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Past Exhibitions at the Library - 2008

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Jewett Gallery and Skylight Gallery

©1997 by Robert Sabuda

The Adventures of Providence Traveler ©2002 Robert Sabuda

Robert Sabuda: Travels in Time and Space features 60 colorful and fanciful illustrations and intricate pop-up books drawn from 11 books. His work demonstrates unparalleled artistry and innovation that are sure to appeal to readers of all ages. Sabuda is widely regarded as the wizard of pop-up book engineering. His first published pop-up was The Christmas Alphabet (1994), followed later by The 12 Days of Christmas (1996), both of which have become best selling holiday classics. The Wonderful Wizard of Oz: A Commemorative Pop-up (2000), has been considered his masterpiece. Its linoleum-block print medium adheres to the style of the original W.W. Denslow illustrations, yet the intense visual power of the pop-up is all Sabuda’s. This exhibition was organized by the National Center for Children’s Illustrated Literature, Abilene, Texas.
Exhibition:  REOPENED October 7
August 31 through November 9, 2008
Main Library, Lower Level, Jewett Gallery
100 Larkin Street (at Grove)

Related Adult Programs:
Flexagons
Tuesday, September 9, 6:30 p.m.
West Portal Branch Library
190 Lenox Way (at Ulloa)

History of Pop-Up Book-making with demonstration
Thursday, October 23, 5:30-6:30 p.m.
Latino Hispanic Community Room,
Main Library, Lower Level,
100 Larkin Street (at Grove)

Complete listing of Robert Sabuda: Travels in Time and Space Children’s Programs

Image representing BookWorks 2008 Exhibition at the Library

BookWorks 2008 - This new exhibition features nearly a hundred contemporary, sometimes sculptural, unique or limited-edition books by members of the Pacific Center for Book Arts. The book arts have a long history--from the first cave drawings, scrolls, illuminated manuscripts and letterpress printing, to more recent forms of visual expression and communication made possible by digital technology. Drawing on past traditions, but free to envision the future, contemporary book artists and craftspeople use a wide range of book forms, materials and techniques to express their concerns as artists and inhabitants of the 21st century. The books on display are distinguished in their design, typography, illustration, hand bookbinding and printing processes and paper. Pacific Center for Book Arts is a member-service organization committed to providing its members opportunities to show their work, socialize with other practitioners of the book arts and learn from their peers. Members include calligraphers, custom binders, printmakers, conservators and many others. For more information, visit www.pcba.info.
Exhibition:  From July 1 through September 26, 2008
Main Library, Sixth Floor, Skylight Gallery

Related Programs: Artist Talks
August 16 and September 13, 2008, 1-3 p.m.
Main Library, 6th Floor, Skylight Gallery,
100 Larkin Street (at Grove)


Sabec Family, photographed by Michael Maloney for the Bay Area Heart Gallery

Sabec Family, photographed by Michael Maloney for the Bay Area Heart Gallery

The Bay Area Heart Gallery: Connecting Hearts…Building Families - This exhibition celebrates the strength of humanity and depicts stories of transformation. The story starts with photos of children and youth that have survived difficult circumstances who have longed for a family of their own. It transforms into photos of families that have adopted children and youth when they are given a chance to be a part of something permanent and important…a family. The exhibition includes approximately 50 heartwarming photographs of families and children whose lives have been brought together through adoption. Each photograph is accompanied by a personal profile in the voice of the parents and children. This exhibition is organized by The Bay Area Heart Gallery which is a collaboration of four member agencies that serve children and youth in foster care across the Bay Area.
Exhibition:  From July 12 through August 17, 2008
Main Library, Lower Level, Jewett Gallery

Related Program: Adopting Children and Youth Living in Foster Care With a Focus on LGBTQ issues
August 5, 2008, 6:30 p.m.
Main Library, Lower Level, Latino Hispanic Community Meeting Room,
100 Larkin Street (at Grove)


      James Luna, Apparitions

James Luna, Apparitions

*Sing Me Your Story, Dance Me Home: Art and Poetry From Native California - California native stories, songs and dance take form in poetry, painting, basketry, jewelry, printmaking, photography and sculpture. Based on the publication by Heyday Books, The Dirt is Red Here: Art and Poetry from Native California, this exhibition shares the lives, stories, songs and dances of the artists. The Sing Me Your Story, Dance Me Home: Art and Poetry from Native California exhibition tour is organized by the California Exhibition Resources Alliance (CERA). The exhibition was developed in concert with Heyday Books and is made possible by generous grants from The James Irvine Foundation, the William Randolph Hearst Foundation, Columbia Foundation, LEF Foundation, the Fleishhacker Foundation and The Clorox Company Foundation, the institute of Museum and Library Services.
Exhibition:  From May 10 through June 29, 2008,
Main Library, Lower Level, Jewett Gallery

