MACLA’s Gallery: A Body Parted: Shrapnel of Present Time Un Cuerpo Partido: Esquirlas de Tiempo Presente Utopia/Nightmare: The American Dream Utopia/Pesadilla: El Sueño Americano Exhibition by Victor Cartagena with sound elements by David Molina.

      Join us for the opening reception, artist talk and micro-performance by Secos y Mojados

    • Phantom Galleriesart exhibits in vacant storefronts and alternative spaces

      66 South First St: Defragmentation 66 
An installation by Michele Guieu

      Defragmentation 66 is an adaptation of the last installation I’ve made in San Diego: Defragmentation: Rearranging Bits and Pieces of Memory. It is an ongoing project and the occasion to reflect on bits and pieces of my memories, as I am recalling/documenting them. The project originated when I was about to leave San Diego after living there for 6 years. I thought about the different times I’ve left a place in my life. Defragmentation 66 is the first installation I am showing in San Jose since I’ve moved and it represents a link between the two towns – and beyond. The installation is on a smaller scale but uses some essential elements featured in the first version of the show: an ensemble of paintings, a painted background and videos. The videos in Defragmentation 66 are new memories and were taken here, in the bay area. The address number where the show is held, 66, is an interesting symbol in my life: the first time I came to the US, that’s the road I traveled on.

      386 South First St: Street Swag Photo Booth photos by Abe Menor at SubZERO Festival 2010

      95 South Market St: Folie à Deux Family Tree Monotypes and Glass Statues by Curt Schauer

      In this exhibit, Curt traces the origins and family history of the Folie a Deux series. From the image on the original sign in Tokyo that inspired the figurative images and the early acrylic ink monotype studies, digital drawings and oil based monotypes to the final five piece monotype series and blown glass statues that defined Curt’s work from 2008 to today. Folie a Deux explores the duality of extremes and conflict in human nature and between the art and the viewer in figurative and expressionist styles. Not satisfied with a single medium to express his vision,

      Curt furthered the duality theme by recreating the series in colorful 3D blown glass with hand etched graal images. This is the first exhibit to display the family tree in life (glass) and in portrait (monotypes) and displays the use of color, light, movement and dimenssion in Curt’s art.

    • San Jose Jazz at Eulipia Restaurant – 374 South First St. map


      The Jazz Mafia for San Jose Jazz

      A creative force on the Bay Area music scene for more than a decade, the loose-knit band of Jazz cats, MCs, arrangers and composers known collectively as The Jazz Mafia is one of the most powerful assemblies of virtuosic performers on the West Coast. Launching some of the Bay Area’s most innovative and stylistically expansive ensembles, these musicians contribute their varied talents to a cross-cultural mix of new beats and melodies, Hip-Hop, Funk and R&B. The Jazz Mafia Horns have recorded in the studio with Carlos Santana and backed artists such as Zion-I, KRS One, and Thomas Dolby. Other bands in the JM pantheon include the incredible Realistic Orchestra, Supertaster w/ Joe Bagale, Brass Mafia, Jazz Mafia Trio, Spaceheater, and the Shotgun Wedding Quintet, one of the hits on the Jazz Beyond Stage at this year’s San Jose Jazz Summer Fest.

    • San Jose Museum of Quilts & Textiles – 520 South First St. map


      Crosses (Stone Mason’s Puzzle), From the collection of Roderick Kiracofe, Photo by Sharon Risedorph

      The Scrap ART exhibit showcases historical quilts drawn from the Museum’s and private collections and ‘scrappy’ contemporary works. Scrap ART examines the historical precedent and aesthetic of the scrap quilt and its modern-day descendants.
Just as quilters have long been inspired to make beautiful pieces from available scraps, the throwaways of daily life have inspired a new generation of ecologically-minded artists to combine creative reuse with old-fashioned thrift in works using material as varied as books, jeans, zippers, plastic, buttons and teabags. Scrap ART celebrates the reinterpretation of materials by artists both historical and contemporary in works that reflect the cultures and values of their makers.
 For more details: http://sjquiltmuseum.org/exhibitions.html



      Join us for a Recycled Fashion Trunk Show featuring the work of Darcy Fowkes, and a scrap art demonstration by Jane Emery, who will make unique fanciful “Aunt Jane’s Creations” – such as spirit dolls and animal figures!

