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NOB HILL GAZETTE
Since 1978, the Nob Hill Gazette is the publication-of-record for the social, cultural and philanthropic life of San Francisco. THE MISSION SCHOOL ARTISTS' LASTING INFLUENCE IN SAN FRANCISCO The Mission School was being hailed as one of the major art movements to emerge from the 1990s that continues to inspire — and draw enthusiastic collectors. The five key figures identified with the MissionSchool — but not exclusive to the movement —are Johanson, Barry McGee, Ruby Neri, Alicia McCarthy and Margaret Kilgallen. THE ETERNAL RETURN • THE NOB HILL GAZETTE Before a world can exist, it must be founded, explained the great mythologist Mircea Eliade, and every country, city, and homestead reboots the primordial act of genesis that mimics the divine creation of the world. I once knew a poet of some renown who resided in THE NOVEMBER INTERVIEW WITH JANET REILLY: ALL HALE, DENISE By Janet Reilly. November 2, 2019. 7 minutes read. Denise Hale: ““I have a deadly Serbian memory and loyalty to my friends. I lived my life, my way.” (Peter Prato) Denise Hale sips espresso in a fine porcelain cup while holding court in a jewel box alcove adjacent to the living room in her grand Russian Hill home. THE INTERVIEW: FATHER GREG BONFIGLIO ON THE FUTURE OF Like the rings of trees, the walls are impregnated with people’s prayers,” says Father Greg Bonfiglio of St. Ignatius Church. (Spencer Brown) For more than a century, St. Ignatius Church has stood on the hilltop looking over the University of San Francisco campus. With its sky-high towers and beautifully ornate dome, it is a powerfulSan
A LOOK INSIDE NICOLE VIDALAKIS' INDIVIDUALISTIC HOME In the playroom, a collection of milk-glass sculptures is displayed near a Suzanne Q. Egan painting. Over the span of four years, Vidalakis and Swatt conjured a home ideally suited for her and 8-year-old daughter Philomena. The three-level abode is sited on a sloped lot, along with a separate 800-square-foot structure. HISTORIC INAUGURATION OF LONDON BREED BRINGS PLENTY TO Gavin Newsom and London Breed. What a wonderful morning for an inauguration, Ms. Mayor! Indeed, there was not a cloud in the sky when Breed, the first African-American woman to be elected to San Francisco’s highest office, took her oath at City Hall. Hundreds of supporters turned out for the occasion, including Lieutenant GovernorGavin
MONTALVO ARTS CENTER'S FOOD & WINE CLASSIC WOWS ONCE AGAIN September 8. Any event that designates a “wine chair” is promising to be a good time. Such was the case at the 16th annual Montalvo Arts Center’s Food & Wine Classic on September 8, whose organizers tapped the Bay Area’s finest eateries, wineries and entertainers — er, auctiontainers — for a rousingly successful evening that raised $500,000 for the center’s art and education TWO LEGENDARY PHILANTHROPIC FAMILIES WERE HONORED AT Two legendary philanthropic families, the Sobrato and the Taube families, were honored at the Dedication and Ribbon Cutting of the new Susan and John A. Sobrato Pavilion and the Tad and Dianne Taube Pavilion at Lucile Packard Children’s Hospital Stanford. PARCA AUXILIARY LUNCHEON AND FASHION SHOW: LA DOLCE VITA For its 31st benefit, the auxiliary went with a sunny Italian theme, La Dolce Vita, featuring a sumptuous alfresco luncheon, a silent and live auction and two fashion shows of must-haves for the summer and fall seasons. With blue skies turning to gray and a forecast of light raindrops, the auxiliary committee had it all planned when you steppedNOB HILL GAZETTE
Since 1978, the Nob Hill Gazette is the publication-of-record for the social, cultural and philanthropic life of San Francisco. THE MISSION SCHOOL ARTISTS' LASTING INFLUENCE IN SAN FRANCISCO The Mission School was being hailed as one of the major art movements to emerge from the 1990s that continues to inspire — and draw enthusiastic collectors. The five key figures identified with the MissionSchool — but not exclusive to the movement —are Johanson, Barry McGee, Ruby Neri, Alicia McCarthy and Margaret Kilgallen. THE ETERNAL RETURN • THE NOB HILL GAZETTE Before a world can exist, it must be founded, explained the great mythologist Mircea Eliade, and every country, city, and homestead reboots the primordial act of genesis that mimics the divine creation of the world. I once knew a poet of some renown who resided in THE NOVEMBER INTERVIEW WITH JANET REILLY: ALL HALE, DENISE By Janet Reilly. November 2, 2019. 7 minutes read. Denise Hale: ““I have a deadly Serbian memory and loyalty to my friends. I lived my life, my way.” (Peter Prato) Denise Hale sips espresso in a fine porcelain cup while holding court in a jewel box alcove adjacent to the living room in her grand Russian Hill home. THE INTERVIEW: FATHER GREG BONFIGLIO ON THE FUTURE OF Like the rings of trees, the walls are impregnated with people’s prayers,” says Father Greg Bonfiglio of St. Ignatius Church. (Spencer Brown) For more than a century, St. Ignatius Church has stood on the hilltop looking over the University of San Francisco campus. With its sky-high towers and beautifully ornate dome, it is a powerfulSan