Related Programs:
Shellmound - During the clearing of a site for a regional shopping a center in Emeryville, California in 1997, the discovery was made of a Native American burial site. This documentary focuses on how the developer, the archaeologists and the Native Californians handled the challenges of managing what became a construction site atop a cemetery. Filmmaker Andres Cediel will lead an audience discussion after the film.
Sunday, June 22, 2008, 1–3 p.m.
Main Library, Lower Level, Koret Auditorium,
100 Larkin Street (at Grove)

Sing Me Your Story: Native American Poetry Night - Join us when poets Greg Sarris, Linda Noel and Kim Shuck read and discuss their work. Moderated by publisher Malcolm Margolin. A book sale and signing follows the reading.
Wednesday, June 25, 2008, 6–7:30 p.m.
Main Library, Lower Level, Koret Auditorium,
100 Larkin Street (at Grove)

Complete listing of Sing Me Your Story, Dance Me Home Exhibitions and Programs

Betty Boop image courtesy of the San Francisco Public Library

Betty Boop image courtesy of the San Francisco Public Library

Charm School: Ill-Mannered Selections from the Schmulowitz Collection of Wit and Humor - This exhibition takes the reader on a quirky tour of the world of etiquette in our “civilized society.” In an age when politicians and pundits freely express their vulgar behavior in public, is bad behavior just something the rest of us are forced to endure? Or can we really maintain a civil society by curbing rudeness and employing a civil demeanor? It is refreshing to note that the demise of a well-behaved society has been the subject of discourse and predictions for well over 600 years. Society has suffered through more ups and downs in mangled manners and frightened horses, but just when we think we’re all headed to hell in a handbasket, a new etiquette book arrives to save us from ourselves. The books and materials on display demonstrate the height of incivility and a mirror reflecting the need for a little etiquette training, but are mainly a showcase of amusing selections drawn from the Schmulowitz Collection.
Exhibition:  From April 1 through June 5, 2008,
Main Library, Sixth Floor, Skylight Gallery

Related Exhibitions:
When in Rome…Travel Etiquette - An exhibition of a droll selection of books from the world of travel and manners.
From April 1 through May 31, 2008,
Main Library, Third Floor, General Collections and Humanities Center
;
It’s a Spoon, Not a Shovel- Features a humorous look at manners and etiquette for children.
From April 1 through May 31, 2008,
Main Library, Second Floor, Fisher Children’s Center

Children's Reading List
Related Program: Crooked Correspondence: A Beginner’s Primer
Wednesday, April 23, 2008, Main Library, Lower Level,
Latino/Hispanic Community Meeting Room, 6–7:30 p.m.
100 Larkin Street (at Grove)

Charm School - A Reading List

Image representing Spirit in Action exhibition. Courtesy of Jerry Berndt.

Spirit in Action - Religion is one of the most powerful social forces shaping the world. While religion may reveal differences, it also provides the basis for finding common ground. The photographs in this exhibition express the important roles that religious communities play in the 21st century and demonstrate how religion may inspire people to make our cities more humane. From serving meals to the homeless, public demonstrations for migrant rights, to individual moments of devotion, The Religion and Immigration Project at the University of San Francisco (USF) and the Center for Religion and Civic Culture at the University of Southern California (USC) present photographic evidence of urban dwellers’ ‘spirit in action.’ San Francisco and Los Angeles, two of the nation’s most diverse cities, boast rapidly changing religious landscapes. The religious diversity celebrated in these cities manifests itself in a commitment to serve those in need and provides a window into these complex cities manifested through the lens of photographer Jerry Berndt, who was commissioned for this project. Berndt spent nearly six weeks in San Francisco photographing Mexican, Filipino, Salvadoran, Chinese and Vietnamese faith communities and his photographs reflect the cultural vibrancy of San Francisco as it translates into a religious social action.
Exhibition:  From February 9, 2008 through April 13, 2008
Main Library, Lower Level, Jewett Gallery
100 Larkin Street (at Grove)

*Related Program: Immigration and Spirit in Action,
Tuesday, March 4, 2008, 6 - 7:30pm
Main Library, Lower Level, Koret Auditorium,
100 Larkin Street (at Grove)

Dorothea Lange, Untitled, 1961,
Copyright the Dorothea Lange Collection, Oakland Museum of California,
The City of Oakland. Gift of Paul S. Taylor. Courtesy of the Marin History Museum.

