Archive for San Francisco

San Francisco Announces Two Spring Fellows!

Monday, April 23rd, 2012

We’ve been quiet here at Awesome Foundation San Francisco for a little bit, but excited to say that we’re back this month with a duo of amazing projects that we’re thrilled to be a part of. One is a dance party, another is a game festival. Presenting…

1) The Balloon Powered Dance Party

George, Will, and Issac are these three guys that we met recently who in their free time have been launching various items into the stratosphere using hundreds of helium balloons (see, e.g. a Christmas tree). They’ve teamed up with the good people over at the Million Fishes Art Collective in the Mission to do an installation that will fill their massive 22,000 cubic feet gallery floor to ceiling with balloons. We’re funding them to do as much.

This alone would be probably awesome enough to warrant an Awesome Foundation grant, but the added twist is that they’ve been playing around with little radio receiver/speaker/LED units that will fit inside a few hundred of these balloons, allowing them to broadcast some bumpin’ tunes and shine a weirdo ethereal light through the morass of inflated elastic that people will be allowed to wander through. The results, we expect, will thus be a dance party, and ensuing awesomeness. More details on this as they fix a date!

2) Come Out And Play

Come Out and Play (COaP) is a completely free annual games festival that turns San Francisco into an urban playground that’ll be running from November 16th to December 8th out of home base at SOMArts. Starting in New York in 2005, the festival has grown to SF, and we’re helping to fund the many game designers that they’re bringing together to produce a variety of activities throughout the month (see, for example, above: live action Frogger).

When the site updates, more information will be available here as the team continues to bring together all the logistics on it. Until they, you can track them on the Twitter and Facebook here.

Ecstatic to have both of these projects on board! We’ll update here as the details continue to come together for each of them, and we’ll look forward to partying and/or gaming with y’all shortly.

Posted by Tim Hwang at 5:09 pm Comments

AF-San Francisco Funds Operas Written and Directed By Little Kids

Monday, December 19th, 2011

Hello everyone!

It’s official: the trustees of Awesome Foundation San Francisco are extremely proud this month to make an award to Erin Bregman of the Little Opera Company. Erin’s project is simple, but awesome. She works with children between 2nd and 5th grade at the West Portal Elementary School to write, produce, and perform complete operas. That’s singing and dancing.

Since they come out of the collective minds of the kids that Erin works with, the topics of these operas are unbelievably intense: previous works have included operas about evil ponies on Mars, pirates, and Custer’s Last Stand (see video above). Naturally, we’re all about this, so AF-SF is helping to fund their upcoming production in March. We’ll post more details as they come together – but from what Erin tells us, the performance is set to include wild animals, magical moons, and spooky forests, so it pretty much is going to be awesome.

Also: they’re looking for people to lend a hand! If you know of a small performance space that might be a good place for it – be sure to drop us a line at contact@awesomefoundation.org. Also, if you’re interested in donating to these efforts, the Little Opera Company has a page set up over at IndieGoGo where you can help out.

In short, we’re ridiculously excited. Congratulations Erin!

Posted by Tim Hwang at 6:23 am Comments

Ourshelves: an intimate and growing library

Tuesday, November 1st, 2011

Kristina Kearns sitting in front of the Book Tree in Ourshelves

Kristina Kearns is the mastermind behind a small book-lined room at the back of a fascinating private-public space in San Francisco’s Mission district. She was recently awarded a $1000 Awesome Foundation grant. I recently toured the space and followed up with some questions for Kristina (and am currently reading the book she recommended for me after a return visit to this fascinating space)

Jesse: How do you explain “Ourshelves” to people who have never heard of it before?

Kristina: Ourshelves is a space designed to share appreciation for literature. It’s not government-funded like the public library, and it isn’t monetarily focused like a bookshop. It’s about sharing good literature — whether sharing suggestions, long conversations over tea, coffee and sometimes whiskey, lending books to the community, or putting little-known work on the shelf. It’s also about sharing possibilities about what publishing can be. San Francisco is one of the most literary cities in the world, still it doesn’t yet have a space completely dedicated to literature. That’s what Ourshelves strives to be.

How did the idea of Ourshelves first come about?

The idea of Ourshelves came about when I returned to San Francisco after spending some months living in an idyllic bookshop in Greece, called Atlantis Books. I was inspired by what these young men and women had created and sustained over the last seven years. Coming back to San Francisco, I wanted to create a space for literature that is more curated and intimate than the public library, yet doesn’t make money the determining factor of whether someone can read the books.

