Past Exhibitions

Gustavo Ramos Rivera Paintings: Eternidades del Instante

This exhibition featured a selection of Rivera’s abstract paintings. Inspired by the landscape of his native Mexico and the bright colors of pre-Columbian and Mexican arts and crafts, Ramos Rivera has a great love for his materials, which he manipulates with a sense of ritual and rhythm.

The San Jose Museum of Art would like to thank the Koret Foundation for its support of this exhibition.

¡Arte Caliente! Selections from the Joe A. Diaz Collection

For almost 25 years, South Texas businessman Joe A. Diaz has collected contemporary art created by American artists with roots in Hispanic culture. This exhibition brought together more than 70 paintings, prints, drawings, and sculptures that are primarily narrative in content and address a wide range of political, social, and autobiographical issues. Among the artists in the exhibition: Connie Arismendi, Alejandro Díaz, Ana Laura de la Garza, Ester Hernández, John Hernández, Benito Huerta, Luis Jiménez, Cesar Martínez, Chuck Ramirez, Alex Rubio, John Valadez, Vincent Valdez, and Kathy Vargas.

Amy Sollins: Shadow Drawings

Known for her intricate abstract paintings, five years ago Bay Area–artist Sollins began making charcoal drawings of her possessions. Reverting to a medium she was taught years ago in her first art classes, Sollins draws with the softest charcoal possible so that the dust falls in shadows. She depicts articles ranging from her grandmother’s cast iron doorstop to her own underwear and jewelry.

Heavenly Bodies

Heavenly Bodies assembled work by seven video and digital media artists who investigate our interconnectivity and the relationship between our physical bodies, our environment, and the cosmos.

Il Lee and Sandra Sunnyo Lee

SJMA's Di Napoli Skybridge exhibition featured work by two artists with similar cultural roots who work in distinctly different styles. Il Lee is best known for his historically grounded abstract work using ballpoint pen on paper and canvas, works rooted in the traditions of Asian calligraphy. Sandra Sunnyo Lee creates closely cropped frontal images of the face using oil on canvas, which is informed by her exploration of fundamental life themes.

Visual Politics: The Art of Engagement

This exhibition examined the interconnected history of art and politics with a focus on the art of the West Coast, where the interchange between art and politics has been very pronounced in the last 50 years. The exhibition traced the development of political art through the second half of the 20th century beginning with the 1940s and concentrating on the 1960s and early 1970s.

 

Terry Winters

Energized by the potency of nature, the mysteries of the mind, and man’s study of both, Terry Winters depicts terrain, which is (by its very nature) invisible to the naked eye. Relying on the traditional methods of painting, drawing, and printmaking, he explores the intersection of the natural and the imaginary. This small exhibition features oil paintings and a selection of drawings from the Turbulence Skins series.

Sandow Birk's Divine Comedy

This exhibition featured Birk’s most recent series of prints and paintings, which are based on his contemporary re-translation of Dante Alighieri’s 14th-century epic poem The Divine Comedy.

Robert McChesney: Mid-century Modernist

For over 50 years, McChesney has lived and worked in a rural studio on Petaluma’s Sonoma Mountain. He has been aptly described as a “painter, cowboy, backwoods boaster, expatriate dreamer, devoted worker.” This exhibition reflected the energy, complexity, and verve that McChesney has culled from a lifetime of travel in Mexico, South America, the South Pacific, and the American West.

Tales from the Kiln: Contemporary Ceramics

The art of ceramic sculpture has deep roots in California, and this exhibition featured an impressive range of works by some of the best-known artists working in the field.

This exhibition of works from SJMA’s permanent collection was supported in part by Doris and Alan Burgess.

Brides of Frankenstein

This exhibition showcased experimental work by a new generation of female artists working with video, installation, robotics, the Internet, computer animation, and other digital and traditional media, to animate synthetic creatures with virtual life. Participating artists included Andrea Ackerman, Peggy Ahwesh, Erzsebet Baerveldt, Kirsten Geisler, Elizabeth King, Heidi Kumao, Kristin Lucas, Amy Myers, Patricia Piccinini, Sabrina Raaf, Tamara Stone, Camille Utterback, Gail Wight, and Adrianne Wortzel.

Caja de Visiones/Box of Visions: Manuel Álvarez Bravo

This exhibition featured approximately 50 black-and-white photographs produced in Mexico from the 1920s to the 1940s by 20th-century master photographer Manuel Álvarez Bravo.

Blobjects & Beyond: The New Fluidity in Design

Beginning Saturday, March 6th the San Jose Museum of Art's first floor galleries will brim with curvaceous, boldly designed products and prototypes as the museum opens its first-ever exhibition devoted to industrial design. The exhibition, Blobjects & Beyond: The New Fluidity in Design is a ground-breaking interdisciplinary look at the objects that fill our lives, chosen from a rich range of product, furniture, graphic, media and architectural work from across the globe.