    • SLG Art Boutiki & Gallery – 577 South Market St. map


      Art by Bea Adams

      The Art of the Zombie Apocalypse.

      Survivors of the zombie invasion from earlier in the week can come out and see the art they left behind. A group of artists will leave their own impressions of the walking dead. Also featuring live music!

    • Works San Jose – 365 South Market St. map


      painting on canvas by Eder Luna

      Primer paso (First Step): emancipation of a life (emancipación de una vida)

      Interpreting the perspective of diverse social contexts the reality of a peaceful emancipation, The First Step shows an aesthetic exegesis of the current circumstances of how oppressed the world is—a discourse that despite reflecting the shadow of death and devastation, intends to light the way toward hope and awareness. These five artists from Oaxaca, Mexico, with one relocated to San José, confront aspects of revolutionary artistic, personal, and cultural emancipation in multiple media and site-specific installation: Julio Cesar, César Chávez, Mario Guzman, Eder Luna, and Ylan Luna.

    • Caffé Frascati – 315 South First St. map

      First Fridays is Caffe Frascati’s Opera Night! with all your favorite arias and duets performed live by some of the bay Areas finest opera singers. 8-10pm.

    • Downtown Yoga Shala – 450 South First St. map


      Join us after Candlelight Yoga (6-7:30pm) as we open our doors to welcome art patrons and the downtown community to the South FIRST FRIDAYS art walk. Our featured artist is Robertino R. Ragazza, featuring his new exhibition, Memorias de mis viajes (memories of my travels).

      …..Memories of my travels (Memorias de mis viajes) is a collection of images which gives me fond memories and recollections of all the places I’ve traveled. When photographing, I like to capture just bit and pieces, not the full scale view, mainly focusing on the usage of high and low key lightings within the frame. In photographing these pieces, they create an assemblage, painting a complete picture of who I am. All photographs are hand-printed Selenium-toned Silver Gelatin.

    • Good Karma Vegan Café – 37 South First St. map

      The Peculiar Pageant new paintings and installation by Lacey Bryant

      Theatrically posed and surrounded by lush, illusory environments, the subjects of Lacey’s newest works are like pictures in a storybook written in an unknown language. The images are somewhat familiar but certain elements remains foreign. Like a hazy dream of an imagined childhood long forgotten, the images strive to make you feel as if you just might have been there once, maybe. As is common in Lacey’s work, there is a subtle tension between beautiful and unsettling elements. This contrast creates a sense of mystery and invites the viewer to construct their own interpretation of the scenes. In the safety of a world poised between reality and imagination where common symbols mingle with strange ones, Lacey’s characters expose their fears, doubts, despairs and longings.

    • METRO Photo Exhibit – 550 South First St. map


      seek party destroy
      Photography by Albert Bracamonte III

    • Pho69 – 321 South First St. map


      Collection of Light A new series by LAuruS Myth

      LAuruS Myth work is based on patterns found in nature that have lead to patterns used in modern technology. Not only do these symbols relate to each other visually, but they also function as patterns that guide flows of energy throughout machines and plant life. Connecting and converting this energy into the power that lies within human life and purpose, fuels her motives and creative inspiration. Her hope is to capture the essence of vibration through the repetition of organic and geometric shapes.

      “A plethora of environmental vibrations transform through colors to expose the core joy of my work as I attempt to bridge my own concepts of power. One source of power is sold as a commodity, and the other is simply generated within living organisms. Sources to support our human needs, such as solar, wind, biomass, and nuclear, are found externally in our environment, and I believe are also indistinguishable from our oneness and inner light. The balance between these two realms brings us closer to our collective achievements for energy. I believe that finding ways to converge the ideas of art and science, nature and technology, and “us” as the environment is the purpose of my current work. The interweaving of nature-spaces and microprocessor components in my paintings create a colorful kaleidoscope of this fusion of a world we live in.”

