What’s New
- At MoAD: “Demetri Broxton: Ancestral Echoes – Crops of Empire” is open through August 16, 2026. It is the first museum show for the Oakland-based mixed-media artist.
- At 500 Capp Street: The Constance Lewallen Legacy Series of talks begins with Bay Area curators Renny Pritikin and Mark Johnson on June 27 from 6 p.m. to 8 p.m. The curators will present their latest research in “Toward A History of Bay Area Contemporary Art 1969-2004.” Register here.
Closing soon
- “The Prince of Homburg: A Solo Exhibition by P. Staff” at Yerba Buena will close June 24.
- “People Make This Place: SFAI Stories” through July 5 at SFMOMA.
Coming soon
- “Treasures of the Pharaohs ” on Aug. 1 at the de Young Museum
- “Ha Chong-Hyun: Retrospective” on Sept 25 at the Asian Art Museum
The gallery scene
Ashley Voss updates a local gallery guide weekly. Check out the guide’s Instagram account and website.
City art biz
The Arts Commission meets online and in person on the first Monday of each month, which means today, June 1 at 2 p.m.. Here are the meeting details.
Civic Design Review Committee, June 15, at 2 p.m.
Community Investments Committee, June 17, at 1 p.m.
Street Artist Committee, June 23, at 1 p.m.
Executive Committee June 24 at 1 p.m.
Visual Arts Committee , June 25 at 2 p.m.
At the Museums
It’s a difficult time for many of the city’s museums and cultural centers. The Mission Cultural Center for Latino Arts has suspended operations. City Hall promises action, but in the meantime, it’s a significant loss of children’s programming, exhibits, and events. You can donate here. SOMArts is also trying to fill a budget gap. You can donate here.
Asian Art Museum
“Two Home Countries” by Japanese contemporary artist, Chiharu Shiota, is open and Julie Zigoris reviewed it for Mission Local. She writes that one of the pieces, “Diary,” which took ten people and two weeks to install, “has a transportive feeling of being sucked into another space and time.”
Read the full review
Here is some of the work you will be seeing from Shiota.
Here is a video of Shiota talking about her webs.
“This Asian American Life” shows scenes from Chinatown from the POV of a child. It is part of a public-art series on Chinatown’s mothers, workers and tenants. The museum recently posted a video of a conversation with the artist, Kayan Cheung-Miaw.

“Echoes in the Small Mountain: Park Dae-sung and the West Coast” is open until July 26.
Dae-sung (b. 1945) is “credited with reinventing the techniques of traditional Korean ink painting,” according to the museum’s website. The paintings are based on California landscapes and are spectacular.
“Jitish Kallat: Covering Letter (Terranum Nuncius)” invites visitors to reflect on the things that unite humanity.

You will also see cutting-edge claywork from Japan in “New Japanese Clay.”
The museum has a series, “Takeout Tuesdays,” where you can meet online to talk about a piece of art with docents and others.
General admission is free on the first Sunday of every month and the special exhibitions are discounted. Here is more information for free and reduced-cost admission. The museum also hosts a robust list of events.
SFMOMA
Monday, Tuesday, Friday, Saturday and Sunday, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m; Wednesday, closed; Thursday, noon to 8 p.m.
Great new show – “Matisse’s Femme au chapeau: A Modern Scandal” based on a 1991 gift from Elise Haas. Julie Zigoris reviewed it for us writing, “The painting’s debut in 1905 caused an immediate sensation for its fury of colors…”
READ the full review
After looking at 140 nominations and having studio visits with 16 finalists, the three SECA award winners have been announced: CrossLypka, Em Kettner, and Chanell Stone. Congratulations! The three artists will have a show from December 12, 2026 to May 30, 2027.
Here is a taste of their work.
Reimagined: The Fisher Collection at 10, a rehanging and consideration of the collection is open.
It’s a spectacular collection and KQED has a good piece on the reinstallation. The NYT, has also published a piece on the Fisher’s relationship with the museum and the rehanging of the family’s collection, writing it is “unlike anything SFMOMA has done in its 90 years.”
Alexander Calder and Claes Oldenburg + Coosje van Bruggen: Thinking Big opened first.
And now, three more floors are open.
Ways of Seeing: Fourteen Artists (on Floor 4)
Calder, Kelly, LeWitt: Fundamentals of Form (on Floor 5)
Memory and Matter: Personal and Collective Histories (on Floor 6)
“Rose B Simpson: Behold,” is on view on SFMOMA’s fourth-floor terrace a bronze sculpture visible from multiple locations. And good news! It has been extended through February 7, 2027.
Also new: “Samia Halaby: Kinetic paintings,” four new works in SFMOMA’s Evelyn and Walter Haas Jr. Atrium.

