Top 3 Things to do in Berkeley (Berkeley Art Museum/Adventure Playground): Traveling with Kids
Visiting Berkeley, California. Checking out Habitot Children's Museum, Adventure Playground in the Berkeley Marina, and Berkeley Art Museum and Pacific Film Archive (BAMPFA).
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Visit Berkeley | Things to do in Berkeley | Berkeley Day Trip | Berkeley Weekend Getaway | Travel Berkeley | Berkeley Attractions | Berkeley with Kids
UC Berkeley Art Museum ~ Berkeley CA
Art is everywhere, everything is art
BAMPFA - University of California Berkeley Art Museum
2016
Claremont Club & Spa - A Fairmont Hotel, Berkeley, California, USA
Claremont Club & Spa - A Fairmont Hotel, Berkeley, California, United States of America
41 Tunnel Road, Berkeley, CA, 94705, United States of America
Suburban hotel with 3 restaurants, near Berkeley Art Museum and Pacific Film Archive
Free WiFi
Avante-garde Anthem for the Future for Berkeley Art Museum and Pacific Film Archive's new space
For the occasion of the celebration for the new BAM/PFA building (designed by DILLER SCOFIDIO + RENFRO), the director of the BAM/PFA asked me for an avant garde anthem of the new millenium. Inspired by that provocation, I thought to combine throat singing and excerpts from the Latin text from Nuper Rosarum Flores, which was sung on the occasion of the consecration of the Duomo in Florence, with an industrial electronica track by Ilya Rostovtsev (which fit the vibe of the graffiti-filled space).
The ceremony included speeches by Larry Rinder (director of BAM/PFA), Chancellor Birgeneau, and UC Berkeley benefactor, Barclay Simpson, who was awarded the Berkeley Medal during the event.
Text excerpted from Nuper Rosarum Flores:
Nuper rosarum flores - Recently garlands of roses
Hieme licet horrida - despite a terrible winter
Grandis templum machinae - a temple of great ingenuity
Condecorarunt perpetim - to be a perpetual adornment
Devotus erat populus - devoted as a people
Ut qui mente et corpore - together in mind and body
Terribilis est locus iste - Magnificent is this place
BERKELEY GALLERY - Sunjoy Jeergall
BERKELEY COLLEGE PRESENTS THE PAINTINGS OF SUNJOY JEERGALL --
ARTWORK ON THE DARK SIDE
Berkeley College is exhibiting the artwork of Sunjoy Jeergall at its New York
City Midtown Gallery, First Floor Lobby, 3 East 43st Street. This exhibit is on
display from June 3 through 28—Monday through Friday—from 9:00 am to
7:30 pm and on Saturdays from 9:30 am to 3:00 pm.
Born in India, Sunjoy Jeergall was raised in an artistic family and learned to
paint and sculpt at an early age. He participated in juried art competitions
and won many prizes, including a silver medal and first prize at the state level
for his paintings. In 1987, he moved to Ahmadabad, India, where he worked
at the Kanoria Center for Art. He became acquainted with many well-known
contemporary artists and organized his first solo exhibition at the
Contemporary Art Gallery.
The artist moved to the US in 1996 and currently works in his home studio in
the Washington, DC area.
About his work, Mr. Jeergall says, I always imagine the huge universe that has
billions of stars and planets full of living and nonliving objects governed by
mysterious cosmic powers. Much of my work is dark—the dark backgrounds
representing the space in the universe—with life represented by the forms
resembling celestial beings living as a group.
His solo exhibits include the Unitarian Universalists Sterling Gallery, Sterling,
VA; World Fine Art Gallery, New York, NY; Kaiser Permanente Gallery, Reston,
VA; and the Elizabeth Public Library Gallery, Elizabeth, NJ. Group exhibits
include the Rochester Contemporary Art Center, Rochester, NY; DC Art Center
Gallery, Washington, DC; Museum of Contemporary Art, Washington, DC; and
the Hyderabad Art Society Art Exhibition, Hyderabad, India.
For more information about the artist, visit sunjoyjeergall.com. For more
details about the exhibit, e-mail Robert Keiber at rjk@BerkeleyCollege.edu or
call 212-252-2065.
Music by:
Chill Carrier - Sundays
Berkeley Aquatic Park
Video of Berkeley Aquatic Park. Read about it at
Find more family-friendly attractions in the bay area at baykidsplay.com.
