Bookworm
Author
April Martin
Decade
1870s 1900s 1920s 1930s 1940s 1950s 1960s 1970s 1980s 1990s
Tags
The Library Murals Video
This is sacred ground, first made holy by the Ohlone Tribes that stewarded the land and then by some of the greatest artists in the world who walked these floors, perused the books, napped on the couches, fucked in the corners, snorted coke off DVDs, and were inspired by the works of Henri Cartier-Bresson, Van Gogh, Kerry James Marshall, Dorothea Lange . . . .
Upon entering the San Francisco Art Institute’s Anne Bremer Memorial Library, you feel like you’ve stepped back in time to a quaint library you’d find in a small town. What it lacks in bells and whistles, it makes up in history and beauty. The pièce de résistance is the reading room. This magnificent space has Craftsman wood paneling and floors, murals by Victor Arnautoff, and sweeping views of the Bay. The centerpiece is Jacques Schnier’s gold library fireplace relief The Soil, shimmering in the brilliant Northern California light. Close your eyes and you can imagine Adams, Rothko, Kuchar, Dewey, Opie, and Kehinde all in this one room being inspired to create their own masterpieces. Little-known secret: you can eat in this library! In all my time there, I never witnessed anyone disrespect the space with litter. Like Kehinde Wiley, I still have overdue books. Jeff Gunderson said I can keep them.
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