Dorothea Lange, Untitled, 1961, Copyright the Dorothea Lange Collection, Oakland Museum of California, The City of Oakland.  Gift of Paul S. Taylor.  Courtesy of the Marin History Museum.

A Life Surrounding a Cabin: Dorothea Lange at Steep Ravine - In a departure from her Depression-era images capturing the plight of migrant farm workers, photographer Dorothea Lange reveals intimate, everyday scenes of her family and the bond they felt with the surrounding natural environment. She described the photographs as documenting the “natural growth of the children” and the pleasure it gave her to see them “so happy and free” acknowledging how the environment at Steep Ravine (Marin) shaped the identity of and relationships within her family. Lange (1895-1965) and her second husband Paul Taylor began leasing a small cabin at Steep Ravine in the late 1950s perched on the rocky coast of Marin County. They traveled to Steep Ravine with their children and grandchildren many times over the years from their home in Berkeley-a short distance, but worlds away. The cabin and its environs so inspired Lange that she often spoke of creating a book of photographs exploring the sense of freedom she discovered there, but was unable to complete the project before her death in 1965. Patrons of the Main Library will have an opportunity to share in Lange’s desire in this rare exhibition of photographs previously exhibited only once before. A Life Surrounding a Cabin: Dorothea Lange at Steep Ravine was organized by the Marin History Museum.
Exhibition:  From January 19 through March 16, 2008,
Main Library, Sixth Floor, Skylight Gallery
100 Larkin Street (at Grove)

*Related Programs:
Opening Event
– Slide Lecture by Daniel and Dixie Dixon,
Saturday, January 19, 2008, 1:30-3:30 p.m.
Main Library, Lower Level, Koret Auditorium,

Dorothea Lange: A Visual Life: Screening and Q & A,
Tuesday, February 19, 2008, 6-7:30 p.m.
Main Library, Lower Level, Koret Auditorium,

Photography Workshop with Kira Sugarman,
Thursday, March 13, 2008, 10:30 a.m.
Main Library, Second Floor, Fisher Children’s Center,
100 Larkin Street (at Grove)

Other Exhibition Areas in the Library

Pride of the Philippine Sea: The Philippine Coral Reef - This exhibition is a display of photographs and other artifacts of the Philippine coral reef considered by many scientists as the world's deepest and most diverse living coral reef. Images of the environmental effects impacting the coral reef and what is being done to conserve this Philippine national treasure will also be featured.
Exhibition:  September 8 through October 30, 2008
Main Library, Third Floor, Filipino American Center
100 Larkin Street (at Grove)


Image representing The Sister Republics: The Swiss Confederation and the United States of America Exhibition

The Sister Republics: The Swiss Confederation and the United States of America - As nations, the United States and Switzerland differ greatly in age, size, population and in their respective roles on the world stage, yet they enjoy historically close ties, common interests, shared traditions and remarkable political similarities as federal unions of independent states with representative democracies. The Sister Republics revives a like-named exhibition conceived in 1991 by Dr. James H. Hutson of the Library of Congress to mark the septicentennial of the Swiss Confederation. Since then, a touring version of the exhibition has appeared in many cities in the U.S. and in Switzerland.
Exhibition:  September 13 through October 31, 2008
Main Library, Sixth Floor Sky Bridge
100 Larkin Street (at Grove)


Black Irish image representing Resilience:  My Culture, My People, Me! exhibition

*Resilience: My Culture, My People, Me! – As part of the 15th annual AfroSolo Arts Festival, we invited African American artists to explore resilience through their eyes. This exhibit is a mixed media extravaganza illustrating the resilience in our history, our culture and our lives. AfroSolo's mission is to nurture, promote and present African American and African diaspora art and culture through solo performances and the visual and literary arts. Since 1993, AfroSolo has provided a forum to give an authentic voice to the diverse experiences of black people. Through art, AfroSolo brings people of all ethnicities together to explore and share the human spirit that binds us all. For more information, visit http://afrosolo.org/.
Exhibition:  From August 16 through October 26, 2008,
Main Library, Third Floor, African American Center
100 Larkin Street (at Grove)

