{"id":183264,"date":"2026-02-18T18:29:10","date_gmt":"2026-02-18T18:29:10","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.newsbeep.com\/us-ca\/183264\/"},"modified":"2026-02-18T18:29:10","modified_gmt":"2026-02-18T18:29:10","slug":"lily-kwong-and-tara-donovan-on-their-ica-san-francisco-exhibitions","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.newsbeep.com\/us-ca\/183264\/","title":{"rendered":"Lily Kwong and Tara Donovan On Their ICA San Francisco Exhibitions"},"content":{"rendered":"<p><img src=\"https:\/\/www.harpersbazaar.com\/_assets\/design-tokens\/fre\/static\/icons\/clock-regular.4ddebeb.svg\" alt=\"Estimated read time\" width=\"16\" height=\"16\" decoding=\"async\" loading=\"lazy\"\/>8 min read<\/p>\n<p data-journey-content=\"true\" data-node-id=\"0\" class=\"body-dropcap css-1vn2egp emevuu60\">In the middle of downtown San Francisco, a public Redwood Park emerges from among skyscrapers. The site epitomizes the city\u2019s unique combination of nature and industry. It\u2019s a great place for a pair of new exhibitions: Tara Donovan\u2019s Stratagems and Lily Kwong\u2019s Earthseed Dome,  are the first installations to be commissioned by the <a href=\"https:\/\/www.icasf.org\/\" target=\"_blank\" data-vars-ga-outbound-link=\"https:\/\/www.icasf.org\/\" data-vars-ga-ux-element=\"Hyperlink\" data-vars-ga-call-to-action=\"ICA San Francisco\" data-node-id=\"0.5\" class=\"body-link css-1a58m3o emevuu60\" rel=\"nofollow noopener\">ICA San Francisco<\/a> in its new, nomadic model, headed by director Ali Gass. Gass always conceived of the Institute, which she founded in 2022, as nimble and oriented towards social justice; her new model, according to the museum, embraces Silicon Valley\u2019s start-up spirit while bringing work directly to the public it serves.   <\/p>\n<p data-journey-content=\"true\" data-node-id=\"1\" class=\"css-6wxqfj emevuu60\">Donovan is known for large-scale sculptures of accumulated, everyday objects. In 2024, she mounted Aggregations at the Bruce Museum in Greenwich, CT, featuring tens of thousands of acrylic rods that altogether shone and bulged like the gemstones nearby. Her Stratagems is a series of torquing and towering sculptures made entirely of recycled CDs, that appear like translucent pillars in the lobby of downtown San Francisco\u2019s Transamerica Pyramid Center. <\/p>\n<p data-journey-content=\"true\" data-node-id=\"2\" class=\"css-6wxqfj emevuu60\">Kwong began her career as a landscape designer and, in 2023, curated the New York Botanical Garden\u2019s Orchid Show. In recent years, she\u2019s ventured deeper into sculptural and photographic practices that keep the natural world at their heart. Her installation resides in the Transamerica Redwood Park, where she has fabricated Earthseed Dome from 3D-printed earth, seeded with native plants. Visitors can take their own seed packets from 20 pockets throughout the work. The program is a partnership with the <a href=\"https:\/\/www.altadenaseedlibrary.com\/\" target=\"_blank\" data-vars-ga-outbound-link=\"https:\/\/www.altadenaseedlibrary.com\/\" data-vars-ga-ux-element=\"Hyperlink\" data-vars-ga-call-to-action=\"Altadena Seed Library\" data-node-id=\"2.3\" class=\"body-link css-1a58m3o emevuu60\" rel=\"nofollow noopener\">Altadena Seed Library<\/a>, founded by Nina Raj, which focuses on seed saving, stewardship, and repopulating local gardens in the wake of last year\u2019s brutal fires. <\/p>\n<p data-journey-content=\"true\" data-node-id=\"4\" class=\"css-6wxqfj emevuu60\">The projects share an interest in data. Donovan\u2019s sculptures contain digital information, rendered unusable in the CDs\u2019 new aesthetic form, while Kwong is programming a robotic arm to print building blocks of her overall structure, and the seeds contain information that allows them to bloom. The two artists recently connected via Zoom\u2014Donovan in her Brooklyn Navy Yard studio, and Kwong at home in the Bay Area\u2014for a conversation about transcendence, motherhood, and the magic of the natural world. <\/p>\n<p><img draggable=\"true\" alt=\"outdoor space with unique structure and people relaxing\" title=\"A visual rendering of Lily Kwong's \ufeffEarthseed Dome.