Thank You to Our “An Italian Dinner on the Piazza” Sponsors!

North Beach Citizens

thanks all of our event sponsors .

Producer

Pamela and George Hamel

Elise Wen

ValueAct Capital

Sponsor

Judith Avery

Kelly and Carrie Barlow

Ron Boring

Carolyn and Timothy Ferris

Dick Grosboll

Chris and Michael Harrison

John and Tina Keker

Joyce Linker

Charles and Silbey Siu

Andrew Tudhope

Jeff Ubben

Briana and Miguel Zelaya

DCO International, Inc.

Lucasfilm, Ltd.

Neyhart Anderson Flynn & Grosboll

San Francisco Waterfront Partners

 

Benefactor

John W. Buoymaster

Julie Harkins

Tina Kwok

Thomas Lockard and Alix Marduel

Janet McKinley

Lisa and John Pritzker

Lynda Spence and Robert Mittelstadt

Gussie and John Stewart

Robert L. Thornton, Jr.

BSC Management

Cahill Contractors, Inc.

Equity Office Properties

PG&E

Skidmore, Owings & Merrill LLP

Wells Fargo

 

Contributor

Boris Dramov and Bonnie Fisher

Curt Cassels and Daniel Bayless

Claudine Cheng

Anne Halsted and Wells Whitney

Irene Lindbeck Tibbits

Jeanne Milligan and Peter Dewees

Michael and Judy O’Shea

Gail and Paul Switzer

Joseph and Edill Tobin

Ruth Yankoupe

Bovis Lend Lease, Inc.

Burr Pilger Mayer, Inc.

Farella Braun + Martel LLP

Holmes Culley

The CAC Group, Inc.

Urban West Associates

WSP Flack + Kurtz

 

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North Beach Citizens and Richard L. Perri present “NOPLACETOGO”, an Art Exhibition Benefitting North Beach Citizens

Art Exhibition benefitting North Beach Citizens

North Beach Citizens and Richard L. Perri present “NOPLACETOGO”

Gallery 28
, 1228 Grant Ave at Columbus Ave, San Francisco, CA 94133

November 3, 2009 to November 30, 2009
Viewing hours: Mon-Sat. 12 p.m.-6p.m., Sunday 1p.m.-4 p.m.
Opening Reception on Thursday November 12, 2009 at 6 p.m.-9 p.m.
50% of the proceeds of the show will be donated to North Beach Citizens.

Artist Richard L. Perri is widely-known for his large-format nostalgic paintings of some of San Francisco’s best loved coffee houses, affectionately referred to as ‘Java Huts’. These structures invite viewers to travel back into a remembered time of bustling activity along the waterfront as these joints teemed with rollicking blue collar longshoremen and roustabouts. They evoke a simpler time, a time of Detroit iron, rotary telephones and blue plate specials. Incorporating these solitary images as landmarks that are disappearing from the SF landscape characterizes the plight of the homeless who also were viable, contributing and productive individuals who too are forgotten and forlorn by the masses and are left alone with “NOPLACETOGO”.

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