Coming soon
Closing soon
The gallery scene
Ashley Voss updates a local gallery guide weekly. Check out the guide’s Instagram account and website.
At the Museums
California Academy of Sciences
There’s a lot going on here. Through this weekend, there is a Behind-the-Screams Tour, where guests will face skeletons, parasites, bloodsuckers, and more from the collection.
The newly renovated Wilson Family Nature Lab is opened in mid-October with lots of hands-on learning.
WelcomeWinterNight 2024. Courtesy of the California Academy of Science
Nature Lab Opening. Courtesy of the California Academy of Arts
WelcomeWinterNight 2024. Courtesy of the California Academy of Science
WelcomeWinterNight 2024. Courtesy of the California Academy of Science
Coming up on Nov. 22, there is a one-night only Welcome Winter Night, with two baby reindeer (and a naming contest), magic shows, and lots of other activities.
“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.
“Piet Zwart: Brand Architect” opens Nov. 8 with an exhibition reception on Saturday, Nov. 22.
The archive has some cool programming including a sign painting workshop, Nov 1 to Sun, Nov 9. 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.
And an intro tour to the archive on Nov. 7.
See all events and programming here.
“Localization: 15 Years of LetterSeed” opened in mid-August. It explores Korean typography.
A pop-up exhibition co-curated by Chris Hamamoto, Su Hyun Leem, and Jeewoon Jung
The Letterform Archive is a nonprofit arts center focused on graphic design.
“Rave into the Future: Art in Motion” is open. Julie Zigoris writes that the curator, Naz Cuguoğlu, calls it a “love letter to the dance floor,” constructed around nine stages that mimic the experience of going to a rave.” Roombas spewing glitter are part of the after-party.
Spiral, 2016, by Sophia Al-Maria (b. 1983), music by Fatima Al Qadiri (b. 1981, Dakar). Single-channel HD video with sound, 5_02 min (video still). Courtesy of the artist.
Um Al Naar (Mother of Fire), 2019, by Farah Al Qasimi (b. 1991, Abu Dhabi). HD video, color, sound, 40 min. (video still). Courtesy of the artist.
Party on the Caps, 2018–2019, by Meriem Bennani. Single-channel HD video with sound, 25:28 min. (video still). Courtesy of the artist
Untitled (radio tower with accessories), 2023 Plastic, steel, soda-fired ceramic. Courtesy of the artist; Rebecca Camacho Presents, San Francisco; Canada, New York; and Parker Gallery, Los Angeles. Photograph by Robert Divers Herrick
“Jitish Kallat: Covering Letter (Terranum Nuncius)” invites visitors to reflect on the things that unite humanity.
Image: Jitish Kallat, Covering Letter (Terranum Nuncius) (2018–2021), detail and installation view. 116 stereoscopic parallax prints on Plexiglas, programmed LED panels, frames, wooden shelves and bench, 4 horn speakers, video projection. Image courtesy of the artist and Ishara Art Foundation. Photography by Ismail Noor / Seeing Things.
And “This Asian American Life,” by artist and activist Kayan Chung, on the Hyde Street Art Wall, shows scenes from Chinatown from the POV of a child.
Chandigarh-based artist Gurjeet Singh’s show “When Words Hurt” is open through March 23, 2026.
You will also see cutting-edge claywork from Japan in “New Japanese Clay.”
The museum also 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.
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.
Carrie Mae Weems, The Tragedy of Hiroshima, from the series Constructing History, 2008; promised gift of Paul Sack to the Sack Photographic Trust; © Carrie Mae Weems.
Nona Faustine, From Her Body Came Their Greatest Wealth, Wall St, NYC, 2013; San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, purchase through a gift of Ty Ahmad-Taylor and Accessions Committee purchase, by exchange, through a gift of Michael D. Abrams; © Nona Faustine.
Rephotographic Survey Project, Rick Dingus for the Rephotographic Survey Project, 1978. Witches Rocks, Weber Valley, Utah., 1977–79; San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, Accessions Committee Fund purchase; © Rephotographic Survey Project.
