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2022 Benefit Auction

Join 500 Capp Street for our inaugural

BENEFIT AUCTION

Benefit Auction Party
October 13, 6:30pm


Silent Auction Open
September 26 – October 14

We are excited to honor Mildred Howard during 500 Capp Street’s Inaugural Benefit Auction. 

A key figure in the Bay Area art scene, Berkeley-based artist Mildred Howard is known for her stunning large-scale sculptural installations, public artworks, assemblage sculptures, and mixed media works. 

Howard was a part of the Bay Area Conceptual art scene as an up-and-coming artist in the 70s and 80s. Howard and David Ireland share a common interest in the everyday and use light and time as tenants of their practice.

The two artists became long-lasting friends with an introduction through Ireland’s role as Howard’s graduate advisor. When visiting her graduate studio, Mildred states he would be put at ease as he had a deep respect for her practice, stating, “I can finally relax.” He remained encouraging of her work with advice such as “get rid of the clutter” or “paint it out.” The wisdom she learned from Ireland she still passes on to artists she mentors today. Howard credits Ireland as an inspiration for a selection of her works, including Skillet to the Flying Pan: Sitting Black (2007). Read more about Howard here.

BUY YOUR TICKETS

Don’t miss your chance to participate in a lively evening with proceeds funding our exhibitions, programs, and educational workshops in the coming year. We can only continue to encourage artistic experimentation, support new modes of living, and build community with your support. 

VIP Hour featuring

Salimatu Amabebe

To David Ireland, dining was everything. Join Amabebe (they/he) – a Nigerian American Chef, multimedia artist, and founder and director of Black Feast – for a special VIP Hour culinary event at the intersection of food and art.


Special performances by

Newoncé Gazelle

Bateria Batuci

Culinary delights by

Miles Ake

Ryoji Kajikawa

Chef Coco

Drinks by

Fort Point Beer

Ghia

Marioni Wine

PURCHASE TICKETS


Benefit Auction Party

5:30 PM – 6:30 PM – VIP Hour

6:30 PM – 8:30 PM – Festivities & Live Auction

8:30 PM – 10:00 PM – After Party

With special guest chefs, artists, and DJs

Tickets

$150 – Individual Ticket

$500 – VIP Ticket

Sponsorship Levels

$2,500 – Artist Steward 

$5,000 – Education Partner

$7,500 – Community Builder

$10,000 – Creator

Purchase your ticket at 500cappbenefit.givesmart.com

Sponsorship packages include unique opportunities of support tailored to your interest. Contact Julianna Heller at julianna@500cappstreet.org to learn more.  


Silent Auction

Open September 26 – October 14

Place your bids today by clicking the bid button at the top of this page.

Featuring Artwork and Experiences by

Saif Azzuz

Libby Black

Ajit Chauhan

Linda Connor

Rico Duenas

Ricki Dwyer

Ebti

Matt Goldberg

Ann Hatch

Nathan Lynch

Tom Marioni

Daniel Melo Morales

Jim Melchert

Jennie Ottinger

Gay Outlaw

J. John Priola

Rachelle Reichert

Eric Ruby

Amy Trachtenberg

Andy Vogt

Robert Wilhite

Michael Zheng

Minoosh Zomorodinia


Event Co-Chairs

PJ Gubatina Policarpio

David Wilson

Host Committee*

Drew Bennett 

Phoebe Brookbank

Rebecca Camacho

Myles Danielsen

Joanne Easton

Amber Goldstein

Elena Gross

Hilary Hogan

Sophia Kinell

Viet Le

Amelia Manderscheid

Micki Meng

Azzurra Alliata di Montereale

Julie Norris

Laura Pacchini

Lauren Ryan

Ana Saygi

Sarah Wendell Sherrill

Kelsey Shell

Claudia Altman Siegel

Jessica Silverman

Adam Swig

Artist Stewards

 Shawn Byers


Thank You to Our Sponsors!

Honoring Mildred Howard

We are excited to honor Mildred Howard during 500 Capp Street’s Inaugural Benefit Auction. 

A key figure in the Bay Area art scene, Berkeley-based artist Mildred Howard is known for her stunning large-scale sculptural installations, public artworks, assemblage sculptures, and mixed media works. 

Howard was a part of the Bay Area Conceptual art scene as an up-and-coming artist in the 70s and 80s. Howard and David Ireland share a common interest in the everyday and use light and time as tenants of their practice.

The two artists became long-lasting friends with an introduction through Ireland’s role as Howard’s graduate advisor. When visiting her graduate studio, Mildred states he would be put at ease as he had a deep respect for her practice, stating, “I can finally relax.” He remained encouraging of her work with advice such as “get rid of the clutter” or “paint it out.” The wisdom she learned from Ireland she still passes on to artists she mentors today. Howard credits Ireland as an inspiration for a selection of her works, including Skillet to the Flying Pan: Sitting Black (2007).