\" loading=\"lazy\" width=\"3840\" height=\"2160\" decoding=\"async\" data-nimg=\"1\" style=\"color:transparent;width:100%;height:auto;\"   src=\"https:\/\/www.newsbeep.com\/us-ca\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/02\/2-earthseed-dome-2-c-lily-kwong-in-collaboration-with-atelio-6995f3981da86.jpg\" class=\"css-0 e1g79fud0\"\/>\u00a9 Lily Kwong_In Collaboration with Atelio.<\/p>\n<p>A visual rendering of Kwong\u2019s Earthseed Dome.<\/p>\n<p data-journey-content=\"true\" data-node-id=\"7\" class=\"css-6wxqfj emevuu60\">Tara Donovan: We didn\u2019t really have that much time to chat during install, did we? We were in different spaces, doing what we each needed to do. I made my sculptures in my studio, shipped them in crates, deinstalled them, arranged them, and worked on lighting. You\u2019re making your work in public. That\u2019s extremely courageous. <\/p>\n<p data-journey-content=\"true\" data-node-id=\"8\" class=\"css-6wxqfj emevuu60\">Lily Kwong: I\u2019ve been on-site for weeks, printing earth every day. I\u2019ve been watching your sculptures live and grow and really embody this space, t.hey Your sculptures feel like a species of trees, deeply connected to the ecology of the Redwood Park, though they\u2019re made from these non-recyclable, obsolete elements. <\/p>\n<p data-journey-content=\"true\" data-node-id=\"9\" class=\"css-6wxqfj emevuu60\">TD: I wanted my sculptures to relate to the skyscraper architecture, which reminds me of a 1970s greenhouse. But their color and bark-like texture matches the trees. I\u2019m always relying on the limitations of my material, yet my work ends up looking organic. Here, I\u2019m basically working with a circle, the primordial symbol of unity.<\/p>\n<p data-journey-content=\"true\" data-node-id=\"10\" class=\"css-6wxqfj emevuu60\">LK: Nature has such a mathematical, organized logic. The pattern on the exterior of my sculpture comes from the radial design of Redwood seeds. <\/p>\n<p data-journey-content=\"true\" data-node-id=\"11\" class=\"css-6wxqfj emevuu60\">TD: I&#8217;d been to San Francisco, but I had never been to the Trans America Building until the site visit for this project. Before I got there and saw the redwoods, I didn\u2019t really believe it or get it. <\/p>\n<p data-journey-content=\"true\" data-node-id=\"12\" class=\"css-6wxqfj emevuu60\">LK: Growing up, you did not go to the Transamerica Building. I went to a little art school in the Haight, and I was downtown all the time, and in the Mission, and that area was just for business. It felt closed off, energetically. Now it\u2019s opened up with exhibitions and events for students and for SF Art Week. It\u2019s a testament to SHVO and the development team. <\/p>\n<p data-journey-content=\"true\" data-node-id=\"13\" class=\"css-6wxqfj emevuu60\">TD: I read that the building was designed to bring more light to the park. I love that. <\/p>\n<p data-journey-content=\"true\" data-node-id=\"14\" class=\"css-6wxqfj emevuu60\">LK: I had a very surreal, inspirational meeting with your Bruce Museum sculpture. I saw it with my young son who circled the work with childlike wonder. My whole career, I\u2019ve found people quite landscape blind. To get New Yorkers to notice orchids, I used 20,000 of them. I want people to see and feel something that\u2019s gone unnoticed. Your work did that for me. The Bruce Museum has that amazing collection of gems and minerals, and your work echoes the geodes in a way that doesn\u2019t feel like mimicry but like human genius. Where does a piece like that begin? <\/p>\n<p data-journey-content=\"true\" data-node-id=\"15\" class=\"css-6wxqfj emevuu60\">TD: All my work begins with the material. In that case, three different sizes of square acrylic rods. I wanted this straight, rigid material to capture the light and appear fiber optic. Basically, I made forks. I glued two shorter acrylic rods to either side of these larger rods. Imagine a \u201cY.