TOM GEHRIG FINE ART
  • HOME
  • ABOUT
    • BIOGRAPHY
    • STATEMENT
    • CV
  • WORK
    • PORTFOLIO 1
    • PORTFOLIO 2
    • PORTFOLIO 3
    • GICLÉE PRINTS
    • STUDENT WORK
  • GALLERIES + EXHIBITS
    • SO REAL — SURREAL
    • PAINTING 2011-2021
    • LOCAL INSPIRATION
    • BLUE
    • THE DE YOUNG OPEN
    • 2020 LEFT COAST
    • Earth + Sky XX
    • NOCTURNE
    • ALCHEMY
    • 2019 LEFT COAST
    • IF I ONLY HAD TIME TO TELL YOU
    • CROCKER-KINGSLEY
  • BLOG
The Unexpected Always Happens: Black Crowned Night Heron at Five Brooks Pond, Installation 
 Installed at Local Inspirations exhibit, O'Hanlon Center for the Arts, 2021
Picture
LIVE PERFORMANCE BY TOM GEHRIG
​As part of this mixed media installation piece, Tom Gehrig did a live performance of The Unexpected Always Happens at the O'Hanlon Center for the Arts in July 2021. Accompanied by Kenny Blacklock on violin. 
PHOTOS AND ADDITIONAL INFO
​The Unexpected Always Happens is an ongoing mixed media work Gehrig started in 1972. It was first performed at the Museum of Conceptual Art in San Francisco (Tom Marioni's place) and then at the Mills College Concert Hall as part of "works in progress" by music and art graduate students. As an evolving and recurring theme, this conceptual work is a continual influence that often surfaces in Gehrig's body of work.

< back to Portfolio 1

CONTACT TOM GEHRIG STUDIO

blog
​Email:
​info@tomgehrig.com
​Phone:
​415-706-5959
Hours:
Studio open by appointment

​2018 – 2023  THIS WEBSITE AND ITS CONTENTS: ©TOM GEHRIG. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

​​2018 – 2022  THIS WEBSITE AND ITS CONTENTS: ©TOM GEHRIG. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.
  • HOME
  • ABOUT
    • BIOGRAPHY
    • STATEMENT
    • CV
  • WORK
    • PORTFOLIO 1
    • PORTFOLIO 2
    • PORTFOLIO 3
    • GICLÉE PRINTS
    • STUDENT WORK
  • GALLERIES + EXHIBITS
    • SO REAL — SURREAL
    • PAINTING 2011-2021
    • LOCAL INSPIRATION
    • BLUE
    • THE DE YOUNG OPEN
    • 2020 LEFT COAST
    • Earth + Sky XX
    • NOCTURNE
    • ALCHEMY
    • 2019 LEFT COAST
    • IF I ONLY HAD TIME TO TELL YOU
    • CROCKER-KINGSLEY
  • BLOG