Peninsula Museum of Art

Peninsula Museum of Art CLOSED - Our Tanforan location is now closed, future plans TBD. Tanforan will be torn down in 2025. Please email [email protected] for our latest hours.

Our mission is to engage and inspire our local community with free art shows, education and programs. Founded in 2003 by the late Peninsula sculptor Ruth Waters and with previous locations in Belmont and Burlingame, we moved into Tanforan Space 204 in 2020.

November 12 to March 5, 2023  - Peninsula Museum of Art presents Books Against the Wall, an exhibition of Bay Area book ...
11/03/2022

November 12 to March 5, 2023 - Peninsula Museum of Art presents Books Against the Wall, an exhibition of Bay Area book artists who translate their work to mixed media and multimedia projects. These artists use the book format to make original works of art and then explore how to share what they have made with a larger audience. The results challenge the viewer to consider the book as sculpture, animation video game and more. Some pieces share the process used in creating the images, others expand an original concept by presenting it in a new format. The show broadens and enhances our notions of what a book can be.

Books Against the Wall includes work by five artists:

Zach Clark creates work concerned with locational memory and his own changing relationship to nature. Working in various approaches to publishing, Zach translates analog photography and writing through risograph, screenprinting, and letterpress into broadsides, postcards, booklets, and hand bound books. Brilliant Silence serves as the culminating work in the last six years of his practice, while Deciduous and Tourist Photographs exist as a prologue and epilogue to the series, with various other forms of ephemera filling the in between, including However Strange The Landscape, an accordion booklet published by Buffalo, NY printmaker Rachel Shelton using Zach’s images, reflecting his own collaborative publishing practice.

Sarah Klein puts paper to motion by presenting books, prints and animations. Informed by a decade of working with stop-motion animation she uses repetition and variation to activate her subject material. To this effect her work employs or suggests movement. The image sequences are arranged for the viewer to set them into motion with a GIF app on a smart device or the mind’s eye.

Mary V. Marsh makes prints and artist's books that explore the changing technologies of communication through a lens of personal experience and anxiety. Presented here are TABLOID!, a linoleum-cut tabloid newspaper sourcing recent headlines, Vertical Scroll: Unorientable, a large newspaper-like möbius strip, referencing the endless scrolling of digital reading, and Here & Now, hanging book pages featuring linoleum-cuts and rubbings that evoke a sense of being in two realities at the same time when immersed in reading a book.

Andy Rottner is an artist, bookbinder and fine-art publisher. His two books presented here; Smoke Pourin' Out of a Boxcar Door & Talkin' Hard Work translate folk music into drawing and book form.

Lorna Stevens is a mixed media artist whose work centers on integrating material and technique to represent subject matter. She presents Paradise Drive, an entirely handmade book of sonnets and paintings translated to video, electronic game, exhibition, print, and e-book.

Iku Nagai: Personal Mythology, Now through October 30th -
08/13/2022

Iku Nagai: Personal Mythology, Now through October 30th -

A series paying homage to Chōjū-giga style animal caricatures is a focus of our exhibition created by the late Japanese-American and Bay Area artist, Ikuku (Iku) Nagai. Her stylized drawings, chiefly of rabbits and frogs acting as humans, tell both humorous and serious stories of heroes, villains ...

Extended by popular demand! Come experience these exquisite art quilts in person before the show closes on July 31. Plea...
07/11/2022

Extended by popular demand! Come experience these exquisite art quilts in person before the show closes on July 31. Please email [email protected] for latest visiting hours.