Howard’s interest in changing the meaning of everyday objects has supported her multifaceted practice. In a 1994 artist talk at InSite in San Diego, she states that she enjoys “using things and everyday objects and changing the meaning of them.” We see this manifested through her large-scale installations—transforming windows or bottles into artworks. She cites memory, music, dance, and literature as inspiration for her art. 

Her poised visual language combined with the social themes of her work call for a sophisticated viewing experience. Her mixed media work is sharp and elegant. In her series The Magnolia Project (2007-2008), she uses buttons and pigmented ink to show recontextualized narratives of womanhood. She has mounted public installations in the Bay Area and beyond which include Frame in Bayview Hunters-Point, Three Shades of Blue (in collaboration with the poet, Quincy Troupe) on the Fillmore Street Bridge, Moving Richmond (with words by poet, novelist, and MacArthur Fellow Ishmael Reed) on the facade on the Richmond BART station, and The Music of Language on the Glide Memorial’s family housing building in San Francisco, and A House That Will Not Stand For Any Color Other Than Its Own, in Battery Park, NYC. 

Active in leading and inspiring her community for decades, Howard served as the director of Alice Waters’ The Edible School Yard at Martin Luther King Middle School in Berkeley providing middle school-aged youth hands-on education in the garden and the kitchen with a focus on sustainable agriculture. She also developed a ciriculum integrating arts and science for the Exploratorium’s Institute for Inquiry program. She has taught at universities Stanford and Brown, San Francisco Art Institute, and California College of the Arts. In 2018, she and her mother, Mable Howard were the focus of Welcome to The Neighborhood, a documentary that focuses on the effects of gentrification on a Black family in South Berkeley, CA. Howard is no stranger to the evolving socio-political, and artistic landscapes of the Bay Area, and uses her practice to create conversation around the futures of art, place, and society. 

Howard received her MFA from John F. Kennedy University, (Orinda, CA) in 1985. She has been the recipient of the Adaline Kent Award (1991) from the San Francisco Art Institute, The Joan Mitchell Foundation award (2004), and The Lee Krasner Award for lifetime artistic achievement (2015), the Flintridge Foundation Award for Visual Art, and The NEA fellowship in sculpture. Her work has been exhibited locally and internationally. She has been the recipient of two Rockefeller Fellowships to Bellagio, Italy (1996, 2007), and has exhibited at Creative Time in New York, InSite in San Diego, CA, The Museum of Glass in Tacoma, and The National Museum of Women in the Art. She is represented by Parrasch Heijnen (Los Angeles, CA), Anglim/Trimble (San Francisco, CA), and Turner Carrol (Santa Fe, NM). Her exhibition The Time and Space of Now is currently being exhibited at the ICA San Jose through February 2023. 

Howard, Skillet to the Flying Pan: Sitting Black (2007)

Get Involved


Support 500 Capp Street

a portal to what’s possible and imaginable!

500 Capp Street’s mission is to encourage artistic experimentation, support new modes of living, and build community— just as David Ireland did during his lifetime.

Join 500 Capp Street’s vibrant community of artists, scholars, neighbors, and friends who shape its future! Every donation is vital to protecting this important cultural treasure and ensuring it remains an accessible space for ongoing artistic dialogue.


Giving Circles

Enhance your experience of 500 Capp Street by joining a Giving Circle. Your contribution ensures the House continues to grow as a dynamic contemporary art space for education, creation, and experimentation for generations to come. 

Provide support while enjoying distinctive privileges and even greater access. For more information contact Cait Molloy at cait@500cappstreet.org

GROUNDBREAKER Giving Circle / $500+

You contribute to breaking the standard of inaccessible art spaces, by making 500 Capp Street an hub for neighbors, artists and the cultural community within and outside the Bay Area, by allowing us to offer free tours.

LIGHTKEEPER Giving Circle / $1,000+

You contribute to keeping our lights on so to speak, sustaining our daily operations, including supporting the artist-guide program, which provides mentorship and jobs to emerging and mid-career artists in the Bay-Area community who want to be involved in an organization. 

KEYHOLDER Giving Circle / $3,000+

You hold the keys to contributing to our dynamic programming of emerging and mid-career artists, our research residency for local Bay Area Artists, and contribute to public programming and educational partnerships.

STABILIZER Giving Circle / $15,000+

You contribute to the stabilization of our foundation and significantly sponsor the funding of our full time and part-time staff.  In addition, you support our fellowship program mentoring students and artists in partnership with the University of San Francisco. You fund projects that are about architecture, adaptive reuse, ecological impact and environmental sustainability to keep 500 Capp Street as a San Francisco heritage site. You also contribute to the upkeep and management of our collection and archives of Bay Area conceptual, contemporary art allowing artists and researchers continued access and inspiration.

