Artwork pictured “The Fight In Me” by Solee Darrell.
Lot# 301
Sawyer Arkilic
Infatuation Complication (2024)
Markers on paper
17 × 14"
“This drawing is a satirical representation of the emotions we feel when we develop a fondness for someone. The crosshairs symbolize how our moods can be dangerous. The fire is to remind us how our passion can burn hearts.”
Courtesy of Sawyer Arkilic & Hospitality House’s Community Arts Program.
Artwork photographed by Nick Melle (Hansen Digital).
Preview in person at an.ä.log SF, 886 Capp St., SF, CA.

Lot #302
gregory rick
Soledad Mother (2024)
Acrylic ink and acrylic on silk mesh
24 × 20"
“Reflections on George and Jonathan Jackson’s mother. George Jackson was imprisoned for taking 70$ from a gas station and was sentenced to 1 year to life in prison for that charge. While on prison George and two others were charged with murder of a guard after a fight and were coined the Soledad brothers, Jackson denied the charge. On August 7th 1970 George’s brother, Jonathan Jackson kidnapped a number of people, including the judge and DA from the Marin County courthouse and demanded the release of the his brother and the two others Soledad brothers. Jackson was killed along with the judge and another as they attempted to flee in a car. George was killed in attempted escape a little over a year after his brother’s death. I did this painting thinking of their mother and her pain and anguish at losing both her sons. Like Jackson’s book, “Soledad Brothers” I am focusing outside of the violence on the humanity and injustice where 70$ is worth a year to life in prison and especially the pathos as I try to envision the mother.”
@gregoryrickstudio
Courtesy of gregory rick.
Preview in person at an.ä.log SF, 886 Capp St, SF, CA 94110.

Lot #303
Alexa "LexMex" Treviño
Existencia es Resistencia (2024)
Archival photographic print on metal
“As a portrait artist, I am deeply influenced by my cultural heritage and the rich traditions of my ancestors. This portrait was taken on Indigenous Peoples Day at the historically significant Alcatraz Island, a site that symbolizes both resistance and the ongoing struggle for Indigenous rights. The Mexican Danzante represents a connection to ancestral traditions, standing in power to honor the resilience of Indigenous peoples. That is why the title is 'To Exist is to Resist,' reflecting the enduring strength and defiance in the face of colonization and cultural erasure.”
@lexmexart
Courtesy of Alexa "LexMex" Treviño.
Preview in person at an.ä.log SF, 886 Capp St, SF, CA 94110.

Lot #304
Lady Henze
Forbidden Fruit (2024)
Spray paint on panel
30 x 30 x 1 - 3/4"
“I am often inspired by the candy aisle: the repetition, colors, and patterns. I also am driven by a desire to recreate nostalgia, fond memories of the sights, smells and sounds of my past. This piece has both: Watermelon Bubbalicious gum.”
Courtesy of Lady Henze
Preview in person at an.ä.log SF, 886 Capp St, SF, CA 94110.

Lot # 305
Soleé Darrell
The Flight In Me (2024)
Dye on silk velvet
30 × 30”
Soleé Darrell is a Bermudian born multidisciplinary artist who is based in Oakland, CA. She has a background in metalsmithing but has recently taken up painting as a new medium. Her work is purely intuition-driven. She explores the experience and depth of being a human in this world while connecting with other worlds through practice and meditation. Each stroke encompasses color, vulnerability, passion, texture, and complete faith in the universe. She uses layers of mixed media to symbolize the healing of wounds and maps the unknown paths we take in life. She is forever fascinated with the idea of things we can never know about our existence, and the self inflicted suffering that human beings can endure through generations of trying to figure it out. Her hope is to bring some optimism to the viewer and bridge the gap between the intuitive world and the physical world.
@soleedarrell
Courtesy of Pt. 2 Gallery & the Svane Family Foundation.
Preview in person at an.ä.log SF, 886 Capp St, SF, CA 94110.