“I wanted to create a space for literature that is more curated and intimate than the public library, yet doesn’t make money the determining factor of whether someone can read the books.”

How long has OurShelves been open?

Three months! We opened our doors July 13, 2011.

Tell me about the name.

Ourshelves came about through long conversations with friends here in the city that are writers, editors and longtime booksellers. A lot of people speak negatively about print these days – they say the book is dead, that bookshops are dying, that the Kindle rules all. Well, corporate bookshops are dying. They can’t compete with Amazon. And certainly, most businesses are hurting in America right now, yet some used bookshops are thriving. Print books are increasing profit each quarter – not in leaps and bounds, but holding steady in the current American economy, As for the Kindle — a Kindle is a luxury item. I don’t mean to say that it’s highly expensive, or that affording one makes a person rich, but there are a large portion of people who can’t afford a Kindle. Movement toward financial privilege being one of the requisites to read a book – that scares me. Our cultural enlightenment came about when books left the hands of the Church and literacy moved through the masses. It’s integral to our society that everyone have access to books.

I love the public library. I hope the national budget cuts against libraries does not continue, and it is not indicative of further de-escalations. Yet friends and I who had lengthy discussions about bookshops and libraries didn’t feel right leaving it in the hands of others to hopefully change. We talked about the idea of a library that cuts out all the filler books and puts all the best books in one place. A library where someone could purchase the book after borrowing it, if they really wanted to keep it. We talked about what could happen if authors worked directly with bookshops to sell their books so that they took a larger cut from their own work. (If someone wants to purchase a book from our local authors who donated their works and a list of their favorites, the authors receive 80% on the sale of their book.) We talked about our ability to publish work ourselves. It slowly became — why not do this ourselves? Ourshelves?


We talked about the idea of a library that cuts out all the filler books and puts all the best books in one place. A library where someone could purchase the book after borrowing it, if they really wanted to keep it.

And the location, how did that happen?

By the good graces of Jonathan Siegel, the owner of Viracocha. There is local art, beautiful typewriters, interesting installations and lighting, and local chapbooks. I saw a poetry reading here and was just sort of stunned by the beauty of the space. That someone had created not just a space for art, but a space for community. It seemed to me that a lot of the authors had been in the city for a while reading in coffee shops and bars, and now they had this beautiful space to share their work.

That’s because of Jonathan Siegel. I don’t think he would say it that way, because so many people helped him put this together and continue to keep it going. But really, Jonathan Siegel filled this shop in the beginning with pieces he had collected over the years. He put all of his things for sale for this space. For the people that use this space, for the people who wander in and are inspired by it. I think what he’s done and what he is doing is amazing, and I think it’s worth pointing out at every moment. There are people who offer to the world not just their own self but space for people to be themselves. That’s what Jonathan does.

I know that personally. When Jonathan and I ran into each other one night and talked about books and publishing, among various other things, I never expected that a month later he would have remembered the conversation and offer me a back room in his space. But he did and then he even helped me build it. He put in the walls and floors and he gave me the idea for the galvanized pipes, which was brilliant. He made our light fixture for us and he donated over a hundred of his own books. I’m incredibly grateful toward Jonathan and those involved with Viracocha for sharing their space with us, thereby letting us exist.

There are people who offer to the world not just their own self, but space for people to be themselves.

You’ve mentioned a plan to work with with local authors?

Right now local authors curate a section of the shop. They give copies of their works and a list of their favorite [books], sometimes even donating their own copies. Should anyone want to buy their books, we will give them 80% of the sale. A lot of local authors submit their work. We read them to decide whether they fit the scope of the library, and prominently display work we hope others will read as well. We also want to start publishing a quarterly of as-yet-unpublished local work.

We just started working with the Riley Center in the Women’s Building. The Riley Center works with women and children victims of domestic violence, helping them get to a safe place. They have many children in their programs and would like to start a storytelling series where local authors come and read to the kids. Ourshelves will build a free library for the center and help them connect with local authors.

Who made the tree mural inside the space?

Chris Drellow, a great visual and video artist. He had created the tree on his computer, one book at a time. (There are 1,206 books.) Viracocha owner Jonathan Siegel saw it and suggested it for the space. Chris and his friend Erik Andersen came by for three days while Chris painted from a projection. I’m so glad to showcase it.

