Search Results : Colette Crutcher

Stream of Consciousness

 Posted by on February 25, 2021
Feb 252021
 

February 2021
Bayview / Hunters Point

Hillpoint Park – Picnic Area
Innes Court

Stream of Consciousness is a 120 foot long ribbon of historic, contemporary, and scientific images interspersed with  literary quotes.  The tiles tell the story of water from the depths of the sea to the constellations in the sky.  The images were made by Bayview Hunters Point school children

This piece was funded by the US Department of Commerce, Economic Development Administration. Created by Think Round Inc., the piece was commissioned by the San Francisco Redevelopment Agency, and created by Heidi Hardin working with Colette Crutcher.

The work of Collette Crutcher occupies several posts on this site.  Collette began with painting and printmaking, and then branded out to create a broad spectrum of pieces, from very large to very small, from public to intensely personal, from abstract to figurative, and across a range of media: painting and drawing, collage, assemblage, paper mache, concrete, ceramic and mosaics.

Heidi Hardin is a San Francisco community artist, educator and long-time art advocate who works in the Bayview Hunters Point neighborhood to connect children and youth with the new Shipyard. Hardin is the founder of Think Round, Inc. a non-profit organization that combines well- established educational programs with newly created initiatives, sometimes in partnership with the SFUSD schools in the southeastern neighborhoods.

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Balboa Has its Name up in Mosaic

 Posted by on March 29, 2018
Mar 292018
 

Balboa at 39th and 34th Avenues

Balboa Sign Posts by Colette Crucher

Balboa at 34th Avenue

These two sided sign posts on Balboa street were commissioned by the SF Arts Commission as part of the Balboa Streetscape Improvement Project.  They were created by artist Colette Crutcher, who has been in this site many times.

Mosaic Balboa Sign Posts

Balboa at 34th Avenue

The site of the Balboa Streetscape Improvement Project extends from 34th to 39th Avenue. The $3,200,000 renovation provided a safer and more pleasant environment for pedestrians, motorists, cyclists, and transit riders to enjoy the neighborhood.

Colette Crutcher Balboa Streetscape Improvement Project

Balboa and 39th Avenue. This marker contains film strips in deference to the 90 year old Balboa Theater down the street.

Balboa Streetscape Improvement Project Colette Crutcher

SurfHenge

 Posted by on March 23, 2018
Mar 232018
 

Taraval and 48th Street
Sunset District

Surfhenge

These sculptures designed by DPW landscape architect Martha Ketterer  are part of the Taraval Streetscape Improvement Project.  The design combines the lightness and fragility of surfboards or sails with monumental weight and verticality.  The work was then adorned with tile work by Colette Crutcher suggestng the ceaseless dance of the ocean and its creatures.

SurfHenge by Martha Ketterer and Colette CrutcherSurfhenge is a nickname for Taraval Street.

The $1,600,000. Taraval Streetscape project is part of the revitalization of a neglected neighborhood at San Francisco’s western edge.

Martha Ketterer is a Landscape Architect for the Department of Public Works. She is a San Francisco native and has a degree in Landscape Architecture and Urban Design from UC Berkeley. She also designed these wonderful tree grates in The Mission District.

SurfHenge Colette Crutcher and Martha

Colette Crutcher has been in this site many times before.  She is a multi discipline artist.  She began her career with painting and printmaking but now covers a variety of media.

Taraval Streetscape Improvement Project

*SurfHenge/Taraval Street Mosaics

Dahlias at Cabrillo

 Posted by on March 22, 2018
Mar 222018
 

Cabrillo Playground
853 38th Avenue
Outer Richmond

Dahlias by Colette Crutcher

Cabrillo Playground, and its attached club house were completely renovated with $45 million dollars from the 2008 Clean and Safe Neighborhood Parks Bond. The budget for the art was $35,970.

These lacy flowers are by Colette Crutcher and were inspired by the Dahlia Garden that is attached to the park.

Photo courtesy of SF Park Alliance

Photo courtesy of SF Park Alliance

The artwork is comprised of flower imagery fabricated in galvanized iron lacework, incorporated along fence panels on 38th and 39th avenues at Cabrillo Avenue, with an overall dimension of 121 in. by 299 in. at 38th Avenue; and 121 in. by 222 in. at 39th Avenue.

Dahlias by Colette Crutcher

Colette Crutcher is not only a friend of this author, but has been in this site many times before for her work throughout San Francisco.

Dahlias at Cabrillo Playground

The wire sculpture was manufactured by Lace Fence.