A LOOK INSIDE NICOLE VIDALAKIS' INDIVIDUALISTIC HOME In the playroom, a collection of milk-glass sculptures is displayed near a Suzanne Q. Egan painting. Over the span of four years, Vidalakis and Swatt conjured a home ideally suited for her and 8-year-old daughter Philomena. The three-level abode is sited on a sloped lot, along with a separate 800-square-foot structure. HISTORIC INAUGURATION OF LONDON BREED BRINGS PLENTY TO Gavin Newsom and London Breed. What a wonderful morning for an inauguration, Ms. Mayor! Indeed, there was not a cloud in the sky when Breed, the first African-American woman to be elected to San Francisco’s highest office, took her oath at City Hall. Hundreds of supporters turned out for the occasion, including Lieutenant GovernorGavin
MONTALVO ARTS CENTER'S FOOD & WINE CLASSIC WOWS ONCE AGAIN September 8. Any event that designates a “wine chair” is promising to be a good time. Such was the case at the 16th annual Montalvo Arts Center’s Food & Wine Classic on September 8, whose organizers tapped the Bay Area’s finest eateries, wineries and entertainers — er, auctiontainers — for a rousingly successful evening that raised $500,000 for the center’s art and education TWO LEGENDARY PHILANTHROPIC FAMILIES WERE HONORED AT Two legendary philanthropic families, the Sobrato and the Taube families, were honored at the Dedication and Ribbon Cutting of the new Susan and John A. Sobrato Pavilion and the Tad and Dianne Taube Pavilion at Lucile Packard Children’s Hospital Stanford. PARCA AUXILIARY LUNCHEON AND FASHION SHOW: LA DOLCE VITA For its 31st benefit, the auxiliary went with a sunny Italian theme, La Dolce Vita, featuring a sumptuous alfresco luncheon, a silent and live auction and two fashion shows of must-haves for the summer and fall seasons. With blue skies turning to gray and a forecast of light raindrops, the auxiliary committee had it all planned when you stepped SPIRITS OF THE CITY: THE TEMPLE OF GLASS ABOVE AN 1 day ago · Illustration By Paul Madonna F or at least 30 years, anyone driving south through the City on Highway 101 has almost certainly noticed it. Atop an obscure hill to the east, near the freeway maze south of Bernal Heights, stands a big odd-looking scaffold adorned with colorful panels of stained glass above the word “studio,” whose letters are made of white-painted two-by-fours. A BRIEF HISTORY OF THE EVER-CHANGING SAN FRANCISCO BAY In 1961, Sylvia McLaughlin, Kay Kerr, and Esther Gulick took action against filling of the Bay and created the Save San Francisco Bay Association, now known as Save the Bay. 1950s: Save the Bay. The Bay itself was getting smaller and smaller as people built out into it more. There were few recreational areas and almost no beaches. THE FUTURE OF WARD 5B, THE FIRST AIDS INPATIENT UNIT The past is present at Zuckerberg San Francisco General Hospital, where the legacy of the first AIDS inpatient unit continues with a crusade to reduce the City’s HIV infections and deaths. Diane Havlir was a medical student at Duke University when she read about the firstcases of
FROM MAUI TO THE MAGIC KINGDOM • THE NOB HILL GAZETTE Hiking the Great Wall, shopping in Istanbul and whale-gazing in island paradise. Mother and daughter in the Far East. Marie Hurabiell, Chief Business Officer at Ellipsis Health, has been traveling globally with 13-year-old daughter Cassidy since she was just 7 months old. “On our recent three-week trip to China, we planned accordingly to steep ourselves in Chinese culture by staying a little A BRIEF HISTORY OF THE COFFEE CRUNCH CAKE • THE NOB HILL A failed candy experiment inspired the creation of Blum’s renowned Coffee Crunch Cake. Originally spelled Koffee Krunch Kake, it was invented by accident by master baker Ernest Weil in the 1940s. When an employee overboiled soft coffee candy, Weil smashed the hard substance into pieces. The Cordon Bleu-trained pastry chef repurposed the ART GENSLER • LIVING LEGEND • THE NOB HILL GAZETTE March 1, 2018. 9 minutes read. The master architect on conquering his field, defending Salesforce Tower and why he’s the anti-Howard Roark. “I believe the words ‘I’ and ‘Me’ are all wrong,” he says. “It’s about ‘We’ and ‘Us.’”. Three years ago, Gensler, the San Francisco-based global architecture firm, achieved anew
PREVIEW: 'TIS THE SEASON • THE NOB HILL GAZETTE Last year, tree sales totaled $1.2 million. “In a year that has been challenging in so many ways, this group has rallied together for a common good,” says tree lot chair Kyle McKenzie. “Our goal is to bring as much Christmas spirit to the community as HISTORIC INAUGURATION OF LONDON BREED BRINGS PLENTY TO Gavin Newsom and London Breed. What a wonderful morning for an inauguration, Ms. Mayor! Indeed, there was not a cloud in the sky when Breed, the first African-American woman to be elected to San Francisco’s highest office, took her oath at City Hall. Hundreds of supporters turned out for the occasion, including Lieutenant GovernorGavin
WHICH SAN FRANCISCO YACHT CLUB SHOULD YOU JOIN? St. Francis Yacht Club members revel in opening day festivities on a sunny spring afternoon. (Spencer Brown) From Brisbane east to Benicia and Alviso north to Vallejo, the storied maritime history of the San Francisco Bay is reflected in a riot of clubs devoted to sailing andracing.