Dawoud Bey, Untitled #17 (Forest), from the series Night Coming Tenderly, Black, 2017; San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, Accessions Committee Fund purchase; © Dawoud Bey.
Carla Williams, Side, from the series How to Read Character, 1990, printed 2024; San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, Accessions Committee purchase, by exchange, through a gift of Michael D. Abrams; © Carla Williams.
“Suzanne Jackson: What is Love” includes 80 paintings and drawings, representing the first retrospective of her career. Teresa Moore writes in Mission Local that it “a fitting show for a phenomenal artist.”
Suzanne Jackson, El Paradiso, 1981–84; San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, Accessions Committee Fund purchase, by exchange, through a gift of Michael D. Abrams
Suzanne Jackson, High Frost, 1982; the Joyner/Giuffrida Collection
Suzanne Jackson, a history drawing-cracked wall, 2016–19; collection George and Keren Davis
Portrait of Suzanne Jackson, 2025
“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.
Admission is free on the first Thursday of every month for Bay Area residents, although it is recommended you reserve your ticket in advance. Here is information for free and reduced-price admission.
Legion of Honor Museum
Julie Zigoris writes that “Manet and Morisot” at the Legion of Honor “will give museum-goers the opportunity for the first time to understand how deeply the two French painters were in conversation with one another.”
Berthe Morisot
“Intérieur,” 1872
Oil on canvas, 23 5/8 x 28 11/16 in. (59.944 x 72.898 cm)
Private Collection
Photograph by Randy Dodson, courtesy of the Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco
Édouard Manet
“Boating,” 1874/1879
Oil on canvas, 38 1/4 x 51 1/4 in. (97.2 x 130.2 cm)
The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, H. O. Havemeyer Collection, Bequest of Mrs. H. O. Havemeyer, 1929
“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.
We have a review of the show and a guide to Ferlinghetti’s San Francisco here.
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.
He tended toward the arts, writing his Master’s thesis on John Ruskin and J.M.W. Turner, and his doctorate on “The City as a Symbol in Modern Poetry,” writes Julian Guthrie in her SFGate profile of him.
Lawrence Ferlinghetti
Lawrence Ferlinghetti
The museum offers a Free Saturday campaign throughout the year.
“Printing Color: Chiaroscuro to Screenprint,” closing Jan. 4, promises to take you across time, from 18th Century etchings to contemporary artists like Kiki Smith.
You can view the Legion of Honor’s full list of exhibitions here.
Admission is free every Saturday for Bay Area residents, and the first Tuesday of every month for everyone. If you get into Ferlinghetti‘s history, visit the Counter Culture Museum, City Lights Book Store and the Beat Museum.
There is a lot happening at the de Young this month.
Tagame Gengoroh (田亀源五郎) (born 1964). Cover illustration of the book Christian Art Without Honor and Humanity [Old Testament Edition] (「仁義なき聖書美術【旧約篇】」表紙用装画), 2020
©Gengoroh Tagame
The “Art of Manga” opened last weekend. Mission Local wrote about four fans or experts who caught the manga mania.
“It’s the future visual language,” said the curator Nicole Coolidge Rousmaniere. “Manga is already in textbooks in Japan. The images are carrying the content. It goes to another part of your brain. At the end of the exhibition, you will be fluent in manga.”
The New York Times also has a strong review of the show.
Artist Rose B. Simpson’s show “LEXICON.” opened, and will be available until 2026.
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.”
Rose Simpson rebuild of a Buick Riviera, leaving her shop on the Santa Claran Pueblo, loading with Dylan Madri. Photo courtesy of the artist.
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 Indigeous America galleries.
“Leilah Babirye: We Have a History” opened earlier this summer gives the artist, born in Uganda and based in New York, her first solo show in the United States. It closes May 26, 2026, Babirye creates sculptures in ceramic, wood and discarded objects.
I don’t know her work, but am excited to get to know it. Here is an excellent introductory video with Babirye and the curator of SFMOMA’s African collection, Natasha Becker. Contemporary artists like Babirye are being invited to have their work in conversation with the museum’s excellent permanent collection.
