Tag Archive for 'oakland'

Global Warming paintings among those featured at Open Studio: Dec 12-13 & 19-20

This year I have chosen to feature my Global Warming series at my December Open Studio to coincide with the World Conference on Global Warming in Copenhagen.

I will also  be showing  a selection  of other works from the past two years.

‘SELECTED WORKS 2007 – 2009′

STUDIO EXHIBITION  Dec 12-13 / 19-20

Sat – Sun 11 am – 6 pm           510.836.1681

351 Lewis Street (near Oakland West BART)


You may also explore my inventory of artwork, archival prints and recently published books over wine, cheese and   cappuccinos. I look forward to seeing you!

Preview a short video of the six Global Warming paintings on YouTube.

Those of you who appreciate the meditative experience of viewing a real  painting should pass by my studio to fully appreciate these and many other recent works:


About the Global Warming Series:

These paintings are, of course, an exercise in science fiction, intended to make us think. We are not likely to see oceans rise to this level in our lifetime. But ultimately, global warming, unchecked, will result in scenes more extreme than these.

Oakland Global Warming Triptych # 2
Oakland Global Warming Triptych # 2

Today, we are witnessing accelerating melt of the Greenland and the Antarctic ice shelves resulting in rising sea  levels that  already threaten some island  cultures. The full loss of all this ice would cause oceans to rise about 171 feet!

Oakland Global Warming Triptych # 3
Oakland Global Warming Triptych # 3

Glaciers, which feed many of the world’s great rivers, have been shrinking for a hundred years. The Ganges, the Mekong and  the Yellow rivers which sustain a quarter of the world’s population draw much of their flow from glaciers in the Himalayas.  Scientists predict these glaciers will disappear within two or three decades.
Of more immediate concern are the  increasingly unpredictable weather patterns world-wide. Large scale agriculture requires stable weather. The increasing frequency of droughts followed by inundation are inimical to agriculture. Some experts view the Murray-Darling Basin drought in Australia as a wake up call to California whose water resources are becoming stretched to the limit. World food reserves are at their lowest level in many decades, so the first great blow of unchecked global warming may well be world famine.

Halting Global Warming and Copenhagen:

American intransigence has so far torpedoed any meaningful global warming agreements.
The European Union, which is as developed as the United States with a larger population, currently emits 50% less pollution than we do. It has offered to reduce it’s green house gas emissions by 25% from 1990 levels by 2020 – provided that other nations are willing to follow suit.
President Obama, in a much heralded move, has offered a reduction of 17% by 2020. But here’s the catch. He’s talking about a 17% reduction from 2005. This offer translates into less than a 4% reduction since 1990.
Climate scientists generally agree that we need to return to a carbon dioxide level of 350 parts per million ( we are currently at  387).  This would require an  80% reduction of emissions by 2050. From this perspective the European proposal seems modest. While Obama’s offer is nothing short of a cruel joke. Coming, as it does, from the nation that has dumped most of  the carbon dioxide into the world’s atmosphere in the past century.

Americans need to wake up and take action. We have reaped enormous benefits from modern science and technology. Now we must shoulder the responsibilities that come with these benefits. Contact your friends and elected representatives. Forward them my video. It is designed to get people talking.

Above all:   Log on to www.350.org for up-to-date information and calls to action.

Uptown Unveiled: The Fox and Paramount Theaters, Oakland, June 18

I’ve painted them on several occasions. Now my guest blogger, Annalee Allen, will fill you in on a celebration which will showcase two of Oakland’s premier movie palaces:

Annalee Allen

The upcoming Uptown Unveiled street party on June 18th presents an opportunity to showcase both of Oakland’s movie palace gems – the Paramount Theatre on Broadway, and the newly restored Fox Oakland Theater on Telegraph Avenue. The lobbies of both theaters will be open for viewing, and guides with the Oakland Tours Program will be leading walks from one venue to the other throughout the evening.