Alumni Panel of Curators Across Disciplines
Alumni Panel of Curators Across Disciplines
with Patricia Cariño Valdez, René de Guzman, and Deena Chalabi
Wed Nov 29, 2017
12:00 PM - 1:30 PM
Location: Berkeley Art Museum and Pacific Film Archive
Three alumni curators from different organizations explore the process of curating objects, new technologies, and public experiences with different goals and in varied locations. Speakers will also discuss their Berkeley education and share ideas for further collaboration with the university and with Berkeley students. Biography: Patricia Cariño Valdez is the Curator and Director of Public Programs at the San Jose Institute of Contemporary Art (ICA). At this California institution, she oversees exhibition coordination including research, interpretation, and presentation of 810 contemporary art exhibitions per year. Additionally, she develops public engagement initiatives including ICA Live!, a performance art program, and Talking Art, a series of panel discussions and artist lectures, portfolio reviews, and workshops. Prior to her current role at the ICA, Cariño worked at the intersection of arts and sciences as the Public Programs Coordinator and Development Specialist at the Exploratorium in San Francisco. Cariños curatorial projects have been held at the Wattis Institute for Contemporary Arts, Asian Contemporary Arts Consortium, Oakland Museum of California, Pro Arts, California College of the Arts, and numerous independent galleries and art spaces in San Francisco and Oakland. She was born in Manila, Philippines and grew up along the West Coast of the United States. Cariño earned a BA in Art History from the University of California, Berkeley and an MA in Curatorial Practice from the California College of the Arts. René de Guzman is Director of Exhibition Strategy and Senior Curator of Art at the Oakland Museum of California. Previously, he was a founding staff member at the Yerba Buena Center for the Arts in San Francisco, where he provided early support for some of the Bay Areas leading artists and worked with national and international emerging and mid-career artists. His artworks are in collections, including at the Berkeley Art Museum and the San Jose Museum of Art. He is currently Adjunct Professor in the Graduate Division of the Curatorial Studies Program at the California College of the Arts. Deena Chalabi is the Barbara and Stephan Vermut Associate Curator of Public Dialogue at the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art. From 2009 to 2012, she was the founding Head of Strategy at Mathaf: Arab Museum of Modern Art in Doha, Qatar. She created the Pop-Up Mathaf program for collaborative international partnerships, curating Interference at the Institute of Contemporary Arts in London in July 2011. She guest curated three additional Pop-Up Mathaf programs internationally, and has written for Bidoun, ArtAsiaPacific, and The New Inquiry, among other publications.
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Fall 2017: Curation Across Disciplines
Wednesdays at 12pm, Free and open to the public
What does it mean to curate? How has the role of the curator changed in our contemporary moment? Does the curator function differently in the performing arts, the visual arts, film, and in the fields of science and technology? And, how has curating changed as it responds to new forms of cultural and digital participation? When curation has become a popular metaphor in many domains --from food, to music, to social media -- how do we define this expanded practice?
Co-taught by Shannon Jackson, Associate Vice Chancellor of the Arts + Design; Natasha Boas, independent curator, art historian and critic; and Eric Siegel, Director of the University of California Botanical Garden at Berkley, Arts + Design Wednesdays @ BAMPFA will explore this theme with some of the most innovative and incisive writers, artists and scholars of our time.
Berkeley Art Museum Beam Installation I DSCN01860+01 05+06+09
BAM/PFA New Building Topping Out Celebration -
Berkeley Art Museum and Pacific Film Archive (BAM/PFA) New Building Final Beam Installation - 17 July 2014
BAM/PFA New Building Topping Out Celebration:
Yesterday, I attended a block party on Addison Street below Oxford, celebrating the topping out of the new Berkeley Art Museum & Pacific Film Archive building of University of California, Berkeley, in the ceremony traditionally held when the last beam is put in place.
According to the press release, the new BAM/PFA is designed by renowned architects Diller Scofidio + Renfro, integrates a repurposed building, the former UC Berkeley printing plant, at the corner of Oxford and Center Streets, with a dramatic new structure. Opening in early 2016, the new building will anchor Berkeley's downtown Arts District, engaging diverse audiences in groundbreaking art, film, performance, and education programs.