The photo exhibit, “(Re)Constructing History,” fills three rooms on the third floor. The title plays on Carrie Mae Weems’ featured series “Constructing History,” asking viewers to consider “the layers of history we encounter through a seemingly fixed image.”
A contemporary Black artist — including Nona Faustine, Carla Williams, and Dawoud Bey — anchors each room.

“People Make This Place: SFAI Stories” is open through July 5, 2026, at SFMOMA. The exhibit looks at the the San Francisco Art Institute’s importance to the local arts eco-system and includes work from 50 alumni and former faculty in the museum’s collection.
“New Work: Sheila Hicks” on the fourth floor illustrates how Hicks turns fiber into sculpture.
500 Capp St.
Friday and Saturday, noon to 5 p.m.: Free self-guided tours. Saturday at 4 p.m.: A guided tour for $20.
500 Capp is launching the Constance Lewallen Legacy Series, named for an influential curator “whose consistently visionary work on California Conceptual art post-1960 uplifted hundreds of individual artists and demonstrated the national and international significance of West Coast art,” according to the museum’s press release.
The first conversation and reception will be with Bay Area curators Renny Pritikin and Mark Johnson on June 27 from 6 p.m. to 8 p.m. The curators will present their latest research in “Toward A History of Bay Area Contemporary Art 1969-2004.” You can register here.
“Amitié: Joyce Burstein and Léonie Guyer,” a two-person exhibit curated by Nancy Nguyen occupies the house.
Museum of Craft and Design (MCD)
Thursday to Sunday, noon to 5 p.m.
“Video Craft” is open until August 16. From the website: “‘Video Craft’ explores the formal and technical properties that video, film, and early moving image technologies share with more traditional craft media like ceramics, textiles, and glass.”
The images look stunning.
The Letterform Archive
Thursday,1 to 8 p.m. and free to all; Friday to Sunday: 11 a.m. to 6 p.m.; closed Monday to Wednesday.
“Black Memory Scholar: The Language of Storytellers” is open. “The exhibition traces the position and discoveries of staff member Jada Simone Haynes as an artist and memory worker engaged with ancestry, identity, and memory,” according to the website.
On Thursday, May 7, you can go on a design studio tour. Find out more here.
“Piet Zwart: Brand Architect” opened Nov. 8.
There are many great examples of his work in this piece by Steven Heller, a former senior art director at The New York Times.
And here is more from the Letterform Archive when it reprinted “Inside NKF: Piet Zwart’s Avant-Garde Catalog for Standard Cables, 1927–1928.” It also publishes his seminal essay, “from old to new typography.”
The new, he writes, “rejects a predetermined formal structure, but builds up forms according to the function … the new typography incorporates active red as a functional element: as a signal, an eye-catcher.” Sounds like an interesting fellow.
See all events and programming here.
“Localization: 15 Years of LetterSeed” opened in mid-August. It explores Korean typography.

The Letterform Archive is a nonprofit arts center focused on graphic design.
Institute of Contemporary Art
The Institute is now nomadic with several exhibits that can be viewed at different public spaces:
- Tara Donovan’s Stratagems at the Transamerica Pyramid Center
- A concurrent installation by Lily Kwong at the Transamerica Pyramid Center
- Jeffrey Gibson’s mural in Yerba Buena
- Rupy C. Tut’s installation at CCSF
Here are some views of the installations.
de Young Museum
Tuesday to Sunday, 9:30 a.m. to 5:15 p.m.
Saturdays are free for residents of the Bay Area’s nine counties.
“Monet and Venice” is open and we have a review by Julie Zigoris. She writes, that the French painter had all but decided to give up his water-lily project when his wife Alice, suggested a trip to Venice – thereby rescuing the water lily project and giving us some exquisite paintings from Venice.
It is meant to be in dialogue with “Venice Drawn” at the Legion of Honor and will be on view through July 26.
“Boom and Bust: Photographing Northern California,” featuring photographs of “San Francisco before and after the 1906 earthquake and fire, the construction of the Golden Gate Bridge and Bay Bridge, and the development of San Francisco’s South of Market neighborhood.” It is on through August 2.
Artist Rose B. Simpson’s show “LEXICON” will be on until Feb 7, 2027.
Noma Faingold writes in her review, “Coming from a long line of Native American ceramic artists of the Santa Clara Pueblo (Kha’po’oe Ówîngeh), based just south of Española, New Mexico, pottery is in Simpson’s DNA. While she still lives at the pueblo and has her studio close by, she has forged a different creative path, while examining the past, present and future.”
Read the full review of Simpson’s show here