atbusstopsm1

Anthony Holdsworth’s portraits of both theaters, seen altogether on this site, capture the sense of expectation and excitement patrons must have felt eight decades ago when both theaters, with capacities to seat 3000-plus people, offered a few hours of escape into the wide world of entertainment. A check of the history files reveals that several other theaters were operating in downtown during that time – the twenties and thirties, but the opening of the Fox in 1928, and the Paramount in 1931 represented a new level of architectural opulence and patron accommodation. Purchasing a ticket for 44 cents (55 cents for the loge level) meant transport to worlds and time periods far far away, files say.
Over the years, at the Fox, well-known vaudevillians and stars like Ginger Rogers, Bing Crosby, Frank Sinatra and the Jimmy Dorsey Band took the stage during movie intermissions. During the year long construction period for the Paramount, which occurred as the Great Depression was deepening, dozens of subcontractors employed hundreds of steelworkers, plumbers, carpenters and artisans to work on the mammoth structure. On opening day the Paramount was reported to be the largest movie house on the West Coast.
The Paramount

The Paramount

While the style of the Fox suggests a “Brahamanian Temple of Northern India,” with a tower dome encrusted with colored tiles, the Paramount, designed by noted San Francisco architect Timothy Pflueger, is a towering tribute to the Jazz Age and Moderne styled Art Deco. It too features highly unusual glazed mosaic tile panels, flanking the neon blade sign, that depict stylized male and female puppet masters crowned with stars, dangling golden strings with performing arts figures.
How exciting it must have been to see those neon letters on the theaters’ towering signs, glowing nightly, drawing folks downtown to shows, dining, and dancing.
According to the files, the acquisition and restoration of the Paramount Theatre by the Oakland Symphony Association in the early 1970’s, was seen as the start of a major trend around the country to take aging movie palaces and convert them in to performing arts centers. A modest $4 million, funds contributed by a few key locally prominent civic minded leaders, and matched by energetic community volunteers who mounted a one dollar per person fundraising campaign, was what it took back in 1973, to reopen the Paramount Theatre. The rescue of the Fox took much longer and was far more complicated. That remarkable story will be retold on June 18th by the volunteer guides of the Oakland Tours20Program at the Uptown Unveiled street party. In addition, the Uptown tour will be repeated monthly through the summer months, the dates and times are posted on the web at Oaklandnet.com/walkingtours.
The Fox during Restoration

The Fox during Restoration

We owe a debt of gratitude to those who refused to give up on the idea that Oakland could have not one but two major downtown landmark venues, fully restored and open for all to enjoy. For more on uptown’s renaissance check out www.MeetDowntownOak.com.

East Bay Open Studios 2009

Saturdays and Sundays
June 6 & 7, 13 & 14, 2009

11AM – 6PM

351 Lewis St Oakland, CA 94110

Google Map

The East Bay hosts one of the highest per capita concentrations of visual artists in the United States. You’ve probably never heard of most of them. Many are not represented by local galleries.

Pro Arts, oil on canvas, 18" X 24", 2004
Pro Arts, oil on canvas, 18″ X 24″, 2004

If you are interested in an overview of the East Bay visual arts, I encourage you to participate in an event that throws the doors wide open. More than four hundred studios will welcome the general public the first two weekends in June. This visual smorgasbord is keenly anticipated by art lovers, as well as collectors and gallery owners.

Because of the number of artists involved I recommend visiting Pro Arts Gallery in Jack London Square where each participating artist shows a sample of his or her work. With the catalog in hand  you can plan your voyage of discovery.

Nowadays you can also take a virtual visit. Check out the Online Gallery.

East Bay Open Studios is a excellent opportunity to discover emerging artists at reasonable prices. While I don’t advise buying art primarily as an investment, there is no doubt that, these days, reasonably priced work by living artists has a greater potential to appreciate in value than most stocks and bonds. It’s also much more enjoyable to look at!

O'Brien Theile painting in the garden of Rancho Santiago, near Patzcuaro, Michoacan, Mexico

O'Brien Thiele painting in the garden of Casa Santiago, near Patzcuaro, Michoacan, Mexico

Four artists, who have attended my painting workshops in Oakland, Mexico or Italy, are taking part in Open Studios. They are  O’Brien Theile and Ron Weil both in Berkeley,  Marvin Dalander in Alameda. And Lorrie Fink in Oakland.