FIVE QUESTIONS WITH MADAME JACQUELINE, CHANEL HAUTE Madame Jacqueline Mercier, Chanel haute couture première, poses in Chanel’s recent pop-up atelier in Silicon Valley. (Drew Altizer) To lovers of haute couture, Madame Jacqueline Mercier is legend. She supervises a team of first-rate seamstresses in the tailleur (tailoring) atelier at Chanel’s Paris mothership on rue Cambon, and had been Karl Lagerfeld’s trusted première for more thanNOB HILL GAZETTE
Since 1978, the Nob Hill Gazette is the publication-of-record for the social, cultural and philanthropic life of San Francisco. SPIRITS OF THE CITY: THE TEMPLE OF GLASS ABOVE AN 5 hours ago · Illustration By Paul Madonna F or at least 30 years, anyone driving south through the City on Highway 101 has almost certainly noticed it. Atop an obscure hill to the east, near the freeway maze south of Bernal Heights, stands a big odd-looking scaffold adorned with colorful panels of stained glass above the word “studio,” whose letters are made of white-painted two-by-fours. THE MISSION SCHOOL ARTISTS' LASTING INFLUENCE IN SAN FRANCISCO The influential punk iconoclasts who rocked San Francisco in the ’90s might be older, but they’ve still got something to say. Barry McGee Installation view, Berkeley Art Museum 2012. A BRIEF HISTORY OF THE EVER-CHANGING SAN FRANCISCO BAY 1770s. The Native population of theBay Area numbered about 100,000 people. When the Spanish arrived, they brought grazing animals and agriculture along, which ended the building of shellmounds and replaced them with an ecosystem of farmland. THE NOVEMBER INTERVIEW WITH JANET REILLY: ALL HALE, DENISE Denise Hale sips espresso in a fine porcelain cup while holding court in a jewel box alcove adjacent to the living room in her grand Russian Hill home. Witnessing this scene firsthand is like taking a trip through time with the woman who’s had a front row seat at everything. Born in Serbia and raised by her wealthy grandparents in Belgrade, Hale fled the Nazi and Russian occupations for ART GENSLER • LIVING LEGEND • THE NOB HILL GAZETTE Art Gensler was born in Brooklyn in 1935. He grew up an only child in West Hartford, Connecticut, where his mother worked at the phone company and his father sold ceiling tiles. THE INTERVIEW: FATHER GREG BONFIGLIO ON THE FUTURE OF “For 106 years, people have been walking through those doors Like the rings of trees, the walls are impregnated with people’s prayers,” says Father Greg Bonfiglio of St. Ignatius Church. TWO LEGENDARY PHILANTHROPIC FAMILIES WERE HONORED AT Two legendary philanthropic families, the Sobrato and the Taube families, were honored at the Dedication and Ribbon Cutting of the new Susan and John A. Sobrato Pavilion and the Tad and Dianne Taube Pavilion at Lucile Packard Children’s Hospital Stanford. A LOOK INSIDE NICOLE VIDALAKIS' INDIVIDUALISTIC HOME In this Portola Valley home, unexpected arrangements and wide-ranging art are on full view. Vidalakis in her living room. (Photos by Margo Moritz) A Mark Chatterley sculpture is positioned outside the home designed by Swatt | Miers Architects. Homeowners and designers often prattle on about creating interiors that are warm and inviting, where visitors can settle in with ease and loll around. MONTALVO ARTS CENTER'S FOOD & WINE CLASSIC WOWS ONCE AGAIN September 8. Any event that designates a “wine chair” is promising to be a good time. Such was the case at the 16th annual Montalvo Arts Center’s Food & Wine Classic on September 8, whose organizers tapped the Bay Area’s finest eateries, wineries and entertainers — er, auctiontainers — for a rousingly successful evening that raised $500,000 for the center’s art and educationNOB HILL GAZETTE
Since 1978, the Nob Hill Gazette is the publication-of-record for the social, cultural and philanthropic life of San Francisco. SPIRITS OF THE CITY: THE TEMPLE OF GLASS ABOVE AN 5 hours ago · Illustration By Paul Madonna F or at least 30 years, anyone driving south through the City on Highway 101 has almost certainly noticed it. Atop an obscure hill to the east, near the freeway maze south of Bernal Heights, stands a big odd-looking scaffold adorned with colorful panels of stained glass above the word “studio,” whose letters are made of white-painted two-by-fours. THE MISSION SCHOOL ARTISTS' LASTING INFLUENCE IN SAN FRANCISCO The influential punk iconoclasts who rocked San Francisco in the ’90s might be older, but they’ve still got something to say. Barry McGee Installation view, Berkeley Art Museum 2012. A BRIEF HISTORY OF THE EVER-CHANGING SAN FRANCISCO BAY 1770s. The Native population of theBay Area numbered about 100,000 people. When the Spanish arrived, they brought grazing animals and agriculture along, which ended the building of shellmounds and replaced them with an ecosystem of farmland. THE NOVEMBER INTERVIEW WITH JANET REILLY: ALL HALE, DENISE Denise Hale sips espresso in a fine porcelain cup while holding court in a jewel box alcove adjacent to the living room in her grand Russian Hill home. Witnessing this scene firsthand is like taking a trip through time with the woman who’s had a front row seat at everything. Born in Serbia and raised by her wealthy grandparents in Belgrade, Hale fled the Nazi and Russian occupations for ART GENSLER • LIVING LEGEND • THE NOB HILL GAZETTE Art Gensler was born in Brooklyn in 1935. He grew up an only child in West Hartford, Connecticut, where his mother worked at the phone company and his father sold ceiling tiles. THE INTERVIEW: FATHER GREG BONFIGLIO ON THE FUTURE OF “For 106 years, people have been walking through those doors Like the rings of trees, the walls are impregnated with people’s prayers,” says Father Greg Bonfiglio of St. Ignatius Church. TWO LEGENDARY