Puneet Varma (Editor)

Hosfelt Gallery

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Phone
  
+1 415-495-5454

Founded
  
1996

Address
  
260 Utah St, San Francisco, CA 94103, USA

Hours
  
Closed now Tuesday10AM–5:30PMWednesday10AM–5:30PMThursday11AM–7PMFriday10AM–5:30PMSaturday10AM–5:30PMSundayClosedMondayClosed

Similar
  
Anglim Gilbert Gallery, Southern Exposure, Wattis Institute for Contemp, San Francisco Museum, Contemporary Jewish Museum

Profiles

Hosfelt Gallery in San Francisco, California was founded in 1996 by Todd Hosfelt to exhibit contemporary international artists working in all media.

Contents


History

Hosfelt Gallery was founded by Todd Hosfelt in 1996, at 95 Federal Street in San Francisco, adjacent to the visual arts residency program Capp Street Project. In 1999 the gallery moved to a 5,000-square-foot (460 m2) space in San Francisco's South of Market neighborhood on 430 Clementina Street. Designed in 1999 by Fougeron Architecture and Endres Ware Engineers, the architect was awarded for her work on the space.

In 2006, the gallery opened an additional venue, a 7,500-square-foot (700 m2) space at 531 West 36th Street, in Manhattan. In 2012 the gallery expanded to a new 8,900-square-foot (830 m2) San Francisco space at 260 Utah Street.

Hosfelt Gallery was among the first to exhibit such critically acclaimed artists as Shahzia Sikander, Stefan Kürten, Shirin Neshat, Marco Maggi and Jim Campbell.

In 2011, the gallery exhibited work by the late Beat artist Jay DeFeo which was the first exhibition of her work on the West Coast in fifteen years.

Artists represented

Hosfelt Gallery represents emerging to established local and international contemporary artists, including: Liliana Porter, Russell Crotty, Shahzia Sikander, Jim Campbell, John O'Reilly, Marco Maggi, Michael Light, Stefan Kürten, Alan Rath, Jay DeFeo and William T. Wiley.

Since its inception, a focus of Hosfelt's program has been emerging artists. These include Andrew Schoultz, Rina Banerjee, Anoka Faruqee, Emil Lukas, Gideon Rubin, Jutta Haeckel, Driss Ouadahi, Julie Chang, Chris Ballantyne, and Lordy Rodriguez.

References

Hosfelt Gallery Wikipedia