\u201d Then I could build outward. A steel armature holds it all together. <\/p>\n<p><img draggable=\"true\" alt=\"san francisco, ca january 15 atmosphere at ica sf vip opening at transamerica pyramid center on january 15th 2026 at transamerica pyramid annex in san francisco, ca (photo devlin shand for drew altizer photography)\" title=\"Stratagems (installation view), 2026. CDs, concrete, stainless steel. \u00a9 Tara Donovan.\" loading=\"lazy\" width=\"5000\" height=\"3333\" decoding=\"async\" data-nimg=\"1\" style=\"color:transparent;width:100%;height:auto;\"   src=\"https:\/\/www.newsbeep.com\/us-ca\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/02\/1-9007-ica-sf-vip-opening-at-transamer-ica-pyramid-center-photo-drew-altizer-photography-260115-6995.jpeg\" class=\"css-0 e1g79fud0\"\/>Drew Altizer Photography<\/p>\n<p>Stratagems (installation view), 2026. CDs, concrete, stainless steel. \u00a9 Tara Donovan.<\/p>\n<p data-journey-content=\"true\" data-node-id=\"17\" class=\"css-6wxqfj emevuu60\">LK: How do you choose an object? Why a CD-ROM? <\/p>\n<p data-journey-content=\"true\" data-node-id=\"18\" class=\"css-6wxqfj emevuu60\">TD: The hardest part is figuring out my next material. I&#8217;m generally attracted to uniform, mass-manufactured things in the everyday world. I look for a peculiar trait that will activate something external when the material accumulates. The internet has made it harder. In the past, I\u2019d wander Walmart or go to weird surplus places that don&#8217;t exist anymore. They&#8217;re online, and I need to touch things, hear them, buy small amounts and experiment. <\/p>\n<p data-journey-content=\"true\" data-node-id=\"19\" class=\"css-6wxqfj emevuu60\">For this project, I bought a bag of CDs at a thrift store, and they sat around for months. I\u2019d forgotten that they\u2019re reflective, transparent when you look through the edge. I started gluing them face to face, to get rid of the label, so they wouldn\u2019t have a muddy cacophony of color. That became my single unit. I love a meditative process, and it became an exercise in stacking and figuring out different ways to stack, overlapping and gluing these pieces in different sculptural profiles, making sure they wouldn\u2019t fall over. Right now, I\u2019m trying to find my next material.<\/p>\n<p data-journey-content=\"true\" data-node-id=\"20\" class=\"css-6wxqfj emevuu60\">LK: I\u2019d think the internet would make things easier. <\/p>\n<p data-journey-content=\"true\" data-node-id=\"21\" class=\"css-6wxqfj emevuu60\">TD: Everything is made in China. Often, I can only access mass manufacturers through WhatsApp. You can find earth and seeds, so you don&#8217;t have that problem. <\/p>\n<p data-journey-content=\"true\" data-node-id=\"22\" class=\"css-6wxqfj emevuu60\">LK: We wanted to use native earth and soil, and that led to complications. We did a lot of our testing in Italy, where these machines are fabricated by a company called WASP. Then we moved to San Francisco and started sourcing mulch, clay, earth, and sandy loam, all from Northern California. It has different dry times, colors, textures. We had to rejigger our formulations.  <\/p>\n<p data-journey-content=\"true\" data-node-id=\"23\" class=\"css-6wxqfj emevuu60\">TD: You\u2019re using a robotic arm. Is its specific function to print Earth? <\/p>\n<p><img draggable=\"true\" alt=\"a view of the machine printing the blocks that will make up earth dome\ufeff's structure.\" title=\"a view of the machine printing the blocks that will make up earth dome\ufeff's structure.