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Category: art

Counter Culture

Vetrazzo counter milefiori

If you’ve ever spent a Sunday looking at real estate open houses, you’ll see the depressing sight of the omnipresent kitchen granite table top. It’s the upscale meme that has spread like a virus. If you don’t know about Vetrazzo, and you’re thinking about new countertops. You need to get out and see this stuff. Vertrazzo is 100% recycled glass, we’re talking old traffic lights, windshields, bottles, etc. Each of the styles has a story about the origin of the glass.

Vetrazzo has created a green business, and that’s great, but it’s the beauty of the product that really matters. Check it out.

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Mimi Jensen: September 6, 2007

Mimi Jensen: Montecristo

If you’re in San Francisco on September 6th, drop by the opening of Mimi Jensen’s new show at the Hespe Gallery. Mimi has provided a preview of the show on her Web site. Her paintings are filled with wit, an unerring sense of composition and a master’s hand with oil paint.

Here’s the info:

Hespe Gallery
251 Post Street, Suite 420
San Francisco, CA 94108
415-776-5918
September 6, 2007

Remember, paintings can’t really be seen on a computer screen. You need to meet them face-to-face. And ideally, you need to live them and have a silent conversation over the years. It’s then that you really begin to understand the meaning of value.

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Disappearing Over the Horizon

Maynard G. Krebs

Beatnik slang is in some ways an invention of the mass media, a safer flavor of the Beat Generation made palatable for mass consumption. Movies and television featured kooky characters that assumed this stereotype. Other films presented a more hard edged vision. But none of them really captured the life, times and writing of Kerouac, Ginsberg, Snyder, Burroughs, Cassady, Ferlinghetti and the rest. A calcification of the Beat spirit is under way, the Beat Museum has opened just around the corner from City Lights.

While it only treats the Beat generation peripherally, the television series Mad Men provides a strange and wonderful picture of how foreign that world was. It chronicles the dominant cultural themes that created a Beat Generation at the margins. It’s a history that is disappearing from our memories and emerging into our imaginations.

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Pigeons Vs. Architects

pigeon image

In San Francisco, there’s a lot of public discussion about the architectural designs submitted for the new Transbay Terminal. It will substantially change the City’s skyline and the feel of that part of downtown. If you’ve ever visited the current Transbay Terminal, you know we need a change.

Skidmore Transbay Design

The three architectural firms have submitted lots of provocative plans and pictures about how the new terminal will look. They all want to make their mark of the skyline of a major international city.

Things never look so perfect as they do in the planning stage. Pure vision is a wonderful thing. But as Carl Philipp Gottfried von Clausewitz once said, no plan survives its first encounter with the enemy.

Pigeon Spikes

That brings us to Pigeon Spikes. No, the image above isn’t one of the new tower designs. It’s the kind of thing that’s added to “great architecture” once it encounters the pigeon. It’s the ugly set of spikes added to ledges and surfaces on which pigeons might roost.

In the war between pigeons and architects, I’d have to say that the pigeons are winning. I’d like to challenge the architects to design the new Transbay Terminal so that it doesn’t require the subsequent addition of pigeon spikes (or even worse chicken wire nets). You can’t win a battle you don’t plan for.

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