      Pho69 also features live contemporary music on First Fridays. Come check out local bands performing favorite covers and original music.

    • Psycho Donuts – 288 South Second St. map


      Psycho Donuts in downtown San Jose is a quirky donut shop and art gallery. The gallery displays top local artists and has an ongoing exhibit featuring the work of John Renzel, Lacey Bryant, Nicolas Caesar, Murphy Adams, Christine Benjamin, Michael Foley, Michael Borja, Carlos Villez, Eric Joyner, Laura Callin Bennett, Michelle Waters and John Hageman.

    • South First Billiards & Lounge – 420 South First St. map


      Efren Alvarez’ Separación/Deportados (Separation/Deported).

      In the exhibition Reflejos de Nuestras Raíces, a group of San Francisco Bay Area artists of Mexican roots who vary in socio-economic background, age, language, nationality, and race, exhibit their artwork in representation of one of the many cultures that together define America’s diverse population. Artists: Efrén Alvarez, Dario Cruz, Tulio Flores, Itzul Gutierrez, Elizabeth Jiménez Montelongo, Ylan Luna, Kimy Martinez, and Mireya Villanueva

      Come to South First Billiards on Friday, September 2, 2011 for a night of open-mike and affordable art! You can sign up for open-mike to read poetry, share your own, sing, play an instrument, or just express yourself! Local artists will be selling artwork at affordable prices: 2-D artwork for $100 and under, 3-D artwork for $300 and under, jewelry and crafts for $50 and under. The Art Slam is an event to accompany the current exhibition Reflejos de Nuestras Raíces.

      5-9pm ALL AGES. 9pm-close 21+

    • TechShop San Jose – 300 South Second St. map


      Made At TechShop

      A collection of various projects made at TechShop from TechShop members.

      Exhibition date: one night only Sept. 2nd

    • Art Ark – 1035 South Sixth St. map


      forest time is an exhibition of new paintings and mixed-media drawings by Christine Canepa. The work employs imagery from the animal world as a means of exploring ideas proposed in contemporary physics regarding the existence of multiple dimensions, or a “multiverse”. Canepa uses imagery of dens, nests, and burrows, and various endangered species to explore ideas around endings, loss, and the speculative potential of parallel worlds. The work plays with traditional distinctions between abstract and representational imagery, and historic conventions of landscape painting.

  • August 5, 2011—South FIRST FRIDAYS art walk

    Posted on July 25th, 2011 ArtWalkSJ No comments

    JOIN US for the next South FIRST FRIDAYS art walk on AUG 5th
    with STREET MRKT & ArtCar Fest.

    It all kicks off at 7pm! — ART WALK venues are free and open to the public

    • South FIRST FRIDAYS presents STREET MRKT plus ArtCar Fest 15th Anniversary Showcase featuring 30 mobile, street legal sculptures from around the bay areaCome to the SoFA District from 7–11pm for an inspired evening of arts & culture.
      Free and open to all ages.
      www.southfirstfridays.com/street-mrkt
    • Anno Domini // the second coming of Art & Design – 366 South First St. map


      Opening Reception: The Melting Kingdom by Dimitri Drjuchin

      Dimitri Drjuchin (NY) returns to Anno Domini for his second solo exhibition entitled The Melting Kingdom. The new works slip us into parallel space of bright pinks, blues, reds and yellows through Drjuchin’s pouring rain paint portals that harbor a metaphor for our country’s current socio-economic troubles. The problems, embodied in his monsters that ooze across cityscapes, are surrounded by super-humans who still manage to have the last laugh. In these epic, dripping landscapes stories of individual triumph melt down the canvas seducing us into a world where anything is possible, even happiness during crisis.

      Dimitri will also perform a live acoustic set out on the STREET MRKT stage as Corrupt Autopilot.

      On view in galleryONE: ART OF ZINES 2011

      Featuring hundreds of zines from basements, bedrooms and midnight copy shops throughout the US and abroad. On view through August 13th.

    • Art Glass Center of San Jose – 465 South First St. map

       

      Listing unavailable at time of posting.

