#LoveOurIsland Art Walk Brings
Bay Area Artists to Alameda Windows
Radical Beauty, Part 1 Event Photos
As creative people of all kinds grapple with what it means to respond to the moment we are living in, we invited artists to remind people about beauty in the world — in all the forms that might take. Artists home in on all kinds of subjects that they find beautiful and that they believe merit close attention. This project stems from the premise that searching for beauty is, in itself, a radical act.
Free Outdoor Musical Performances on Opening Night
About the Artists
Jennifer Brandon lives and works in San Francisco. In 2007, she received her MFA at Mills College, preceded by an MA in 2005 and BA in 2004 in Art at California State University, Northridge, as well as a BA in 1997 in English Literature at San Francisco State University. Brandon’s work has been shown at Bay Area venues including the Mills College Art Museum, Stephen Wirtz Gallery, Headlands Center for the Arts, Swarm Gallery, Pro Arts Gallery and The San Jose Institute of Contemporary Art. Residencies, awards and fellowships include The Rayko Artist in Residence, The Herringer Prize for Excellence in Studio Art and The Catherine Morgan Trefethen Fellowship in Art.
Angela Hennessy is an Oakland-based interdisciplinary artist and Associate Professor at California College of the Arts, where she teaches courses on visual and cultural narratives of death and contemporary textile theory. She leads workshops and lectures nationally. Recent talks and performances include Death Salon Seattle, University of Cincinnati, CTRL+SHIFT Artists Collective, You’re Going to Die, IDEO/Reimagine End of Life, Disclose Silence: We See Violence and Dead Black at Nook Gallery. Last fall her work was featured in a solo exhibition When and where I enter at Southern Exposure and in the recent publication Fray: Textile Art and Politics by Julia Bryan Wilson.
Jerome Rivera Pansa is a genderqueer interdisciplinary artist involving installation, sculpture, text, and performance. Their work consists of reusing collected objects and sourced information concerning the impermanence of beingness, and the intersections of queerness and the abjected. Rivera Pansa received their BFA at University of California, Berkeley. They have shown work in Berkeley Art Museum and Pacific Film Archive, AS Gallery at San Francisco State University, California Center for the Arts, ARC Gallery as part of Kearny Street Workshop Annual APAture exhibition. They have also shown in Worth Ryder Art Gallery, Kruglak Gallery, and the San Dieguito Art Guild. Rivera Pansa is a recipient of the Wendy Sussman Prize in Painting, and the 2017 Eisner Award. Their studio practice is based in Oakland.
About the #LoveOurIsland Art Walk
Organized by Rhythmix Cultural Works in partnership with the Downtown Alameda Business Association and the City of Alameda, the #LoveOurIsland Art Walk is a two‐year initiative that temporarily places art in empty storefront windows on and around the city’s Park Street business corridor. Live musical performances will accompany each window at opening events held during regularly scheduled Second Friday Art Walks. Support for the project is generously provided by the California Arts Council.