Chuck Sperry

  • Blog
  • About
  • Press & Reviews
  • Contact
  • Store
  • Books: Color x Color • Helikon • Chthoneon • Idyllion

February 19, 2012 By squirt

“The Roots” Firehouse Poster Show in San Francisco at The Original Firehouse

I had the great pleasure to meet Teresa Nittolo, who is the present-day owner of The Original Firehouse, the root of the Firehouse in The Firehouse Kustom Rockart Company. I am happy to announce that I am having an art show at The Original Firehouse, the very place where Ron Donovan and I got our artistic start. This is a very rare opportunity to visit the place where The Firehouse began – a return to The Roots.

“The Roots” Art Show

Firehouse Kustom Rockart Company, Jacknife Posters (UK), Jorge Gamboa (paintings), Chase Marshall (handmade lamps and art)

The Original Firehouse, 1648 Pacific Avenue, San Francisco

Thursday, March 8, 2012, 6pm until late.

I will be exhibiting rare and formerly unavailable posters and prints for this very special evening!

 

The Firehouse located at 1648 Pacific Avenue is a landmark building built in 1917; I had the privilege to make silkscreened rock poster there from 1997-2001. I came to love this building. This lovely place was a great source of inspiration.   This crucial jump-start to my artistic career gave me the firm foundation for my recent achievements, exhibiting at the SFMOMA last year, representation at Varnish Fine Art Gallery, inclusion in SCOPE Miami / Art Basel last year, my large exhibition at the San Francisco Public Library and inclusion in their Art, Music and History Archive, and inclusion of my posters in the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame.

Teresa Nittolo plans to continue this artistic tradition, as quoted in The Bold Italic (February 17, 2012), she “plans to make Firehouse a multifaceted space that would include a café with outdoor seating, a small but well-curated library, a market-like area of rotating local vendors and artisans, a massive event space upstairs, and a rooftop garden. They are staring down the home stretch and they need their community’s support to get them across the finish line. Their dream is big and has come with even bigger challenges, but it’s wholly committed to bringing people together to create an inspiring story and space.”

Unfortunately, Firehouse 8 has gone into foreclosure (THEY ONLY HAVE UNTIL MARCH 8th) and Teresa and Gavin need help to hold onto it and bring their big dreams into reality. Angel investors take note. If this building goes into foreclosure, it will most certainly never be an art space again. Teresa is so very close! She needs your help! Help keep the Firehouse 8 Project alive and heading towards success!! Donate funds to the IndieGoGo campaign, or if you can offer your services or support in any other way please email Teresa at [email protected].

Photos: Chip Walker

I will be exhibiting rare and formerly unavailable posters and prints for this very special evening!

Filed Under: Events Tagged With: Chase Marshall, Firehouse, Jacknife, Jorge Gamboa, Teresa Nittolo

February 15, 2012 By squirt

Free University Art School “Occupy Art” with Jon-Paul Bail

The Free University of San Francisco aims to make the highest level of education available, completely free, to any individual who wants it, regardless of color, creed, age, gender, nationality, religion or immigration status—a university free of money, taught for free. The only requirement for membership is a desire to teach and/or a desire to learn.

Jon-Paul Bail & Chuck Sperry, “Occupy Art,”  Free University Art School Event

Every Sunday, February 5, 2012 through March 4, 2012 – 2:30PM to 5PM

Viracocha

998 Valencia Street (at 21st Street)

San Francisco, CA

__________________________________________________

Course Description:

The Free University Art School is very proud to present Jon-Paul Bail prolific Bay Area artist who uses the streets of the world as his canvas. Since last year’s brilliant presentation – street action / wheat paste demonstration – at the Free University, Jon-Paul Bail has been extremely active making a series of “Hella Occupy” posters for the Occupy movement across the length and breadth of California. Based in the East Bay, “JP” set up a print station on site at Oscar Grant Plaza and the heart of the Occupy Oakland movement in the first days people gathered there. He began producing thousands of posters which have become iconographic to this historical event. As the movement spread and touched similar gatherings and actions across California, “JP” travelled and set up his mobile propaganda studio, printing at Occupy Oakland, UC Berkeley, UC Davis, and Occupy San Francisco. Jon-Paul discusses his motivations, methods and will bring our art class to a live on-site, print-making session at the Occupy Education action scheduled for March 1st – location to be disclosed later. Chuck Sperry and Jon-Paul Bail are collaborating on a poster design which will be printed in quantity in the class, and later printed live at the Occupy Education demonstration scheduled for March 1, 2012.

Come early / limited room!

Jon-Paul Bail / Chuck Sperry Collaboration in process:

Here is a sampling of posters Jon-Paul is presenting to the class – which he designed, printed and collaborated on:

 

Bio:

Jon-Paul Bail (JP) founded Political Gridlock in 1991 and has been posting street art ever since.  JP’s work is branded by strong cohesive messages and relevant imagery, putting a funny and sometimes shocking spin on popular culture.  His work reference issues that are based in local, national and global communities.  His first company was called Reagan Wear and was co-founded with Ron Donovan from The Firehouse Kustom Rockart Company.  Having studied silk-screening with Malaquias Montoya at California College of the Arts from 1986 – 1989, JP graduated from the San Francisco Art Institute in 1991.  His poster titled Inhail to the Chief , which depicts Barrack Obama smoking a blunt, was featured in rap artist E-40′s music video featuring Dem Boyz in 2010.  He has done print work for Winston Smith and Emory Douglas and has shown work in New York, San Francisco, Los Angeles, and Rome, Italy.  JP’s art is in the collections of the Legion of Honor, Oakland Museum, and Center for the Study of Political Graphics and has been published in four political art books (Yo! What Happened to Peace, Reproduce and Revolt and two editions of Paper Politics).

Filed Under: Events Tagged With: Free University of San Francisco, Jon-Paul Bail, Occupy Oakland, Political Gridlock

January 11, 2012 By squirt

Mind Spring at Varnish – Second Art Print Reveal – Large Format “Chaos” and “Cosmos” on Wood Panel

Back in 2007, when I invited the British Rock Artists Group from the UK to join me for a workshop on silkscreen printing in San Francisco (see link about BRAG), I made a show for them at Aspect Gallery in San Francisco. Owner of Aspect, Lon Richter, showed me his oversized silkscreen, one-arm, hand-press, saying he might sell it to me, if I was interested. What a beauty! It had over six feet by four feet of printing bed. It was hardly used, but this sturdy piece of heavy equipment was in his basement. The idea of moving it – let alone paying for it – put this in the “later” department in my brain. I was asking myself, why would anyone move a piece of heavy printing equipment into a basement? When I asked Lon how it got there, he said, “Oh! I thought the Mayans left it here.” It had been there when he moved in years before.

When Varnish Fine Art offered to represent me late last year, I got to thinking about good man, Lon and his beautiful oversized one-arm silkscreen press, for some huge format art printing. I called Lon in November last year, and the press was still there, unused, in the basement. To cut to the chase, I bought the press and hired some very talented press movers to extract this heavy machine from the basement at Aspect Gallery. So if it seemed a little quiet on my front in December, well that’s why. I was acquiring this press and then figuring out how to move this monster. Here’s some shots of the move:

So I’m telling this story to make another announcement about my upcoming art exhibition, “Mind Spring” opening this Saturday, January 14th at 4pm to 7pm at Varnish Fine Art, 16 Jesse Street, San Francisco. I printed my first large format art pieces on birch panel – editions of 40 x 60 – “Chaos” and “Cosmos” –  on the new press with brand new oversized screens. Here, you can see the giant screens I used for these art pieces:

And here’s the pieces with a chair next to them to show you the scale (sorry for the blurry cellphone shot):

Here are my Chaos and Cosmos art prints on birch panel:

Chaos

Edition of 5

40 x 60

7 color silkscreen on birch panel

Signed and Numbered

(Inquire to Varnish Fine Art for price and availability)

Cosmos

Edition of 4

40 x 60

7 color silkscreen on birch panel

Signed and Numbered

(Inquire to Varnish Fine Art for price and availability)

 

Filed Under: Events Tagged With: Chaos, Cosmos, Varnish Fine Art

January 4, 2012 By squirt

Mind Spring – Chuck Sperry, Chris Shaw, Ron Donovan – at Varnish Fine Art SF

Mind Spring
Chuck Sperry, Chris Shaw, Ron Donovan
New paintings, installations, and limited silkscreen editions

Varnish Fine Art, 16 Jesse Street, #c120, San Francisco, California 94105 – phone: 415-433-4400

Artist Reception: January 14, 2012, 4pm to 7pm

JANUARY 14 – FEBRUARY 18, 2012

Lending rock and alternative music a form of visual expression in sync with their urban environments, Chuck Sperry, Chris Shaw, and Ron Donovan embrace, alter, re-assign meaning and re-contextualize images until they become the medium-the subject emerging, used purposely–irreverently or reverently–to transform ephemeral events and experiences into a lexicon of shared cultural visual memory.

“Donovan, Shaw and Sperry have made their living creating expressive contemporary prints and posters for both the collector and the general public whose capacity for images is not just at its maximum, but teetering on overload. Dedication to their craft has rewarded them with a mastery of color theory, composition and print design that creates a language that can be seen, perhaps almost heard, amidst a visually competitive, urban environment. Never known for following the consensus of any art establishment, these three have a strict loyalty to their craft, and have become leading innovators of the rock poster art form. Their suspicion and disdain for mainstream American politics often characterizes their approach to making art. With a sincere dedication to a broad public audience, they reflect a social consciousness and draw much from the immediate urban environment.” – Renee de Cossio, curator SFMOMA

In Mind Spring, Sperry creates an icon of the Worldwide Occupy Movement and it’s antecedent in the Arab Spring. The figure wreathed in blooming spring flowers is a representation of the surprising enlightened humanism, the opening mind, the broadened socio-political possibilities which has swept the world in 2011.

Press Release

We look forward to seeing you, and celebrating the closing of our installation at the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art.

I will be offering new large format works on wood panel, with limited paper and variant paper editions as well. These will be released at the show and then very soon after on my website at a time to be announced. Stay tuned I’ll post these new works, and release times as the show approaches.

———————————-

Below, I’ve included SFMOMA curator Renee de Cossio’s statement on our installation at the Museum:

Ongoing until January 12, 2012, SFMOMA Artists Gallery is presenting three S.F. Bay Area artists Ron Donovan, Chris Shaw and Chuck Sperry and their site specific art installations in a 24/7 exhibit at the SF MOMA Garage Windows on Minna and Natoma Streets.  For almost twenty years, Donovan, Shaw and Sperry have been cultivating and developing an important component of the music scene and culture: the Rock Art Poster.   Lending rock and alternative music a form of visual expression, in sync with their urban environments, the artists embrace, alter, re- assign or retain meaning, re-contextualize the image, not just as the image, but the image as the medium. The image is their medium, and the subject emerges and is used purposely, irreverently, or reverently, engaging viewers – asking them to stop, look and listen.

Donovan, Shaw and Sperry have made their living creating expressive contemporary prints and posters for both the collector and the general public whose capacity for images is not just at its maximum, but teetering on overload. Dedication to their craft has rewarded them with a mastery of color theory, composition and print design that creates a language that can be seen, perhaps almost heard, amidst a visually competitive, urban environment.