I’ve participated  in East Bay Open Studios every year since it’s inception in the early 80’s.  Pro Arts is an artist membership organization which has acted as an entry point into the art world for emerging talent. It hosts a number of exhibitions each year. My exhibition with Pro Arts in 1986 garnered a full page review (by Charles Shere and Susan Stern) in the Oakland Tribune, as well as a gallery connection. Sales from this show enabled me to phase out my landscape gardening business and devote myself full time to painting.

Autumn at the Farmers' Market, oil on canvas, 18" X 24", 2008

Autumn at the Farmers' Market, oil on canvas, 18" X 24", 2008

This year I am showcasing my painting of the San Francisco Chronicle (Storm Clouds over the Chronicle) and the Farmer’s Market painting that was featured in an article by Brenda Payton in the San Francisco Chronicle. I will  be showing other examples of my Farmers’ Market Series and Urban Garden Series as well as new urban landscapes.

You are welcome to explore my racks in the mezzanine where I store about a hundred paintings, and to take part in lively conversation with other guests over wine, cheese and cappuccinos.

I look forward to seeing you.

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

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

Morning on the Malecon, Havana, Cuba, oil/canvas, 18 x 24, 2002

Excerpt from “Three Weeks in Cuba” that relates to the painting above:

Wed  Aug 14:  On the Malecon near Hotel Deuville  I started painting a view west down the Malecon. A bunch of kids, seven to ten years old, gathered around me. While I was laying out my design, I pretended not to speak any Spanish and ignored them. A policeman hovered on the periphery. There’s a policeman on nearly every block in old Havana. The kids are real toughs. They scuffled, fist fought and threw stones at one another. The officer pretty much ignored their quarrels. Finally a street cleaner with a broom and small wagon, who’d stopped to watch me, admonished them that I was trying to work and they retreated across the street. A tall, black man hung around for a long time. I noticed that he was holding a small canvas. Turns out he’s a painter. He wanted to know what colors I used and was very surprised to learn I painted with black, which he never uses. He showed me his painting: a primitivist portrait of a woman in a tropical landscape.

Thurs  Aug 15:  This morning I finished-my view down the Malecon. The painter from yesterday returned this morning with a gift of a drawing. I asked him if he would pose for me for a few minutes in the colonnade.  Afterward I got his address so that I can send him a reproduction of the painting. We talked while I worked. He told me that it was his birthday today. That he was forty, and that he’s a professor of mathematics, but his first love has always been painting.

The Framboyan Tree, Tivoli, Santiago de Cuba, oil on canvas, 18" X 24", 2002

The Framboyan Tree, Tivoli, Santiago de Cuba, oil on canvas, 18" X 24", 2002

Wed   Aug 21:  Barrio Tivoli

Anthony:  I started my second painting several blocks southeast of the historic center beyond the Escaleras de Padre Pica in the Tivoli district. There are several spectacular views here. I picked the simplest because I’m afraid of getting bogged down. Ramshackle housing high up on the right descends by steep steps, down to a street that plunges towards the bay. On the left stands a lovely red flowered framboyan tree, the national tree of Cuba. A freighter is moored in the distant slice of bay. I was immediately surrounded by kids, much better behaved than their counterparts in Havana. A handsome Rastafarian came down from the house above the steps. He was delighted to learn that I was from Oakland because he was interested in the Black Panthers. He invited me in for coffee but I demurred until tomorrow because it was nearly time for me to leave and rejoin Beryl.

Beryl (Beryl Landau) :  This was our best day so far in Santiago. Anthony went off painting after breakfast and I started another view from the balcony. Anthony returned, and we had to leave to meet the artist Pagan; so I didn’t have time to finish my watercolor. Pagan took us to visit two artists who live nearby. En route to the first one, Jose Horruitiner, it started pouring and we had to wait under an overhang until it subsided…

Thurs, Aug 22

Anthony:  I feel very comfortable in Barrio Tivoli away from the center of town. I was joined by my new Rastafarian friend who lent me a pair of powerful binoculars to examine the bay. His girlfriend brought me a demitasse of sweet espresso. He told me that his two passions are painting and poetry. Whenever he needs money in Havana he paints pictures. A backup source of income are his necklaces. He told me he used to like to smoke a joint first thing in the morning followed by a cup of strong Cuban coffee. Then he would paint and string beads for hours. His friends would ask him where he found the patience, but he considered it a better activity than running in the streets and fighting. I observed that there are thousands of people in the U.S. in jail for dealing or using marijauna. He said it was the same in Cuba.. He had spent six months in jail for smoking. I put his grandmother in my painting as she stood on their balcony.