Lot #306
Jo Smith
We Are Seeds (2025)
Mixed media, acrylic paint, and painted paper
16 x 20"
“I've been an artist with Hospitality House since 2010 and I view CAP as a sanctuary. I use vivid Colors/Botanicals/Nature images as my visual language to incline my heart towards beauty and life. I invite the viewer to see their own beauty and explore their relationship to the Earth.”
Artwork photographed by Nick Melle (Hansen Digital).
Courtesy of Jo Smith & Hospitality House's Community Arts Program
Preview in person at an.ä.log SF, 886 Capp St, SF, CA 94110.
Lot #307
Cheyenne Concepcion
The Gates No. 6 (2024)
Mylar, nylon net, paint, birch board
24.75 x 24.75 x 2.5”
“The Gates series captures my ongoing exploration of hybrid weaving that mixes unexpected textiles and industrial materials to create refined, simplified compositions with rich and layered textures. With this series, I hand weave mylar into nylon netting to create tapestries that feature bold, geometric forms while capturing light, reflection and a kaleidoscope of colors from the environment.”
Courtesy of Cheyenne Concepcion.
@cheyenneconcepcion
Preview in person at an.ä.log SF, 886 Capp St, SF, CA 94110.

Lot #308
Chad Hasegawa
Gold Coast #1 (2023)
Acrylic on canvas
18 x 24”
“This painting was created while visiting home, Honolulu. It is based off of a specific neighborhood that is at the base of Diamond Head crater, called “The Gold Coast”. This neighborhood is very small but it is often visited by surfers. Tonggs is the name of that surf break. It is where my dad used to surf when he was a young man. All the white buildings and historical houses turned pink during the sunset and colors illuminate off of its background. This painting in particular is that blue turquoise ocean on top of that tinted pink white surface.”
Courtesy of Chad Hasegawa
Preview in person at an.ä.log SF, 886 Capp St, SF, CA 94110.

Lot #309
Chelsea Ryoko Wong
Magical Evening With Friends (2023)
Watercolor and gouache on paper
13 x 10"
A California muralist whose tableaux explore the choreography of friendship and the social harmony of diverse peoples.
Chelsea Ryoko Wong is a painter and muralist known for vibrant, joyful celebrations of community, ritual, and seasonality. Inspired by Northern California and international travels, the scenes in Wong’s paintings are infused with fantasy, humor, and imagination. Translating her printmaking background to the realm of painting, Wong’s paintings are composed through a meticulous layering of form and figure.
Wong (b. 1986, Seattle, WA) attended Parsons School of Design, New York and received her BFA in printmaking from California College of the Arts. She is the first recipient of the Hamaguchi Emerging Artists Fellowship award at Kala Art Institute, Berkeley and was a 2022 finalist for SFMOMA’s esteemed SECA Art Award. She has participated in recent group exhibitions at the de Young, San Francisco; Yerba Buena Center for the Arts, San Francisco, CA; Creativity Explored, San Francisco, CA; Chinese Cultural Center, San Francisco, CA; and Bolinas Museum, CA. She has completed large-scale mural projects in San Francisco at Asana; La Cocina; Facebook Artist in Residence Program; and the Asian Art Museum. She was awarded the Harker Fund Residency in 2024 and will present a solo exhibition at the Oakland Museum of California in February 2025. Her work has been acquired by institutional and private collections including the de Young, Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco; Crocker Art Museum, Sacramento, CA, and Bolinas Museum, CA. Wong lives and works in the Mission District of San Francisco.
@ChelseaRWong
Courtesy of artist, Jessica Silverman, San Francisco & the Svane Family Foundation. Artwork photo by Phillip Maisel.
Preview in person at an.ä.log SF, 886 Capp St, SF, CA 94110.

Lot #310
Christopher Martin
Oakland Raider (2020)
Fabric
31 x 47.5 "
As a multidisciplinary artist, Chris seamlessly blends sewing, poetry and tattoo artistry into a distinctive practice rooted in minimalism. His bold black-and-white aesthetic distills words and imagery down to their most essential forms, creating work that is both powerful and thought-provoking. His recent accomplishments include collaborations with Vans, Meta, and Adobe, as well as a mural for the 49ers Levis Stadium. He was also the first-ever Artist-in-Residence at the Museum of the African Diaspora (MoAD) in 2018, the inaugural artist for ICA San Francisco in 2022, and has delivered lectures across the U.S. and internationally. His work has been featured in the New York Times, Elle, Esquire, Complex and more.
@chrispymartin
Courtesy of Christopher Martin.
Preview in person at an.ä.log SF, 886 Capp St, SF, CA 94110.

Lot #311
Ira Watkins
The Poker Player
Charcoal
18 x 22 "
Ira has been a Bay Area resident since 1957. He is a self-taught artist whose work depicts and celebrates the African-American community in the Bay Area that migrated from the South during WWII to find jobs in the shipyards.
https://www.shipyardartists.com/artist/ira-watkins/
Artwork photographed by Nick Melle (Hansen Digital).
Courtesy of Ira Watkins.
Preview in person at an.ä.log SF, 886 Capp St, SF, CA 94110.

