It’s KPFA’s sixtieth birthday in April. I went out on the street this last week and painted a small canvas of the headquarters appropriately located at 1929 Martin Luther King Jr. Way in Berkeley. (Martin was born in 1929 and this first listener supported station in the world was founded by pacifists.)
I will be donating 50% of the sale price of this painting as well as 10% of all sales for the next three Last Sundays to KPFA. My next three Last Sunday exhibitions are March 29, April 26 and May 31. Also, I will donate 10% of sales from this website for the next three months.
Please pass by. I will be serving wine, cheese and cappuccinos, showing new work and I’m sure we will share some lively conversation.
Like most institutions these days, KPFA is having financial difficulties though they do not appear to be anywhere near as grave as those facing mainstream media. As an artist and a progressive I find it impossible to imagine the San Francisco Bay Area without KPFA. Would we have some of the largest political demonstrations in the country without this institution as a cataluyst??
The arts, especially music and literature, would suffer without this eclectic public forum for writers and musicians.
Sculptors, painters, graphic and conceptual artists would find their silent studios bereft without the disquisitions on science by Dr Michio Kaku, the exposition of the Middle Eastern conflict by our generation’s most dedicated and eloquent journalist, Robert Fisk, the smorgasbord of literary luminaries like Isabel Allende, and Alice Walker who appear on Cover to Cover… well, I could go on and on. Those of you who listen to KPFA are already aware of these riches.
Those of you who aren’t familiar with KPFA should tune your radio dial in Northern California to 94.1 FM or listen online at KPFA.org. What you hear will amuse, shock, irritate and enlighten you as no other radio station can, because this is the voice of our community by turns brilliant, informative and just plain crazy.
When the history of our time is written, KPFA and the national network Pacifica, will emerge as one of the most important forces of this period. With public radio and television severely compromised by corporate underwriters, KPFA , and the Pacifica network which it spawned, are a principal independent source of news and culture – an essential nerve center for activism and the arts.







Three weeks in Cuba a Painter’s Perspective
In 2001 the Oakland Museum of California commissioned me to create a painting of Oakland as a gift to Oakland’s sister city Santiago de Cuba. This painting ‘Desde las Calles Abajo’ (‘From the Streets Below’) now hangs in Santiago.
Desde Las Calles Abajo, oil on canvas, 2001, in the collection of UNEAC Santigo de Cuba
The next year my wife, son and I were invited to a family wedding in Havana. We jumped at the opportunity to travel and paint in Cuba for three weeks, and to visit Santiago. To give you a taste of what it is like on the street in Cuba I have posted two paintings along with diary excerpts that relate to these paintings.
U.S. relations with Cuba are again being hotly debated. It is impossible to make sense of this debate without an understanding of our tangled history with Cuba. One of the most qualified sources is film maker and writer Saul Landau. His extensive series of films documenting the Cuban revolution can be found on DVD at Round World Productions. He is also syndicated with both Counterpunch.org and Progreso-weekly.com
My travels in revolutionary Nicaragua in 1984 and 1985 (See Video From Oakland to Nicaragua ) convinced me that painting on location is one of the best ways to gain an in-depth understanding of another culture. To set up an easel on a street corner and begin painting is a passport into local culture. I am not taking a picture and leaving. I am composing a painting from start to finish under the watchful eyes of the community. Everyone gathers around and shares their stories. Since I return to a location over several days I become familiar with the texture and rhythm of daily life. .
Some of you may want to download the complete diary: Anthony Holdsworth and Beryl Landau Three Weeks in Cuba Diary’ (PDF)
Morning on the Malecon, Havana, Cuba, oil/canvas, 18 x 24, 2002
The Framboyan Tree, Tivoli, Santiago de Cuba, oil on canvas, 18" X 24", 2002
Some of you may want to download the complete diary: Anthony Holdsworth and Beryl Landau Three Weeks in Cuba Diary (PDF).