    • Higher Fire Clayspace & Gallery – 499 South Market St. map


      Firing a wood kiln is exciting and labor intensive requiring constant stoking and tending for as long as 12 days. Local ceramic artist Shawn Felts brings his wood-fired works to Higher Fire this August — blistered bourbon bottles and flasks as well as more traditional “wabi sabi” teabowls and serving items.

    • KALEID gallery – 88 South Fourth St. map


      Image by Jojo Perea

      Convergence by Jojo Perea

      Subatomic abstract realism: A worldwide acceleration where science and spirituality dances to the tune of the cosmos. The illusion of duality unveiled a new beginning.


      Image by Michelle Waters

      Musings from the Wasteland by Michelle Waters

      The paintings in this series are influenced by the nightmarish imagery of Hieronymus Bosch, Edward Abbey’s writings and my work as a wildlife rehabilitator and environmental activist. My art deconstructs the assumption of human superiority by showing what might transpire if animals took control over the fate of the planet. Animals demolishing the Glen Canyon Dam and wildlife laying waste to a bulldozer are some of the characters who populate my paintings.

    • MACLA Movimiento de Arte y Cultura Latino Americana – 510 South First St. map


      MACLA and Secos y Mojados Artist Collective is pleased to present A Body Parted: Shrapnel of Present Time Mural unveiling on MACLA’s William St Facade. In MACLA’s Gallery do not miss Navigations of the Fantastic featuring: Elizabeth Gómez, Betty Davis, José Arenas and Verónica Félix and stay for our music lounge featuring Cuban artist Marcos Pereda.

    • Phantom Galleriesart exhibits in vacant storefronts and alternative spaces

      66 South First St: Defragmentation 66 
An installation by Michele Guieu

      Defragmentation 66 is an adaptation of the last installation I’ve made in San Diego: Defragmentation: Rearranging Bits and Pieces of Memory. It is an ongoing project and the occasion to reflect on bits and pieces of my memories, as I am recalling/documenting them. The project originated when I was about to leave San Diego after living there for 6 years. I thought about the different times I’ve left a place in my life. Defragmentation 66 is the first installation I am showing in San Jose since I’ve moved and it represents a link between the two towns – and beyond. The installation is on a smaller scale but uses some essential elements featured in the first version of the show: an ensemble of paintings, a painted background and videos. The videos in Defragmentation 66 are new memories and were taken here, in the bay area. The address number where the show is held, 66, is an interesting symbol in my life: the first time I came to the US, that’s the road I traveled on.

      386 South First St: Street Swag Photo Booth photos by Abe Menor at SubZERO Festival 2010

      95 South Market St: Roundels sculptures by Gianfranco Paolozzi

      I was looking in the recycle container full of paper from flexo printing presses.

      That’s when I felt the passion again: round surfaces screaming to be used. I looked at them changing on the floor of my studio. I had to use my marks, my moments on the surfaces as a sign of me being there.

      That’s when the roundels were born.

    • San Jose Jazz at Eulipia Restaurant – 374 South First St. map


      Composer/cellist/trombonist Dana Leong blends jazz, classical and pop to create a signature sound. Dana’s pioneering collage of musical styles has garnered critical acclaim and wowed audiences around the world. He has collaborated with top jazz artists including Paquito D’Rivera, Christian McBride, Dafnis Prieto, and Henry Threadgill; and has worked with such diverse artists as Ray Charles, Barry White, Kanye West, Wynton Marsalis, Bjork, Ryuichi Sakamoto, Yoko Ono and Lila Downs.

      In 2008 Dana’s quartet MILK & JADE toured all over Southeast Asia as part of Jazz at Lincoln Center and the U.S. State Department-sponsored tour, The Rhythm Road: American Music Abroad. Since then the group has been a smashing hit at numerous festivals in Europe, Asia and the US. In addition to touring, Dana is a prolific composer and arranger, having recently written and premiered IdEgo, a new work for an aerial dance company Project Bandaloop at the Orange County Performing Arts Center as well as an evening length work, Life After Dark, at the Apollo Theater in Harlem, New York. He was a featured guest music director and performer in Fela! on Broadway in 2010 and is the first ever Composer-In-Residence for The Museum of Chinese in America in New York City.

