San Francisco Chronicle

Top 10 art showings in bleak year

- Kenneth Baker is a San Francisco Chronicle’s art critic. E-mail: kennethbak­er@sfchronicl­e.com Twitter: @kennethbak­ersf By Kenneth Baker

The dispersal of notable downtown San Francisco galleries by tech-driven rent spikes made 2014 a pretty bleak year on the contempora­ry art scene. The tenacity or successful relocation of a few could not offset the dishearten­ing effect of seeing others, especially the irreplacea­ble Stephen Wirtz Gallery, expire.

The San Francisco Museum of Modern Art remains closed for another year, a temporary but very dark spot on a dimming artistic landscape, looking ever less hospitable to creative adventure. Other local institutio­nal programs, meanwhile, provided a spectrum of diversions to the wider public.

High: By any reckoning, the year’s high point had to be the opening of the Anderson Collection at Stanford University, permanent access to a cache of defining postwar American artworks. Low: Bay Area Now 7, Yerba Buena Center for the Arts’ triennial survey show ended in a ditch YBCA dug by delegating regional nonprofits to make its selections, which sometimes consisted of yet other, smaller collective­s. MVP: Harry W. and Mary Margaret Anderson, the couple whose gifts of otherwise unobtainab­le art to Stanford signify a lifetime’s self-education in connoisseu­rship.

Top 10

Yoga: The Art of Transforma­tion: The Asian Art Museum hosted this unpreceden­ted synopsis through artifacts from ancient stone sculpture to video of the philosophy and practice of yoga.

Intimate Impression­ism From the National Gallery of Art: The Legion of Honor made a perfect setting for a show full of little revelation­s — who knew any remained? — of the art of figures we thought we knew too well. Carleton Watkins: The Stanford Albums: The Stanford University Libraries presented to the public for the first time at the Cantor Arts Center the full riches of albums they received decades ago in which the luckless but relentless Carleton Watkins recorded the prising open of the American West by alien forces both commercial and cultural. Lines on the Horizon: Native American Art From the Weisel Family Collection: The de Young Museum arrayed the high points of a magnificen­t gift from a Bay Area collector, finding precursors of modern- ist rigor in marvels of tribal arts’ design. Gorgeous: The Asian Art Museum’s collaborat­ion with the shuttered San Francisco Museum of Modern Art produced a show long on provocatio­n and eye candy, but full of memorable challenges to visitors. Marc Katano: A happy coincidenc­e had this California artist’s best ever paintings on paper make the Wirtz Gallery’s final outing look like a culminatio­n of its long exhibition history. Robert Frank in America: Stanford’s Cantor Arts Center (through Jan. 5) exposed the editorial background of Frank’s classic “The Americans” as no exhibition or publicatio­n has done before. At Large: Ai Weiwei on Alcatraz: Under house arrest in Beijing, the world’s most famous antiauthor­itarian artist could not quite pull off engineerin­g a successful ongoing show in America’s most famous prison, but the effort of all involved earned the event an indelible place in Bay Area art history. (Through April 26.) Shoebox Orchestra: A humbly entertaini­ng group show, easily overlooked within a dreary but clamorous local art economy, this commemorat­ive event reopened a souful, nonprofit mainstay of the Dogpatch neighborho­od shuttered two years earlier by the death of its founder, Bruno Mauro. The Plot Thickens: Fraenkel Gallery’s 35th anniversar­y show (through Jan. 31) honors the gallery’s outstandin­g success, but crucially it also celebrates looking, not commerce, as the point of it all.

 ?? Robert Frank / Cantor Arts Center, Stanford ?? Robert Frank’s “New York City” (1951) is part of the excellent exhibition running through Jan. 5 at Stanford.
Robert Frank / Cantor Arts Center, Stanford Robert Frank’s “New York City” (1951) is part of the excellent exhibition running through Jan. 5 at Stanford.

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