Rising Seas Exhibit (Opening Reception)
$ Free. RSVP Recommended
2:00 pm to 5:00 pm
Saturday, June 8, 2024

Will our grandkids be kayaking to school? Will we work with the underwater world to improve conditions and rebuild wetlands? Or are we on track to have rising seas cover most of Alameda?

With photos, beeswax, wood and resin, ten artists present their take on Rising Seas. From crowded freeways to healthy seaweed, this exhibit displays a range of perspectives on how climate change will affect our island.

Rising Seas Opening Reception Schedule
2:00 – 5:00pm (K Gallery): Rising Seas Art Exhibit
3:30PM & 4:30PM (Rhythmix Courtyard): Where do we draw the line? (Preview performances)
Choreography by KT Nelson and dancers
Soundscape by Tina Blaine (bean) with voices from the local community
Rising Seas Exhibit Dates
Opening Reception: Saturday, June 8, 2024 | 2:00-5:00PM
Closing Reception: Saturday, August 24, 2024 | 2:00-5:00PM
Gallery Hours: 1:00 – 3:00PM, Saturdays – June 29, July 6, July 27 and August 10
Exhibit Dates: June 8 through August 24, 2024

Make and Take Workshops

Kids and grownups welcome (Ages six and up)
Saturday, June 29th | 1:00pm & 2:00pm (only 12 spots for each session!)
Snowy Plovers are an endangered bird that nest on the Alameda beach. Come use reuse materials to tape and marker your own snowy plover with local artist Ginny Parsons.
Saturday, July 27th | 1:00 & 2:00pm (only 12 spots for each session!)
Construct an art piece wall hanging or freestanding face sculpture using repurposed materials with local artist, Charlie Sullivan. The art piece face will come to life and you’ll magically begin seeing faces everywhere.

About the Artists

Josie Iselin
Josie Iselin is a photographer, author, book designer, and co-director of Above/Below, a campaign to tell the stories of seaweed. Josie holds a BA from Harvard, an MFA from San Francisco State University. She currently teaches in the School of Design at SFSU. For over twenty years Josie has used her scanner to generate imagery of the underwater world.
Jan Watten
Jan Watten hails from Oakland, California and has a BFA in Photography from California College of Arts and Crafts. She has been making photographs for more than 25 years in her Oakland studio in the Jingletown Arts District. She has shown domestically and internationally and was profiled in Black and White Magazine in 2010. She still shoots with film.
Ginny Parsons
Ginny is an intuitive painter using common household ingredients like borax and peanut butter. An environmental artist, Ginny paints on found materials. She shows at Gray Loft Gallery and curates at Rhythmix K Gallery.
Ed Holmes
Ed Holmes, aka Lazlo Bean-dip of the Jalopy School of Fauxtography, has been collecting photons for 50 years. Occasionally he gets some good ones.
Christo Braun
Christo is a fine artist and educator. Recently returned to the Bay Area and settled here in Alameda, Christo works primarily with epoxy resin on aluminum panels, capturing natural and unnatural phenomena alike.
Deb Sullivan
Deb Sullivan (she/her) has been making art from clay for over 30 years. These days she splits her time between making functional pottery and sculptures. While Deb does not like math, she does like placing her work in a Venn Diagram. Picture two overlapping circles: one contains sculpture and the other, coffee mugs. Deb is interested in the overlap where function meets art.
Charlie Sullivan
Charlie Sullivan re-purposes found and discarded items, combining them with lenses and mirrors to create emotionally inspired freestanding sculptures and hangings. Everyday items are rearranged in a playful balance and are built to be viewed in the round to encourage shifting perspectives.
Jenn Doyle Crane
Jenn Doyle Crane is an artist, curator, creative connector and chief jam maker of Alameda Fruit Co. Her encaustic paintings are imaginary entanglements of the natural and made world.
Pons Maar
Pons Maar’s creative life has veered from ceramics to graphic design to performing arts to video. Now on his little cruiser bicycle, he terrorizes Alameda neighborhoods searching for that reason to keep going.
Marc Ribaud
Marc Ribaud has worked in house painting, picture framing, the toy business and the film business. He now lives in Alameda and practices bricolage.
Maurice Ramirez
Maurice Ramirez studied photojournalism at San Francisco State University and worked as a music editorial photographer in the late 90’s, corporate editorial, and then a decade on private events. More recently he’s focused on municipality and non-profit communities.


Banner image: Ginny Parsons, Beeswax, Leftover house paint and traffic photo on canvas.