Donovan, Shaw and Sperry often reference the legacy of founding rock poster artists, such as Wes Wilson, Rick Griffin, Victor Moscoso and Stanley Mouse (creators of famous album covers for Grateful Dead, Steve Miller, Quicksilver, and Aoxomoxoa, and the many posters of the 60’s and 70’s that papered walls and street posts announcing concerts for Jimi Hendrix, Janis Joplin, and Led Zeppelin, to name a few).  These originators of the rock poster including promoter Bill Graham, had established it as a visual arts vehicle, giving it an identity of its own, characterized by unusual, off-beat color combinations, dynamic fonts and captivating imagery.  Irreverence, imbedded into the beat of the times, resonated through many forms of expression.  Many of these early rock poster artists made a conscious break from formal art norms and standards taking departure through artistic exploration that included altered perceptions and “new” ways of thinking and seeing.  The posters became part of a messaging system that played an important role both locally and nationally, in moving and gathering people, engaging them to take part in the social movements of the time.

Building on the socially aware art poster scene of the 1960’s and acutely aware of its mostly unwritten art history, Donovan, Shaw and Sperry share a philosophy, a DIY (do it yourself) mindset; the use of their art sprang out as an expression of guerilla marketing, contributing to the successful efforts of many musicians and independent music labels, (Jello Biafra’s Alternative Tentacles label, and bands Metallica, Green Day, Faith No More, and The Melvins, etc.).  Remarkably, these three working artists with a prolific work output demonstrate an acute awareness of social context and popular culture. In doing so, they can often be seen as a visual measure, even mediums, of social currents and constructs.  It is where Internet 2.0 comes full circle around to life in the physical world; with a language of visuals and word of mouth marketing that is art.

Heirs of the 1960’s San Francisco Bay Area rock poster artists, Donovan, Shaw and Sperry are the next generation, whose process and approach to art making, reflect the varied complexities of contemporary times.  In this exhibition, the artists expand beyond the confines of formatting described by standard paper dimensions, to create monumental, colorful, hand painted, multi-dimensional, art installations – which are black lit at night.

In the Minna Street windows, each has created his own individual installation and has chosen a female as his main subject.  Although the artists have worked closely together for years, each installation is as different in style as its creator:

Chuck Sperry’s Saint Everyone, features a woman with long hair gazing toward the viewer over her bare back and right shoulder.  On large canvas, she is surrounded by an opt-art patterned sphere and background and is painted in fiery-hot red drastically contrasted by her features and details painted in an opaque sky blue.  With an ambiguous stare suggesting worry, fear or perhaps anger, she lifts a lotus flower upward between the viewer and her gaze, as an offering gesture, perhaps a warning.  Her presence evokes a sense of humanism, sensuality and spirituality—all which seem caught in a crucial state in a chaotic world displayed by the painting’s reactive background.  

Next to Sperry’s installation, is Chris Shaw’s Madonna Fukushima.  The richly colored painted canvas features a Japanese woman in traditional dress standing, caught balancing herself with a container of flowers, nature’s gifts from the garden, in one hand while grasping at her cloak in the other.  Sadly things will never be as they once were.  Her expression speaks of shock and alarm.  Her once calm, peaceful world has turned into a stirring, crashing deluge of catastrophic proportions described by a Hokusai wave and ocean swells engulfing the Fukushima nuclear reactors in the background. 

In the third window is Ron Donovan’s multi- layered print on wood panels titled Keeper of the Gate. Amazonian-in presence, provocative, his main female subject is suited in an armor of multi-cultural symbols and imagery from eastern and Pan Pacific ethnicities.   She stands grasping a Hindu sword in each hand.  Sexuality, spirituality, and ancient religious mythology and metaphor are her weapons. Wearing wings, like Garuda the male winged god, she displays the combined characteristics of animals and divine beings. 

