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By Lauren Palmor
Chiura Obata was one of the San Francisco Bay Area’s most influential artists.
By Timothy Anglin Burgard
Rainbow Sign was located at 2640 Grove Street in Berkeley and was active between 1971–1977.
In 1970, ten billboards went up across Oakland and Berkeley. The artist never explicitly stated their meaning.
Paintings conservator Tricia O’Regan outlines her process for preparing The Hero for its first public display in decades.
By Tricia O’Regan
In 1968 – 1969, the exhibition A Photographic Essay on the Black Panthers drew 100,000 visitors.
The Museums have acquired a monumental painting from Steir's “Waterfall” series.
Eleventh-graders from Oakland School for the Arts created their own paintings inspired by Cult of the Machine.
How two women sought to reveal the allure of steel mills through highly personal images.
Announcing the acquisition of 62 works by African American artists from the Southern United States.
Encounter the riot of geometric color that is Frank Stella’s impressive 12-foot-square painting Lettre sur les aveugles II.
X-rays can reveal a broken bone, but they can also give us information about what is happening inside inanimate objects.
By Catherine Coueignoux