Still Life

Still Life

Cover | Alejandro Rivera

Still Life, (mixed-media on canvas), 55 x 43 inches. Alejandro Rivera’s paintings transport viewers to a place where time has collapsed, allowing artifacts of disparate civilizations to engage in a continuous and complex dialogue. His works have a labyrinthine, densely narrative quality that both invites and rewards extended contemplation. Rivera’s ability to manipulate symbols has allowed for compositions that speak incisively about the timeless, collective nature of human experience. Indeed, Rivera’s paintings can often be read as allegories of contemporary life—especially in Mexico, where elements of American pop culture have become deeply ingrained in society. Yet for all their depth of symbolism, Rivera’s paintings are not prescriptive. They are, more than anything else, expansive works, testaments to the boundless potential of the human imagination. Courtesy of Caldwell Snyder Gallery, 341 Sutter St., San Francisco, 415-392-2299, and 1328 Main St., St. Helena, 707-200-5050. CaldwellSnyder.com.


NEXT MONTH: Start the new year with the latest in education, the arts, and health as The Monthly explores the arrival of the maker movement to the educational curriculum, considers Art Murmur 2.0, and ponders the growth of alternative and integrative health regiments.


 

Faces of the East Bay

In the Philanthropic Swim

In the Philanthropic Swim

Rockridge residents John Bliss and Kim Thompson may live far removed the gritty flats of East and West Oakland. But this philanthropic couple see themselves as one with the citizens of Oakland, particularly those who are struggling financially, and they’re leading a campaign to get their “financially blessed” peers to invest in the community like they have by funding city programs to teach kids how to swim.