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SFMOMA Ruth Asawa Retrospective Celebrates Her Art and Life as Educator

SFMOMA Ruth Asawa Retrospective Celebrates Her Art and Life as Educator

As a new retrospective of her work and life opens at SFMOMA, we talk about Ruth Asawa’s legacy as an artist, teacher, and community member as part of our Bay Area Legends series.

KQED's Forum

April 11, 202555m 46s

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Show Notes

“An artist is an ordinary person who can take ordinary things and make them special,” said San Francisco artist Ruth Asawa. From her studio in her home in Noe Valley, Asawa created crocheted wire sculptures whose shadows are just as evocative as the art itself. But as the mother of six, Asawa was also passionate about arts education and teaching. As a new retrospective of her work and life opens at SF MOMA, we talk about Asawa’s legacy as an artist, teacher, and community member as part of our Bay Area Legends series.


Guests:

Janet Bishop, Thomas Weisel Family chief curator, SFMOMA; She co-curated the exhibition Ruth Asawa: Retrospective

Terry Kochanski, executive director, SCRAP - a nonprofit education and creative reuse center based in the Bayview and founded in 1976

Andrea Jepson, close friend of Ruth Asawa; Jepson served as the model for the fountain "Andrea" in Ghiradelli Square, and also worked with Asawa on her public school education projects

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