Exquisite examples of Buddhist art from the Himalayan region.
ViewThis collaborative video project captures twenty-four hours in the lives of diverse individuals across the globe.
ViewI Suddenly Hear the Flap of Wings
Commissioned for BAMPFA’s outdoor screen, Kwon’s imaginative digital animation evokes a woman who transformed her apartment into an aviary.
ViewMoletsane’s vibrant, large-scale portraits for the Art Wall draw on both traditional African visual culture and Afrofuturism.
ViewA Community Response to a Citizenship Test
An interactive installation based loosely on the 100 questions used to test aspiring US citizens.
ViewView artworks and ephemera from the Cha archive at BAMPFA in dialogue with her best-known work, the artist's book Dictee.
ViewRecent paintings, sculptures, and drawings that offer both a reflection on our cultural moment and a commitment to the material properties of the art object
ViewCreated in collaboration with a UC Berkeley course, this exhibition explores the cataclysmic end of the Ming dynasty through paintings and literature of China’s long seventeenth century.
ViewThis selection of historical works explores how physical violence and suffering have been represented in art, from the promise of transcendence to political critique.
ViewAl Wong’s photocollage portraits of the sister he never met form a meditation on displacement and the collision between personal and geopolitical histories.
ViewThis annual showcase celebrates the diverse and exceptional work of new graduates from the MFA program at Cal.
ViewWorks dating from the second century through the twentieth reveal how Buddhist power was visually expressed and transmitted throughout Asia.
ViewNew work by two artists who got their start in San Francisco in the 1990s and have maintained a strong artistic dialogue ever since.
ViewRecent additions to the BAMPFA collection feature unusual approaches to color and form—plus a unicorn.
ViewThe first retrospective of an enormously influential artist whose photographs capture the creative subcultures of downtown New York in the 1970s and 1980s.
ViewLeonard’s photographs are rare, intimate documents of life in Oakland in the 1960s and 1970s.
ViewThis first survey of Vicuña’s work stages a conversation about discarded and displaced people, places, and things in a time of global climate change.
ViewThe pioneer of the 1960s design phenomenon Supergraphics creates a new piece for BAMPFA’s Art Wall.
ViewBAMPFA’s outstanding collection of historical European art—including several important new acquisitions—is showcased in this exhibition, the culmination of a major research and conservation effort.
ViewA gathering of paintings by Quarles, whose work tussles with culturally prescribed identities and probes the margins where meaning remains unfixed, illegible, and subject to question.
ViewA selection of works from the BAMPFA collection that use redacted content to question the relationships between power, information, and censorship and consider the precarious nature of truth.
ViewFeaturing works by renowned contemporary Tibetan artists alongside rare historical pieces, this exhibition highlights how artists explore the infinite possibilities of visual forms to reflect their transcultural, multilingual, and translocal lives.
ViewThis new retrospective charts the painter’s career from the 1960s through the 1990s, showcasing abstract experiments in form, texture, and color that are both formally rigorous and rich with sensuality and humor.
ViewDiscover the connections between the scientific and artistic revolutions of the early twentieth century with this groundbreaking exhibition, which reveals how artists responded to scientific advances with bold new forms of creative expression.
ViewAn exceptional selection of scroll paintings, screens, woodblock prints, lacquerware, and ceramics demonstrating the breadth and beauty of Japanese art.
ViewA gallery exhibition and complementary screenings of videos by Arthur Jafa, whose work expands the concept of black cinema while exploring African American experience and race relations in everyday life.
ViewA magical installation inspired by Shinto beliefs and the shape-shifting beings of Japanese folklore.
ViewThe exuberance, romance, and beauty of dance are central themes in this wide-ranging selection of works.
ViewIn these multicolored transformations of computer-generated forms, the artist makes connections between art, science, design, and visual poetry.
ViewSpanning the entirety of the artist’s career, this exhibition presents a fresh and eye-opening examination of Hans Hofmann’s prolific and innovative artistic practice.
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