PHILANTHROPIC FAMILIES WERE HONORED AT Two legendary philanthropic families, the Sobrato and the Taube families, were honored at the Dedication and Ribbon Cutting of the new Susan and John A. Sobrato Pavilion and the Tad and Dianne Taube Pavilion at Lucile Packard Children’s Hospital Stanford. A LOOK INSIDE NICOLE VIDALAKIS' INDIVIDUALISTIC HOME In this Portola Valley home, unexpected arrangements and wide-ranging art are on full view. Vidalakis in her living room. (Photos by Margo Moritz) A Mark Chatterley sculpture is positioned outside the home designed by Swatt | Miers Architects. Homeowners and designers often prattle on about creating interiors that are warm and inviting, where visitors can settle in with ease and loll around. MONTALVO ARTS CENTER'S FOOD & WINE CLASSIC WOWS ONCE AGAIN September 8. Any event that designates a “wine chair” is promising to be a good time. Such was the case at the 16th annual Montalvo Arts Center’s Food & Wine Classic on September 8, whose organizers tapped the Bay Area’s finest eateries, wineries and entertainers — er, auctiontainers — for a rousingly successful evening that raised $500,000 for the center’s art and education SPIRITS OF THE CITY: THE TEMPLE OF GLASS ABOVE AN 5 hours ago · Illustration By Paul Madonna F or at least 30 years, anyone driving south through the City on Highway 101 has almost certainly noticed it. Atop an obscure hill to the east, near the freeway maze south of Bernal Heights, stands a big odd-looking scaffold adorned with colorful panels of stained glass above the word “studio,” whose letters are made of white-painted two-by-fours. VILLA/VALLEDOR • THE NOB HILL GAZETTE O dds are you have never heard of Leo Valledor and Carlos Villa, Filipino American artists who were born and raised in San Francisco in the 1930s.Today, their lives and art are being considered with renewed interest in an effort to place them within the ranks of West Coast artists. They were impacted by the abstract expressionist movement, but then forged their own paths, inspiring others DIGITAL EDITION ARCHIVES • THE NOB HILL GAZETTE Since 1978, the Nob Hill Gazette is the publication-of-record for the social, cultural and philanthropic life of San Francisco. MOVERS AND SHAKERS: TAKING CHANCES • THE NOB HILL GAZETTE Bay Area high achievers on our radar this month span generations and genres. Enrique Chagoya. Artist Enrique Chagoya, also an art and art history professor, is one of seven Stanford scholars recently awarded a 2021 Guggenheim Fellowship.Chagoya’s work is informed by his time living in both the U.S. and Mexico (as well as Europe in the late ’90s) and explores the clash of cultures in these SPIRITS OF THE CITY: MISSION DOLORES BASILICA • THE NOB Illustration by Paul Madonna T. he union of the 18th century Mission Dolores and the adjoining 20th century Mission Dolores Basilica is one of the odder visual collisions in San Francisco.. The old adobe mission is simple, squat and unadorned, with its plain whitewashed walls evincing an austere piety. The basilica, by contrast, is the opposite of austere. THE ETERNAL RETURN • THE NOB HILL GAZETTE The virus may not be the bubonic plague, but it’s kindling a certain feudalistic spirit. (Adam McCauley) Wherever you’re reading this, there’s a good chance you’re not where you thought you’d be backon January 1, 2020.
ART GENSLER • LIVING LEGEND • THE NOB HILL GAZETTE Art Gensler was born in Brooklyn in 1935. He grew up an only child in West Hartford, Connecticut, where his mother worked at the phone company and his father sold ceiling tiles. LITERATURE: VENDELA VIDA • THE NOB HILL GAZETTE Vida discusses her writing style and latest literary effort with the Gazette’s Paul Wilner. You reportedly set a goal of writing 500 words a day. How do you deal, if MOVERS AND SHAKERS IN FEBRUARY • THE NOB HILL GAZETTE Kara Swisher. Swisher, who has at least 20 jobs, including tech’s fiercest watchdog, just got a new gig: mom to baby Clara Jo Swisher Katz, whom she welcomed with her girlfriend, Amanda Katz, a senior editor at CNN, last October.“You probably have to be pretty ambitious to have a baby at 56,” Swisher, ever the overachiever, told New York magazine’s The Cut just a month before CJ was born. FIVE QUESTIONS WITH MADAME JACQUELINE, CHANEL HAUTE Madame Jacqueline Mercier, Chanel haute couture première, poses in Chanel’s recent pop-up atelier in Silicon Valley. (Drew Altizer) To lovers of haute couture, Madame Jacqueline Mercier is legend. She supervises a team of first-rate seamstresses in the tailleur (tailoring) atelier at Chanel’s Paris mothership on rue Cambon, and had been Karl Lagerfeld’s trusted première for more thanNOB HILL GAZETTE
Since 1978, the Nob Hill Gazette is the publication-of-record for the social, cultural and philanthropic life of San Francisco. SPIRITS OF THE CITY: THE TEMPLE OF GLASS ABOVE AN 12 minutes ago · Illustration By Paul Madonna F or at least 30 years, anyone driving south through the City on Highway 101 has almost certainly noticed it. Atop an obscure hill to the east, near the freeway maze south of Bernal Heights, stands a big odd-looking scaffold adorned with colorful panels of stained glass above the word “studio,” whose letters are made of white-painted two-by-fours. A BRIEF HISTORY OF THE EVER-CHANGING SAN FRANCISCO BAY In 1961, Sylvia McLaughlin, Kay Kerr, and Esther Gulick took action against filling of the Bay and created the Save San Francisco Bay Association, now known as Save the Bay. 1950s: Save the Bay. The Bay itself was getting smaller and smaller as people built out into it more. There were few recreational areas and almost no beaches. THE MISSION SCHOOL ARTISTS' LASTING INFLUENCE IN SAN FRANCISCO The Mission School was being hailed as one of the major art movements to emerge from the 1990s that continues to inspire — and draw enthusiastic collectors. The five key figures identified with the MissionSchool — but not exclusive to the movement —are Johanson, Barry McGee, Ruby Neri, Alicia McCarthy and Margaret Kilgallen. THE NOVEMBER INTERVIEW WITH JANET REILLY: ALL HALE, DENISE By Janet Reilly. November 2, 2019. 