As you may know, I’ve been following street artist Eddie Colla for a while and had been determined to acquire a piece of his work for quite some time, but the stars weren’t really aligning. I had pretty much given up on the idea when I found a small representative (not to mention affordable) piece he had hung at Amsterdam Cafe (see girl on bike above). I checked out the photos on Facebook, inquired about pricing and size before even arranging to see it (so I wouldn’t fall in love with it), and then swung by the cafe to check it out. I liked it and sent Dan by on a Saturday morning to tell me if he agreed. We decided we should buy it because we needed something to tie our guest room (also depository of miscellaneous stuff that does not fit in our shared room) decor together. Then, I noticed that Eddie had another show going at Secession Art & Design at the same time. I figured we should take a look before committing to the Amsterdam Cafe piece.
Somehow, we fell in love with a massive piece there and got the crazy idea in our heads that we should buy not one but both pieces. Then we could hang them in the living room and shift existing living room art to the lower priority guest room. The colors of the large piece were unique matched to our living room, so I’m going to pretend that that’s why the splurge made perfect sense. Although the piece is a bit over-scaled for the room, we only rent the space, and I always say (at least starting now): buy for the home you envision, not the one you have. Just like dressing for the job you want. I can envision this piece on a brick or concrete wall in my future loft. So that was that. As much as it was nerve-racking to make such a commitment to art, I feel really good about it. Like all the personal finance bloggers are saying these days, frugality is about honing in on what really makes you happy. We did manage to save a few extra bucks by hanging it ourselves.
Everyone always asks about the masks, so: gallery owner Eden Stein explained that, in the wake of SARS, Hong Kong residents started to reclaim the streets transforming disease protection into elements of urban style.
In case you missed it, Eddie was doing his thing in San Francisco last weekend for Pride. Excellent video below.
One more thing — this is not the only art I have had in the works. There is more (smaller) art to come.
Filed under: Art & Design, Hayes Valley, Home Tagged: | Amsterdam Cafe, Eddie Colla, Secession Art & Design












This looks great, even if it is “large.” And I agree about buying for the home you envision and for the future. The wall I’m facing right now (also rented) has some somewhat haphazardly pieces hanging that went up before the big TV came in, but I am perfectly okay with that!
Looking forward to your upcoming pieces.