Black lit? Rather than to remind one of the head shops of earlier decades, the change in lighting activates the artists’ delivery of alternate perceptions of color, and maybe even a moment of synesthesiastic viewing.  (Synesthesia is a neurological condition where stimulation of one sense or thought process leads to automatic, involuntary experiences in another sense; for example, seeing colors when you hear music, and vice versa). The work raises questions about how one really sees color and if, in the act of seeing, there is more to experience than some acknowledgement of what you think you are seeing?  Can or does one feel color– perhaps even hear it?  Marrying music with a visual art form, Donovan, Shaw and Sperry continue exploring and seeking ways to expand the visual experience.  They apply their depth of knowledge of color theory principles, ultimately by purposely and creatively altering formal color relationships and aesthetics. Viewers can see these works under conventional light conditions by day, and return to a very different experience under the black lights at night.  Through color and perception, the artists suggest opportunities for new sensorial visual perceptions, introducing non-classified forms of art to a much classified and defined art world.

Never known for following the consensus of any art establishment, these three have a strict loyalty to their craft, and have become leading innovators of the rock poster art form.  Their suspicion and disdain for mainstream American politics often characterizes their approach to making art.   With a sincere dedication to a broad public audience, they reflect a social consciousness and draw much from the immediate urban environment. 

In the Natoma windows, Chris Shaw and Chuck Sperry collaborated to present Temporary Bound.  In 3 separate hinged and painted panels totaling almost 60 feet in length, are three gorgons representing the Greek myth of Perseus and Medusa. There are different translations of the myth, but each share a reaction in one way or another to the perilous nature of feminine beauty.  

Shaw and Sperry describe the installation:

“The work’s form is derived from an Asian “accordion” book, while the  subject, “Three Gorgons” reflects the artists’ western influences.  The free intertwining of Eastern and Western references is not only  evocative of the modern technological world, but also of San  Francisco, a cultural melting pot on the Pacific Rim.”

Here is a link to continue reading their description of the work.

– Renee de Cossio, curator SFMOMA

Filed Under: Events Tagged With: Chris Shaw, Chuck Sperry, Mind Spring, Ron Donovan, Varnish Fine Art

December 15, 2011 By squirt

Varnish Fine Art
Holiday Freaktastic Art and Book Sale!

Come by Varnish Fine Art at 16 Jesse Street in San Francisco on Wednesday December 21st for their big sale of art books, prints, and ephemera. They’re staying open late–until 8pm–and there will be freaktastic discounts to celebrate their first holiday season at the new digs.

This sale includes special artist prints and publications for the holiday sale that you won’t find on their online Emporium, including items by some of their favorite artists.

https://chucksperry.net/3158/

Filed Under: Events

  • « Previous Page
  • 1
  • …
  • 19
  • 20
  • 21
  • 22
  • 23
  • …
  • 36
  • Next Page »

Latest News

  • The Cure Poster by Chuck Sperry Wins Award
  • The Cure x Chuck Sperry Poster & Variant Release on EQL
  • “Joe Strummer, London 1975” Blotter for Dead Rockstars at Blunt Graffix & Online Release
  • Tickets On Sale for Chuck Sperry’s Retrospective at Fort Wayne Museum of Art
  • Edwardian Ball 2026 Poster

Topics

  • Art Prints
  • Event Posters
  • Events
  • Movie Posters
  • News
  • Original Art
  • Press & Reviews
  • Rock Posters
  • Site

About Chuck Sperry

Chuck Sperry lives in the Haight-Ashbury district of San Francisco, where he’s made his particular style of rock poster designs for over 20 years. He operates Hangar 18, a silkscreen print studio, located in Oakland. Learn More…

Archives

Sperry Books: “Color x Color” • “Helikon” • “Chthoneon” • “Idyllion”

Latest Blog Posts

  • The Cure Poster by Chuck Sperry Wins Award
  • The Cure x Chuck Sperry Poster & Variant Release on EQL
  • “Joe Strummer, London 1975” Blotter for Dead Rockstars at Blunt Graffix & Online Release
  • Tickets On Sale for Chuck Sperry’s Retrospective at Fort Wayne Museum of Art
  • Edwardian Ball 2026 Poster

Band, Venue, Year…

© 2009–2026 Chuck Sperry - All Rights Reserved.

 

Loading Comments...
 

You must be logged in to post a comment.