What is a typical day like?

A typical day starts off slow, which gives me time to make coffee and do all the backend work. At least one member on any given day will come in to exchange books, and often stay for a bit to talk about the one they just read or other literature they think I should read, or I think they should read—I love my members. Some ask for more assistance than others; part of the reason some use the space is for a guiding hand. Some people shame me with their knowledge of books. They often help me figure out what new books to bring in.

A few days a week WillBilly will play piano right outside the library, which I love. The weekends are busy here, there’s a consistent stream of people coming in. The week is a bit slower but still nice. I love when someone comes in and spends time looking at the shelves, then picks a book and sits down to read. I try to balance giving people their space and welcoming dialogue.

What has surprised you from the experience? (What has been harder than expected? Easier than expected?)

I was surprised by the relative ease of sign-ups. Almost 100 people have signed up, yet it is a bit tricky to extend member communication to monthly dues. We just started taking credit card information, which I had not wanted to do, [but] it [easily] allows members to decide they would rather keep the book, without feeling like they can’t come back and borrow another one. So it’s actually positive—but it can obstruct the flow of conversation and goodwill when signing up.

One of the nicest surprises was how well-received the selection is. There was a moment an hour before opening day where I almost panicked. I had put together the books I care about most and, being a private person, felt overwhelmingly exposed all of the sudden. Some of these books define who I am and I’ve made that public. Overcoming shyness in order to promote the project has been one of the hardest, yet interesting and necessary aspects of the project.


Overcoming shyness in order to promote the project has been one of the hardest, yet interesting and necessary aspects of the project.


Tell me about the plan to have free library satellites at the Women’s Center and other places?

Thanks to a $1000 award from the Awesome Foundation, we will soon build a free library in the St. Vincent De Paul Society of San Francisco Riley Center. The Riley Center has various programs and services, as well as emergency shelter and transitional housing for women and children victims of domestic abuse. They do amazing work and have wanted a library for some time. We will build the shelves and provide English, Cantonese, Mandarin and Spanish books. We have talked to 826 about having their kids curate the children and young adult sections.

I’m really excited. There are many people without easy access to literature here in the city, and we hope to offer more free libraries in senior centers, youth homes and cultural centers. We’d also like to host book clubs and writing programs—particularly oral histories. Everyone we have talked to so far has been very welcome to the idea. Nonprofits and senior housing have budgets that don’t necessarily make space for these projects, and we can come in and do the work for them.

How do you get and select books for Ourshelves?

Michael Chabon let us borrow from his personal library for our initial stock. Friends of the San Francisco Public Library let us trade some books as well. There have been a few hundred donated, and the rest I purchase.

How many people come in each day?

I don’t know! I should probably pay attention to that. Over a seven hour or ten hour day, I would say around fifty to one hundred. Some weekdays are much slower.

I can’t help but ask, what are you reading right now?

I am just starting Geek Love by Katherine Dunn. I’m often reprimanded for not having read it yet. I might put it off just a bit longer, though, since we just got the new translation of de Beauvoir’s The Second Sex. It’s the first time the complete and unabridged version has been translated in English. The only English copy until now was translated by a male zoologist who might not have had a grasp on what he was translating. I don’t mean that harshly, but he had to look up what existentialism meant when he wrote the introduction -which was after he finished the translation. I suspect he may have misrepresented some of her theories.

How did you hear about the Awesome Foundation?

I had been to an Awesome Foundation gathering about a year ago and was impressed with all the interesting  and different projects the Awesome Foundation funds. A few visitors to the shop mentioned the Awesome Foundation and suggested I look into it for Ourshelves.

What are you planning on using the $1000 award for?

The $1000 will go toward the Spanish language books and building costs for the Riley Center library. We could not build the library without it, and we are very, very grateful. Thank you!

How can anyone reading this article help you move forward?

We are always looking for book donations. We’re especially interested in Spanish titles and titles on our Wish List, which is also posted on our Facebook Page. Monetary donations are welcome as well. I think people would be surprised to know how much difference a donation makes. A thousand dollars is almost enough for us to build an entire library. Every donation, regardless of the amount, helps further our goals. Donations and memberships are available at www.ourshelves.net. People are welcome to contact me at kristina@ourshelves.net for any further information. We also need volunteers to spend a few hours a week in the library.

How can people find OurShelves in person or online?