7 minutes read. Denise Hale: ““I have a deadly Serbian memory and loyalty to my friends. I lived my life, my way.” (Peter Prato) Denise Hale sips espresso in a fine porcelain cup while holding court in a jewel box alcove adjacent to the living room in her grand Russian Hill home. THE INTERVIEW: FATHER GREG BONFIGLIO ON THE FUTURE OF Like the rings of trees, the walls are impregnated with people’s prayers,” says Father Greg Bonfiglio of St. Ignatius Church. (Spencer Brown) For more than a century, St. Ignatius Church has stood on the hilltop looking over the University of San Francisco campus. With its sky-high towers and beautifully ornate dome, it is a powerfulSan
BIGELOW’S BABBLE ON BY THE BAY: THE COOL KIDS In March 2006, Twitter co-founder Jack Dorsey probably never dreamed that his first tweet released into the world (“just setting up my twttr”) would — 15 years later — sell in March 2021 for $2.9 million in a red-hot art market phenomenon: nonfungible tokens.. Or, as the cool kids say: NFTs. For the rest of us, according to The Verge, NFT is a digital good that lives on the “Ethereum A LOOK INSIDE NICOLE VIDALAKIS' INDIVIDUALISTIC HOME In the playroom, a collection of milk-glass sculptures is displayed near a Suzanne Q. Egan painting. Over the span of four years, Vidalakis and Swatt conjured a home ideally suited for her and 8-year-old daughter Philomena. The three-level abode is sited on a sloped lot, along with a separate 800-square-foot structure. TWO LEGENDARY PHILANTHROPIC FAMILIES WERE HONORED AT Two legendary philanthropic families, the Sobrato and the Taube families, were honored at the Dedication and Ribbon Cutting of the new Susan and John A. Sobrato Pavilion and the Tad and Dianne Taube Pavilion at Lucile Packard Children’s Hospital Stanford. MONTALVO ARTS CENTER'S FOOD & WINE CLASSIC WOWS ONCE AGAIN September 8. Any event that designates a “wine chair” is promising to be a good time. Such was the case at the 16th annual Montalvo Arts Center’s Food & Wine Classic on September 8, whose organizers tapped the Bay Area’s finest eateries, wineries and entertainers — er, auctiontainers — for a rousingly successful evening that raised $500,000 for the center’s art and educationNOB HILL GAZETTE
Since 1978, the Nob Hill Gazette is the publication-of-record for the social, cultural and philanthropic life of San Francisco. SPIRITS OF THE CITY: THE TEMPLE OF GLASS ABOVE AN 12 minutes ago · Illustration By Paul Madonna F or at least 30 years, anyone driving south through the City on Highway 101 has almost certainly noticed it. Atop an obscure hill to the east, near the freeway maze south of Bernal Heights, stands a big odd-looking scaffold adorned with colorful panels of stained glass above the word “studio,” whose letters are made of white-painted two-by-fours. A BRIEF HISTORY OF THE EVER-CHANGING SAN FRANCISCO BAY In 1961, Sylvia McLaughlin, Kay Kerr, and Esther Gulick took action against filling of the Bay and created the Save San Francisco Bay Association, now known as Save the Bay. 1950s: Save the Bay. The Bay itself was getting smaller and smaller as people built out into it more. There were few recreational areas and almost no beaches. THE MISSION SCHOOL ARTISTS' LASTING INFLUENCE IN SAN FRANCISCO The Mission School was being hailed as one of the major art movements to emerge from the 1990s that continues to inspire — and draw enthusiastic collectors. The five key figures identified with the MissionSchool — but not exclusive to the movement —are Johanson, Barry McGee, Ruby Neri, Alicia McCarthy and Margaret Kilgallen. THE NOVEMBER INTERVIEW WITH JANET REILLY: ALL HALE, DENISE By Janet Reilly. November 2, 2019. 7 minutes read. Denise Hale: ““I have a deadly Serbian memory and loyalty to my friends. I lived my life, my way.” (Peter Prato) Denise Hale sips espresso in a fine porcelain cup while holding court in a jewel box alcove adjacent to the living room in her grand Russian Hill home. THE INTERVIEW: FATHER GREG BONFIGLIO ON THE FUTURE OF Like the rings of trees, the walls are impregnated with people’s prayers,” says Father Greg Bonfiglio of St. Ignatius Church. (Spencer Brown) For more than a century, St. Ignatius Church has stood on the hilltop looking over the University of San Francisco campus. With its sky-high towers and beautifully ornate dome, it is a powerfulSan
BIGELOW’S BABBLE ON BY THE BAY: THE COOL KIDS In March 2006, Twitter co-founder Jack Dorsey probably never dreamed that his first tweet released into the world (“just setting up my twttr”) would — 15 years later — sell in March 2021 for $2.9 million in a red-hot art market phenomenon: nonfungible tokens.. Or, as the cool kids say: NFTs. For the rest of us, according to The Verge, NFT is a digital good that lives on the “Ethereum A LOOK INSIDE NICOLE VIDALAKIS' INDIVIDUALISTIC HOME In the playroom, a collection of milk-glass sculptures is displayed near a Suzanne Q. Egan painting. Over the span of four years, Vidalakis and Swatt conjured a home ideally suited for her and 8-year-old daughter Philomena. The three-level abode is sited on a sloped lot, along with a separate 800-square-foot structure. TWO LEGENDARY PHILANTHROPIC FAMILIES WERE HONORED AT Two legendary philanthropic families, the Sobrato and the Taube families, were honored at the Dedication and Ribbon Cutting of the new