Museum of the African Diaspora
The Museum of the African Diaspora has reopened and has a new exhibition, “Unbound: Art, Blackness and the Universe,” which opened Oct. 1 and runs through Aug. 16, 2026.
Curated by Key Jo Lee, MoAD’s Chief of Curatorial Affairs and Public Programs, the show “invites visitors to reimagine Blackness not as fixed or earthbound, but as infinite — expansive, unknowable, and cosmically rich,” according to the museum’s website.
”Unbound” features a global and intergenerational group of artists, including Lorna Simpson, Rashaad Newsome, Gustavo Nazareno, Harmonia Rosales and Didier William.
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.
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.
Artist-in-residence Catherine Wagner is at 500 Capp St. Her work has long focused on the philosophical and material qualities of the color blue. Her new exhibit is “Blue Reverie” runs through Jan. 10, 2026.
From the website: “Wagner has invited the members of her team to each contribute a piece to Blue Reverie installed in various sites throughout the house including work by Sophia Ramirez, Deirdre Visser, Nathan Kosta, Martín Rodriguez Serrano, Anika Murthy, and TZ Jiang.”
Yerba Buena Center for the Arts
“Bay Area Then” runs through Jan. 25, 2026. It features work by 21 artists from the ’90s and into the new century, including Beatrix Fowler, Arnold Kemp, Margaret Kilgallen, Rigo 23, Spie One, and many others. The quest curator is Eungie Joo.
Entry to YBCA Galleries is free on Wednesdays and second Sundays.
Institute for Contemporary Art
“Midnight March” by Masako Miki and “stay, take your time, my love” by David Antonio Cruz are now open. You may know Miki’s work from her whimsical installations at the Uber headquarters. Cruz’s exhibit includes newly commissioned work “created in response to the queer histories of San Francisco.” Both exhibits close on Dec. 7, 2025.
David Antonio Cruz, “canyoustaywithmetonight_causeyouarehere,youarehere,andweareherewithyou,”
2021.
David Antonio Cruz, “yourenotbymyside_wontyouremember,”
2025.
David Antonio Cruz. “thefogwillrise,theclaydry,andallcoveredindew.ButI’llseeyouwhenthesunsets_causewehavelivingghosts,” 2024
Masako Miki, “Ancient Tree Witness,” 2023,
Wool on XPS foam, walnut wood. Photo: Steve Ferrera, Courtesy of the artist and Jessica Silverman.
Masako Miki, “Revealing Mirror Shapeshifter,” 2022. Photo: Steve Ferrera, Courtesy of the artist and Jessica Silverman.
Masako Miki,
“Midnight March (Blue and Red Violet),” 2025. Photo: Phillip Maisel, Courtesy of the artist and Jessica Silverman.
Museum of Craft and Design (MCD)
“Judith Schaechter: Super/Natural” and “Wunderkammer: The Collection of Susan Beech” are both open until Feb. 8, 2026.
The Chinese Historical Society of America
“Challenging a White-Washed History: Chinese Laundries in the U.S.” is on. Mission Local’s Junyou Yang wrote about the exhibit.
Also at the museum: “We are Bruce Lee: Under the Sky, one family,” and “Living in Chinatown: Memories in Miniature,” sculptures by Frank Wong, who attended Galileo High School, became a set designer and now lives in Chinatown.
San Francisco State University’s Fine Arts Gallery
The gallery will reopen on Dec 2 to 11 for its “38th Annual Stillwell Student Exhibition”
“The Return of Lord Frederick” is a “solo exhibition of recent and restored works that form a pantheon of Lord Frederick‘s personal mythology and display his provocative aesthetic and distinctive handicraft,” according to the Museum’s website. It is on view until Jan. 31, 2026.
I did not know about the Tenderloin Museum until the San Francisco Chronicle wrote about its planned expansion to 10,000 square feet from 3,000, adding a room for 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.
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.
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 Mission Cultural Center for Latino Arts
See the center’s website for offerings.
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.