Things worth sharing:
- Peter Brannen's fascinating book The Ends of the World gave me new appreciation for the work of modern geologists, what we're still learning about Earth's previous mass extinctions, and what said extinctions can teach us about the harm we're currently inflicting on our home planet. Come for the science, stay for the hilarious footnotes.
- The current exhibition of portraits at the SFAC Gallery The Continuous Thread: Celebrating our Interwoven Histories, Identities and Contributions is incredibly moving, and it's just one component of the citywide American Indian Initiative. Check out the full schedule of events here.
- Matt Borruso's show You Live at my fave local gallery Et al. just got extended to October 26, highly recommend carving out some time to experience the succession of images he has woven together for this video installation. I had to hightail it when the snake section started, but you are probably not as phobic as I am.
- I felt lucky to catch HUSH-HUSH at the Berkeley Art Museum Saturday evening in a performance piece called Crummy Sheets in which a trio of artists used a real bed as a platform to explore sleep, dreams, and the concept of home. From their website: "HUSH-HUSH provides a space to blur genres, take risks, and be strange."
- More Terry Fox! The Lab has videos, sound pieces, one of his pendulums, and a slideshow documenting his performances. Go check it out.
- Movies worth revisiting: Florian Henckel von Donnersmarck's 2006 heartbreaker The Lives of Others, and Marjane Satrapi and Vincent Paronnaud's 2007 adaptation of Satrapi's gorgeous graphic novel Persepolis.
- And my local biz rec for the week: Voodoo Love is an authentic slice of New Orleans on a sunny corner in SOMA. They take excellent care of the vegetarians and vegans too.