For inquiries on donations contact Development Coordinator Rebecca Kaufman at rebecca@500cappstreet.org


Giving Circles 2022

STABILIZER

Gary Schefsky*
Suzanne Helmuth & Jock Reynolds
Kenneth Rainin Foundation
John Sanger
Anonymous

KEYHOLDER

David Wilson*
Peggy Peralta*
Kristina Willemse*
Dan Ake & Peggy Ingalls*
Anne Deveraux-Mills
Joshua Jenkins
Sarah & Stephen Sherrill

LIGHTKEEPER

Mary Valledor
Ann Hatch
Small Works*
Jerlyn Jareunpoon-Phillips*
Julie Norris
Roselyne Swig; in honor of Constance Lewallen

GROUNDBREAKER

John Yoyogi Fortes*
Rico Duenas*
Matthew Katsaros*
Victoria Shen*


Giving Circles 2021

STABILIZER

Dan Ake & Peggy Ingalls*
Suzanne Helmuth & Jock Reynolds
Carlie Wilmans

KEYHOLDER

Berger Family Foundation
Amy Berk*
Rico Duenas*
Evans Hankey & Brooke Lane
The Japan Foundation
Matt Rolandson & Sam Tripodi
John Sanger
Anonymous (2)

LIGHTKEEPER

Philip Anglim
Carla Emil
Dudley & Michael Del Balso
Randi & Bob Fisher
Fraenkel Gallery
Lexie Fisher George & Mark George
Ann Hatch
Mildred Howard
Kenneth Rainin Foundation
Kathy Klausner & Benni Strebel
Tom Loughlin
Jim Melchert
Gay Outlaw & Bob Schmitz
Eugene Whang
Anonymous

GROUNDBREAKER

Kristen Espinosa & Matthew Wright
Kristin Ingram
Kenneth Rainin Foundation
Paco Prieto
The Victorian Alliance of San Francisco
David Wilson
Anonymous

*In-kind donation


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Archival Update

At 500 Capp Street, we preserve all facets of David Ireland’s legacy, even the problematic aspects of his past. We acknowledge that the objects displayed in Ireland’s dining room, including the taxidermied animals and cultural artifacts acquired during  his time as a safari  guide in East Africa, tie him to extractive colonial histories and practices rooted in imperial fascination and exploitation. We also acknowledge how the objects have made the space uncomfortable for the museum’s staff, visitors, and collaborating artists. 

Under our current leadership, we choose to address these issues head on rather than gloss over or hide this layer of Ireland’s life from public view. Through meaningful programming  we will explore how these troublesome histories still resonate in our lives today. In collaboration with our team, researchers, and scholars, we will be hosting a series of programming that asks: how does colonization and the exploitation of people and resources shape the trail of object collection? And, what steps can we take to actively decolonize the root of exhibition-making within a museum context? We look forward to your continued support as we begin sharing this important work-in-progress with you over the coming year.

Photo by Henrik Kam

Broom Collection with Boom

David Ireland, Broom Collection with Boom, 1978/1988. Photograph by Henrik Kam

About David Ireland’s Broom Collection with Boom

Broom Collection with Boom, 1978/1988, is one of the most recognized assemblage and sculptural works by David Ireland. The work was a centerpiece at 500 Capp Street for nearly three decades before its acquisition by SFMOMA in 2007. It is composed of old salvaged brooms left behind by the House’s former owner, accordion maker Paul Greub. These are wired together into a ring and arranged in a clock formation. The brooms stand on their bristles and are arrayed from the least to most worn in a counterbalance, stabilized by a boom. Ireland considered this work a social sculpture because he felt that the brooms were a social instrument of Greub’s day to day existence.

A “Suite of Daze” by William T. Wiley

Suite of Daze is a book of hand drawn etchings and text by artist William T. Wiley. It was printed at Landfall Press in Chicago under the direction of Jack Lemon in 1977. They were printed in an edition of 50 by Timothy Berry of Teaberry Press with the text being set and printed by Holbrook Teter of Spring Creek Typesetting Service. This book was Wiley’s first major venture into the process of etching. It contains a juxtaposition of etchings and typeset text that follow narrative threads of the time Wiley spent in Chicago working on the project. The text narrates the process of creating prints as well as information about I Ching hexagrams divined by Wiley’s coin tosses in the studio. The I Ching is an ancient  Chinese text that expounds on a divination technique in which coins or, more traditionally yarrow stalks, are used to produce six lines that represent numbers and relate to one of sixty-four hexagrams, symbols representing descriptive qualities. Through chance in this way, tossing a coin, and his encounter with the city of Chicago, Wiley created this book as a translation of process through the medium he used. Much like Ireland’s Variation on 79, currently on view and created with assistance from Timothy Berry, Suite of Daze asks us through process and chance to pause with the hope to discover something more about ourselves, the world, or what art can be.    

This can be seen in the Paule Anglim Archive room and can be browsed by appointment. Please contact visit@500cappstreet.org for more information.

This work is on loan from Timothy Berry.

Suite of Daze

William T. Wiley

1977

Hand bound book of limited edition etchings and hand set type on Arches paper with goat skin and chamois cover. 

edition 50

proofed, and printed by Timothy Berry of Teaberry Press; Published by Landfall Press, Inc.