Related Programs: Meet the Artist
Sunday, August 17, 2008, 2 p.m.
Main Library, Lower Level, Latino/Hispanic Community Meeting Room,
100 Larkin Street (at Grove)

Image representing 25th Anniversary of the Folsom Street Fair: Dore Alley exhibition

25th Anniversary of the Folsom Street Fair: Dore Alley - This year marks the 25th anniversary of the Folsom Street Fair, the world’s largest leather/fetish event which goes beyond the distinctions of gender and sexual orientation. This exhibit will focus on the Up Your Alley Fair (aka Dore Alley, where the event takes place). Although a younger offshoot of the Folsom Street Fair, Up Your Alley attracts over 12,000 local leatherfolk and few tourists, it is considered a less commercial and very authentic San Francisco event.
Exhibition:  September 1 through October 15, 2008
Main Library, Third Floor, James C. Hormel Gay and Lesbian Center
100 Larkin Street (at Grove)


Pages Unbound - This exhibition will be a display of the collective talent of the pages from the 3rd floor, sharing different forms of artwork such as photograph, painting, sculpture and so on.
Exhibition:  August 3 through September 29, 2008
Main Library, Lower Level, Café Level Exhibition Case,
100 Larkin Street (at Grove)


Image representing Beijing Welcomes You! Exhibition at the Library

Beijing Welcomes You! - In the summer of 2008, Beijing will host the XXIX Olympic Games. This photo exhibit is an open invitation for games participants and visitors to get to know about Chinese history and culture, to experience the glorious celebration of the Olympic spirit in China on an unprecedented scale, to see the tremendous changes that have taken place in this great country and to be touched by its people’s passion and dedication. These works are courtesy of the Consulate General of the People's Republic of China in San Francisco.
Exhibition:  From July 19, 2008 through September 18, 2008
Main Library, Third Floor, Chinese Center
100 Larkin Street (at Grove)


“Unemployed Men sitting on the sunny side of the San Francisco Public Library” by Dorothea Lange. Feb. 1937. Courtesy of the San Francisco History Center

Unemployed Men sitting on the sunny side of the San Francisco Public Library” by Dorothea Lange. Feb. 1937. Courtesy of the San Francisco History Center

75th Anniversary of the New Deal –
A Three-Floor Exhibition

Exhibit 1: A New Deal for San Francisco-Thanks to WPA!- Civic improvements to parks, streets & public buildings; arts & theatre programs; controversies & labor unrest
Main Library, Sixth Floor,
Cases Outside the San Francisco History Center,
March 22-August 30, 2008,

Exhibit 2: Government at Work: A Chronology of Federal Agencies from the New Deal - Domestic agencies that started with the Roosevelt Administration and still exist today are featured.
Main Library, Fifth Floor,
Wall Display near the Government Information Center,
March 22-June 29, 2008,

Exhibit 3 (two locations): WPA Years A New Deal Explosion of Art, Public Works and Labor - A rich collection of documents, illustrations & photographs from projects that returned the unemployed to the workplace and strengthened workers rights; also featuring federal art and theatre programs that enriched the cultural life of our city and country.
Main Library, Fourth Floor,
Art, Music & Recreation Center;
and Business, Science & Technology Center,
March 22-August 10, 2008,

WPA Related Programs:
*The New Deal in the Sunset: An Illustrated Talk by Gray Brechin
Discover the invisible public legacy of the Great Depression in a talk commemorating the 75th anniversary of President Franklin Roosevelt's New Deal. Dr. Gray Brechin is project scholar of the California Living New Deal Project--a statewide collaborative effort to identify, map and interpret those essential public works. Half a dozen agencies created to lift the United States out of the Great Depression built hundreds of socially beneficial projects we depend on today. Among them is the West Portal Library, built in 1939 by the Works Progress Administration (WPA), lovingly renovated and reopened in 2007. View and contribute to the project at http://livingnewdeal.berkeley.edu
Tuesday, July 15, 7-8pm
West Portal Branch Library
190 Lenox Wy. (at Ulloa)