Dahlias by Colette Crutcher at Cabrillo Playground

The Clubhouse was originally built in 1938.

Cabrillo Playground Clubhouse

Arelious Walker Stairway

 Posted by on May 5, 2014
May 052014
 

Innes Avenue
Bay View / Hunters Point

Arelious Walker Stairway

This was the proposal that was written for the Call for Artists by the SFAC:

The Arelious Walker Drive Stair replacement is a dynamic community project in partnership with the San Francisco Redevelopment Agency and the Department of Public Works to create ceramic tile mosaic steps on the Arelious Walker Drive extending uphill from Innes Avenue to Northridge Road in the Bay View Hunters Point neighborhood. The stairway provides a vital connection from an isolated low-income community to the India Basin Shoreline, the Bay Trail, Herons Head Park, and future development at Hunters Point Shipyard. The mosaic steps project will enhance the character and livability of the surrounding area so that it becomes a gathering place consistent with the nature and spirit of the neighborhood. The project will also beautify the site by landscaping it with California native plants, succulents, and other drought tolerant species to attract birds, butterflies, and other wildlife.

Stairways of San Francisco

The new stair comprises 87 equal steps, each measuring four feet wide (4’) and seven inches high (7”). Each riser will be faced in ceramic tile mosaic ½ inch thick.

Stairways of San Francisco

The artists chosen are the same lovely ladies that are responsible for two tiled stairways in Golden Gate HeightsColette Crutcher and Aileen Barr.  Both ladies have been in this website many times before.  The cost for the installation was slated to be $90,000.

Arelious Walker Stairway

 

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Tile Stairs in Hunters Point*

Aileen Bar, Colette Crutcher*

Bayview hunters point tile stairway*

Collette Crutcher Aileen Bar Stairways

 

 

 

Tiled Stairways to Heaven

 Posted by on January 9, 2014
Jan 092014
 

Golden Gate Heights
16th Avenue between Kirkham and Lawton

Stairways of San Francisco

This is the second project by Aileen Barr and Colette Crutcher covering stairways in the Golden Gate Heights area. You can read about both of them and their first project here.

Stairways of San Francisco

 

This project was made possible by a group called Hidden Garden Steps.  According to their website: The Hidden Garden Steps Project is a community-based, public art initiative to create mosaic steps, a public garden and a wall mural on 16th Avenue extending uphill from Kirkham to Lawton in the Golden Gate Heights/Inner Sunset neighborhood. Formal partners include the San Francisco Parks Alliance, the San Francisco Department of Public Works Street Parks program, and artists Colette Crutcher and Aileen Barr who designed the Moraga Mosaic Steps. Other collaborations include the Inner Sunset Park Neighbors, the Golden Gate Heights Neighborhood Association, Woodside International School, volunteers from Nature in the City’s Green Hairstreak (Butterfly) Ecosystem Corridor project, and individual local merchants.

Colette Crutcher and Aileen Barr

 

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Hidden Stairways of San Francisco*

16th Avenue Tile Stairs*

DSC_2477*

16th Avenue Stairways*

Aileen Barr and Collette Crutcher*

Tile Stairways of San Francisco*

Mosaic Stairways*

Mosaic Tile Stairway Art*

16th Street San Francisco Tile Work*

Tile Mosaics of San Francisco

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

La Madre Tonantsin

 Posted by on November 27, 2012
Nov 272012
 

3495 16th Between Sanchez and Dehon
Castro District

Colette Crutcher is a multi discipline artist. Her career began with painting and printmaking, but now covers a broad spectrum, from very large to very small, from public to intensely personal, from abstract to figurative, and across a range of media: painting and drawing, collage, assemblage, paper mache, concrete, ceramic and mosaics.

According to Collete’s website: This mural is a renovation of La Madre Tonantsin, a similar mural I painted there in 1991. The original fence was rotting, and along with it the mural. A grassroots fundraising campaign, helped by a grant from Precita Eyes, enabled me to create this new version. Rather than sticking to paint alone, I incorporated a variety of semi-sculptural media. (The mural was done in 1998)

The piece was made for the headquarters of the Instituto Pro Musica, an organization dedicated to the performance of music old and new from Spain and Latin America. I sing with their choral group, Coro Hispano de San Francisco, and used my artwork to express feelings evoked by this powerful musical heritage. The goddess represented is Tonantsin, the mother of the Aztec gods. I am not particularly well-versed in pre-Columbian religious practices; I just used the theme as a springboard for my imagination.

