Sonya Rapoport (1923-2015) lived in Berkeley and engaged in campus life for nearly six decades. It is fitting that Berkeley Art Museum/Pacific Film Archive added two important works to their permanent collection from the Sonya Rapoport Legacy Trust.
Read MoreThis conversation is part of a series of interviews with families and individuals who collected and preserved the legacy of Carl Heidenreich for the past half-century.
Read MoreSan Francisco artist Ed Aulerich-Sugai died of AIDS in 1994. A quarter-century later, KunstWorks is working with the partners who survived him to honor his art and life.
Read MoreFor the current issue of Art Journal, Alla Efimova was interviewed by Rachel Middleman about preserving artists' estates.
Read MoreChristopher Squier considers the work of artist Carole Doyle Peel (1934–2016) on view at Kala Art Gallery, Berkeley, from April 30 to May 3, 2017.
Read MoreWe are proud to have worked with the Estate of Carole Doyle Peel to realize the artist's vision. Peel was a graduate of University of California Berkeley's Department of Art and taught drawing at California College of the Art for over forty years.
Read MoreIn the last decade of his life, while living in the Sierra Foothills, Guyer created a series of paintings of trees that explore the border between nature and abstraction. For the first time, a group of these is shown in the Bay Area, thanks to the efforts of Guyer's family and North Berkeley Investment Partners.
Read MoreFor Performa Magazine, Alla Efimova and Terri Cohn discuss Sonya Rapoport's painting Koch II (1973-1975) now on view at the Berkeley Art Museum/Pacific Film Archive as part of Hippie Modernism: The Struggle for Utopia.
Read MoreJoin me at North Berkeley Investment Partners for a unique learning opportunity designed for professionals who encounter art legacy issues with their clients.
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