Don Soker Contemporary Art
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Don Soker Contemporary Art is a San Francisco-based art gallery, established in 1971. It is one of the longest continuously operating contemporary art galleries in the San Francisco Bay Area. The gallery exhibits contemporary international art with an emphasis on conceptual, reductive and minimal work in a variety of media. It was one of the first to show contemporary Japanese art in the 1970s. As of 2017, the gallery is located in San Francisco's Potrero Hill district.


History

The gallery was founded in 1971 by Don and Carol Kaseman Soker as the "Upstairs Gallery" in a Victorian-era flat in San Francisco's North Beach. Working with the Kyoto-based art venue Gallery Coco and later directly with artists, the early shows' focus was on contemporary Japanese conceptual art, which was little known in the United States at the time. These artists included the new conceptual group, as well as
Mono-ha Mono-ha (もの派) is the name given to an art movement led by Japanese and Korean artists of 20th-century. The Mono-ha artists explored the encounter between natural and industrial materials, such as stone, steel plates, glass, light bulbs, cotton ...
and
Gutai The was a Japanese avant-garde artist group founded in the Hanshin region by young artists under the leadership of the painter Jirō Yoshihara in Ashiya, Japan, in 1954. The group, today one of the most internationally-recognized instances o ...
artists. Their aesthetic was an experimental hybrid of past and present. Works on paper, particularly printmaking, the dominant medium and easiest to export, predominated. Among the artists were Tetsuya Noda,
Ay-O Takao Iijima (born May 19, 1931), better known by his art name Ay-O, (靉嘔 ''Ai Ō''), is a Japanese avant-garde visual and performance artist who has been associated with Fluxus since its international beginnings in the 1960s. Biography Ear ...
, Shoichi Ida, Akira Kurosaki, Nobuo Sekine,
Lee U-Fan Lee Ufan (Korean language, Korean: 이우환, Hanja: 李禹煥, born 1936 in Haman County, in South Kyongsang province in Korea) is a Korean people, Korean minimalist painter and sculptor artist and academic, honored by the government of Japan ...
,
Ushio Shinohara Ushio Shinohara (篠原 有司男, ''Shinohara Ushio'', born January 17, 1932), nicknamed “Gyū-chan”, is a Japanese contemporary painter, sculptor, and performance artist based in New York City. Best known for his vigorously painted, large- ...
, Masuo Ikeda and
Takesada Matsutani is a Japanese avant-garde artist based in Paris and Nishinomiya. Active as a painter since the 1950s, Matsutani's practice has also included object-based sculpture, printmaking and installation. Matsutani was a member of the Gutai Art Associatio ...
. In 1978, the gallery took the name of the owners, Soker-Kaseman Gallery. Later in that decade, the gallery began to exhibit prominent local and international artists including
Bruce and Norman Yonemoto Bruce Yonemoto and Norman Yonemoto are two Los Angeles, California-based Video art, video/installation artists of Japanese American heritage. Family background and birth Bruce and Norman Yonemoto's family was among the 120,000 Japanese American ...
,
Michi Itami Michi Itami (born 1938) is a Japanese-American visual artist. Her work includes printmaking, painting, ceramics and digital art and has been exhibited internationally. She has had solo exhibitions at A.I.R. Gallery, New York; 2221 Gallery in Ne ...
, Yoong Bae,
Stanley William Hayter Stanley William Hayter (27 December 1901 – 4 May 1988) was an English painter and printmaker associated in the 1930s with surrealism and from 1940 onward with abstract expressionism. Regarded as one of the most significant printmakers of ...
, Paul Wunderlich, Jorg Schmeisser, Peter Van Riper, Jeffrey Vallance, Mary Woronov, Mike Kelley,
Ronald Chase Ronald Chase (born December 29, 1934) is an American artist, photographer, educator, independent film maker and opera designer. His work with projection and film has been called "one of the most exciting developments in the history of opera stage ...
, Karolyi Zsigmond and Geza Samu. From 1982 to 1986, the gallery developed and operated an alternative exhibition/performance space in the basement. As the entrance was on the small alley behind the building Bannam Place, it was called Bannam Place Exhibition Space. It was modeled on what became
New Langton Arts New Langton Arts (active 1975 – 2009) was a not-for-profit arts organization focusing on contemporary art founded in 1975 and located the South of Market neighborhood in San Francisco, California. Part of the first wave of alternative art spaces ...
, initially run by the San Francisco Art Dealer's Association of which Don Soker was a founder. The original curator, Rolando Castellon, had just left his post at SFMOMA. More than 80 exhibitions and numerous readings and performances were held there by SFAI students, artists from Japan who frequently lived there, North Beach artists. Bannam Place artists included Koichi Tamano,
Mark Bulwinkle Mark Bulwinkle (born 1946, Waltham, Massachusetts) is an American graphic artist and sculptor who works in cut steel. He received a BFA from the University of Pittsburgh in 1968 and an MFA in printmaking from the San Francisco Art Institute in 19 ...
, Takehisa Kosugi,
Corwin Clairmont Corwin "Corky" Clairmont is a printmaker and conceptual and installation artist from the Confederated Salish and Kootenai Tribes of the Flathead Nation. Known for his high concept and politically charged works, Clairmont seeks to explore situatio ...
, Ray Beldner, DeWitt Cheng, Mark Van Proyen, Bob Kaufman, Howard Hart, Stan Rice,
Julia Vinograd Julia Shalett Vinograd (December 11, 1943 – December 5, 2018) was a poet. She is well known as "The Bubble Lady" to the Telegraph Avenue community of Berkeley, California, a moniker she gained from blowing bubbles at the People's Park demonstra ...
, and Jack Meuller. The gallery moved to a new location at 871 Folsom Street in 1987 and changed to its present name. The earthquake of 1989 damaged the building and the gallery and fellow tenants 871 Fine Arts and Crown Point Press moved to other locations. Subsequent locations of the gallery were 251 Post Street from 1990-1998, 49 Geary Street from 1998-2009, 100 Montgomery Street/80 Sutter Street until 2015, and, currently, 2180 Bryant Street. In 2015, the gallery moved to the Potrero Hill/Dogpatch Area of San Francisco. The gallery has held over 300 exhibitions at its various locations. The gallery continues to represent established and emerging artists in an annual series of six 6 week exhibitions. Current artists include Elisabeth Ajtay, Julie Alland, Peter Boyer,
Christel Dillbohner Christel Dillbohner (born 1956) is a German artist whose installations, paintings, and assemblages are deeply involved with the relationship between personal and cultural memory and the human struggle to live in threatened environments. Biography ...
, Theodora Varnay Jones, Carole Jeung, Veronika Dobers, Kristie Hansen, Gordon Senior, Eleanor Wood, Susanne Schossig, and Dimitra Skandali.


Controversy

In June of 2019, eponymous gallery owner Don Soker made international headlines when a video went viral showing him pouring water on a homeless woman and her belongings from the roof of the building that houses the gallery.


External links


Theodora Varnay Jones "fugue" review and gallery history

Don Soker gallery talk 2/4/17 gallery history and Japanese art of 1970s-80s

Bruce & Norman Yonemoto "Garage Sale" 1976 with DS at Upstairs Gallery

Noda Exhibition Asian Art Museum 10/22/04-1/16/050

Theodora Varnay Jones San Jose Institute of Contemporary Art

Reflections

S F art galleries forge into new territories


Notes

{{Reflist Art museums and galleries in San Francisco "40th Anniversary Exhibition" The San Francisco Chronicle, June 30-July 3, 2011