Susan and John A. Sobrato Pavilion and the Tad and Dianne Taube Pavilion at Lucile Packard Children’s Hospital Stanford. MONTALVO ARTS CENTER'S FOOD & WINE CLASSIC WOWS ONCE AGAIN September 8. Any event that designates a “wine chair” is promising to be a good time. Such was the case at the 16th annual Montalvo Arts Center’s Food & Wine Classic on September 8, whose organizers tapped the Bay Area’s finest eateries, wineries and entertainers — er, auctiontainers — for a rousingly successful evening that raised $500,000 for the center’s art and education FRANK RESIDENCES: AT THE INTERSECTION OF LUXURY AND CARING 1 day ago · At Frank Residences, our person-centered approach to care sets us apart from other Assisted Living and Memory Care communities. When the San Francisco Campus for Jewish Living (SFCJL), known to many as the Jewish Home, started planning its new Assisted Living and Memory Care community several years ago, it knew that it had the opportunity to redefine senior living. MOVERS AND SHAKERS: TAKING CHANCES • THE NOB HILL GAZETTE Bay Area high achievers on our radar this month span generations and genres. Enrique Chagoya. Artist Enrique Chagoya, also an art and art history professor, is one of seven Stanford scholars recently awarded a 2021 Guggenheim Fellowship.Chagoya’s work is informed by his time living in both the U.S. and Mexico (as well as Europe in the late ’90s) and explores the clash of cultures in these DIGITAL EDITION ARCHIVES • THE NOB HILL GAZETTE Since 1978, the Nob Hill Gazette is the publication-of-record for the social, cultural and philanthropic life of San Francisco. VILLA/VALLEDOR • THE NOB HILL GAZETTE Leo Valledor’s Desire, 1971, is a 96-by-60-inch acrylic on canvas. In addition to their mutual love of art, Valledor and Villa were connected by a woman who would play a major role in both of their lives. In 1958, Villa met a young woman named Mary Leahy at a SPIRITS OF THE CITY: MISSION DOLORES BASILICA • THE NOB Illustration by Paul Madonna T. he union of the 18th century Mission Dolores and the adjoining 20th century Mission Dolores Basilica is one of the odder visual collisions in San Francisco.. The old adobe mission is simple, squat and unadorned, with its plain whitewashed walls evincing an austere piety. The basilica, by contrast, is the opposite of austere. ART GENSLER • LIVING LEGEND • THE NOB HILL GAZETTE March 1, 2018. 9 minutes read. The master architect on conquering his field, defending Salesforce Tower and why he’s the anti-Howard Roark. “I believe the words ‘I’ and ‘Me’ are all wrong,” he says. “It’s about ‘We’ and ‘Us.’”. Three years ago, Gensler, the San Francisco-based global architecture firm, achieved anew
THE ETERNAL RETURN • THE NOB HILL GAZETTE Before a world can exist, it must be founded, explained the great mythologist Mircea Eliade, and every country, city, and homestead reboots the primordial act of genesis that mimics the divine creation of the world. I once knew a poet of some renown who resided in BIGELOW’S BABBLE ON BY THE BAY: THE COOL KIDS In March 2006, Twitter co-founder Jack Dorsey probably never dreamed that his first tweet released into the world (“just setting up my twttr”) would — 15 years later — sell in March 2021 for $2.9 million in a red-hot art market phenomenon: nonfungible tokens.. Or, as the cool kids say: NFTs. For the rest of us, according to The Verge, NFT is a digital good that lives on the “Ethereum LITERATURE: VENDELA VIDA • THE NOB HILL GAZETTE Vida discusses her writing style and latest literary effort with the Gazette’s Paul Wilner. You reportedly set a goal of writing 500 words a day. How do you deal, if FIVE QUESTIONS WITH MADAME JACQUELINE, CHANEL HAUTE Madame Jacqueline Mercier, Chanel haute couture première, poses in Chanel’s recent pop-up atelier in Silicon Valley. (Drew Altizer) To lovers of haute couture, Madame Jacqueline Mercier is legend. She supervises a team of first-rate seamstresses in the tailleur (tailoring) atelier at Chanel’s Paris mothership on rue Cambon, and had been Karl Lagerfeld’s trusted première for more thanNOB HILL GAZETTE
Since 1978, the Nob Hill Gazette is the publication-of-record for the social, cultural and philanthropic life of San Francisco. THE MISSION SCHOOL ARTISTS' LASTING INFLUENCE IN SAN FRANCISCO The Mission School was being hailed as one of the major art movements to emerge from the 1990s that continues to inspire — and draw enthusiastic collectors. The five key figures identified with the MissionSchool — but not exclusive to the movement —are Johanson, Barry McGee, Ruby Neri, Alicia McCarthy and Margaret Kilgallen. THE FUTURE OF WARD 5B, THE FIRST AIDS INPATIENT UNIT The past is present at Zuckerberg San Francisco General Hospital, where the legacy of the first AIDS inpatient unit continues with a crusade to reduce the City’s HIV infections and deaths. Diane Havlir was a medical student at Duke University when she read about the firstcases of
A BRIEF HISTORY OF THE EVER-CHANGING SAN FRANCISCO BAY In 1961, Sylvia McLaughlin, Kay Kerr, and Esther Gulick took action against filling of the Bay and created the Save San Francisco Bay Association, now known as Save the Bay. 1950s: Save the Bay. The Bay itself was getting smaller and smaller as people built out into it more. There were few recreational areas and almost no beaches. THE NOVEMBER INTERVIEW WITH JANET REILLY: ALL HALE, DENISE By Janet Reilly. November 2, 2019. 7 minutes read. Denise Hale: ““I have a deadly Serbian memory and loyalty to my friends. I lived my life, my way.” (Peter Prato) Denise Hale sips espresso in a fine porcelain cup while holding court in a jewel box alcove adjacent to the living room in her grand Russian Hill home. ART GENSLER • LIVING LEGEND • THE NOB HILL GAZETTE March 1, 2018. 9 minutes read. The master architect on conquering his field, defending Salesforce Tower and why he’s the anti-Howard Roark. “I believe the words ‘I’ and ‘Me’ are all wrong,” he says. “It’s about ‘We’ and ‘Us.’”. Three years ago, Gensler, the San Francisco-based global architecture firm, achieved anew