      Dana grew up in San Francisco and studied classical cello and jazz trombone on double scholarships at Manhattan School of Music. Dana gives clinics and workshops around the globe as an official performing artist and clinician for YAMAHA and D’Addario Bowed Strings.

    • San Jose Museum of Quilts & Textiles – 520 South First St. map


      English Garden by Arline Fisch, 2010. Photo by William Gullette

      View two exhibits: Primary Structures explores how innovative artists using simple linear elements in combination with unconventional materials can broaden our understanding of the familiar by transforming the stitch structures of knit and crochet into large scale and compelling art. Southwestern Banded Blankets: Three Cultures, One Horizon (Collection of Jean and Roger Moss) is a unique exhibit and the first of its type to focus exclusively on banded blankets. These utilitarian and simply striped blankets showcase the rich cultural tradition of the Pueblo, the Navajo, and the Spanish Colonial Rio Grande blankets of the “Four Corners” area of the American Southwest.

      Join us for the South First Friday Salon: Make a beautiful sculptural origami lotus out of yarn and paper, and check out our gigantic knitted yarn flowers that are currently being exhibited! And listen to solo classical guitarist, Michael Bautista, member of the South Bay Guitar Society.

    • SLG Art Boutiki & Gallery – 577 South Market St. map


      The SLG Art Boutiki features the return of its popular show The Modern Primitives Cultural Research and Cocktail Society. Tikis and other Polynesian pop and cocktail themed art adorn the gallery walls. Live music and the stuff that dreams are made of.

    • Works San Jose – 365 South Market St. map


      Image credit: Theresa Because, mixed media sculpture

      Primer paso (First Step): emancipation of a life (emancipación de una vida)

      Five artists from Oaxaca confront aspects of artistic, personal, and cultural emancipation:
      Julio Cesar, César Chávez, Mario Guzman, Eder Luna, Ylan Luna

    • Caffé Frascati – 315 South First St. map

      Cheating Time: Constructing a Praxis of Juncture by Trina Merry

      Bodypaint is a temporary medium which changes into a different painting almost as soon as the artist has set it onto the skin and as the human canvas performs & models in it. Bodypainting in many ways is like another indigenous & tribal art form, the sand painting.

      “Quite a bit of effort and time is made to create the work and it is easily destroyed or becomes a new work, changed by factors I the artist have no control over. When I bodypaint I am not ruled by time, but external elements remind me that we are in a state of change & life is a process, not a product. So much of our culture is designed to produce & consume a product- we live by the clock, the stoplight & the retirement plan.

      Nature has much to teach us about seasons & living in process. Each day the sunsets a little sooner or a little later; the ocean & rivers teach us something about time that a clock cannot. We are in a constant state of change, no matter how much we resist it. “

      Through bodypaint, Merry has taken classical high art themes, such as the Four Seasons, and high art forms, such as ballet, to examine this concept of process, connection and living in season. Performance artists, such as dancers with fabric, are caught in the moment of leaps & turns frozen by photography. One of the featured bodypaintings of the exhibit based on Picasso’s “Guernica”, is set on a purposefully posed human canvas, yet full of imagery of an existential moment—the horror & anguish experienced by the victims of war.

      “I feel like Caffé Frascati (formerly Caffé Trieste) is the correct venue to explore these high art subjects as it has been a proud supporter of San Jose artists as a venue for music, poetry, and art exhibits.

      This exhibit explores two important photographer relationships I have with Martin Delfino & Rafael Hernandez. Both are immigrants with a wonderful love of avante garde art who have been instrumental in my growth as an artist.”

    • Downtown Yoga Shala – 450 South First St. map


      Imagination Landscapes by Allegra Bick-Maurischat

      In her first solo show, Allegra Bick-Maurischat explores the fluidity of line and the intensity of color to break from literal, everyday forms. Her multimedia drawings and paintings are physically detailed, visual mappings of form and color that create “landscapes” meant to engage and challenge the imagination.

