The American artist’s virtuosic appropriations and reinterpretations of old and new European and American artworks offers insights into his creative process.
Jazz (1947) is considered the culminating masterpiece of Henri Matisse as a graphic artist, reflecting his deeper and more experimental involvement with printmaking and cutouts.
The defining painter of the Art Deco period, Tamara de Lempicka forged a bold cosmopolitan figural style that infused the European pictorial tradition with the energy of American modernity.
One of the San Francisco Bay Area’s most influential and respected artists, Obata found inspiration throughout his life in what he termed “Great Nature.”
Art made in California forms a core component of the Museums’ collection and demonstrates the institution’s history of supporting the region’s artists.
Commemorate the 110th anniversary of the Panama-Pacific International Exposition with vintage reproductions from San Francisco’s 1915 world fair celebrating the Panama Canal’s opening, and the city’s post-1906 earthquake rebirth.