Lost Art Salon

Lost Art Salon A SF gallery specializing in the rediscovery of important 20th artists who have been lost to time. O
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Our Signature Mix

Lost Art Salon’s founders and creative directors Rob Delamater and Gaetan Caron blend their distinct personalities to create the gallery’s curious and unmistakable air of an “art apothecary”. Intimately acquainted with each work of art in the gallery, Delamater and Caron have from the outset anchored the gallery’s mission to finding new audiences for artists who have been overlo

oked by the confines of art history. Through dedicated searches worldwide Lost Art Salon continues to rediscover new artists and collections, including:
• Philadelphia artist John Whitworth Robson who defied his family's wishes and took off in 1905 for the art capital of the world, Paris, and later on returned to Hollywood to become one of the key scene painters of "The Wizard of Oz".
• Alysanne McGaffey who landed at the San Francisco Art Institute in 1957, was just in time to become an integral part of the Bay Area Figurative Movement.
• Dave Fox who fled Austria in 1939, would come to join a newly emerging art scene in Los Angeles.
• Polish-born Jennings Tofel who arrived in New York City at the turn of the Century and would soon be mentored by Alfred Stieglitz.
• Peter Witwer who created grand, stunning artworks in his Haight Ashbury apartment but would not be discovered until nearly forty years after his murder. Lost Art Salon serves our clients as an established resource for modernist, vintage, antique & contemporary art, embodying the atmospheres of an atelier, a fine art museum and a rare book library. We acquire our individual works and collections through artists’ estates, surviving family and friends, auctions, art dealers and myriad North American and European antique markets and fairs. Upon arrival at our gallery, our arts management team takes each piece through a diligent conservation and archival process detailing acquisition history and provenance. Prior to presentation in our gallery and online, our arts management team works from our selection of restored original period frames to classic contemporary frames to create the best stage for every piece. At Lost Art Salon, we are as inspired by the hunt and the rediscovery of historically significant artists and fine art collections, as we are with sharing these experiences and artworks with our clients. Visit us at our San Francisco gallery or online at www.lostartsalon.com

This Pride Saturday we’re opening the vaults and bringing together a curation of original works by 20th Century LGBTQ+ a...
06/24/2026

This Pride Saturday we’re opening the vaults and bringing together a curation of original works by 20th Century LGBTQ+ artists—many of which are rarely exhibited and have been tucked away in our collection for years. We’ll have dozens of pieces (framed and unframed) at a variety of price points.

Discover overlooked histories and original works available to collect.

The Historic Q***r Art Event

This Saturday, June 27th • 10:30–5:30
Lost Art Salon

06/24/2026

We knew immediately this one was special…

Basil Gilmore Hawkins (1903–1980) was an American artist who served under the Works Progress Administration of the 1930s and 40s. As a WPA artist under President Franklin D. Roosevelt Hawkins belonged to a generation tasked with documenting and interpreting everyday American life during the Great Depression and uplifting the American spirit through art.

06/20/2026

In an era of endless newness… we’re over here falling in love with the things history almost forgot.

Last week we released a new collection of 1930s WPA-era art, and honestly, it’s one of our favorites. Beautiful works. Incredible stories. Nearly a century of history waiting to be rediscovered.

In observance of Juneteenth, Lost Art Salon will be closed today, Friday. We look forward to welcoming you back tomorrow...
06/19/2026

In observance of Juneteenth, Lost Art Salon will be closed today, Friday. We look forward to welcoming you back tomorrow.

06/17/2026

Morning edition.

A Love Story. The artist (in a self portrait lower left) made this image of his wife, Rose in the 1930s. Both long since...
06/16/2026

A Love Story. The artist (in a self portrait lower left) made this image of his wife, Rose in the 1930s. Both long since passed, they are together again as part of our WPA / Depression Era Art collection. Both pieces are now available through our website.

More about the artist Basil Hawkins (1903-1980): Hawkins was an American artist whose work is closely tied to the Works Progress Administration of the 1930s and 40s. As a WPA artist under President Franklin D. Roosevelt, he belonged to a generation tasked with documenting and interpreting everyday American life during the Great Depression. His work is held in major institutional collections, including the Metropolitan Museum of Art, the National Gallery of Art, the Philadelphia Museum of Art, the Detroit Institute of Arts, the University of Michigan, and the Library of Congress. During his time he was considered one of the leading Michigan artists.

Hawkins trained at the Flint Institute of Arts under Jaroslav Brozik. The Institute now holds a significant body of his work. During the 1930s, he completed WPA-era murals for the Flint Public Library, Hurley Hospital, and Flint Public Schools.

In 1942, Hawkins relocated to Arizona, where he continued his artistic and commercial practice. In the early 1950s his work evolved toward abstracted landscapes and abstract surrealism influenced by Wassily Kandinsky (1866-1944) and Frantisek Kupka (1871–1957).

Just released and part of our new WPA / Depression Era Collection. Douglas Hall (1885–1958)In Jackson Park Yacht Harbor,...
06/09/2026

Just released and part of our new WPA / Depression Era Collection.

Douglas Hall (1885–1958)
In Jackson Park Yacht Harbor, 1931
Woodcut on paper

Hall’s “In Jackson Park Yacht Harbor” reduces a harbor scene to its essential forms—bold carved lines, calm reflections, and the gentle rhythm of boats resting on still water. The contrast between dark ink and untouched paper creates a striking sense of light, allowing the harbor to feel both graphic and atmospheric.

Hall was a multidisciplinary artist who worked across painting, sculpture, and printmaking, studying at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago and contributing to the rich artistic landscape of the WPA era. Though much of his work remains little known today, but prints like this showcases the sensitivity that defined his practice.

This 1931 woodcut is framed in a vintage wood frame with a wide face and soft ash-washed finish, a pairing that complements the print’s understated character and handcrafted quality.

Address

245 S Van Ness Avenue, Ste 303
San Francisco, CA
94103

Opening Hours

Monday 10am - 5:30pm
Tuesday 10am - 5:30pm
Wednesday 10am - 5:30pm
Thursday 10am - 5:30pm
Friday 10am - 5:30pm
Saturday 10am - 5:30pm

Telephone

+14158611530

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