A LOOK INSIDE NICOLE VIDALAKIS' INDIVIDUALISTIC HOME In the playroom, a collection of milk-glass sculptures is displayed near a Suzanne Q. Egan painting. Over the span of four years, Vidalakis and Swatt conjured a home ideally suited for her and 8-year-old daughter Philomena. The three-level abode is sited on a sloped lot, along with a separate 800-square-foot structure. HISTORIC INAUGURATION OF LONDON BREED BRINGS PLENTY TO Gavin Newsom and London Breed. What a wonderful morning for an inauguration, Ms. Mayor! Indeed, there was not a cloud in the sky when Breed, the first African-American woman to be elected to San Francisco’s highest office, took her oath at City Hall. Hundreds of supporters turned out for the occasion, including Lieutenant GovernorGavin
MONTALVO ARTS CENTER'S FOOD & WINE CLASSIC WOWS ONCE AGAIN September 8. Any event that designates a “wine chair” is promising to be a good time. Such was the case at the 16th annual Montalvo Arts Center’s Food & Wine Classic on September 8, whose organizers tapped the Bay Area’s finest eateries, wineries and entertainers — er, auctiontainers — for a rousingly successful evening that raised $500,000 for the center’s art and education PARCA AUXILIARY LUNCHEON AND FASHION SHOW: LA DOLCE VITA For its 31st benefit, the auxiliary went with a sunny Italian theme, La Dolce Vita, featuring a sumptuous alfresco luncheon, a silent and live auction and two fashion shows of must-haves for the summer and fall seasons. With blue skies turning to gray and a forecast of light raindrops, the auxiliary committee had it all planned when you steppedNOB HILL GAZETTE
Since 1978, the Nob Hill Gazette is the publication-of-record for the social, cultural and philanthropic life of San Francisco. THE MISSION SCHOOL ARTISTS' LASTING INFLUENCE IN SAN FRANCISCO The Mission School was being hailed as one of the major art movements to emerge from the 1990s that continues to inspire — and draw enthusiastic collectors. The five key figures identified with the MissionSchool — but not exclusive to the movement —are Johanson, Barry McGee, Ruby Neri, Alicia McCarthy and Margaret Kilgallen. THE FUTURE OF WARD 5B, THE FIRST AIDS INPATIENT UNIT The past is present at Zuckerberg San Francisco General Hospital, where the legacy of the first AIDS inpatient unit continues with a crusade to reduce the City’s HIV infections and deaths. Diane Havlir was a medical student at Duke University when she read about the firstcases of
A BRIEF HISTORY OF THE EVER-CHANGING SAN FRANCISCO BAY In 1961, Sylvia McLaughlin, Kay Kerr, and Esther Gulick took action against filling of the Bay and created the Save San Francisco Bay Association, now known as Save the Bay. 1950s: Save the Bay. The Bay itself was getting smaller and smaller as people built out into it more. There were few recreational areas and almost no beaches. THE NOVEMBER INTERVIEW WITH JANET REILLY: ALL HALE, DENISE By Janet Reilly. November 2, 2019. 7 minutes read. Denise Hale: ““I have a deadly Serbian memory and loyalty to my friends. I lived my life, my way.” (Peter Prato) Denise Hale sips espresso in a fine porcelain cup while holding court in a jewel box alcove adjacent to the living room in her grand Russian Hill home. ART GENSLER • LIVING LEGEND • THE NOB HILL GAZETTE March 1, 2018. 9 minutes read. The master architect on conquering his field, defending Salesforce Tower and why he’s the anti-Howard Roark. “I believe the words ‘I’ and ‘Me’ are all wrong,” he says. “It’s about ‘We’ and ‘Us.’”. Three years ago, Gensler, the San Francisco-based global architecture firm, achieved anew
A LOOK INSIDE NICOLE VIDALAKIS' INDIVIDUALISTIC HOME In the playroom, a collection of milk-glass sculptures is displayed near a Suzanne Q. Egan painting. Over the span of four years, Vidalakis and Swatt conjured a home ideally suited for her and 8-year-old daughter Philomena. The three-level abode is sited on a sloped lot, along with a separate 800-square-foot structure. HISTORIC INAUGURATION OF LONDON BREED BRINGS PLENTY TO Gavin Newsom and London Breed. What a wonderful morning for an inauguration, Ms. Mayor! Indeed, there was not a cloud in the sky when Breed, the first African-American woman to be elected to San Francisco’s highest office, took her oath at City Hall. Hundreds of supporters turned out for the occasion, including Lieutenant GovernorGavin
MONTALVO ARTS CENTER'S FOOD & WINE CLASSIC WOWS ONCE AGAIN September 8. Any event that designates a “wine chair” is promising to be a good time. Such was the case at the 16th annual Montalvo Arts Center’s Food & Wine Classic on September 8, whose organizers tapped the Bay Area’s finest eateries, wineries and entertainers — er, auctiontainers — for a rousingly successful evening that raised $500,000 for the center’s art and education PARCA AUXILIARY LUNCHEON AND FASHION SHOW: LA DOLCE VITA For its 31st benefit, the auxiliary went with a sunny Italian theme, La Dolce Vita, featuring a sumptuous alfresco luncheon, a silent and live auction and two fashion shows of must-haves for the summer and fall seasons. With blue skies turning to gray and a forecast of light raindrops, the auxiliary committee had it all planned when you stepped HOME, DELIVERED • THE NOB HILL GAZETTE For thousands in Silicon Valley, Bay Area Furniture Bank ensures that shelter comes with dignity. In Sunnyvale, throughout a 40,000-square-foot warehouse that once fabricated marble and granite,are neat piles