Ourshelves is  located at 998 Valencia St, on the corner of 21st and Valencia. We are open from 11-6pm Wednesday through Friday and 11-7pm on the weekends. We are also open 2-3 nights per week for events. People can call 415.705.9950 to set up access outside of normal hours.

Anything else you want to share?

Ourshelves is open to anyone who would like to be involved. The monthly dues do help us pay our rent and build new libraries, but no one is turned away for lack of funds. I want to offer the space, too, for writing and reading. All we did was build the space. It is yours to make use of, in any way that you like. Please stop by.

I’d also like to make some public thank-yous, if possible. I don’t get the opportunity to thank these people enough. John Marshall, Jeremy Hatch, Anisse Gross, Michael Berger, Ian Tuttle, Isaac Fitzgerald, Adam Roszkiewicz, Oscar Villalon, Byron Spooner, Laura Maguire, Amy Cray, Michael Chabon, Ayelet Waldman, Sarah Rosedale, Sean Taylor, Amanda Rino, Sierra Logan, the anonymous woman (Kate), Carlos Bueno, Duo von Dagrate, Ashley Townsend, Andrew Leland, Michelle Quint, McSweeney’s, Chris Drellow, Erik Anderson, Radhika Garland, Caitlin Donohue, Jason Whitacre, Charlie Getter, Chad Xavier, Brad Johnson, and Jonathan Siegel. All of the local authors who help curate. I owe them everything. John Marshall —a thousand times over. And, truly, the Awesome Foundation and all it’s wonderful members. Thank you!!!

Posted by Jesse Taggert at 8:33 pm Comments

Talking Process and Projects with Wendy MacNaughton

Thursday, October 27th, 2011

Wendy MacNaughton is an artist and illustrator living in San Francisco. She was recently awarded a $1,000 Awesome Foundation Grant to help fund Meanwhile: The San Francisco Public Library in it’s own Words— a narrative and illustrative documentary “about the people who work [at libraries], who use them, and how they serve as a community hub for many people, including the aging and homeless.” Wendy’s unique vision and observations pace themselves well in the scrolling narrative to be found online and in a newly published book. She has done a series of Meanwhiles and you can always find them on the Rumpus.

I’ve been talking with Wendy a bit about her project— on the phone, over dinner with other Awesome Trustees, and by email:

Why the San Francisco Public Library?

Wendy: My partner Caroline Paul is a writer and voracious reader who never buys books, only borrows them from the library. I think she suggested it first.

And a dear friend of mine, Anne Wintroub, was working at Friends of the [San Francisco Public] Library at the time—she suggested it as well and created the opportunity. Without her introductions to Jill Bourne, the deputy city librarian, and Michelle Jeffers, the SFPL PR officer, I would never have had the ease of access i did.  It was a collaborative idea, like good ideas often are.

Wendy is part of a team that produces Longshot—an occasional magazine experiment themed, written, illustrated, edited, designed, and printed in 48 hours. In one late night phone conversation Wendy explained to me her process for creating a “Meanwhile.”  My takeaways were this:

  • Each project takes about a month.
  • Wendy visits a location with an idea, knowing that idea will be transformed just by the process. She spends time onsite—it could be from a  a day to a week—talking to people, taking notes, and of course, sketching. Back at her home studio Wendy refines some of the sketches through drawing and painting.
  • The quotes —she refers to the them as “all these voices” from the experience—are redrawn, cut into strips and arranged on the floor with corresponding painting/illustrations. (I have a mental image of Wendy sitting in a patchwork of drawings and words on her studio floor arranging and ordering and creating something that didn’t exist just hours before.
  • Production consists of scanning the quotes and images into Photoshop, doing mild color correction or touch up as required.  The last step is prepping and uploading files for Rumpus, the online home of Meanwhile.
  • Production takes place in 48 hours, the last evening is always an all nighter and Wendy embraces it as part of the process.

That 48 hour sprint must make you a pro for LongShot production schedules. Can you share a bit what working on LongShot as been like?

Wendy: Longshot is a great adventure—it has gotten smoother every time, but I don’t think there will ever be a set schedule or routine.  A lot of the success of Longshot is everyone’s flexibility and willingness to do anything, anytime, for anyone.  Which everyone does. That’s why they’re there.  It’s a really incredible group of smart, creative and tireless people and a fun, exhausting process.  I’m sure everyone gets something unique of participating, but I do think everyone shares at least one outcome—a huge sense of camaraderie —it is great to work in one place with people you respect all at one, non-stop— do something impossible.

