“The Looker – The Most Interesting Gallerist in Town”
San Francisco Magazine
Written by Lauren Murrow
December 2013
Full excerpt here
Jessica Silverman has a knack for spinning obscurity into greatness. Over the past five years, the 30-year-old Detroit native has made a name for her eponymous gallery on the international art scene by unearthing underappreciated talent and developing a collector base from the ground up. “I like being there first,” she says. “We’re bringing in artists who have no link to San Francisco and don’t already have a support system built for them.” Thhough her gallery’s 15 artists are commonly described as emerging, she’s vocally anti-ageist. Her youngest artist is 25-year-old Brooklynite Hugh Scott-Douglas, whose work Silverman showed at Art Basel last June; the oldest is septuagenarian Barbara Kasten, a photographer who will have a solo show at the Institute of Contemporary Art in Philadelphia next year….[DDET read more]
This month, Silverman’s unorthodox approach is again apparent with the next phase of the Jessica Silverman GAllery. While a handful of her fellow gallerists jumped east this fall, from downtown to the Potrero Hill strip newly christened Potrero Flats, she has relocated to a 2,800-square-foot corner space – formerly the Arlington Hotel – in the Tenderoin, quadrupiling her gallery’s footprint (488 Ellis St., at Leavenworth). Chalk it up to youthful enterprise or creative foresight, but her success belies convention.
Silverman launched her original Dogpatch gallery five years ago while simultaneously earning her master’s in the curatorial program at California College of the Arts. “I was totally nuts,” she admits, “but I’ve always been a risk taker. That’s why I work with unknown artists.” Her eye for overlooked talent has earned her a reputation as one to watch at international art shows – a rarity for a Bay Area-based dealer. (Bob Wilms, development director of Mission design showroom the Nwblk, calls her “by and large, the most interesting gallerist in town.”) The new space’s opening exhibition features a series of 7 1/2-by-7-foot paintings made from LondonĀ TimesĀ newsprint pulp by the Israel-born, London-based artist Amikam Toren – his first U.S. show.[/DDET]