Thursday, August 2, 2012
Alysanne McGaffey - Rediscovered Treasures and Contemporary Works
If you have been following Lost Art Salon for a while, then you have most likely encountered the work of Bay Area artist, Alysanne McGaffey (b. 1931). Over the years we have presented her 1950s-1970s work from the Bay Area Figurative Movement. Recently, a lost cache of her art from this period was discovered, and we are very excited to debut these pieces. Works from this era have been framed in period frames using archival framing techniques.
To this day, Alysanne continues to live in the Bay Area (Pacifica, CA) and is still a vibrant artist intensely dedicated to her craft. For the first time we are presenting her contemporary work from the 1990s and 2000s. For the past couple decades, Alysanne has focused on the watercolor medium, often depicting scenes of the Northern California coastal landscape. The luminous pigments and fluid lines of watercolor paints are an ideal conduit for her flowing, richly-colored aesthetic. Many of these works have been framed floating on a linen background in handsome solid maple shadow box frames.
All of the framed and ready to hang pieces from this collection can viewed and purchased online.
Tuesday, June 26, 2012
Michael di Cosola and Dave Fox: Made in California
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Northern California artist, Michael di Cosola in his studio in the the North Beach neighborhood of San Francisco (1950s) |
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Southern California artist, Dave Fox, in his San Pedro studio on the Los Angeles County Coast (1950s) |
Northern California artist Michael di Cosola (1929 - 2010) and Southern California artist, Dave Fox (1920-2011) are the two subjects of our current show (opening June 28th). We call the show "Made in Calfornia" because both men moved to California at pivotal moments in their personal and creative developments (di Cosola from Chicago in the 1950s and Fox from Austria during WWII). It was in California that they made the work that would define them as artists. And it was there that they experienced a powerful new freedom.
The work of di Cosola embodied the San Francisco spirit with its whimsical surrealism and flowing lines. While Fox found his inspiration in the scenes and stories of Southern California. But both artists channeled the bright, intense colors of California into their gorgeous, sunny palettes.
The full story and work of Michael di Cosola can be viewed here.
The full story and work of Dave Fox can be viewed here.
The ready to hang and display pieces by both artists can be viewed and purchased online in our New Arrivals Boutique.
Thursday, May 17, 2012
The San Francisco Decorator Showcase
At this year's San Francisco Decorator Showcase (running through May 28th) we are presenting a new collection of Soviet Russian Impressionist landscapes (1940s -1980s). The small scale, unique frames, and intimate atmosphere of the scenes lent themselves handsomely to various unique groupings. Above we hung a selection of pieces in a style known as a "Paris Hang". Complimenting the oils is a collection of Modernist sculptures by Dave Fox (1920-2011) . Both the paintings and sculptures can be viewed and purchased online in our New Arrivals Boutique.
The Modernist ceramic sculptures of Dave Fox were created during the final decade of his career (2000-2010) and represented a dramatic new direction for the Vienna-born artist. Here they are displayed on custom linen-wrapped plinths.
We continued the gallery design of the 3rd floor hallway with the groupings above; curating pieces based on their harmonious palettes and the forms of their frames.
Combing a variety of frames gives each arrangement a sculptural aesthetic that adds visual excitement to the hang. It's a very nice alternative to simply presenting everything in the same frame.
During the design process we gave a great deal of thought to how each grouping would look from every angle. Here a group of three Soviet Impressionist landscapes are seen through the bannister as you ascend.
The San Francisco Decorator Showcase is widely considered to be the West
Coast’s premier design showhouse event, renowned for featuring the work
of the region’s top interior and landscape designers. All the funds
raised through the Decorator Showcase go directly to support the San
Francisco University High School (UHS) Financial Aid Program. For more information on visiting the house and viewing our installation visit www.decoratorshowcase.org
Wednesday, April 25, 2012
April's Guest Curator: Robert Polacek
We invited Robert
Polacek, Partner at the Puccini Group, to be our first "Guest
Curator". Robert was asked to select a salon-style grouping that reflects his personal taste and collecting aspirations. His group (seen above) is unified by
harmonious, muted colors and modernist compositions, and we love it. Robert selected pieces by (from left): Wilhem Faulkner, Rob Delamater, Jennings Tofel, Helen Sewell Rennie, and Gary Lee Shaffer.
With
a diploma in architecture from Catholic University of America, Robert
Polacek, Chief Creative Officer and Partner at Puccini Group, heads up the concept
development and design side of the company. He has helped the firm
create countless sophisticated, chef-tailored, noteworthy restaurants
across the globe for clients such as Jumeirah, Kimpton, Fairmont and
Four Seasons among others.
Robert recently planned a San Francisco art and inspiration day for the Puccini team. Part of the day's itinerary included a visit to the Salon to educate his staff around the idea of using Lost Art Salon as a resource for their future design projects.
Robert recently planned a San Francisco art and inspiration day for the Puccini team. Part of the day's itinerary included a visit to the Salon to educate his staff around the idea of using Lost Art Salon as a resource for their future design projects.