Playthings of the Wind

 Posted by on November 24, 2012
Nov 242012
 

1199 Mason at Washington
Chinatown
Betty Ong Chinese Recreation Center

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Colette Crutcher’s mosaic mural, titled Playthings of the Wind, located in the playground of the new center, honors China’s 2000-year tradition of kite making. The mural depicts a young child, in traditional dress, holding a string attached to a butterfly kite, which is joined among the swirling clouds and sun by two other kites in the form of a “flying lizard” and bat. The mural continues onto an adjacent wall with a depiction of a dragon kite. Using a combination of stained glass, mirror, broken fragments of Chinese cookery and commercial and handmade tiles, Crutcher captures the kites’ simple, yet fanciful, geometric forms that make it possible for them to defy gravity.

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Ocean View Branch Library

 Posted by on December 16, 2011
Dec 162011
 
Ocean View Public Library
345 Randolph, San Francisco

The front of the Ocean View library is adorned with two marvelous sculptures on either side of the door.  It was done out of cast Glass Fiber Reinforced Concrete with integral color.

The left panel shows a young tree, with landmarks of the old Oceanview District, some still standing and some now gone, in the background.
The artists are husband and wife team Mark Roller and Colette Crutcher.  According to Colette’s website it was made under the auspices of the San Francisco Arts Commission for the new branch library in the Oceanview District, at Randolph and Ramsell St., near the southern boundary of the city. Neighbors from the area had petitioned the City for a new library in this sadly neglected community. They wanted aspects of the history of their neighborhood to be included in the artwork.  Colette and Mark have been in this website before and will be featured in the future as well.  Not only are they friends of mine, but they are a vital part of the public art scene in San Francisco.
The panel on the right features a mature tree and a representation of the present/future of the District. Both trees bear fruit adorned with letters and symbols representing the languages and traditions of world culture

The round circles are letters from various alphabets around the world, the one on top is Thai, the one on the bottom is cyrilic.

Ocean View Branch Library was the 15th branch established in the San Francisco Public Library system. The first Ocean View Branch Library opened in 1903 on Broad Street near the corner of Capitol Avenue. The new Ocean View Branch Library, at 345 Randolph Street, was opened on June 7, 2000. It was the first branch building to be built in San Francisco since 1969. The San Francisco Bureau of Architecture designed the two-story building. The cost of the building was $2.5 million. Private funds were raised for the equipment and furniture within the branch.
Jul 012011
 
24th and York

This is another mosaic by  Colette Crutcher, this time, in collaboration with her husband, Mark Roller and friend Aileen Barr.   The park is at 24th and York in San Francisco.  It is a wonderful little mini park in a terrific part of the Mission District. This giant mosaic statue of the Mesoamerican snake-god Quetzalcoatl and it’s playful fountain is the focal point of the park.  Quetzalcoatl started as a concrete structure and then was covered with broken commercial tile, and hundreds of handmade tiles.
The park used to be a neighborhood eyesore, filled with pretty scary folks just lounging in the park, but thanks to a million-dollar 2006 beautification project, the 24th & York Street Mini Park was transformed into an urban oasis.
Across the street is the vintage St. Francis Soda Fountain, where you can get milkshakes and sandwiches like when you were a kid, or just hang out and wait for the strolling ice cream carts to come by.
This part of town is covered with murals, thanks primarily to Precita Eyes.  Precita Eyes was established in 1977 as an inner city, community based, mural arts organization.  I will be coming back to them from time to time as I explore the murals in this neighborhood over the next few days.
All of Quetzalcoatl with the fountain running.  This is one of those fountains, that turns itself on and off and surprises you, but it is so warm in this part of town, that it is often welcoming.
Most of the walls in the park are covered in murals. Many of them by Michael Rios, who designed many of Carlos Santana’s album covers in the 1970’s.  Carlos Santana and Rios grew up in the neighborhood and Rios still lives there.
These three pieces are pierced steel.  They remind me of pierced steel lamps you find all over Mexico, but I could find nothing about them, nor who made them.
Jun 302011
 

This amazing set of stairs is at 16th Avenue and Moraga in San Francisco.  The artists are Colette Crutcher and Aileen Barr.   This 163 step stairway was a collaboration of the Golden Gate Heights Neighborhood Association and the San Francisco Parks Trust.  Colette and Aileen led a group of over 300 volunteers in making 163 mosaic panels, with over 200 neighbors sponsoring handmade tiles that are embedded in the mosaic.  Colette and Aileen wrote an amazing book about the project, and you can buy it through a link on Colette’s website. I suggest you visit the stairs yourself, enjoy the mosaics and climb them, the view at the top is absolutely unbelievable!

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