Alleged serial thief — mostly after art — struck three times at Mission co‑op

by Junyao Yang : missionlocal – excerpt

Project Artaud just hosted its spring open studios on April 12 and 13. Just a week later, it was struck by seemingly the same art thief three times.

In just one week, Project Artaud, the art cooperative at 499 Alabama St., was hit three times by seemingly the same thief — one interested mostly in the artworks.

In just one week, Project Artaud, the art cooperative at 499 Alabama St., was hit three times by seemingly the same thief — one interested mostly in the artworks.

The thief took keys from the lock boxes near the sidewalk and let himself into the three-story complex, where artists live and work. He stole a sculpture, several paintings and prints from five artists. The stolen pieces add up to about $20,000 in losses, according to Javier Manrique, an artist at the building who had one of his paintings stolen.

“It’s just odd,” Manrique said of the video that showed a man in his late 20s about 5 feet 10 inches tall. “But they knew what they were looking for.”

The thief was identified on security footage as the same man by Manrique, but Mission Local could not independently verify this. The San Francisco Police Department did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

The break-in happened just a week after the spring open-studio weekend on April 12 and 13. On April 18, a wooden sculpture went missing overnight. On the evening of April 21, the thief returned and broke into the sculpture studio, stealing some electronics and speakers.

Two days later, on April 23, the thief showed up again between 2 a.m. and 5 a.m. He entered through the back parking lot, “messed with” a double locked door that had a broken top lock, and went directly to the third floor, Manrique said. There, he stole two paintings from artist Dale Erickson and then took a few more from the second and ground floors — plus a bike from the parking lot.

The thief used spray paint in the parking lot to obstruct one of the security cameras, but was caught on other cameras in the parking lot and on the sidewalk. He also left his footprints on the wet paint on the third floor during a floor maintenance project… (more)

Bay Area mommy musicians shelter in place with a song in their heart

By Andrew Gilbert : sfchronicle – excerpt

…. Meklit Hadero’s experience of sheltered-in-place motherhood has been shaped by the push and pull of throwing herself into a new job while mourning the loss of her old one. The singer-songwriter was set for a full season of gigs with her Ethio-jazz influenced band, including a showcase performance at California WorldFest in July, all of which were canceled. As her musical vocation evaporated she was settling into her new job as chief of program for Yerba Buena Center for the Arts, a position she took on while pregnant with her son (León, who’s now 9 months old).

Instead of anticipating rescheduled concerts (“What will the live music industry even look like after this?” she says), Hadero has turned her music inward. “Shelter-in-place has made music more something for me and the baby,” she says. “We’re constantly singing together. He sang in tune at 4 months. He’s an insane little musician, incredibly rhythmic. He syncopates vocally.”

Considering that León’s father, Marco Peris Coppola, is the percussionist in Hadero’s band and a founding member of the Balkan brass band Inspector Gadje, the tot’s rhythmic chops shouldn’t come as a surprise. As with all the musical families sheltering in place, the influence of nature and nurture will be harder than ever to tease apart…(more)

Working at Home

One of my most popular blogs is beauxartisans.wordpress.com. Every time I post an article it seems to generate new readers and a lot of them are helpful and creative sites. The last article I posted on the push for more people to work at home after the pandemic attracted this reader. homeindependence.wordpress.com,  with a number of sites and a lot of information on how to work at home. I think this may be of interest to some of us who don’t want to commute.

The article I posted is one of many on the subject. Most exciting for us is how the employers are reacting to the idea. This article covers the Silicon Valley Leadership Council, made up of the largest employers who have been leading the push for unlimited growth and density in the region. The members appear to be embracing the concept of work at home. It looks like many of us will have the choice. It also looks like the dense housing YIMBY push for stack and pack housing and office development will be on hold soon as well.  Coronavirus Impact: Santa Clara Co. proposal would allow more employees to work from home after pandemic