San Francisco Art Exchange
The San Francisco Art Exchange is a gallery in San Francisco, California, United States, founded in 1983.
The gallery first rose to prominence through its role in establishing the work of pinup artist Alberto Vargas as fine art. Less than a year after the San Francisco Art Exchange's 1985 display of 100 Vargas drawings,[1][2] it announced the sale of two of his works for $550,000. Prior to the show, the highest price paid for a Vargas had been $80,000;[3] In September 1986, the gallery announced the sale of 45 Vargas paintings for $4.6 million.[4][5]
The gallery is also known for rock and roll art and photography.[6] It debuted the painting of musician Ronnie Wood in 1987.[7][8] In 2005 it displayed the photography of Pattie Boyd, known as the wife and muse (Layla) of musicians George Harrison and Eric Clapton.[9]
References
- United Press International (July 14, 1985). "San Francisco museum puts rare Vargas drawings on display". The Orlando Sentinel.
- Kenneth Baker (June 16, 1985). "The Pin-up Visions Of Alberto Vargas". The San Francisco Chronicle.
- "Vargas' work sold". The Orlando Sentinel. March 9, 1986.
- The Associated Press (September 26, 1986). "45 Vargases Go for $4.6 Million". The San Francisco Chronicle.
- Chutkow, Paul (September 1, 1996). "The Real Vargas". Cigar Aficionado. Archived from the original on June 6, 2011.
- Medina, Audrey (24 July 2011). "5 Places: Long Live Rock n' Roll". San Francisco Chronicle.
- "Guitarist Wood carves new niche with paintings". The Sacramento Bee. December 16, 1987.
- Leopold, Todd (September 10, 2004). "Ron Wood, painter: Rolling Stone guitarist has major exhibit of artworks". CNN.
- Leopold, Todd (February 3, 2005). "Harrison, Clapton and their muse". CNN.