For a Better America: The New Deal in Film
A mini film festival of historical shorts covering the Depression and the New Deal from the motion picture holdings of the National Archives. Cosponsored by the San Francisco History Center and LaborFest, a month-long celebration of labor culture, history and the arts.
Saturday, July 12,
Main Library, Lower Level, Koret Auditorium, 12-3 p.m.
100 Larkin Street (at Grove)

The Indispensable New Deal: Discovering the Invisible Public Legacy of the Great Depression and What it Means for Us Today
New Deal agencies created to lift the United States out of the Great Depression built socially beneficial public works that we all use everyday without knowing we are doing so. Dr. Gray Brechin is Project Scholar of the California Living New Deal Project — a statewide collaborative effort to identify, map and interpret those essential artifacts. He will focus on New Deal San Francisco on its 75th anniversary.
Thursday, June 12, 2008,
Main Library, Lower Level, Koret Auditorium, 6 - 8 p.m.
100 Larkin Street (at Grove)

Hallelujah! I’m a Bum! - Join us for an evening of music from the 1930s. Richard Wahlberg brings original 78 rpm records from his music archives and plays them on an historic, open-horn victrola from 1906 to capture the sounds and the sprit of the 1930’s. This is part of the Library’s celebration of the 75th Anniversary of the WPA. This program will be presented twice, once at the Main Library and once at the beautifully renovated WPA West Portal Branch Library.
Thursday, May 15th, 6 p.m.
Main Library, Latino/Hispanic Meeting Room
100 Larkin Street (at Grove)

And Tuesday, May 20, 7 p.m.
West Portal Branch Library
190 Lenox Way (at Ulloa)

Tillie Olsen: A Heart in Action - A documentary on the legendary labor organizer, peace activist and author. Filmmaker Ann Hershey will present the film and answer questions.
Two screenings: Sunday, June 1st at 1 p.m. and 3 p.m.,
Main Library, Koret Auditorium
100 Larkin Street (at Grove)

Complete listing of 75th Anniversary of the New Deal Exhibitions and Programs

Image representing Patently Beautiful Exhibition - Device for Shaping the Upper Lip

Patently Beautiful: 10 Decades of Innovation for the Sake of Beauty - A look at patents from each decade of the 20th century representing the technological march forward in the world of beauty products. Often familiar and occasionally absurd, these drawings, taken from original United States patents illustrate the innovation behind the products that have helped define the concept of beauty in the United States in the last 100 years.
Exhibition:  From June 1 through August 31, 2008,
Main Library, Fifth Floor, Government Information Center
100 Larkin Street (at Grove)


Image representing International Hotel

One Story at a Time: The Rebuilding of the International Hotel and the Memory of Manilatown - A series of photographs and artifacts illustrating the history and the rebuilding of the International Hotel and the memory of San Francisco’s Manilatown.
Exhibition:  From July 1 through August 31, 2008
Main Library, Third Floor, Filipino American Center
Related Program: Saturday, July 12, 2008, 4─6 p.m.
Main Library, Lower Level, Latino/Hispanic Community Meeting Room,
100 Larkin Street (at Grove)

Image representing Real Fatherhood

Bayview Hunters Point Presents: Real Fatherhood - A photographic journal of neighborhood fathers with their children, in celebration of Father’s Day.

Exhibition:  From June 8 through August 23, 2008,
Bayview/Anna E. Waden Branch Library
5075 Third Street (at Revere)


3-D Stories - the ceramic art of Berkeley artist Helen Canin. See which of the famous characters from children’s literature you recognize!
Exhibition:  From June 12 through August 21, 2008
Main Library, Second Floor, Fisher Children’s Center
100 Larkin Street (at Grove)


Image representing Spirituality Photo Project by Black Brothers Esteem

*Spirituality Photo Project by Black Brothers Esteem - With dramatic photography and compelling text, 16 members of Black Brothers Esteem document for the entire San Francisco community their search for and in some cases creation of spirituality in a world that too often abandons, even condemns them. This project showcases their soul-searching, their solidarity, their courage and ultimately just how important their spirituality is to their mental and physical health. Black Brothers Esteem is a prevention and support program designed to empower men who live predominantly in the Tenderloin/Polk Gulch and Sixth Street corridor sections of San Francisco. These men struggle not only with issues related to HIV, but also with racism, addiction, poverty, homophobia, violence and marginal housing conditions.
Exhibition:  From June 10 through August 7, 2008,
Main Library, Third Floor, African American Center
and James C. Hormel Gay and Lesbian Center
100 Larkin Street (at Grove)


