The Sam and Alfreda Maloof Foundation, including the Pyramid Room (photos compiled after 1933 from the Library of Congress).

January 2022

Winter Greetings from

Jane Brucker Studio

Mother’s Mirrors by Jane Brucker. Photograph by Brian Forrest.

On View:

Jane Brucker in the Pyramid Room

Open for public viewing through April 2, 2022

Sam and Alfreda Maloof Foundation, 5131 Carnelian St, Alta Loma, CA 91701

The Sam and Alfreda Maloof Foundation for Arts and Crafts is a member of the Historic Artists' Homes and Studios program (HAHS) of the National Trust for Preservation.

Jane Brucker will be showing a series of sculptural works installed in the Pyramid Room at the Sam and Alfreda Maloof Foundation. Included in the exhibition are three chairs using painted and fused glass elements from her monumental work, Fragile Thoughts, completed in 2018.

The work is a tribute to Elizabeth Milbank Anderson, an early twentieth century philanthropist who championed healthcare, education, women’s issues and the arts, and who spent her summer summers in California, attracted to its healthy climate. The installation Objects for Sam’s Desk is a set of seven works culled from Brucker’s oeuvre and chosen by Brucker for their reference to the domestic setting of the Maloof.

Finally, Bouquet is an ongoing installation project that begins with an antique vase owned (and broken) by Brucker’s grandmother and repaired by her grandfather. Emerging from a collection of vessels, containers and vases are changing arrangements that respond to the setting. In this case, the two large niche windows of the pyramid room and a third wooden shelf built-in. In all of the works presented, Brucker uses heirloom elements to construct meditations on the nature of relationship, home and domesticity.

Sam Maloof is acknowledged as one of the finest woodworkers of our time. As a leader of the California modern arts movement, he designed and produced furniture infused with profound artistic vision for more than half a century until his death in 2009. Central to Sam’s work and life is the sprawling hand-built residence and adjoining woodshop. Nestled in a lemon grove near the San Gabriel Mountains in Southern California, the residence is filled with Maloof furniture and many examples of 20th Century American arts and crafts.


Left: LOST (detail) by Jane Brucker. Photograph by Brian Forrest.

Right: LOST installation at San Diego International Airport. Photograph by Joey Herring.

On View through May 2022

Jane Brucker’s LOST

in Make Yourself at Home Exhibition at San Diego International Airport

3225 N Harbor Dr, San Diego, CA 92101, located in Terminal 2 West, Post-Security, Gate 35

On two monumental pedestals, 388 cast bronze and brass tiny objects make up the installation, LOST. Brucker uses lost-wax jewelry techniques to cast in bronze, white bronze and brass objects such as preserved buttons, a handcrafted millinery flower, puzzle pieces, misplaced keys, coins and containers of makeup. LOST evokes thoughts about loss throughout life—from baby teeth to relationships—and the entire collection prompts us to consider what we leave behind when we move or die.

Make Yourself at Home features 16 distinct exhibitors whose artwork and collections explore how the concept of home differs for each person and shapes our memories, identities, and sense of belonging in an increasingly nomadic world. Artists rely on the motif of home to draw connections between personal histories, and timely political and social themes including immigration, homelessness, urban planning, race, and gender.


Recording Available:

Mirror Image: Frankenstein and the Creation of the Human

Jane Brucker and Brenno Kaneyasu

At the birth of self-recognition, estrangement is born. This previously recorded web event examines how arts and culture create a mirror-like surface that allows us to witness, examine, reflect, and subvert the radical ambiguity between human and monster.

Recorded on October 27, 2021


More from Jane Brucker Studio…

​Left: “Building a structure “of broken concrete road paving, August 1938.” Claremont Russian Village. Photo courtesy of Blanchard Family (via National Trust for Historic Preservation); Right: Native Roger’s Red Grapevine in winter growing against Jane Brucker Studio’s broken concrete and road paving side.

Claremont Views

We are continuing to create a space for work and shared conversation in our home and studio space in Claremont’s Russian Village, a unique architectural neighborhood directly east of Los Angeles. In 2022, we would be pleased to welcome you to the studio after renovations are complete. May the quiet and gratitude of the winter season be extended to you all-near and far.