Simpson’s exhibit is all part of the opening of four galleries dedicated to Arts of Indigenous America, which draws on the permanent collections, new acquisitions and artists like Simpson.
The New York Times has an excellent piece by Carolina A. Miranda on the development of the Arts of Indigenous America galleries.
Legion of Honor Museum
Tuesday to Sunday, 9:30 a.m. to 5:15 p.m.
“Drawn to Venice” will be on until Aug. 2, 2026. The exhibition is designed to be “in dialogue with ‘Monet and Venice,’ on view until July 26, 2026, at the de Young.” See our review of the latter here.
The exhibit includes 30 drawings and prints from 16th-century Venice, including landscapes and figure studies, from such artists as Giovanni Battista Tiepolo (1696–1770), Rosalba Carriera (1673–1757) and Canaletto (1697–1768).
“Ferlinghetti for San Francisco” draws from the museum’s collection of prints, etchings and lithographs. Here is a 2012 profile from SFGate of the poet, artist, activist and founder of City Lights Book Store. The show is open until July 19, 2026.
Our Review and Guide
Ferlinghetti died in 2021, but what a life. Even before arriving in San Francisco, he had earned a master’s degree from Columbia University and a doctorate from the Sorbonne.
If you get into Ferlinghetti‘s history, visit the Counter Culture Museum, City Lights Book Store and the Beat Museum.
You can view the Legion of Honor’s full list of exhibitions here.
The museum offers Free Saturdays to residents of the Bay Area’s nine counties.
The Tenderloin Museum
Open Tuesday to Saturday from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.
“Finding Our Way Home: Mary TallMountain is open. The exhibit celebrates the longtime Tenderloin resident and Native Alaskan poet Mary TallMountain (1918-1994). From the website: “Her extraordinary personal journey of recovery, writing, and cultural reclamation is told through key poems, rare photos, and video performances, with special emphasis on her community writing practice in the TL and how her legacy endures and inspires from SF to the Yukon.”
A friend just saw “The Compton’s Cafeteria Riot” and loved it. It is at the museum’s venue at 835 Larkin St and runs every Friday and Saturday at 7 p.m. You can get tickets here. Chris Carlsson writes about the 1966 riots and resistance on FoundSF, a great resource for history.
The San Francisco Chronicle reported on the Tenderloin Museum’s planned expansion from 3,000 to 10,000 square feet, adding a room dedicated to San Francisco’s neon history, including a sign from Hunt’s Donuts, once based in the Mission District and known as the “epicenter of crime.”
There is a lot more going on at the Tenderloin Museum, including the permanent collection that explores the neighborhood’s history and upcoming events, such as a walking tour focused on the area’s LGBTQIA+ history. Other walking tours are listed here.
SOMArts
See “Lineages of Organizing: The Asian Pacific Islander Cultural Center at 30.” an exhibit illustrating the history of the center. It is running in conjunction with the Asian Pacific Islander Cultural Center’s “Common Ground” programming.
Museum of the African Diaspora
Tuesday, Wednesday, Friday, Saturday, and Sunday, 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. Thursday, noon to 8 p.m.
“Demetri Broxton: Ancestral Echoes – Crops of Empire” is open through August 16, 2026. It is the first museum show for the Oakland-based mixed-media artist.
He will give an artist’s talk on Saturday, June 25 at 3 p.m. with Dr. Leigh Raiford.
Here are some photos of his work and we will soon have a review.
Also showing: “Unbound: Art, Blackness and the Universe,” runs through Aug. 16, 2026.
Teresa Moore reviews “Unbound” this writing, “Over three floors, she (curatorial chief Key Jo Lee) presents an African diaspora that is “unbound” from earthly and chronological conceptions of diaspora.”
Read the full review
California Academy of Sciences
Monday to Saturday, 9:30 a.m to 5 p.m; Sunday, 11 a.m. to 5 p.m; Thursday, NightLife (21+ with ID): 6 to 10 p.m. (Last entry is always one hour before closing time.)
There’s a lot going on here.
The newly renovated Wilson Family Nature Lab is open with lots of hands-on learning.
“Big Picture” competition winners are on view.
