500 Capp Streettells the story of David Irelands house, a rundown Victorian in the Mission District of San Francisco that the artist transformed into an environmental artwork, taking the detritus of his restoration labors as well as objects left behind by previous owners and refashioning them into sculptures. Constance M. Lewallen begins by recounting the history of the house from 1886, when it was built, until Ireland acquired it in 1975. She then details Irelands renovation and continuing engagement with the site that served simultaneously as his residence, studio, and evolving artwork; the houses influence on his own work and that of artists who followed him; and its relationship to other house museums. An introduction by Jock Reynolds, who was close to the artist for many years, chronicles the social scene that developed around 500 Capp Street in the 1980s. The book also includes a 1983 article on the house by renowned poet John Ashbery. Illustrated with a generous selection of photographs taken over the years by the artist and his many visitors, this is an invaluable and intimate record of Irelands best-known work.500 Capp Streetis essential reading for anyone interested in the artistic and cultural history of the San Francisco Bay Area and the California conceptual art movement.
Constance M. Lewallenis Adjunct Curator at University of California Berkeley Art Museum and Pacific Film Archive. As Senior Curator at BAM/PFA from 1999 through 2007, she organized many major exhibitions that toured nationally and internationally, includingThe Dream of the Audience: Theresa Hak Kyung Cha (19511982);Everything Matters: Paul Kos, a Retrospective;Ant Farm, 19681978(with cocurator Steve Seid);A Rose Has No Teeth: Bruce Nauman in the 1960s; andState of Mind: New California Art circa 1970(with cocurator Karen Moss).
[David Ireland was] a conceptual artist whose quiet embrace of life-as-arlc.