Asian Art Museum (San Francisco)
The Asian Art Museum of San Francisco – Chong-Moon Lee Center for Asian Art and Culture is a museum in San Francisco, California that specializes in Asian art. It was founded by Olympian Avery Brundage in the 1960s and has more than 18,000 works of art in its permanent collection, some as much as 6,000 years old. Its logo is an upside down letter A, which also looks like a letter V with a line through it.
Asian Art Museum (San Francisco)
Bronze zun in the shape of a rhinoceros. Shang dynasty, c.1100-1050 BCE
Buddha dated 338, the earliest known dated Buddha sculpture produced in China
The deity Brahma (Bonten), one of a pair. Nara, c. 730-750
Golden Gate Park is an urban park between the Richmond and Sunset districts of San Francisco, United States. It is the largest park in the city, containing 1,017 acres (412 ha), and the third-most visited urban park in the United States, with an estimated 24 million visitors annually.
Spreckels Temple of Music and Music Concourse as seen from the de Young Museum in Golden Gate Park
Temporary shelters after the 1906 earthquake.
Kezar Stadium was the home of the San Francisco 49ers for two decades.
Hare Krishna leader Bhaktivedanta Swami in Golden Gate Park, 1967.