How do people react when sketching them?

Wendy: Most don’t notice and if they do then I smile and nod and they do the same back. Sometimes people ask me to stop so I stop. Sometimes people put on lipstick and strike a pose.

What do you focus on when sketching someone? What to you seek to see deeply?

Wendy: You can tell so much about a persons mood, life, disposition—by they way they hold their weight.  And the angles of their face. I don’t love classically pretty people as subjects. They might be nice to look at, but they are boring to draw.

How did the Awesome Foundation grant help you?

Wendy: I am not paid for any of the Meanwhile stories I do. it’s my own project and it takes about 40-50% of my time. That means that I am taking on double the amount of paying work to support the project, and not sleeping.  The grant gave me some time away from paid projects so iIcould put more energy into the story. and I think it paid off.  It is the best Meanwhile yet, I believe.

How would you describe the Awesome Foundation to someone?

Wendy: A small group of people who want to help support local projects. Those people might not be able to give a huge chunk of money themselves, but put ten people together who can each give 100, and it makes a sizable fund.  Grantees don’t have to spend weeks putting together a huge grant  [application]—which is SUCH a relief.

So, now there is a book published from the SF Public Library project. Can you tell me more about the book that came out of this project?

Wendy: The mayor’s office funded the publication of the book. We gave some [copies of the book] to the library, some to the city, sold a big number of them to the library at cost so they could resell them and keep all the proceeds, and part of the proceeds of the remaining books will go to the SFPL as well.

How many copies?

Wendy: We printed 1000.  I hope we go into another printing.

Where can people get a copy of the book?

Wendy: Online at Etsy and at shops in San Francisco including: Electric Works, SFMOMA, Booksmith, The Curiosity Shoppe, The General Store, and hopefully soon Books Inc, Green Apple and Mrs. Dalloways in Oakland.

What next?

I have a piece in a group show at Intersection for the Arts called Here Be Dragons curated by Kevin Chen centered on the idea of mapping. I spent a few weeks hanging out around 5th and 6th Street south of Market and the result is a sort of non-linear narrative installation on the area, its history and the people who live there and pass through. The whole show is really great including other artists like Tucker Nichols and Jenny Odell. I’m thrilled to be included.

My partner and I just sold a book we’ve been working on to Bloomsbury (she’s writing it and i’m illustrating it) so that will come out next year, and I’m hoping to make a book of the Meanwhiles telling stories around San Francisco (including the SF library). That’s with a publisher right now.

In the meantime, I have work coming out in magazines like Lucky Peach, Edible SF, Bold Italic, and a new illustration for My Life Is True just came out, a project sharing powerful personal stories via NPR and the internet that people wouldn’t otherwise get to hear.

Any words of encouragement for pursuing awesome ideas?

It’s easy.  Do it.

Posted by Jesse Taggert at 6:38 pm Comments

“Meanwhile” – Documenting the Microcommunities of San Francisco

Wednesday, April 13th, 2011

Tim Hwang reporting in here for Awesome Foundation San Francisco! We’re thrilled to announce that this months winner of the Awesome Fellowship is Wendy MacNaughton, a brilliant artist and illustrator living here in the Bay Area. She’s been working recently on a series called “Meanwhile” — narrative comics exploring the thicket of awesome microcommunities nestled within San Francisco.

Previous comics have explored the Market Street Chess Players, The Dolphin Club Bay Swimmers, Dog Walkers, Farmer’s Market Farmers and Mission Bartenders. They’re all tremendously fun to read, and are worth checking out here.

For this month, she’s worked out a partnership with the San Francisco Public Library, and will be spending a month interviewing and drawing the folks who work there, and exploring the people who use the libraries as a community hub.

Best of all (and we’re still working out the details) but the SFPL has agreed to either show the outcome of the project in their readers cafe at Fort Mason, or (better yet) help make little books of it that can be on display and for sale at libraries, the cafe and bookstores in SF (with proceeds going to the library!)

You can see more of Wendy’s work here — couldn’t have picked a better person to team up with on this — she’s been been featured in Juxtapoz, GOOD, 7×7, Time Out NY and she is a Staff Illustrator at Longshot Magazine. Congratulations Wendy!

Posted by Tim Hwang at 12:50 pm Comments