Living Along The Fenceline - Trailer - TWN
Living Along the Fenceline is available for educational purchases:
LIVING ALONG THE FENCELINE tells the stories of seven grassroots women leaders from across the Pacific to Puerto Rico whose communities are affected by the U.S. military presence in their backyards. Although not considered war zones, these strategic locations are part of a global network of 1,000 U.S. bases that allows the United States to go to war anytime, anywhere. These women are not four-star generals or White House strategists. Their expertise comes from living with the tragic hidden costs to life, health, culture, and the environment.
LIVING ALONG THE FENCELINE offers provocative insights and information for audiences to think about these contentious issues in new ways. It lifts up alternative ideas of peace and security, embedded in the work of women who are acting on their visions and creativity. Rethinking security means respecting people and the land, having living wage jobs, and creating genuine security for all our children.
This documentary, winner of the Best Feature Documentary Award at the Female Eye Film Festival, features interviews with Alma Bulawan (Philippines), Diana Lopez (San Antonio TX), Lisa Natividad (Guam), Sumi Park (South Korea), Terri Keko’olani Raymond (Hawaii), Yumi Tomita (pseudonym--Okinawa) and Zaida Torres (Vieques, Puerto Rico).
Reviews
After seeing this film, 'security' will take on new meanings, and the world map will never look the same.
- Cynthia Enloe, Author of Nimo's War, Emma's War: Making Feminist Sense of the Iraq War
Powerful, informative, and inspiring, this film provides an urgently needed critique of the global impact of militarism.
- Setsu Shigematsu, Co-editor Militarized Currents
...will open the minds and hearts of viewers, inspire debate, and be very useful in high school and university classrooms worldwide.
- David Vine, Author of Base Nation
This documentary explores the creativity, insights, and resilience of women of color organizing in the U.S. and its military colonies around the world. Its community-oriented dialogue on the ways in which women variously address the environmental, medical, political, and sexual violence of the U.S. military is both compelling and moving. I highly recommend Living Along the Fenceline for educational instruction and community reflection.
- Keith Camacho, Co-editor of Militarized Currents
The women we meet in Living along the Fenceline are linked not merely by their troubles, but also by their activism—that silver lining that allows them to stitch together strong new solidarities from a fractured social fabric.
- Peter Certo, Foreign Policy in Focus
LIVING ALONG THE FENCELINE is beautifully shot and professionally edited, and the film’s far-ranging geography is easy to follow thanks to a map of the world on which American flags indicate US bases. This film come[s] at an auspicious time. As Americans gradually begin to face the moral and economic limits of constant military growth, and as the once unquestionable US defense budget comes under closer scrutiny…
- Vanessa Warheit, Filmmaker, Insular Empire: America in the Mariana Islands
Screenings
Jeju Women’s International Film Festival, South Korea
Guam International Film Festival
KRCB, North Bay Public Media, Channel 22
American Academy of Religion Conference, San Francisco
Asia Pacific American Labor Alliance, Seattle
California State University, Monterey Bay
Comunidad Jesús Mediador, El Volcán, Bayamón, Puerto Rico
Contra Costa Community College, CA
Delancey Street Screening Room, San Francisco, CA
Eastside Arts and Cultural Center, Oakland, CA
Evergreen State College, Olympia, WA
Holy Names University, Oakland, CA
Interference Archive, Brooklyn, NY
Laney College, Oakland, CA
Mills College, Oakland, CA
Naha, Okinawa, Japan
National Japanese American Historical Society of San Francisco
New York University Law School
Petaluma Film Series, Petaluma, CA
Pitzer College, Claremont, CA
Plymouth United Church of Christ, Oakland, CA
San Francisco Public Library
San Francisco State University, CA
School of the Americas Watch, Fort Benning, GA
Sonoma County Museum, Santa Rosa, CA
Summerfield Cinemas, Santa Rosa, CA
Tisch School of the Arts, New York, NY
UC-Berkeley
UC-Los Angeles
UC-Riverside, Critical Ethnic Studies Conference
United Methodist Seminars, Women’s Division, Global Ministries, NY
University of San Francisco, CA
Veterans for Peace National Convention. Portland, OR
Awards
Best Feature Documentary, Female Eye Film Festival For educational streaming, visit twn.tugg.com
For educational DVDs, visit twn.org
For public screenings, fill out the following request form:
For upcoming events, visit our Facebook page:
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Semester Vlog | Spring 2018
A slice of life.