Vital Signs: Photographs by Jacqueline Thurston

An accomplished artist and writer, Thurston creates evocative black-and-white photographs. In Vital Signs, a photographic series featuring abstract scenes from hospitals and doctors’ offices, Thurston captured what she has described as “an intimate moment filled with reverence for the frailty and imperfection of the physical self.”

Girl Power! Laurie Long

This exhibition presented the work of Bay Area–artist Long, whose enchanting art fuses together elements of humor, gender identity, and pop culture. This exhibition featured work from a number of Long’s series including Becoming Nancy Drew, I Dating Surveillance Project, and The Secret History of Goddess Sites.

Photographs from the Collection of Arthur J. Goodwin

For nearly 30 years Arthur J. Goodwin (1926–2004) passionately collected photographs that together reflect the range and diversity of contemporary photography. His collection is substantial, embracing everything from the lyrical photographs of Ruth Bernhard and Keith Carter to the documentary images of Mary Ellen Mark and Sebastião Salgado. The San Jose Museum of Art was extremely fortunate to acquire the Arthur J. Goodwin collection. This exhibition was presented in honor of Goodwin’s strong support of SJMA, its exhibitions, and its permanent collection, and the images included in this show represented only a fraction of his generous bequest.

Inside Out: Selections from the Permanent Collection

This exhibition continued the ongoing celebration of SJMA’s 35th anniversary. Coupled with a concurrent show featuring 50 major new gifts to the permanent collection, this exhibition by contrast drew from gifts accumulated over the years, contrasting familiar works by artists such as Hung Liu, Robert Colescott, and Roy DeForest with new gifts of works by artists like Clayton Bailey, Ellen Carey, and Sam Tchakalian. A wide variety of paintings, ceramic sculptures, and installations by diverse artists were included.

It's About Time: Celebrating 35 Years

In 2004 SJMA celebrated its 35th anniversary. To commemorate this event, the Museum launched a gift campaign two years before to acquire 35 new works for the permanent collection—one for each of the Museum’s 35 years of existence. SJMA far exceeded this goal and unveiled more than 100 new acquisitions when It’s About Time: Celebrating 35 Years opened in October 2004. Among the artists included in It’s About Time: Celebrating 35 Years: Ruth Asawa, Elmer Bischoff, Joan Brown, Raimond Staprans, Wayne Thiebaud, David Gilhooly, Stephen De Staebler, Roland Petersen, Masami Teraoka and Peter VandenBerge.

Dream Games: The Art of Robert Schwartz

Schwartz (1947-2000) created meticulously crafted oil paintings and gouaches featuring enigmatic, dreamlike narratives, which are often no larger than eight inches square. This exhibition focused primarily on Schwartz’s later works.

Sam Smidt: A Career in Graphic Design

This exhibition featured a selection of graphic designs produced by leading West Coast graphic designer Smidt over the course of his career—including the San Jose Museum of Art’s 2004 permanent collection catalogue. It also included a group of Smidt’s recently published photographs from the series Gifts of the Street, a series of photographs Smidt took on his daily walks to work.

Art of Zines 04

Art of Zines 04 explored the creative and often subversive phenomenon of the zine, which is typically defined as a modest art book publication produced by an individual or small group. For the three years prior to this presentation, San Jose’s Anno Domini Gallery played a vital role in the zine community by organizing an annual zine exhibition. SJMA partnered with Anno Domini to mount Art of Zines 04.

Yoshitomo Nara: Nothing Ever Happens

Adored by everyone from art critics to punk kids, Nara's figures haunt galleries and museums, and adorn T-shirts, CD cases, ashtrays, and clocks. SJMA presented the Tokyo- based artist’s first major solo museum exhibition in the United States.

The Koret Foundation was a major sponsor of the San Jose presentation of Yoshitomo Nara: Nothing Ever Happens, which was organized by the Museum of Contemporary Art Cleveland. The traveling exhibition was sponsored by an anonymous donor with the additional support of the Marianne Boesky Gallery, New York, The Japan Foundation, Toby Devan Lewis, The Peter Norton Family Foundation, Nancy and Joel Portnoy and Jennifer McSweeney Reuss.

The Art of Lawrence Ferlinghetti

Long admired as a prolific poet, author, and iconic publisher, Ferlinghetti is also a well-established and respected painter. A selection of Ferlinghetti’s most recent works were on view in the SJMA Koret Gallery.

Domestic Odyssey

This exhibition featured work by national and international artists who use metaphors of domesticity—and actual household items such as furniture and appliances—to explore issues of gender, class, and culture. Major sponsorship of Domestic Odyssey was provided by The Mercury News. Additional support was provided by Aspect Communications and Vintage Wine Merchants.

Jack Fulton: On the Origins of Everything

This selection of photographs and photo-based works by Jack Fulton were drawn from the course of Fulton’s career. Fulton is known for his hand-annotated photos that range from intimate family portraits to striking travel photographs.