    • Good Karma Vegan Café – 37 South First St. map

      Dreams by Valerie Runningwolf

      What are dreams? Where do they come from? Some believe they may come from a collective consciousness, others believe they are messages from the spirit world, or maybe self generated from our minds.

      A collection of dreams brought to life by mixed-media artist Valerie Runningwolf can be seen at Good Karma in August. Please join us during the First Friday art walk to share your dreams in a collaborative art piece.

    • METRO Photo Exhibit – 550 South First St. map


      Know Trespassing by Jason Duffany

      “Last year I rode my bicycle across Canada, then down the East Coast to Florida, then west again to New Mexico, invading any empty buildings I came across, for photo sessions. This image (above) was taken at an abandoned gypsum factory in Philadelphia.”

    • Pho69 – 321 South First St. map


      Collection of Light A new series by LAuruS Myth

      LAuruS Myth work is based on patterns found in nature that have lead to patterns used in modern technology. Not only do these symbols relate to each other visually, but they also function as patterns that guide flows of energy throughout machines and plant life. Connecting and converting this energy into the power that lies within human life and purpose, fuels her motives and creative inspiration. Her hope is to capture the essence of vibration through the repetition of organic and geometric shapes.

      “A plethora of environmental vibrations transform through colors to expose the core joy of my work as I attempt to bridge my own concepts of power. One source of power is sold as a commodity, and the other is simply generated within living organisms. Sources to support our human needs, such as solar, wind, biomass, and nuclear, are found externally in our environment, and I believe are also indistinguishable from our oneness and inner light. The balance between these two realms brings us closer to our collective achievements for energy. I believe that finding ways to converge the ideas of art and science, nature and technology, and “us” as the environment is the purpose of my current work. The interweaving of nature-spaces and microprocessor components in my paintings create a colorful kaleidoscope of this fusion of a world we live in.”

      Pho69 also features live contemporary music on First Fridays. Come check out local bands performing favorite covers and original music.

    • Psycho Donuts – 288 South Second St. map


      Psycho Donuts in downtown San Jose is a quirky donut shop and art gallery. The gallery displays top local artists and has an ongoing exhibit featuring the work of John Renzel, Lacey Bryant, Nicolas Caesar, Murphy Adams, Christine Benjamin, Michael Foley, Michael Borja, Laura Callin Bennett, Michelle Waters, John Hageman and Valery Milovic.

    • South First Billiards & Lounge – 420 South First St. map

      Reflejos de Nuestras Raíces (Reflections of Our Roots)

      As people continue to immigrate to the United States, those who come from the South are often automatically assumed to be Mexican. While people of Mexican heritage do have much in common with people from Central and South America, it is important to recognize the uniqueness of every culture and the differences between them, especially in a country as culturally diverse as the United States. In fact, there is a broad range of diversity even within each cultural group because, as with the general populations, every individual brings a very unique set of life experiences and perspectives.

      In Reflejos de Nuestras Raíces (Reflections of Our Roots), a group of San Francisco Bay Area artists of Mexican roots exhibit their artwork in representation of one of the many cultures that together define America’s diverse population. These artists, though sharing Mexican roots, are in fact a cross-section of their cultural group as they vary in socio-economic background, gender, age, life experience, language, nationality, and race.

      Artists’ reception includes Aztec dance, live music by The Blank Manuscript, and more!

      5-9pm ALL AGES. 9pm-close 21+ venue.

    • TechShop San Jose – 300 South Second St. map


      Made At TechShop

      Join us for a night of art at San Jose’s South FIRST FRIDAYS art walk! We have turned the lobby of TechShop San Jose into a gallery space for the night to showcase artwork and projects that TechShop members have made! Come see what you can make here!

    • Art Ark – 1035 South Sixth St. map


      Photo Credit: Michelle Budziak

      Welcome to Coyote Creek’

      City waterways provide residents, housed and un-housed, an escape to nature. Access of this resource is important, though local use can cause damage to the area. This exhibit explores Coyote Creek in San Jose, focusing on both positive and negative aspects of resident use of its trails and parks.