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About Place: Bay Area Artists from the Svane Gift

Miguel Arzabe (American, b. 1975). Te Quiero Inti (detail), 2021, Woven acrylic on canvas, 48 x 60 in. (121.9 x 152.4 cm). Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco, a gift from The Svane Family Foundation, 2022.26.20. Courtesy of the artist and Johansson Projects. Photograph by Randy Dodson

de Young Museum

About Place: Bay Area Artists from the Svane Gift

Through May 3, 2026

This exhibition is included in general admission. Some artworks will be rotated during the run of the exhibition.

This exhibition is the second in a series highlighting contemporary Bay Area artists in our collection. The installation explores how artists relate to their environments through place: place as the physical land, place as heritage, place as the imaginary, and place as belonging.

Several artists examine climate change and its local impact. In Saif Azzuz’s Lo’op’ (It burns) (2021), he draws the color palette from maps of the 2021 droughts and fires in California. Other artists use found materials not only to address ecological issues but also to add layers of meaning, such as in Guillermo Galindo’s Listo (Ready to Go) (2015), made from a broken bicycle and chair he found along the US-Mexico border. And others play with figure and ground: Clare Rojas’s Walking in Rainbow Rain (2021) is a meditation on disappearing into one’s environment. The drab cityscape is brightened by the rain’s rainbow palette, which also alludes to the history of the LGBTQ+ movement in San Francisco. The works on display, exploring themes of belonging, ecological stewardship, and social justice, are drawn from the 2022 Svane Family Foundation gift of 42 works by more than 30 local artists.

See how Saif Azzuz creates paintings and sculptures that pulse with color.

See how painter Rupy C. Tut creates powerful images of migration, legacy, and resilience.

The photographer on using art to confront power and how his work has been misread.

Join artist Miguel Arzabe as he reflects on his journey into the arts and one-of-a-kind weaving practice.

The artist on her love of San Francisco, how she communicates through art, and how painting never goes as planned (but that’s what makes it exciting).

This exhibition is included in general admission. Some artworks will be rotated during the run of the exhibition.

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