This little project has been a nice way to remember and appreciate what my semester was like - from noticing the little things to finding some kind of hidden rhythm to enjoying good company.
Adding text to the video was too difficult with my low tech. So in chronological order : :
Back home after studying abroad
Ballin' after the rain
WOW SURROUND SOUND @ California Science Museum
Me @ all the prairie grass waving in the wind
Second perm
Hanging out in the states! ❤
University of California Botanical Garden
It's not the ground, it's a green covered pond!!!
Bamboo outside my apartment
Appreciating geometry @ MLK Student Union
Architecture major in a cafe
Auditing Wealth and Poverty class by former Secretary of Labor Robert Reich!!
Finding hidden gems of wall art near Wurster Hall
Snuck into Boalt Hall, UC Berkeley Law School
Decided to randomly check out Durant Hall
Visiting old workplace on the marina ;)
Des Inv 97 fieldtrip to Terminal Manufacturing
Blue's Chocolates Shop
Des Inv 97 fieldtrip to FactoryOS
Chinese New Year in Oakland Chinatown
Drizzle
Trying to learn Signals and Systems on a bus (Des Inv 97 fieldtrip to Flex)
Berkeley Art Museum and Pacific Film Archive
Visiting where I ended up going for summer internship ;)
Appreciating geometry @ tufts on BART ride
EE16B car!!
That man has hair
Des Inv 97 factory tour of TESLA
[M]ovement Mixer
Appreciating geometry @ Moffitt Library
Singing in the halls of Wheeler ❤
Playing at Exploratorium!!
Also Des Inv 97 fieldtrip to their in-house machine shop
Friends from back home visit and sleepover!!! ❤
Views @ Berkeley
Hiking with Mom ❤, home for Spring Break
First time bouldering!
Indian Rock Park
North Berkeley is beautiful
Des Inv 97 fieldtrip to Autodesk
Cal's FAST Fashion Show: Intersection
Completed voice-control EE16B car!!!
Thinking about going back to ballet :3
Ballet Company @ Berkeley's Showcase: Break and Blur
Mathematics Statistics Library Catalog @ Evans Hall!!
Wurster Hall
Repping Study Abroad AMBASSADOR @ Cal Day
Exercising and flowers with the lovely ❤
Bay Area Book Festival (or Rave??) @ Downtown Berkeley
Me @ treadmill guy + fast jazz
Beautiful friends from different 'worlds' colliding ❤
Yeah I'm cool
LET'S GO BRASS (me @ marching band in high school)
Trying to study during dead weak, first time in Doe Library LOL
Second dance collab ever
Presence Senior Banquet with the faves, featuring Mom's top from back in the day!?
Art @ Oakland First Friday!!!
Signs of growth ❤
San Francisco Chinatown
Amazing free tea tasting with a hint of cultural roots @ Vital Tea Leaf
What's that in the back @ Lombard Street
Premed nerd things
GRADS :')
Flight back home
State of Mind: New California Art circa 1970 Curators' Talk
State of Mind curators Constance Lewallen (University of California, Berkeley Art Museum and Pacific Film Archive) and Karen Moss (Orange County Museum of Art) giving a tour of the exhibition on Saturday, September 29, 2012.
State of Mind: New California Art Circa 1970 investigates Conceptual art and related avant-garde activities from the late 1960s to the mid-1970s. The artists who came to California at this time were, like many other transplants, attracted by its beauty, climate and relative ease of living. More importantly, this part of the US was emerging as a leading incubator for social change and a youth-oriented counterculture, tendencies that were complementary to artists seeking alternatives to traditional modes of art making. California's art schools, universities and artist-run spaces provided new exhibition opportunities and, additionally, the distance from the New York art press, commercial galleries and museums gave artists greater freedom to experiment as they challenged the definition of art, the role of the artist and the academic and institutional structures of the art world. New York represented tradition, California the future.
Artists working in California at this time deemphasized the art object in favour of the idea and process that went into its making. They explored new noncommercial genres: text-based works, video, sound, performance, installations, mail art and artists' books. No longer bound by practical considerations of scale, materials, or salability, they turned to collectivity, ephemerality, body-oriented performance, the merging of art and life, political commentary and social interaction which have continued to influence generations of younger artists for more than forty years.
