Reception

Our wedding reception will take place immediately after our Marriage Ceremony, November 20, 2010 at 7:00 pm in the San Jose Museum or Art in Downtown San Jose directly across the street from the Cathedral Basilica Saint Joseph of San Jose.

San Jose Museum of Art
110 South Market Street
San Jose, CA‎

(click to open in google maps)

For PARKING information, go to our “Around Town” page

On view during the reception

Let’s Look At Art: Build It

The Let’s Look at Art exhibitions in the Koret Family Gallery inspire imagination. This fall, see works by Wayne Thiebaud, Michael Wolf, Richard Shaw, and others.

Leo Villareal

Nerman Museum of Contemporary Art, Overland Park, KSLeo Villareal (born 1967 in Albuquerque, New Mexico) is a pioneer in the use of LEDs and computer-driven imagery and known both for his light sculptures and architectural, site-specific works. This exhibition, his first major traveling museum survey, seeks to place Villareal’s body of work within the continuum of contemporary art.

Degrees of Separation: Contemporary Photography from the Permanent Collection

Degrees of Separation illustrates a touchstone among photographers—the fragile nature of our connection to other human beings and to the world around us. Featuring several key new acquisitions, the story unfolds through images ranging from portraits to landscapes, grainy vintage snapshots to large-scale digtital photographs.

Retro-Tech

The artists represented in this exhibition grapple with the potential of technology as they “build their own world.” They re-purpose and manipulate technologies of the past and present in ways that range from playful to ironic to analytical.

Vital Signs: New Media from the Permanent Collection

The patterns of nature find reflection in the functions of human life—the motion of ocean waves echoes the measured inhalation and exhalation of breath; flower petals reach for the sun, unfurling and then collapsing, more slowly but similarly to the way a heart contracts and expands. The new media artists in this exhibition use technology to replicate these vital signs, but also to explore the inner source of life, those elements unseen but often sensed.