You Must Be Mistaken: Photographs by First Exposures - The students of First Exposures, San Francisco Cameraworks photography mentoring program for low-income youth, explore the idea of what it means to be misunderstood and misrepresented. You Must Be Mistaken features work created using a multitude of photographic processes from cyanotype to digital imagery. The students’ work incorporates text and multi-layered concepts to approach this deeply personal theme.
Exhibition:  From June 14 through July 31, 2008
Main Library, Third Floor, Teen Center
Reception: Saturday, June 14, 2008, 4:00 – 5:00 p.m.,
Main Library, Lower Level, Latino/Hispanic Meeting Room
100 Larkin Street (at Grove)


Image representing 41 years exhibition. Courtesy of Dennis Maness

41 Years/42 Photos: A Retrospective - Dennis Maness is now in his 41st year as a librarian at San Francisco Public Library. For this retrospective, he has chosen to include a single photograph taken during each of the years he has worked at the library, 1967-2008. Most of these photographs have not been displayed before and demonstrate the different kinds of subjects he has photographed over the years – a few portraits, things and people he just stumbled across as he walked in the city and spanning his travels here and abroad.
Exhibition:  From May 5 through July 29, 2008,
Main Library, Lower Level, Café Exhibition Case
100 Larkin Street (at Grove)


Welcoming the Olympics: An Exhibition of Paper Cutouts Depicting Traditional Chinese Sports - Chinese people have created and cherished many popular art forms and paper cutouts are one of them. With brilliant skill, a plain piece of paper can be transformed into a fascinating artwork. As Beijing prepares to host the 2008 Olympics, we are proud to present you with a series of 19 paper cutouts on traditional Chinese sports and games. These games, just like paper cutting, are popular and enrich people's lives of different ethnic groups in China. We can find traces of some of these games in the modern Olympics. These works are courtesy of the Consulate General of the People's Republic of China in San Francisco.
Exhibition:  From April 26, 2008 through June 26, 2008,
Main Library, Third Floor, Chinese Center
100 Larkin Street (at Grove)

Related Program: Chinese Papercut Demonstration
Saturday, May 24, 2008, 2-3pm
Ortega Branch,
3223 Ortega Street (at 39th Avenue)


Realia - An exhibition by emerging artists, architects and designers from The California College of the Arts. In the spirit of the 17th century “Cabinets of Curiosity” the participating artists and designers have undertaken journeys of discovery in the diverse collections housed in the San Francisco Public Library. They have spent the last month delving into the collections in the San Francisco History Center, Rare Books, Music, and Periodicals Collections, to name a few. What they have discovered has inspired them to create new works in response to their explorations. The participating artists and designers work in diverse media and approach their subjects from a variety of viewpoints, creating an exhibition that is as diverse as the collections that inspired it.
Exhibition:  From May 3 through June 26, 2008,
Main Library, Sixth Floor

Related Program: Meet the Artists,
Saturday, May 3, 2008,
Main Library, Sixth Floor, 4–5 p.m.
100 Larkin Street (at Grove)


Photo of Cordell Hawkins representing Homicide Quilt exhibition

Unveiling of the San Francisco/Bay Area Homicide Quilt - This exhibition is presented, in part, to honor the Rev. Cordell Hawkins, who developed the quilt as a way to offer emotional support to the families of homicide victims.
Exhibition:  From April 7, 2008 through June 7, 2008,
Main Library, Third Floor, African American Center
100 Larkin Street (at Grove)


Bob Barner Collage - Local collage artist and children’s book illustrator Bob Barner displays his work and process. Included is this year’s Dia de los Niños/Dia de los Libros poster.
Exhibition:  From May 3 through June 9, 2008,
Main Library, Second Floor, Fisher Children’s Center
100 Larkin Street (at Grove)


Dance It! – Dance and Information Technology - See the world of dance in a new way! This interactive digital media installation features varied dance styles from many cultures and allows participants to get in the act. Presented by the San Francisco Ballet Center for Dance Education, in collaboration with University of California, Irvine Media Arts specialist, John Crawford.
Exhibition:  From April 4 through May 4, 2008,
Main Library, Second Floor, Fisher Children’s Center

Related Program: Dance It! San Francisco Ballet Workshop
Saturday, April 26, 2008,
Main Library, Second Floor, Fisher Children’s Center, 2–3 p.m.
100 Larkin Street (at Grove)