Ruth Waters' Celebration of Life on Sunday July 10th at 1pm -Please RSVP at AZ Gallery's Event/ Peninsula Art Foundation...
07/08/2022

Ruth Waters' Celebration of Life on Sunday July 10th at 1pm -Please RSVP at AZ Gallery's Event/ Peninsula Art Foundation, Ruth's latest artist studios venture at Tanforan

To find us in Space 204, please park in the north Cinemark Movie Theaters parking structure on the 3rd floor and walk down the pedestrian ramp next to the elevators to enter the mall. We are in Space 204, right around the corner from the movie theater box office. Our mission

To artists in our community: Consider applying to the Recology Artist in Residence Program. Check out
06/23/2022

To artists in our community: Consider applying to the Recology Artist in Residence Program. Check out

06/18/2022

Join us in our new location inside the Shops at Tanforan; create your own role as a volunteer staffing our space and sharing your passion for art with visitors. Contact us for more info. Image credit: Arianna Cunha/San Mateo Daily Journal

It is with heavy hearts we share the profoundly sad news of the passing of our fearless founder, sculptor Ruth Waters, o...
06/18/2022

It is with heavy hearts we share the profoundly sad news of the passing of our fearless founder, sculptor Ruth Waters, on June 13th. She was a force for artists and art lovers and an inspiration to us all. Ruth Waters' Celebration of Life will be on July 10th from 1pm - 4pm inside her Tanforan studio Space 247 💔 There's a link to a wonderful half hour interview with Ruth from the 2019 Silicon Valley Open Studios in our Videos section. Read more about Ruth on her personal website: http://www.ruthwaterssculptor.com/about.html

From the San Mateo Daily Journal June 18, 2022:

Artist, community builder Ruth Waters dead at 88
Loved ones to remember her at art exhibit and memorial in Tanforan Mall

For decades, Ruth Waters, a notable Peninsula artist and community builder, has dedicated her life to uplifting other artists and connecting their work to the public. Two close friends intend to keep that legacy alive.

“She supported the marginalized, she was somebody who was very interested in inclusion. There was nothing that would rock Ruth’s world at 88. … Ruth lived for the present and for the future, she was accepting. She really, really wanted to support women in the arts. She just wanted to be that voice for them,” said Stephen Seymour, an artist, San Mateo County Arts Commissioner, and a friend and colleague of Waters.

Waters died at the age of 88 on Monday, June 13. A week earlier, she was seen playing a hands-on role setting up an art exhibition at San Carlos’ Domenico Winery, an event planned by Nounie Siy, a longtime friend of Waters who described their relationship to one between a mother and her daughter.

Siy said she woke up that morning thinking of Waters. The two hadn’t seen each other in about a month due to Siy’s busy schedule. Something felt off, Siy said, leading her to routinely check on Waters personally or through Seymour who assured her Waters was fine. He had seen her earlier that day dropping off a pedestal that would be used to display one of her wood sculptures.

By 7 p.m., the show had started and Waters had not shown. Siy and Seymour would soon learn that before the show Waters had fallen and hit her head while watering her garden, putting her in the hospital.

The news had come as a shock to Siy and Seymour. Despite her advanced age, Waters was highly active, still playing tennis — the sport that brought her and Siy together — and carving sculptures out of hardwood.

“That afternoon was very emotional and many days have been since because it was a surprise. She was still carving that day. Her tools were in her hand when we were speaking. She had a chisel and mallet and was creating the next work of art,” Seymour said.

Finding the artist
Before Waters first picked up a set of sculpting tools 65 years ago, she was a writer pursuing a degree in literature from Stanford University. The Seattle, Washington, native had moved to the Bay Area with Phil Waters, her then boyfriend and future husband, who also studied at the prestigious institution.
The two went to different Seattle high schools but met when Phil Waters was in need of a date for a dance. The former football player had met Waters’s twin sister and when one of his teammates suggested they go on a double date, Phil Waters thought of Ruth.

The couple would spend the rest of their lives together in the Bay Area except for about seven years when Phil Waters’s government job transferred him to Michigan and then Washington D.C. Ruth Waters would go on to start a career in the newspaper business, working as an editor at a number of publications, before picking up work in art galleries while the couple lived in the state’s capital.

“She was a very outgoing person. She liked to meet people. That’s her thing and she’s very sort of forward and not pushy about it,” Phil Waters said, admitting to being more reticent about outings than his wife of nearly 68 years.

Two years after graduating college, Ruth Waters found her way to sculpture work, using the medium to further explore the human condition and connection. She’d go on to develop skills in sculpting bronze, marble, constructed room-size sculpture and painting.