Thurs, Aug 23

Back in Bario Tivoli for a few last touches to my painting. A man sweeps the street with a large bristle broom. People with buckets loudly hawk avocados and yucca.

“La yucca! La yucca! Caliente la buena yucca!”

Men and women hurry to work, some with briefcases, from shacks so run down they’d be condemned in Oakland. A man pulls his vintage motorcycle with sidecar up against the curb below the embankment where I’m standing. He takes our a bucket of yellow paint and a brush and begins retouching his vehicle. My rastafarian friend descends from his home with another brush and lends a hand. After they’ve finished, the man’s wife,small child in her arms, gingerly climbs into the sidecar trying to avoid contact with all the wet paint. Like most Cuban drivers who are always trying to conserve gas, they coast down the hill towards the bay.

My friend brings me a cup of coffee. The kids gather round. One of them throws a stone across the street and is gently reprimanded by adults who are watching from their balconies. A skinny old man with a hawk-like face stops and asks me where I’m from. He brightens when I say the U.S. and breaks into impeccable English. I ask him how he learned to speak so well.

“In the streets. I was a guide for American sailors. I showed them
where to drink and find a good fuck. I was a boy then. Now I’m an
old man.”

I move up onto my friend’s balcony. The three young women
who had been staying as his guests all kiss him goodbye and exhort
me to paint him “el mas feo,” the ugliest man in the neighborhood.

Taller Luis Diaz O

This afternoon Pagan took us out to the Taller ‘Luis Diaz 0.’ in the Vista Allegre district. The administrator Idalmnis Reyes Dominguez explained that this was a hybrid organization, principally a series of small studios for more than twenty painters, sculptors, ceramicists and printmakers, but also a small gallery and cultural center. Pagan who does not have a space here avails himself of the printmaking studio.

It’s surprising how many museums, galleries and artists’ organizations there are in this town. UNEAC even publishes a couple of quality art magazines…

Some of you may want to download the complete diary: Anthony Holdsworth and Beryl Landau Three Weeks in Cuba Diary (PDF).

Obama on Broadway

Afternoon at 13th and Broadway Tribune Tower Holdsworth Painting Oakland

This is one one of my most successful downtown paintings and I owe part of its success to the election of Barack Obama. I’ve painted three pictures here. I enjoy the contrast of the modern buildings across Broadway with the old buildings which are reminiscent, as John Protopapas once remarked, of the towers of San Gimignano in Tuscany. But it’s a difficult place to work. The bus stop and BART attract large crowds. And there are a smattering of extremely disturbed people who become belligerent for no particular reason except that I’m here and that I can’t leave without abandoning my canvas.

The first two paintings suffered from these distractions but this painting was lifted by a tide of enthusiasm that began rising in the days before the election when crowds of students who would usually stop and pepper me with a staccato of questions and wisecracks instead marched in orderly ranks down Broadway campaigning for Obama.

As the election approached it seemed that a weight was being lifted off everyone’s shoulders. Even the malcontents eased up. The day after the election the light in people’s eyes was contagious. It seemed to spill over into my painting. Spontaneous exclamations of ‘Obama!’ rang out on Broadway as people were unable to contain their joy.

A couple of days later a big man in an Obama t-shirt asked if I’d like to put him in my painting. I said ’sure’ and asked him to pose with the Tribune tower behind him. After I’d finished he told me he’d just got out of jail. “What were you in for?” I asked “Somethin stupid, but I won’t make that mistake again. I’m gonna turn my life around.” He smiled at me gently and I believed him.

www.anthonyholdsworth.com



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