Make sure to plan ahead and see the admission and ticketing page for more information. Also, see how you can get a free or reduced rate for your next visit.
Counterculture Museum
Wednesday to Sunday, 11 a.m. to 6 p.m.
We have more museums in town. This one is at the corner of Haight and Ashbury streets with a whole lot of San Francisco history.
I could see a whole weekend, or a couple of weekdays, spent between the Counterculture Museum, the Beat Museum and the “Ferlingetti for San Francisco” show at the Legion of Honor. It would be like a graduate seminar on the late ’50s, ’60s and ’70s.
Beat Museum
Thursday to Sunday, 11 a.m. to 7 p.m.
The Beat Museum is at 540 Broadway, across the street from City Lights, the bookstore founded by Lawrence Ferlinghetti.
“We are dedicated to carrying on the Beats’ legacy by exposing their work to new audiences, encouraging journeys — both interior and exterior — and being a resource on how one person’s perspective can have meaning to many,” according to a statement from the museum.
This sounds like a great place to visit.
Yerba Buena Center for the Arts
Wednesday to Sunday, 11 a.m. to 5 p.m.; free on Wednesdays and second Sundays.
“The Prince of Homburg: A Solo Exhibition by P. Staff” runs until June 24. From the website: “Loosely inspired by Heinrich von Kleist’s 1810 play of the same name, the work explores exhaustion as a response to structural oppression. The centerpiece of the installation is a 23-minute video…”
San Francisco State University’s Fine Arts Gallery
The gallery is open Tuesday to Friday, noon to 4 p.m. It will be closed for most of the summer, reopening on August 8 for “Life and the Inevitable.” The show on life, death and grief will feature six artists. It is curated by Keone Nakakura, a graduate student in museum studies, and will run through Oct. 15.
Life and the Inevitable
August 8 – October 15, 2026
San Francisco State University’s Global Museum
It’s a teaching lab and open to the public during the school year – Oct. through May. 11 a.m. to. 4 p.m., Tuesday through Thursday, and by appointment. Location: Fine Arts Building, Room 203
Now on: “Craft or Commodity?” And “Please Touch!” “Both exhibits focus on themes of responsible stewardship of cultural heritage, decolonizing museum work, and expanding accessible museum experiences,” writes Marley Townsend, a graduate student in Museum Studies.
The Walt Disney Family Museum
Thursday through Sunday, 10 a.m. to 5:30 p.m.
“Happiest Place on Earth: The Disneyland Story” is open. The museum described it as a “treasure trove of Disney history” taking “will take “guests behind the scenes of one of the most groundbreaking endeavors of the 20th century — the creation and opening of Disneyland in Anaheim, California.”
The museum is showing rare objects featured in the book “Walt Disney Treasures: Personal Art and Artifacts from The Walt Disney Family Museum.” The objects will change every two months.
Visit the museum’s website for more information on admission costs and reduced ticketing options. The special exhibits are free with a suggested $5 admission fee.
Exploratorium
Closed Mondays. Sunday, 10 a.m. to noon (members/donors only); noon to 5 p.m. for everyone. Tuesday to Saturday, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Thursday, 6 to 10 p.m. for 18+.
Experience After Dark at Pier 15. Every Thursday evening, immerse yourself in more than 700 interactive exhibits. For people 18 and older. The museum advertises a carefree environment with new themes each night. Here is information for reduced admission.
The Chinese Historical Society of America
The museum is closed for renovations, according to its website.
The Mission Cultural Center for Latino Arts
Closed until further notice.
See the center’s website for offerings.
Jewish Contemporary Museum
The museum closed in December for at least a year as it works out its financial situation. You can learn more here. Laura Waxmann wrote a good piece for the San Francisco Chronicle about the difficulties museums are facing.
Its closure is a reminder to visit our museums.









































































The Ruth Asawa gallery with rotating pieces curated by her family opened last month
@ Minnesota Project.