Urban Sights: Urban History and Visual Culture

1. Painting the Bay Area

Bechtle has devoted several decades to representing the residential neighborhoods of the San Francisco Bay Area. Depicting ordinary, everyday activities and spaces, his work interfuses the concreteness of local images with the broad, complex issues of contemporary socio-spatial relationships. Almost all of Bechtle's paintings depict his home turf: one can chart the artist's movements through the Bay Area by tracking his oeuvre. Early paintings in Alameda are of Bechtle's hometown; canvases from the 1970s frequently picture Oakland and Berkeley, where he worked and lived during these years; in the 1980s the artist moved to San Francisco and subsequently began painting its streets and neighborhoods in earnest. Collectively, the works include environments classified as both urban and suburban–whether picturing the city of San Francisco or its smaller East Bay neighbors, Bechtle's paintings concentrate on the intersections of private and public spaces equally in these variously dense locales. 

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