Lot #312
Sylvester “Slick” Guard
Fatman (2024)
Mixed media
9 x 33"
“I have used the CAP studio for since I was a teenager and now I am a staff member. That is a beautiful full circle and I am happy to support Hospitality House which has always supported me.”
Courtesy of Sylvester “Slick” Guard & Hospitality House’s Community Arts Program.
Artwork photographed by Nick Melle (Hansen Digital).
Preview in person at an.ä.log SF, 886 Capp St, SF, CA 94110.

Lot #313
Kelly Ording
Selkie (2025)
Acrylic on paper
25.5 x 32.5"
Based in Oakland, CA, Kelly Ording has exhibited her work both in the U.S. and internationally since graduating from the San Francisco Art Institute in 2000, with recent solo exhibitions including An Unseen World, Gilman Contemporary, Sun Valley, ID (2019), Shadows and Light, Local Language, Oakland, CA (2018), and Rotations Around the Sun, Sarah Shepard Gallery, Larkspur, CA (2018). Her public works and murals can be seen in San Francisco Arts Commission Public and Civic Art Collection, the Alameda County Collection, JP Morgan Chase Collection, and the Ellie Mae Collection. She recently returned from traveling in Yogyakarta, Java, Indonesia with the Bangkit/Arise Project in association with Clarion Alley Mural Project and Indonesia Institute of the Arts, Yogyakarta. Kelly currently devotes all her time to her artwork and her two children with fellow artist, Jet Martinez.
Courtesy of Pt. 2 Gallery & the Svane Family Foundation.
Preview in person at an.ä.log SF, 886 Capp St, SF, CA 94110.

Lot #314
Emory Douglas
Food Insecurity/Homeless (2018)
Archival print, signed
32.25 x 22.25"
Emory Douglas describes himself as a visual communicator and a social justice artist. Douglas was born in Grand Rapids, Michigan and has been a resident of the San Francisco California Bay Area since 1951. Douglas majored in commercial art at City College of San Francisco and considers himself a self-taught graphic designer.
Douglas became the Revolutionary Artist and The Minister of Culture for the Black Panther Party from the 1967 until 1981, during which time he created iconic images that were frequently seen on the front and back pages of the Black Panther Newspaper and reflected the politics of the Black Panther Party and its advocacy for addressing the needs of the community. Along with more recent artworks that Douglas creates, he also may remix some of his historic iconic graphic artworks in a more contemporary context to reflect today’s social issue concerns.
Since 2007, Douglas has had many retrospective exhibitions here in the United States such as at The African American Culture Complex in San Francisco, Yerba Center for the Arts in San Francisco, the Oakland Museum, Oakland, CA, The New Museum of Contemporary Art in New York, MoMA, Los Angeles CA and the MoMA New York, de Young Museum San Francisco, plus many more art institutions and college campuses around the country. Since 2008 Douglas has had many exhibitions in countries abroad, such as Australia, New Zealand, Holland, Mexico, Brazil, Colombia, Canada, Cuba, France, Algeria, Portugal, the UK, and Scotland.
Douglas has been honored with awards such as the AIGA Medal in 2015, the San Francisco Art Institute Honorary Doctorate of Fine Arts in 2019, and was inducted into The Society of Illustrators Hall of Fame in New York City. Retrospectives of Douglas’ artwork have been published in Art in America, PRINT Magazine, American Legacy Magazine, Soul of The Nation, and the American Institute of Public Arts. There is a comprehensive retrospective collection of his graphic artwork from the 1960s and 1970s that was published in a 2007 book titled Black Panther, The Revolutionary Art of Emory Douglas.
Douglas continues creating art that reflects social justice concerns of today.
Courtesy of Emory Douglas.
Preview in person at an.ä.log SF, 886 Capp St., SF, CA.