Organized around central themes such as mapping the environment, the street, feminism, and the body, the exhibition features approximately 150 works by 60 artists, ranging from those who became major international figures—Ant Farm, John Baldessari, Chris Burden, Lynn Hershman, Bruce Nauman, Martha Rosler, Ed Ruscha—to lesser-known artists who nonetheless made important contributions and merit renewed attention. The exhibition consists of video, film, photography, installation, artist's books, drawing, and paintings. Additionally, there is extensive performance documentation and ephemera.
State of Mind: New California Art Circa 1970 complements the upcoming exhibition at the Vancouver Art Gallery, Traffic: Conceptual Art in Canada 1965--1980, an ambitious project that examines similar sensibilities as they developed in Canada. In addition, several of the artists in State of Mind visited Vancouver at the time, mostly at the invitation of Image Bank and the Western Front.
State of Mind: New California Art Circa 1970 is an exhibition curated by Constance Lewallen and Karen Moss and co-organized by the Orange County Museum of Art and the University of California, Berkeley Art Museum and Pacific Film Archive. The tour is organized by Independent Curators International (ICI), New York, and is made possible in part by the Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts, the Horace W. Goldsmith Foundation, Video Data Bank, Electronic Arts Intermix (EAI) and with the generous support of Robert Redd, LLC and the ICI Board of Trustees.
The Morris and Helen Belkin Art Gallery gratefully acknowledges the generous support of the Canada Council for the Arts and our Belkin Curator's Forum members.
BCR Berkeley Art Museum Exhibit
Barbara Chase-Riboud Berkeley Art Museum, California Malcolm X Steles Exhibit
Wooden Box - a film of Mungo Martin and Henry Hunt from 1963
Kwakiutl, Kwakwaka'Wakw, wood carvers Mungo Martin and Henry Hunt make wooden boxes. The film follows the process from tree to finished product.
It is very interesting to watch the process.
Songs sung by Mungo Martin and Henry Hunt along with their wives
The film is from the Department of Anthropology of the University of California Berkeley
American Indian Films
Series in Ethnology
Initiated by
A.L. Kroeber PhD
S.A. Barrett PhD
Project Director - S.A. Barrett PhD
Production Coordinator - C.B. Smith
Photography - W.R. Heick, D.W. Peri
Editing - W.R. Heick
Writing - S.A. Barrett, C.C. Macauley
Narrator - A.J. Ostroff
Produced by University Extension, University of California Berkeley
Cooperation: Provincial Museum Victoria BC (now the Royal BC Museum)
Source material
The Stronger Sex: The Cambodia Royal Couple
for all Asian Art Museum Oral History Project transcripts. This video is an excerpt from an interview with Alice Lowe.
In 2012 and 2013 the Regional Oral History Office (ROHO) of the Bancroft Library at the University of California Berkeley conducted a new series of interviews on the history of the Asian Art Museum (AAM)—the Chong-Moon Lee Center for Asian Art and Culture. The AAM is the largest single museum devoted to Asian art in the United States and it holds one of the most significant collections of its kind in the world. Opened to the public in 1966, the origins of the AAM can be traced at least to the 1930s when Chicago real estate developer Avery Brundage began collecting rare works of Asian art and when the Golden Gate International Exhibition on Treasure Island displayed an important collection of Asian art. Since 1958 when the Brundage Collection was first promised to San Francisco through 1969 when the Asian Art Commission and the Asian Art Museum Foundation were established to 2003 when the AAM moved to San Francisco's Civic Center, the museum has transformed from a fledgling collection into a world-class museum. This oral history project documents that transformation.
Copyright © UC Regents 2013
Regional Oral History Office, The Bancroft Library
Berkeley, California (in HD)
Filmed at Sproul Plaza , Telegraph Ave and Peoples Park . Filmed October 16, 2009.
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African Americans in San Francisco: Before, During, and After the 1915 World's Fair
On April 30, 2015 the California Historical Society hosted a panel discussion on the experiences, successes, and struggles of African Americans before, during, and in the decades following the Panama-Pacific International Exposition, San Francisco's 1915 World’s Fair. Follow broad and important moments in this twenty year history as well as individual stories both unique and indicative of the struggles and successes of African Americans in the early 1900s.
