Culture of San Francisco, California

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A San Francisco cable car
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A San Francisco cable car

San Francisco, California is a major and diverse international center of culture in terms of arts, music, festivals, museums and much more. San Francisco's diversity of cultures along with its eccentricities are so great that they have over time greatly influenced the country and the world at large over the years.

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[edit] Museums

Palace of Fine Arts
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Palace of Fine Arts

The Museum of Modern Art (SFMOMA) contains 20th Century and contemporary pieces. It moved to its iconic building in South of Market in 1995 and attracts 600,000 visitors annually.[1] The Palace of the Legion of Honor contains primarily European works. The De Young Museum and the Asian Art Museum have significant anthropological and non-European holdings.

Palace of the Legion of Honor
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Palace of the Legion of Honor

The Palace of Fine Arts, originally built for the 1915 Panama-Pacific Exposition, today houses the Exploratorium, a popular science museum dedicated to teaching through hands-on interaction. The California Academy of Sciences is a natural history museum and hosts the Morrison Planetarium and Steinhart Aquarium. The Asian Art Museum of San Francisco has one of the most comprehensive collections of Asian art in the world. From 1958 until 2003 the collection was housed in a wing of at the original de Young in Golden Gate Park. When the de Young closed while constructing a new building, the Asian Art Museum moved to the former San Francisco City Library building, which was renovated for the purpose under the direction of Italian architect Gae Aulenti who had previously overseen the converion of the Musée d'Orsay in Paris.

The San Francisco Zoo cares for a total of about 250 animal species out of which 39 have been deemed endangered or threatened.[2]

Other museums include the International Museum of Women, the Museum of the African Diaspora, the Contemporary Jewish Museum, the Museum of Craft & Folk Art, the Cartoon Art Museum, and the Mexican Museum. San Francisco's eccentric nature has also created some "offbeat" museums dealing in unconventional topics. Such museums and galleries include the Antique Vibrator Museum, the Musée Mécanique (dedicated to penny arcade machines), Museum of Ophthalmology, Ripley's Believe it or Not Museum, the Stamp Francisco/Stamp Art Gallery (rubber stamps not postal stamps), Tattoo Art Museum (old tattoo machines and instruments), the UFO, Bigfoot and Loch Ness Monster Museum, and the Wax Museum at Fisherman's Wharf.

[edit] Performing arts

War Memorial Opera House, San Francisco
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War Memorial Opera House, San Francisco

Classical and Opera venues in San Francisco include the San Francisco Symphony, the San Francisco Opera and the San Francisco Ballet. They all perform at the San Francisco War Memorial and Performing Arts Center. San Francisco's Ballet and Opera are some of the oldest continuing performing arts companies in the United States. The city is also home to the American Conservatory Theater, also known as A.C.T., which has been a leading force in Bay Area performing arts since its arrival in San Francisco in 1967, routinely staging original productions. A major player in the promotion of theater in the Bay Area is Theatre Bay Area (or TBA). A non profit organization, Theatre Bay Area has members from more than 365 Bay Area theatre and dance companies, is the publisher of Callboard Magazine, and runs San Francisco's Half-Priced Ticket Booth.

In addition to professional, mainstream performing arts, San Francisco is home to the 200-member San Francisco Gay Men's Chorus, the world's first gay chorus, as well as the San Francisco Lesbian/Gay Freedom Band, the world's first gay marching band. Two additional gay choruses, the Lesbian/Gay Chorus of San Francisco and Golden Gate Men's Chorus, also perform throughout the year.

San Francisco has had a thriving improv theatre community, with a distinctly different style of improv than much of the rest of the country. Unlike Chicago where one venue will host three 30-45 minute shows in one evening, most San Francisco improv shows are 2 hours long, complete with their own intermission. And while Chicago and New York are full of improv companies who perform formats based on the Harold (with multiple storylines going on at the same time), San Francisco is full of improv shows with single-story formats. Often referred to as play-length improv shows, these improv shows are rooted in the idea that if someone can perform something scripted (like a play, movie, or musical) then it can also be improvised just as well. Some groups that define the improvisation scene in San Francisco are: The Committee, The San Francisco Mime Troupe, BATS Improv, The Un-Scripted Theater Company, True Fiction Magazine, The San Francisco Improv Alliance, and 3 for All.

[edit] Popular music

The Grateful Dead
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The Grateful Dead

San Francisco has often hosted influential rock music trends, starting with the San Francisco Sound during the 1960s. Two of the most influential bands from that era, the Grateful Dead and Jefferson Airplane started out in San Francisco in 1965. Punk, electronica, industrial, goth, and rave activity 1980s and early 1990s, was also somewhat influential. Intense gentrification during the late 1990s forced many performers to move away and has limited current creativity, though San Francisco, especially in the Fillmore and Hunters Point districts is the home of numerous rappers. Rap artists from San Francisco include Messy Marv, RBL Posse, Rappin' 4-Tay, San Quinn, JT the Bigga Figga and Paris. San Francisco DJ's and electronic musicians are credited with defining the laid- back, dub- influenced sound of West Coast House Music. Prominent DJ's and artists include: Miguel Migs, Mark Farina and DJ Garth. Om Records, one of the country's most respected electronic music labels, is also located here. [citation needed]

Famous songs featuring San Francisco include Tony Bennett's I Left My Heart in San Francisco, and the Scott McKenzie song "San Francisco".

[edit] Festivals and street fairs

San Francisco is home to many different and unique street festivals, parties and parade. Most famous are its Gay pride parade, the world's largest, held every June, the Folsom Street Fair held every September, Chinese New Year Parade held in February, Carnaval held during the spring, Fleet Week in October, and the North American home of the rave the Loveparade (now known as the "Lovefest") held in the late summer/early fall. San Francisco is also home to running marathons such as the Bay to Breakers and the San Francisco Marathon.

Many neighborhoods in San Francisco have annual street festivals featuring live music, arts and crafts vendors, and community organizations. Among the largest of these are Castro Street Fair, Union Street Art Festival, North Beach Festival, and Haight-Ashbury Street Fair. The San Francisco Opera company puts on an annual free Opera in the Park performance in Golden Gate Park. The San Francisco Symphony does likewise on several dates in July, including one as part of the Stern Grove Festival. On the Fourth of July holiday, there are fireworks shows over Fisherman's Wharf and Marina Green. Another fireworks show is held every May as part of the KFOG: Kaboom!.

[edit] Architecture and tourist attractions

Coit Tower
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Coit Tower


The Transamerica Pyramid, A famous building and symbol of the city
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The Transamerica Pyramid, A famous building and symbol of the city

Despite its limited geographical space, San Francisco contains a plethora of unique architecture that also serve as tourist attractions in their own right. They include its Civic Center, Coit Tower atop Telegraph Hill, the Ferry Building on its waterfront, the world renowned Golden Gate Bridge, the twisty and windy Lombard Street in Russian Hill, "Painted Ladies", terraced victorian houses that can be found city wide, the San Francisco cable car system, the abstract San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, the San Francisco-Oakland Bay Bridge, the ruins of the once great Sutro Baths, and the Transamerica Pyramid.

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ Corporate Sponsorship (SFMOMA Facts and Audience) San Francisco Museum of Modern Art. Accessed September 1, 2006.
  2. ^ About the Zoo: Media Center (Press Kit) San Francisco Zoo. Accessed September 3, 2006.

[edit] See also

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