Lot #315
Jeffrey Sincich
Lotto (2022)
Cotton, cotton batting, wooden panel, redwood artist frame
42 x 21 x 1.5"
Jeffrey Sincich (b. 1990 • Belleair, FL, he/him) is an artist living and working in San Francisco, CA. After studying ceramics in school, Jeffrey pursued the trade of sign painting for seven years. His love of hand painted signage, typography and architecture later merged with his fascination with handmade quilts. He combines his process of quilting lettering and illustrations with neon signage, found wood, salvaged window grates and building materials to highlight the overlooked and underappreciated everyday signs and objects that help the city function day to day.
Jeffrey earned his BFA from the University of Florida in 2012. His work has been exhibited domestically and internationally in San Francisco, Los Angeles, Oakland, Miami, Portland, OR, Tokyo, Japan and Paris. He has shown at venues including Gallery 16, Park Life and the de Young Museum in San Francisco and Charlie James Gallery in Los Angeles. His work has been featured in publications including Juxtapoz Magazine and Popeye Magazine.
@JeffreySincich
Courtesy of artist, Studio AHEAD, & the Svane Family Foundation.
Preview in person at an.ä.log SF, 886 Capp St, SF, CA 94110.

Lot #316
Alicia McCarthy
Untitled (2024)
Color pencil and spray paint on paper
12.5 x 15 "
Alicia McCarthy (b. 1969, lives and works in Oakland) engages with the immediate world around her and uses a decidedly focused color palette on mixed-media panels. Sincere and intense but also playful, McCarthy transforms found wood surfaces into bursts, geometric blocks of color and woven patterns that are often emphasized by text and spray paint. These “paintings” bear a sculptural weight that is juxtaposed by their deceptively simple mark and image making. Although visually abstract, McCarthy's motifs - a weave or rainbow, for instance - are deeply personal and the works often include an indication of physical presence, such as the ring left by a coffee cup, print from a boot, or a note written by the artist.
@helloforevor
Courtesy of Alicia McCarthy & Pt. 2 Gallery.
Preview in person at an.ä.log SF, 886 Capp St, SF, CA 94110.

Lot #317
Benito
Molecular Biologists (2023)
Fabric, thread, embroidery, buttons, yarn, bells
18 x 30"
"Im just an extra extra extraterrestrial. I love using the Community Arts Program and the people I met there."
Courtesy of Benito & the Hospitality House's Community Arts Program
Preview in person at an.ä.log SF, 886 Capp St, SF, CA 94110.

Lot #318
Cate White
Earth and Space (2025)
Acrylic, spray paint, sand, glitter, mica flakes, collage, plastic gems on canvas
30 x 26”
Cate White’s drawings and paintings map a psychic cartography of the unrest associated with the proliferating social and ecological devastation of post-industrial capitalism. Operating in registers of humor, caricature, allegory, dream and autobiography, she examines the structural conditions that produce the unrest while laying out paths toward, if not total liberation, at least a human camaraderie in captivity.
@CateWhite
Courtesy of Cate White & George Adams Gallery
Preview in person at an.ä.log SF, 886 Capp St, SF, CA 94110.

Lot #319
Kelly Tunstall
Job (2018)
acrylic on panel
16 x 20”
Rooted in California’s contemporary art movement, Kelly Tunstall’s work, though figurative in nature, translates mental states; externalized through garments and projected through painted mindscapes, melding the animal world as expressive physical form. Whether through solo pieces or collaborations with her husband, Ferris Plock, as KEFE, she transforms the everyday into surreal, color-dipped extravagance. Having shown nationally and internationally, the pair is represented by Hashimoto Contemporary and Harman Projects (NY/SF), while their exclusive product line recently launched at SFMOMA's museum store.
@kellytunstall
Courtesy of Kelly Tunstall, Hashimoto Contemporary / Harman Projects
Preview in person at an.ä.log SF, 886 Capp St, SF, CA 94110.

Lot #320
Muzae Sesay
Golden Gate (2024)
Oil on canvas
24 x 36"
"My artistic focus derives from a relentless commitment to understanding our collective relationship to space, memory, community, and the perceived truths within them. From that foundation, my practice has thematically revolved around the merging of these correlations to form paintings that provoke social reasoning and induce the viewer’s agency in the navigation and narration of imagery. Current work connects with the feelings that arise from testing the absoluteness of the strict and rigid aspects of physics and pragmatism found in architecture, design, and our built environment. Utilizing skewed perspectives of space and shape collapsed into two-dimensional planes of color, I create surreal geometric interiors, exteriors, landscapes, and structures—presenting a situation in which to be experienced and explored. Inspired by ideas of cultural reflection and developed by questioning the validity of remembrance, my work often depicts worlds created in response to a social introspection and/or an attempt to perceive a shared reality. This process involves taking imagery from the physical world and reducing them to rudimental forms that then populate fragmented universes compiled by perspectival fallacies and tied together by harmonious color composition. The viewer is compelled to understand the space, question its dimensionality, dive inside and walk around. Muzae’s work is in the museum collections of San Francisco Museum of Modern Art and de Young Museum."
@muzae
Courtesy of Pt. 2 Gallery & the Svane Family Foundation
Preview in person at an.ä.log SF, 886 Capp St, SF, CA 94110.