Ruth Waters worked with her hands. Using a chisel and mallet, she’d sculpt away at stumps of hardwood from cherry and oak trees, typically opting against using some of the softer, more malleable options like redwood trees or pines.

Her work was laborious, meticulous. Once she achieved the abstract shape she desired of the hardwood, she would spend hours shaving away at its bumpy surface with sandpaper. She wouldn’t stop until the wood felt like silk to the touch. Ruth Waters wanted her viewers to connect to her art, to feel its energy.

“She wanted it to be touched. She didn’t want it to be looked at as a standoffish piece of art,” Siy said.

Her pieces would go on to be exhibited across the country and overseas — Seattle, Michigan, Washington, D.C., New York, China and Ireland have all been destinations. And she and her work was honored by a number of local leaders including as Woman of the Year by U.S. Rep. Jackie Speier, D-San Mateo, and former state Sen. Jerry Hill.

Beyond connecting through art, though, Ruth Waters wanted to connect people in life. She spent the last 45 years of hers working to build spaces where artists can share their work with the community while also teaching her skills to future generations of artists.

She’s behind spaces like Belmont’s Twin Pines Art Center, the Peninsula Museum of Art and her most recent adventure, the Peninsula Art Foundation. The new space is located on the second floor of San Bruno’s Tanforan mall and was created in partnership with Seymour.

“Ruth is an amazing artist but she was also an amazing person. When she was teaching, it was not just about the carving. She’s teaching life lessons and that came through loud and clear,” Seymour said.

Carrying on the legacy
Her objective to connect people is what caused Siy to gravitate toward Ruth Waters and then Seymour. Siy first met Ruth Waters about 14 years ago when Waters joined Siy’s tennis team. Ruth Waters was an asset, having been a longtime long-distance runner who finished 16 marathons and an avid tennis player.
With Ruth Waters’ prompting, Siy would go on to help with fundraising and development for the Peninsula Museum of Art and brought people from their athletic world into Ruth Waters’s world of art. From there, Ruth Waters took Siy under her wing and supported her when Siy opened up her own art gallery in San Francisco’s SOMA district, SIY Gallery.

“She was my mentor. She created me. She created what I’m doing at this point in my life. She believed in me and wanted to never give up on creating a community that makes a difference,” Siy said. “We found each other. She was the mom I always wanted.”

Seymour’s introduction to Ruth Waters came just more than a year ago when he got the idea to use some of the empty space in the Tanforan mall as art studios and exhibits. After approaching mall management about the idea, he was told Ruth Waters had a similar suggestion. He said he immediately jumped in his car and drove to Ruth’s studio where they sat and talked about art for hours.

Neither Siy or Seymour ever worried whether Ruth Waters could handle a task. She was regularly seen lugging around large chunks of wood and leading tours. She was independent and never wanted to be treated as if she were inept. She wanted to work and did so up until the very end.

“She wanted to create a community of weirdos,” Seymour said. “She wanted the space to be inclusive with wide ranging artists of different disciplines. She would say, ‘I don’t want artists who just make pretty pictures.’ … She wanted to create a space where the public could come in and intersect with the artist.”

Seymour and Siy intend to continue Ruth Waters’s legacy. She and her work will be honored through an exhibit titled, Made with Serendipity, opening at 1 p.m. Saturday, June 18, on the second floor of the Tanforan Mall at 1150 El Camino Real in the AZ Gallery space 247. The exhibit will remain open through 4 p.m. every day and will come to an end July 20. Her art studio is on the same floor and can be viewed through a window, including her dusty bench and her most recent piece left unfinished.

A celebration of life will be held in the same location from 1-4 p.m. July 10. Those interested in honoring Ruth Waters’s life are encouraged to donate pieces of hardwood throughout the monthlong duration of the exhibit that her students may use to continue her work. Eventually, the duo said they would like to open a museum and working art studio in Ruth Waters’s honor where her work can be put on display and new artists can find a space to express themselves.

Waters is survived by her husband, three children and three grandchildren. A private funeral service will be held for the family.

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Millbrae, CA

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