San Francisco Examiner  circulation | classifieds | autos | real estate | jobs | advertise
   
Monster
View today's E-Dition

Saturday, July 31, 2010 | Last Update 11:37 PDT
click for forecast
Home News Politics Local Opinion Economy Sports Lifestyle Buy, Sell & More Jobs Homes Cars
Nation World Under the Dome Ken Garcia Beltway Confidential Weather Mobile Site Contact
Under the Dome California Nation World
Under the Dome California Beltway Confidential White House Congress Michael Barone Byron York
Under the Dome Ken Garcia Melissa Griffin Gavin Newsom City Hall People Real Estate Events Calendar
Editorials Nate Beeler's Toons Blogs Michael Barone Byron York
Economy Page Real Estate Technology
49ers/Raiders/NFL Warriors/NBA Sharks/NHL Giants/A's/MLB Soccer Colleges Golf
Movies Television Health Events Calendar Birth of Impressionism
Classifieds Stuff for Sale Post Free Ad
Find a Job Post a Job Career Tools
For Sale For Rent
New Used Certified Pre-Owned

Entertainment
[Print]  [Email]         Share    

Artist’s yard is a big chess set

By: Brigid Gaffikin
Special to The Examiner
December 31, 2009

This Outer Richmond backyard at the home of Nomi Klein (below) features a giant gold and white fiberglass chess set on a 16-foot-by-16-foot board. (Mike Koozmin/Special to The Examiner)

It’s not every San Francisco garden that can boast a king, a queen and an entire court to boot.

But Nomi Klein’s garden, in a quiet stretch of the outer Richmond, does just that — with a gold and white fiberglass chess set Klein designed.

The tallest game piece measures 43 inches high and the entire set sits atop a 16-foot-by-16-foot board made of paving tiles.

Each piece weighs around 12 pounds. And while the figurines dominate the small backyard, they also lend a gentle order to a space that Klein says was once nothing but grass, weeds and sand.

The tile chess board is bordered by a gravel walkway, grasses and flowers like lavender and pansies in purples, white and yellows and the garden has an easy, impromptu look.

Klein scattered seeds and split grasses to save the cost of buying and planting whole plants throughout the garden and she experiments with plants to see what takes well to the space and requires little water and constant maintenance.

A green shed in the back corner of the yard is intended to blend in with the flora.

“I want to leave it very, very simple,” Klein says. “The chess will be the main thing.”

A Meyer lemon tree is a nod to the Bay Area and an avocado tree reminds her of the 80 fruit trees she left behind in San Diego when she moved here around a year ago to be closer to family. A pomelo tree, with its oversized fruit, is the perfect foil to the massive chess pieces, she says.

Klein said she first thought of creating a massive chess set when she was a child visiting Salzburg, Austria, and saw people playing the game outdoors.

She honed her interest in art and design with a career that took her from Israel to New York, Mexico and San Diego. She studied machine design and did mechanical drawing during military service, as well as studying art.

The giant chess set became reality while she was in Mexico. Some 10 years after she started, her chess pieces — which are all made by hand — are in hotels and private gardens around the U.S. and abroad, she says.

As far as she knows, Klein’s the only person in the U.S. making large chess sets.

“It’s not just for the game, it’s also like a sculpture,” she says.





To view this site, you need to have Flash Player 8.0 or later installed. Click here to get the latest Flash player.


Most Popular Headlines
  1. Teenaged robbery suspect’s attempt to disappear fails
  2. Jury trial set for suspect in poorly researched robbery
  3. Muni mechanic, accomplice face three years for transfer sales
  4. Man stabbed outside Mission Street club
  5. Muni Fast Pass with BART option to be phased out by October
  6. More details emerge about fatal inmate stabbing at San Quentin
  7. Officer risks own safety to save mother, kids
  8. Wildfire jumps aqueduct in high desert outside Los Angeles, threatens hundreds of homes
  9. Medevac company suspends AZ service after crash
  10. Jobs a casualty in SFFD takeover of the Presidio; Alioto-Pier's office responds





StarCraft 2 Wings of Liberty Cheats

Art Schools

in San Francisco

Sell Tickets Online

Play online bingo at

Jack Pot Joy

 


 



 

Reader Comments

All comments on this page are subject to our Terms of Use and do not necessarily reflect the views of the Examiner or its staff. Comment box is limited to 200 words. Comments that advocate violence, racism, or libel as well as comments written in ALL CAPS are not permitted.
blog comments powered by Disqus
RSS | Twitter | Facebook | Mobile | Contact Us | Rack Locations | Advertise | Terms of Use | Privacy Policy