Image of bird representing Seen in San Francisco exhibition

Seen in San Francisco - An exhibition of bird photographs by Grace Ruth.
Exhibition:  From March 7 through April 30, 2008,
Main Library, Lower Level, Café Exhibition Case
100 Larkin Street (at Grove)




Light the Passion, Share the Dream: 2008 Olympic Torch Relay Display - Featuring an official torch that was run in the 2002 Salt Lake City Olympic Relay, along with a few book covers of books on the Olympics from the library collection, a map showing the route of the torch relay, etc.
Exhibition:  From March 15 through April 30, 2008,
Main Library, Fourth Floor, Art, Music and Recreation Center
100 Larkin Street (at Grove)


River of Words - A related exhibition of original artwork from Bay Area winners and finalists of the annual River of Words Poetry and Art Contest for youth.
Exhibition:  From April 1 through April 30, 2008,
Main Library, Second Floor, Fisher Children’s Center

Related Program: 13th Annual River of Words Awards Ceremony
Sunday, April 20, 2008,
Main Library, Lower Level, Koret Auditorium, 1:30 p.m.
100 Larkin Street (at Grove)


Pisco: “Miracle and Benison” - Pisco Punch was long associated with San Francisco, but the roots of this brandy-based drink are in Peru. This small exhibition of books and photographs traces the history of the Punch in San Francisco and presents historic descriptions of the Pisco, Peru region, which was devastated by earthquake last year.
Exhibition:  From February 1, 2008 through April 24, 2008
Main Library, Sixth Floor, San Francisco History Center
100 Larkin Street (at Grove)


Gate Guardian, Wei Chingong

Chinese New Year Woodblock Prints - The Chinese New Year Prints (Nián Huà in Chinese) are a time-honored art form of significant standing among the many traditional folk arts in China. New Year Prints often use subjects and motifs reflecting historical and social themes, village and town life and people’s aspirations and beliefs. Prints courtesy of the Consulate General of the People's Republic of China in San Francisco.
Exhibition:  From February 2, 2008 through April 10, 2008
Main Library, Third Floor, Chinese Center
100 Larkin Street (at Grove)


Jeoly Chang, acrylic

Transformation and Appropriation: The Eccentric Art of Diallo - An exhibition of 10 acrylic paintings by local artist Diallo.
Exhibition:  From February 1, 2008 through April 3, 2008
Main Library, Third Floor,
African American Center
100 Larkin Street (at Grove)



Image representing coffee and donut.  Emilie Valentine.  Courtesy of the artist.

Emilie Valentine. Courtesy of the artist.

Timeless San Francisco and Timeless Cities – A Two-Floor Exhibition - The sixth floor exhibit cases include local photographer Emilie Valentine’s contemporary photography integrated with San Francisco Historical Photograph Collection’s photographs and San Francisco History Center’s ephemera and realia depicting San Francisco lifestyle and entertainment. The fourth floor exhibit cases present city settings, city landscapes and city life blended with samples of Emilie Valentine’s American urban images. The exhibit highlights the Art, Music and Recreation Center’s books and periodicals of photographers’ perspectives of urban life and landscape throughout the last 70 years. The sixth floor/fourth floor exhibition promotes and foregrounds San Francisco History Center and Art, Music and Recreation Center’s collections while partnering with a community art member, Emilie Valentine. The collaborative exhibit promotes independent learning and highlights the world class collections of San Francisco Public Library.
Exhibition:  From January 19 through March 20, 2008,
Main Library, Sixth Floor, San Francisco History Center and
Fourth Floor, Art, Music and Recreation Center
100 Larkin Street (at Grove)


Inspirations of Kit Wilson’s Ceramic World - Obsession with shapes and texture is what gives meaning to Kit Wilson’s work. Her work often reveals the uneasy relationship between the tangible and the fleeting. In several of her pieces, she has tried to understand the relationship of concrete structures to the people and environment that surround them.
Exhibition:  From January 4 through February 29, 2008,
Main Library, Lower Level, Café Exhibition Case
100 Larkin Street (at Grove)


Black Inventions - R. J. Reed presents replicas of some of the most well-known and some not so well-known inventions by Black Americans. Educators, community leaders and parents – this is a wonder field trip opportunity not to be missed.
Exhibition:  From February 25 through February 29, 2008,
Bayview/Anna E. Waden Branch Library
5075 Third Street (at Revere)


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