Panelists:
Professor Lynn M. Hudson teaches courses on slavery and abolition in the U.S., western history, social movements, public history, and the history of gender and sexuality. She is a specialist in African American history and has been active in women's studies and ethnic studies programs.
Professor Douglas Daniels is professor in the Department of Black Studies and in the Department of History at UC Santa Barbara. He received his BA in Political Science from the University of Chicago and an M.A. and Ph. D. in History from the University of California, Berkeley.
Rick Moss is a graduate of UCLA (B.A., 1977, M.A. History, 1980) and UC Riverside’s Program for Historic Resources Management (M.A. 1987). Since July 2001 he has been the Director and Chief Curator of the African American Museum & Library at Oakland (AAMLO).During his twenty-two year museum career, Mr. Moss has created many exhibitions and collaborated with many of the finest institutions and professionals across the nation. In 2008 Mr. Moss opened Visions Towards Tomorrow: The African American Community in Oakland, 1890-1990, the permanent multi-media history exhibition for the African American Museum & Library.
Dr. Leon Litwack is an American historian and Professor of American History Emeritus at the University of California Berkeley, where he received the Golden Apple Award for Outstanding Teaching in 2007. He has received the Pulitzer Prize in History for his book Been In the Storm So Long: The Aftermath of Slavery. He is the winner of the 1980 Francis Parkman Prize and the 1981 National Book Award . He is the recipient of a Guggenheim Fellowship and a National Endowment for the Humanities Film Grant. Professor Litwack retired to emeritus status at the end of the Spring 2007 semester, went on a lecture tour that resulted in his most recent work, How Free Is Free?: The Long Death of Jim Crow published in February 2009.
Presented in partnership with the Museum of the African Diaspora and the African American Museum and Library in Oakland.
Telegraph Avenue, Berkeley, CA
Telegraph Avenue is a colourful and vibrant street with plenty of shops, stalls, and dining places. It attracts a wide diversity of pedestrians and shoppers, particularly on Sundays when it becomes a no-vehicular traffic zone.
Located at the foot of University of California, Berkeley campus, it attracts plenty of UC Berkeley students and there are many stores selling plenty of UC Berkeley memorabilia.
Telegraph Avenue is a hip and happening spot and makes a very interesting stroll.
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State of Mind: New California Art Circa 1970
Watch the full length lecture here;
A conversation with curators Constance Lewallen and Karen Moss
SITE's audience gets a sneak preview of Constance Lewallen and Karen Moss' upcoming exhibition State of Mind: New California Art Circa 1970. Co-organized by Orange County Museum of Art (OCMA) and UC Berkeley Art Museum and Pacific Film Archive (BAM/PFA), it is the most comprehensive exhibition to date to focus on Conceptual art and related new genres in both Northern and Southern California during this pivotal period in contemporary art. Featuring more than 50 artists and 150 works of art, the exhibition includes newly discovered work as well as materials culled from archives that have rarely been viewed.
Constance Lewallen is Adjunct Curator at the University of California Berkeley Art Museum and Pacific Film Archive.
Karen Moss is a LA-based art historian, curator, and educator who has worked in museums and academic positions since 1980. Currently, she is Adjunct Curator at the Orange County Museum of Art.
Architecture of Life - Philippa Kelly and Pierluigi Serraino
Architecture of Life
Philippa Kelly and Pierluigi Serraino
Thursdays 3:15–5 p.m. from April 7 to April 28, BAM/PFA
Architecture of Life, the inaugural exhibition in the Berkeley Art Museum and Pacific Film Archive’s landmark new building, explores the ways that architecture illuminates various aspects of life experience: the nature of the self and psyche, the fundamental structures of reality, and the power of the imagination to reshape our world. Course fee includes four admission tickets to the museum.
Philippa Kelly has worked as the resident dramaturg for the California Shakespeare Theater and the Napa Shakespeare Festival. She has received awards from the Fulbright, Rockefeller, and Walter and Eliza Hall Foundations and the Literary Managers and Dramaturgs of America. She has published 12 books, including The King and I.
Pierluigi Serraino is an architect, educator, and author. He holds multiple professional and research degrees in architecture from Italy and the United States and is principal of his own design practice. He has lectured extensively on postwar American architecture, California modernism, architectural photography, changes in architectural practice, and digital design.
Museum at Stanford University
Museum at Stanford University