Lot #321
Charles Blackwell
Bricked in by the City (2023)
Acrylic on canvas
24 x 36"
“My approach is unorthodox- I use the bottom of a paintbrush, my fingers, and an ink spout to create abstracted forms and texture making my blindness work for me. My blindness, in a sense, gives my work a unique quality. When painting, I strain my eyes to see, until the reality of being partially blind registers. I then rely on an intuitive serendipitous process, sloshing colors between thick lines, moving the medium along the path towards completion. This flow state allows for freedom of self-expression and improvisation.”
Courtesy of Charles Blackwell & Hospitality House’s Community Arts Program.
Preview in person at an.ä.log, 886 Capp St, SF, CA 94110.

Lot #322
Casey Gray
Cookies, Crumbs & Cakes (2024)
Acrylic on panel
31 x 40"
Casey Gray is an esteemed artist based in San Francisco known for his distinctive style that seamlessly blends classical painting traditions with modern day materials and methods. First and foremost a still life painter but often delving into other common subject matter, Gray's visually striking compositions use the language of symbolism to explore themes of leisure, connection, shared experience and the search for balance. His process employs acrylic spray paint as his predominant medium coupled with meticulous hand-cut masking techniques resulting in boldly colorful, energetic and elegant artworks that mimic the nuanced and paradoxical blend of analog and digital influences.
Born and raised in the Bay Area, Gray earned a BA from San Diego State University in 2006 before completing his MFA at the San Francisco Art Institute in 2010. His work has been showcased nationally and internationally in numerous exhibitions and art fairs and resides in public and private collections worldwide.
@CaseGraySF
Courtesy of Hashimoto Contemporary & the Svane Family Foundation.
Preview in person at an.ä.log SF, 886 Capp St, SF, CA 94110.

Lot #323
Shawn Moore
Reap What You Sow (2024)
Ivory soap, pistachio shells, beans, cherry seeds, grape vines, lentils, puzzle pieces, date seeds, and acrylic paint
19' x 28''
“I started making soap art when I was incarcerated and it helped to take me away like therapy. I used seeds in this piece because it takes my art into nature and out of the city where I live.”
@artbymoe77
Courtesy of Shawn Moore & Hospitality House’s Community Arts Program.
Preview in person at an.ä.log, 886 Capp St, SF, CA 94110.

Lot #324
Chris Stokes
Cityscape with Moonrising (2025)
Mixed media
18 × 24”
“This piece highlights the effects the light the moon over has over the city. The brightest brights and darkest darks.”
@ChrisStokes
Courtesy of Chris Stokes, Luna Rienne, and The One and Done

Lot #325
Jeffrey Cheung
Seven (2022)
Acrylic on canvas
60 x 48"
The playfulness and low-brow style of Oakland-based Jeffrey Cheung’s contorted nude figures has quickly gained traction within the Bay Area’s ever-changing art scene. Cheung’s humor translates well across his many paintings, prints, collages, drawings and even murals. Born and raised in the Bay Area, Cheung graduated form the University of California Santa Cruz and has since shown in a variety of shows throughout the Bay Area as well as Hashimoto Contemporary in New York City, Jeffrey Deitch Projects in Los Angeles, City Bird Gallery in Paris, France and V1 Gallery in Copenhagen, Denmark. In addition, Cheung has been a resident artist at the Bedford Stuyvesant Artist Residency, in Brooklyn, New York. Alongside his visual artwork, Cheung launched Unity Skateboarding, a queer skating collective. He also plays music in local punk bands Meat Market and Unity. Cheung currently lives and works in Oakland, CA.
@JeffCheung1
Courtesy of Hashimoto Contemporary & the Svane Family Foundation.
Preview in person at an.ä.log SF, 886 Capp St, SF, CA.

Lot #326
Ferris Plock
Claudezilla (2025)
Gouache, spray paint, acrylic and gold leaf on wood panel
16 × 20”
“I needed to create something special this year for this special 40th anniversary of Hospitality House. I wanted to combine two of my favorite creatures Claude the Albino Alligator with Godzilla.”
Courtesy of Ferris Plock, Harman Projects and Hashimoto Contemporary
Preview in person at an.ä.log SF, 886 Capp St, SF, CA.