\" loading=\"lazy\" width=\"4320\" height=\"2880\" decoding=\"async\" data-nimg=\"1\" style=\"color:transparent;width:100%;height:auto;\"   src=\"https:\/\/www.newsbeep.com\/us-ca\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/02\/17-icasf-transamerica-pyramid-center-lily-kwong-sp26-6995f57a7fe82.jpg\" class=\"css-0 e1g79fud0\"\/>Photo by Nicholas Lea Bruno, courtesy of ICA SF<\/p>\n<p>A view of the machine printing the blocks that will make up Earth Dome\u2019s structure.<\/p>\n<p data-journey-content=\"true\" data-node-id=\"25\" class=\"css-6wxqfj emevuu60\">LK: No, the robotic arm can print all sorts of materials. But the machine that feeds the arm is specifically designed to print earth. WASP\u2019s machines are more aligned with sustainability goals than many 3D printing outfits, who focus on plastics or concrete. We have two machines running. One prints a geomix of limestone and marble that\u2019s more structural. Another, smaller machine prints the living, seeded soil mix. <\/p>\n<p data-journey-content=\"true\" data-node-id=\"26\" class=\"css-6wxqfj emevuu60\">I\u2019ve been hesitant to work with technology. My mission has been to reconnect people to the natural world with tactile experiences. But I\u2019m working in San Francisco during a tech revolution. I\u2019m thinking about AI and robotics. I\u2019m asking how humanity and the natural world can collaborate with these new technologies in a meaningful way that doesn&#8217;t destroy the planet. And you don\u2019t just write the program. It&#8217;s this labor intensive, physical process. We&#8217;re hand-mixing buckets of soil or geomix and feeding this machine that needs constant tending. You still can\u2019t control weather or drying times. And seed germination depends on warmth and humidity. We\u2019ve done a rigorous site analysis and sunshade studies, but how these seeds react to the environment is a bit out of our control. The unpredictability makes it exciting. <\/p>\n<p data-journey-content=\"true\" data-node-id=\"27\" class=\"css-6wxqfj emevuu60\">TD: Will you have to water it?<\/p>\n<p data-journey-content=\"true\" data-node-id=\"28\" class=\"css-6wxqfj emevuu60\">LK: We fabricated a built-in irrigation system. This piece is a seed dispersal hub. We&#8217;re going to disperse 1000s of packets of seeds, all native. I love their ecological power and their metaphorical dimension. They embody hope, stewardship, and new life. We\u2019re creating this ecological corridor in downtown San Francisco where people can touch the sculpture, dig their hands in, take these seeds, and disperse them in a backyard or highway median or neighborhood. The ecological footprint goes beyond the project. <\/p>\n<p data-journey-content=\"true\" data-node-id=\"29\" class=\"css-6wxqfj emevuu60\">TD: You&#8217;ve transitioned into making these more sculptural works in the last year or so. <\/p>\n<p data-journey-content=\"true\" data-node-id=\"30\" class=\"css-6wxqfj emevuu60\">LK: I had my first child in 2021 and my second in 2023. It\u2019s a surreal, transcendent act, to grow and birth a child. It opened a creative portal for me. I thought: why not create a sculpture or a new body of work? I felt empowered by the instrument of my body. And I want to show my kids something cool and exciting that will make them proud. I became more daring and focused, because I have a fraction of the time. I\u2019ve had this explosion of experimentation, between this more sculptural approach and my \u201clumens,\u201d a body of photographic work I showed with Night Gallery, created in the wake of what was supposed to be my maternity leave with my daughter. <\/p>\n<p><img draggable=\"true\" alt=\"stratagems (installation view), 2026. cds, concrete, stainless steel. \u00a9 tara donovan.\" title=\"stratagems (installation view), 2026. cds, concrete, stainless steel. \u00a9 tara donovan.\" loading=\"lazy\" width=\"2880\" height=\"4320\" decoding=\"async\" data-nimg=\"1\" style=\"color:transparent;width:100%;height:auto;\"   src=\"https:\/\/www.newsbeep.com\/us-ca\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/02\/4-icasf-transamerica-pyramid-center-tara-donovan-sp26-6995f999e2d1a.jpg\" class=\"css-0 e1g79fud0\"\/>Photo by Nicholas Lea Bruno, courtesy of ICA SF<\/p>\n<p>Stratagems (installation view), 2026. CDs, concrete, stainless steel. \u00a9 Tara Donovan.  <\/p>\n<p data-journey-content=\"true\" data-node-id=\"32\" class=\"css-6wxqfj emevuu60\">TD: A lot of my earlier work was assembled on site. After I had kids, I couldn\u2019t crawl around on the floor in Germany for months. I&#8217;ve adapted how I make things so that they can get moved, and installation takes five days instead of 18.<\/p>\n<p data-journey-content=\"true\" data-node-id=\"33\" class=\"css-6wxqfj emevuu60\">LK: I read that you went to Catholic school in New York. My mom and aunts did too. I perceive a spiritual element in your work. <\/p>\n<p data-journey-content=\"true\" data-node-id=\"34\" class=\"css-6wxqfj emevuu60\">TD: I was raised in a very Irish Catholic house. Before my mother got married, she considered becoming a nun. As a teenager, I rejected Catholicism and explored other religions. I went to a Baptist church. I went down a rabbit hole of Rudolf Steiner and anthroposophy. Since then, I\u2019m just an atheist. But I believe in the spirit in objects. There is some numinous quality, a magic, that stems from being blown away by nature. Even something as simple as driving on the highway, past a cornfield, watching the rows ripple past. Or the fog.<\/p>\n<p data-journey-content=\"true\" data-node-id=\"35\" class=\"css-6wxqfj emevuu60\">LK: I also draw spiritual direction from the natural world, especially having grown up here. The redwoods have given me so much inspiration. To be able to create this work in a Redwood Grove is a blessing. I\u2019m honored to create alongside these beings, these incredible trees.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"8 min read In the middle of downtown San Francisco, a public Redwood Park emerges from among skyscrapers.&hellip;\n","protected":false},"author":2,"featured_media":183265,"comment_status":"","ping_status":"","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[30],"tags":[86678,47544,86676,9569,9568,101,103,102,104,106,105,86675,86677],"class_list":{"0":"post-183264","1":"post","2":"type-post","3":"status-publish","4":"format-standard","5":"has-post-thumbnail","7":"category-san-francisco","8":"tag-books-music","9":"tag-content-type-news","10":"tag-contentid-9a876b1e-2b38-4858-976d-0b1db3b8a056","11":"tag-displaytype-standard-article","12":"tag-locale-us","13":"tag-san-francisco","14":"tag-san-francisco-headlines","15":"tag-san-francisco-news","16":"tag-sf","17":"tag-sf-headlines","18":"tag-sf-news","19":"tag-shorttitle-lily-kwong-and-tara-donovan-on-making-and-motherhood","20":"tag-subsection-art"},"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.newsbeep.com\/us-ca\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/183264","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.newsbeep.com\/us-ca\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.newsbeep.com\/us-ca\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.newsbeep.com\/us-ca\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/2"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.newsbeep.com\/us-ca\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=183264"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/www.newsbeep.com\/us-ca\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/183264\/revisions"}],"wp:featuredmedia":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.newsbeep.com\/us-ca\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media\/183265"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.newsbeep.com\/us-ca\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=183264"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.newsbeep.com\/us-ca\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=183264"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.newsbeep.com\/us-ca\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=183264"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}