A New Collection of Soviet Impressionism
Friday, March 16, 2012
Our Latest Discovery: The Enchanted Art of David Landis (1918-1983)
Our most recent obsession is the work of Chicago artist David Merkel Landis (1918-1983). The rich colors, lively brushstrokes and exotic subjects give his oils an enchanted aura. The paintings exhibit a strong American Impressionist aesthetic and are often large-scale. Many of the spectacular period frames are original to the pieces and were hand-built. Landis graduated from the Art Institute of Chicago in 1941, served in Europe during World War II from 1942-1945, and returned to the Art Institute of Chicago as a faculty member in 1947. He continued to teach there with the title Associate Professor of Drawing and Painting until 1969. His work was included in numerous exhibitions in the Midwest and East from 1939-1973, including ten one-man shows at private galleries in Detroit, Chicago, and Edgartown, Massachusetts. Later in life, he and his wife, the potter Esther Landis, moved to the San Francisco Bay Area, where they maintained the "Landis Studio" until his death in 1983. The Landis' pieces below represent only a selection of the works we have available. Paintings by David Landis, and other new arrivals, can now be viewed and purchased in our New Arrivals Boutique.
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#18987- David Landis, Mid 20th Century, Oil on Canvas, 46.5" x 36.5" Framed, $3,750 |
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#19012- David Landis, Mid 20th Century, Oil on Wood Panel, Entitled "Sunbathers, Martha's Vineyard", 41.5" x 29" Framed, $3,500 |
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#19068- David Landis, 1950, Oil on Canvas, Entitled "Dream of Rome", 22" x 31" Framed, $2,450 |
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#19280- David Landis, Mid 20th Century, Oil on Canvas, Entitled "Portuguese Bullfight, Lisbon", 56" x 43.5" Framed, $4,500 |
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#19285- David Landis, Mid 20th Century, Oil on Masonite, Entitled "Beach, Watch Hill, Connecticut", 82" x 32" Framed, $4,750 |
Paintings by David Landis, and other new arrivals, can now be viewed and purchased in our
Wednesday, February 8, 2012
A Collaboration with McGuire Showroom and Designer Laura Kirar
For Winter Market at the San Francisco Design Center, McGuire Showroom invited us to curate an art collection to display alongside the furniture designs of New York designers, Bill Sofield and Laura Kirar. Over sixty pieces from the Lost Art Collection are highlighted in the windows of the showroom and in the living and dining room designs by Kirar.
The Bill Sofield Office for McGuire
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Here we created a monochromatic "mosaic" display of graphic pieces that complement the Mid Century inspired Baton Writing Table by Bill Sofield. |
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For her dining and living room designs Laura Kirar selected a collection of modern artwork that echoed the bold colors of the serape elements that she integrated into her custom upholstered pieces. |
Contemporary Artwork in the Jackson Square Dining Room
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Contemporary artwork by Lost Art Salon owners and artists, Gaetan Caron and Rob Delamater are featured here with the new Jackson Square Collection by McGuire. |
Saturday, January 21, 2012
Little Pieces in the “Little Crumb”
This week we installed a small collection for the third and newest Miette Pastry Shop in Larkspur. A Parisian influenced pastry boutique that Meg Ray, owner and baker extraordinaire, founded in 2001. "Miette" is French for "little crumb".
Charming illustrations and drawings that fit the chic Parisian designed space and local Marin culture were selected by Meg (the best selling author of "Miette: recipes from San Francisco's most charming pastry shop"). One work by 1940s/50s fashion illustrator, Marjorie Ullberg, depicts passengers disembarking from a ferry, and a still life painting of a rose ties back into the overall feeling of the dainty patisserie.
Miette in the Larkspur Country Mart
Before
After
Saturday, November 19, 2011
Installation of 20th Century Shop Drawings
Check out our latest installation of early 20th century shop drawings for Brooks Griffin's (VP of Merchandising for NapaStyle) historical SOMA loft. Each piece was uniquely framed in an antique frame unearthing it's natural beauties of patina and bringing a sense of warmth to the home. We collaborated with Brooks on the diamond shaped salon arrangement by mapping the pieces out on the floor before installing them. Framing these drawings in historical frames, art programing, and installation are a few of the services we offer here at Lost Art Salon.
With the blank wall in the background, we started conceptualizing different arrangements for the group.
We always begin by mapping the arrangement on the floor, before committing to the wall.
Half way through and we can tell that the overall plan is working and everything is going to fit well.
The final salon style arrangement.
Tuesday, November 1, 2011
Designer Projects
We serve as an art resource to a wide variety of residential and commercial interior designers and stylists. The following images showcase the way pieces from our collection have been woven into a designed environment.
We would like to thank the following designers and their photographers for allowing us to share these images on our website: Ted Boerner, Ken Fulk, Jay Jeffers, Steven Miller, Mathew Turner, Kim Betzina and Steven Pappas (Williams-Sonoma Home).

Steven Miller Design Studio: Dining by Design
Steven Miller Design Studio: San Francisco Decorator Showcase
Kim Betzina: Residential Design
Jeffers Design Group: San Francisco Decorator Showcase
Jay Jeffers Design Group
Williams-Sonoma Home
Mathew Turner: San Francisco Decorator Showcase
Ken Fulk: Sonoma residence, photo by Matthew Millman
Jay Jeffers Design Group
Lost Art Salon: Dining by Design
Ken Fulk
Lost Art Salon is now represented at Ted Boerner in New York City
Rosas-Kruger Residence in Oakland, CA. Installation Design by Rob Delamater.
Jeffers Design Group: San Francisco Decorator Showcase
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