UPCOMING EVENTS
Virtual. A virtual fundraiser June 10. 2021, 6 p.m. RSVP OR DONATE AT www.clinicbythebay.givesmart.com 4877 Mission Street, San Francisco, CA 94112 (415) 405-0207 Thank you to all our supporters and sponsors. We couldn’t do what we do without you. Diane B. Wilsey Kathleen Welsh MD and Bill Plautz MD Janet & Clint Reilly AT&T Merchants FRANK RESIDENCES: AT THE INTERSECTION OF LUXURY AND CARING 20 hours ago · At Frank Residences, our person-centered approach to care sets us apart from other Assisted Living and Memory Care communities. When the San Francisco Campus for Jewish Living (SFCJL), known to many as the Jewish Home, started planning its new Assisted Living and Memory Care community several years ago, it knew that it had the opportunity to redefine senior living. DIGITAL EDITION ARCHIVES • THE NOB HILL GAZETTE Since 1978, the Nob Hill Gazette is the publication-of-record for the social, cultural and philanthropic life of San Francisco. A BRIEF HISTORY OF THE EVER-CHANGING SAN FRANCISCO BAY In 1961, Sylvia McLaughlin, Kay Kerr, and Esther Gulick took action against filling of the Bay and created the Save San Francisco Bay Association, now known as Save the Bay. 1950s: Save the Bay. The Bay itself was getting smaller and smaller as people built out into it more. There were few recreational areas and almost no beaches. THE FUTURE OF WARD 5B, THE FIRST AIDS INPATIENT UNIT The past is present at Zuckerberg San Francisco General Hospital, where the legacy of the first AIDS inpatient unit continues with a crusade to reduce the City’s HIV infections and deaths. Diane Havlir was a medical student at Duke University when she read about the firstcases of
THE INTERVIEW: FATHER GREG BONFIGLIO ON THE FUTURE OF Like the rings of trees, the walls are impregnated with people’s prayers,” says Father Greg Bonfiglio of St. Ignatius Church. (Spencer Brown) For more than a century, St. Ignatius Church has stood on the hilltop looking over the University of San Francisco campus. With its sky-high towers and beautifully ornate dome, it is a powerfulSan
HISTORIC INAUGURATION OF LONDON BREED BRINGS PLENTY TO Gavin Newsom and London Breed. What a wonderful morning for an inauguration, Ms. Mayor! Indeed, there was not a cloud in the sky when Breed, the first African-American woman to be elected to San Francisco’s highest office, took her oath at City Hall. Hundreds of supporters turned out for the occasion, including Lieutenant GovernorGavin
WHAT TO DO THIS WEEK: JUNE 10–15 • THE NOB HILL GAZETTE Celebrate Pride with two iconic film screenings at Oracle Park. On Friday, June 11, guests can enjoy In the Heights, and on Saturday, June 12, attendees can take in FIVE QUESTIONS WITH MADAME JACQUELINE, CHANEL HAUTE Madame Jacqueline Mercier, Chanel haute couture première, poses in Chanel’s recent pop-up atelier in Silicon Valley. (Drew Altizer) To lovers of haute couture, Madame Jacqueline Mercier is legend. She supervises a team of first-rate seamstresses in the tailleur (tailoring) atelier at Chanel’s Paris mothership on rue Cambon, and had been Karl Lagerfeld’s trusted première for more thanMenu
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WILLIE BROWN, UNCENSORED The former San Francisco Mayor, now in his 80s, remains as vibrant (and opinionated) as ever. The relentless raconteur and dapper dresser tells all to JANET REILLY in our April cover story,
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THE ART WORLD’S PROBLEM IN SILICON VALLEY With much of the Bay Area working in tech, museums and galleries explore efforts to engage a younger generation. At…April 4, 2020
FUNDRAISING FREE FALL How the coronavirus outbreak has upended the financial outlook for nonprofits. In her nearly 18 years in the nonprofit world,…April 4, 2020
AT HOME WITH ALICE WATERS AND FANNY SINGER Fanny Singer talks her new memoir, shares her must-have kitchen tools, and makes one of her mom’s signature dishes It’s…April 4, 2020
LESLIE BLODGETT’S SECOND ACT Leslie Blodgett has never sold anything the conventional way. She routinely cleared $1.4 million an hour selling her bareMineralsfoundation…
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ELEVEN OF SAN FRANCISCO’S BEST TAKEOUT RESTAURANTS DURINGCORONAVIRUS
You can help keep your favorite eateries in business by ordering food for delivery. When the going gets tough, the…April 4, 2020
THE ESSAY: LETTERS FROM HERB CAEN Basic Mac skills. Suggested typing speed: 50 wpm. Possibly familiar with email. Those bullet points on the job description weren’t…April 7, 2020
THE ART WORLD’S PROBLEM IN SILICON VALLEY With much of the Bay Area working in tech, museums and galleries explore efforts to engage a younger generation. At…April 4, 2020
FUNDRAISING FREE FALL How the coronavirus outbreak has upended the financial outlook for nonprofits. In her nearly 18 years in the nonprofit world,…April 4, 2020
AT HOME WITH ALICE WATERS AND FANNY SINGER Fanny Singer talks her new memoir, shares her must-have kitchen tools, and makes one of her mom’s signature dishes It’s…April 4, 2020
LESLIE BLODGETT’S SECOND ACT Leslie Blodgett has never sold anything the conventional way. She routinely cleared $1.4 million an hour selling her bareMineralsfoundation…
April 8, 2020
ELEVEN OF SAN FRANCISCO’S BEST TAKEOUT RESTAURANTS DURINGCORONAVIRUS
You can help keep your favorite eateries in business by ordering food for delivery. When the going gets tough, the…April 4, 2020
THE ESSAY: LETTERS FROM HERB CAEN Basic Mac skills. Suggested typing speed: 50 wpm. Possibly familiar with email. Those bullet points on the job description weren’t…* 1
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