Society of Independent Artists
GCS Agency and SALA Present: Society of Independent Artists – Works on Paper
Opening Reception: June 18, 2025 | 5–8 PM | On view through July 11, 2025 GCS Agency, 201 Jackson Street, San Francisco, CA
GCS Agency and Society of Art Los Angeles (SALA) are thrilled to host an exhibition of works on paper by members of the Society of Independent Artists (SIA), organized by Alberto Cuadros. The opening reception will take place on June 18, 2025, from 5–8 PM at GCS Agency, 201 Jackson St., San Francisco, CA. The exhibition will remain on view through July 11, 2025.
Participating artists include:
Alissa Anderson, Mari Andrews, Mark Ashworth, Susan Backman, Richard Beggs, Michael Brennan, Ishan Clemenco, Eleanor Coppola, Roman Coppola, Alberto Cuadros, Nadereh Degani, Mike Dyar, Mitra Forouhar, Peter Gutkin, Mary Ijichi, David Jones, John Held Jr., Paul Kos, Susan Magnus, Tom Marioni, Dan Max, Andrew McClintock, Flicka McGurin, Cheryl Meeker, Susan Middleton, Ruth Miller, David Ng, Mick O'Kelly, Sono Osato, Mark Van Proyen, Kent Roberts, Diane Roby, Alice Shaw, Isabelle Sorrell, Fran Valesco.
My first visit to Tom Marioni’s Wednesday meetings was in 2010. The invitation came from Alissa Anderson—almost as an afterthought. She said to me, “Hey, you might like this place,” snapping on her helmet as she left the surf shop where I was working. “I’m bartending this thing. You should come.” That was it—she sped off on her moped to some other part of the Outer Avenues.
Alissa recently told me about her first visits to Tom’s in 2001. She said that Lawrence Ferlinghetti was the guest bartender the first time she went and she quickly put it together: something quietly significant seemed to be afoot at Tom’s Wednesday studio–and it definitely had nothing to do with the beer selection. Then, on that Wednesday in 2010, I found myself at Tom’s studio. I walked in and plopped down on a bar stool, right in between Paule Anglim and Robert Bechtle. Right on cue, Robert Bechtle—or Bob, as he was referred to at Tom’s—ordered his famous half–non-alcoholic O’Doul’s–half–Anchor Steam beer. Simultaneously, someone in one of the booths—probably Dan Max—started up a conversation about Cage, or it may have been Duchamp or maybe even Beuys. This was a while ago now, however I do remember with absolute clarity the feeling that I had stumbled into something singular, and that I needed to be part of it.
I always say that Tom’s Wednesday group was my first formal education in art—and it really was. I pretty much learned everything there first, and 15 years later, I’d have the honor of receiving my own SIA “GB” degree, cementing my place in the group as its newest member.
The SIA is a division of Tom Marioni’s Museum of Conceptual Art (MOCA), where, in 1970, the Wednesday group began an ongoing artwork: The Act of Drinking Beer with Friends Is the Highest Form of Art. The group has gone through a few iterations, occupying a number of different venues—bars, galleries, and studios have all been home to the group over the past 55 years. It has had a few name changes, a dedicated core of regulars, and then some who would hang out for a while, disappear, and resurface years later as if only a week had gone by. Mike Dyar, for instance, decided to take all of the 1980s off to play beach volleyball.
The group’s historic continuum contains, within itself, a whole lot of history: art history, jazz history, American history, world history—sometimes very niche history—a healthy dose of art world gossip, past and present. But crucially, it also contains the highest form of art, which, as we know, is the act of drinking beer with friends. What makes this such high art is largely due to the high quality of these friends. Between Tom’s social sculptures and Kathan Brown’s Crown Point Press—which attracted world-class artists from around the world—they were truly one of the great power couples in art history and a gift to San Francisco, being in close proximity to the SF Museum of Modern Art didn't hurt either. This exhibition recognizes a legacy that is still unfolding both through the works on display and by sustaining the culture that shaped them.
The Missing Link Club
LIVE in San Francisco!
What’s been missing at the intersection of tech and culture
San Francisco Launch – October 2025
Executive Summary
The Missing Link Club is a live lecture series and salon designed to reimagine the dialogue between culture and technology in San Francisco. Rather than positioning these worlds in opposition, the series creates a shared space where artistic and technological practices can inform one another and vital connections can be made.
Programs combine panels, salons, workshops, and exhibitions staged within significant cultural or architectural sites across the city. Each gathering emphasizes rigor, conviviality, and the creative exchange that arises when disciplines converge. Documentation of these events will be thoughtfully developed into digital formats, extending the resonance of the conversations to broader audiences while preserving their intimacy and integrity.
As an independent initiative, The Missing Link Club partners with the Society of Art and Living Archives (SALA) to anchor programming in San Francisco’s artistic legacy and contemporary cultural networks. Together, we cultivate platforms for dialogue that are as attentive to aesthetic and intellectual depth as they are to civic and economic impact.
By situating technology within a fine art context, the Missing Link Club contributes to shaping a more integrated, imaginative future for San Francisco and beyond.