Sat, May 30
11:00 am to 5:00 pm
Museum Reach Public Opening
Saturday, May 30
FREE ADMISSION!
Enjoy children’s art activities, refreshments, a scavenger hunt through the galleries, special themed tours, music by Henry Brun and the Latin Playerz Trio and DJ JJ Lopez!  Festivities begin at 11 am.
Celebrate the Museum Reach at SAMA
Released: Thursday, April 16th, 2009
Special events during opening weekend May 29-31

The city of San Antonio is filled with anticipation for the opening of the new extension of our famed Riverwalk, the Museum Reach. Did you know the San Antonio Museum of Art is located right on the banks of the San Antonio River? SAMA will now be accessible to local and tourist traffic from barges and sidewalks. We’ve built a gorgeous new pavilion and terrace, our own River Landing, so everyone can enjoy these riverfront views.

Friday, May 29: Members Celebration of the River Landing and the river-inspired exhibition Waterflow
6 pm. Members only. E-mail to become a member or check your status.

Saturday, May 30: Public Opening of the Museum Reach. Museum admission half-price all day.
1 to 3 pm. Artists Panel co-hosted with the San Antonio River Foundation. Come hear from the eight local and international artists who have designed 12 new public art installations for the Museum Reach.

Sunday, May 31: Una Gran Despidida, a farewell brunch for Mayor Phil and Linda Hardberger.
10:30 am to 1 pm. Co-hosted with the San Antonio Parks Foundation. Please contact Teresa Keck at the Parks Foundation for tables or tickets at or .

For more information on all of these events, please see our schedule for May.

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Museum Reach Public Art – Presentation and Panel Discussion
Saturday, May 30, 1 to 3 pm
Auditorium. FREE ADMISSION. Tickets available at SAMA at 12 noon. Limited seating.

The unveiling of the twelve Museum Reach public artworks commissioned by the San Antonio River Foundation will be commemorated at SAMA during an exclusive presentation and panel discussion,moderated by David S. Rubin, The Brown Foundation Curator of Contemporary Art.  This program will feature Stuart Allen, Rolando Briseño, Carlos Cortés, Bill Fontana, Donald Lipski, Martin Richman, Mark Schlesinger and George Schroeder, the eight Museum Reach artists, and will explore the methods,concepts, and materials used in the making of their site-specific art installations.

This program is co-presented by the San Antonio Museum of Art and the San Antonio River Foundation. Follow this link to find out more about the San Antonio River Improvements Project.

From the press release:

“We are extremely excited about having public art projects of international significance so close to the Museum.  These public works will provide many new opportunities for extending our contemporary art programming into our surrounding community,” said Rubin.

Three artists with work in the SAMA collection have been chosen by the committee to create site-specific artworks.  Rolando Briseño will design three bridge railings and canopies in pedestrian areas and will relate the iconography to the history and culture of San Antonio.  Stuart Allen, the artist who created the sail cloth installation on long-term loan in the Museum’s Great Hall, will create new sculptural works for two of the underpasses, and Donald Lipski, whose sculpture also now hangs in the Great Hall, will create an installation for the I-10 Underpass.

The installation that will be most directly linked with the SAMA River Landing is the Jones Street underpass, which will be designed by San Francisco artist Bill Fontana. Bill Fontana is a pioneer in using the urban environment as a living source of music, creating sound sculptures to transform awareness of architectural spaces and visual stimulation. The composer and artist has created sound sculptures in Berlin, London, Madrid, Paris, Sydney and Tokyo, as well as in New York, Seattle and San Francisco, where he resides. Fontana graduated with a Bachelor of Arts in 1970 from the New School for Social Research in New York City and, over the last 30 years, his work has enlivened indoor and outdoor spaces and transformed countless museums, bridges and parks.For the installation, sequenced speakers under the bridge will emit a blend of recorded and live broadcasts gathered from multiple locations along the river, washing pedestrians and boat passengers in the subtle sounds of birds, water and urban spaces. This will be Fontana’s first permanent public work.