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Read MoreGround Up, a UC Berkeley student journal of the Department of Landscape Architecture and Environmental Planning, recently published an online article advocating for a
Read MoreTwo finalists have emerged from a pool of submissions in a lengthly City of Emeryville Public Art selection process. Ned Kahn’s “Wind Jetty” and
Read MoreThe University of California, Berkeley Art Museum and Pacific Film Archive (BAMPFA) launched a region-wide celebration of the 50th anniversary of the Summer of
Read MoreThe Emeryville Mudflat Sculptures were an anonymous folk art sculpture garden that utilized trash and driftwood as its medium for public art. Considering how it
Read MoreIn the face of great uncertainty, fear, and cultural upheaval that plagued the 1960s an art movement bloomed that inspired millions. Starting in 1964,
Read MoreMost people who have heard of the Emeryville Mudflat Sculptures know very little about them. If you have seen pictures of them, you are left
Read MoreIf I was indeed ever able to turn The E’ville Eye into a full-time profession, I’d make a conscious effort to write more about our history.
Read MoreKen Bukowski and his EPOA group have turned their focus to cataloging city videos onto their YouTube channel and in the process have unearthed
Read MoreThe publishing of the NY Times article Once Upon a Landscape profiling Brooklyn artist and Berkeley native Carol Bove led me to this 1982 archive titled “Rubbish lives for a
Read MoreConsider this Gallery an aggregate of images I’ve amassed from various web sources including this page dedicated to the mudflats on Tribe.net, a collection
Read MoreI ran across this 2008 post while reminiscing with a co-worker recently. Probably my first memory of Emeryville … before I knew where Emeryville was. The
Read MoreIt’s a story we’ve all heard before: Artists find cheap, funky space in a neglected industrial area and beautify it making the neighborhood more
Read MoreThe fate of the notorious former Emeryville Police Chief John LaCoste, whose name disappeared from local news headlines and politics in the late 1980’s,
Read MoreTyler James Hoare affectionately known by some as “The Red Baron” passed away on Tuesday, January 31. He was 82 years old. Hoare’s biplane
Read MoreSome notable coverage of Emeryville by The East Bay Times over the past two weeks. Court reporter Nate Gartrell has been doing an excellent
Read MoreThe Sea Walls: Artists for Oceans program has chosen Emeryville to host its latest mural festival. The event is being coordinated to help increase
Read MoreThe ongoing shelter order has been catastrophic for many sectors of small businesses and local news publications are no exception. Simply put, when local
Read MoreThe next time you’re driving I-580 West towards Emeryville and SF, keep your eyes on the road, but try to catch a glimpse of
Read MoreA 2012 article by Chronicle writer Peter Hartlaub contained an impressive list of long-gone Bay Area landmarks. Among this list were two Emeryville icons:
Read MoreChris Edwards, the artist behind the popular Ghost Ship Memorial docked in Emery Bay, has passed away at the age of 32. “He passed
Read MoreIf you happen to be arrested or detained in Emeryville, you’ll likely be transported to an Oakland or County jail. The reasons are that
Read MoreWhen all is said and done, Ken Bukowski will go down as one of the most colorful characters our city has ever seen. A
Read MoreEmeryville residents and commuters noticed a peculiar billboard along Shellmound on Thursday morning that might have caused a double-take. A 1-800-GOT-JUNK billboard that previously
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