Artist Hollis Callas

We’re baaaaaaack! Happy New Year, y’all!

In this first episode of 2026, meet and get to know San Francisco artist Hollis Callas. Hollis first came across my radar a few years ago when she won a contest to design our city’s new “I voted” stickers. I soon learned that she’s something of an artistic fixture in one of my adopted neighborhoods—The Inner Richmond. So I sat down with her one afternoon in November to learn more about her life.

In Part 1, Hollis, an artist, illustrator, and designer, begins sharing her life story, which started in Atlanta. She grew up in the same Georgia house where her dad was also raised. Her grandpa lived there when Hollis was young, and her parents still live in the house today.

Both of Hollis’s parents are creatives. Her mom studied fabric design and textiles and weaves quilts these days. Her dad is a carpenter and “builds everything.” Along with her crafty dad, Hollis often found herself making big changes in her house when she was little.

Her parents met when they were both at the University of Georgia, in Athens. When the two moved in together, Hollis’s mom was friends with members of the B-52s. That now well-known band played one of its early shows at her parents house, in fact. Hollis met the band when she was a kid, but doesn’t really remember it.

After they each graduated college, Hollis’s parents moved back to Atlanta to that ancestral home we talked about earlier to take care of her dad’s dad, who had fallen ill. First, her older sister was born. And then, in 1987, along came baby Hollis.

Life in Atlanta in the Nineties for Hollis meant lots of time outdoors. There’s an acre of land with the house she grew up in, space for lots of trees and a bird sanctuary. It was still a time of latch-key kids, and she was definitely one. Hollis roamed her parents’ land, wading in creeks and running through the forest. Her parents eventually got a second home up in the Blue Ridge Mountains where she also spent a lot of time.

Hollis went to public school the whole way. Her mom went back to school to become an elementary school librarian, and her dad taught at her high school what we used to call woodshop and coached the boys cross-country team (Hollis was part of the girls team). Kids at her high school loved Coach Griffith, she says.

Art didn’t necessarily “enter” Hollis’ life. It was always just there. She answered that dreaded question some adults ask kids of “what do you wanna be when you grow up?” with “an artist or a vet.” But then she stared getting good grades in art and didn’t do so well in math. The Universe spoke, and Hollis listened.

Sports remained a big part of Hollis’s life up to and through college, where she played intramural soccer. There was an art school in a small North Carolina town she'd had her eye on, but she ended up getting a scholarship to stay in-state, and landed at UGA in Athens, where she studied art.

UGA is one of those intense Greek life schools (I relate, having gone to UT Austin), and Hollis found out quickly that it wasn’t for her. She found her art school homies right away.

At this point in the recording, Hollis and I go on a sidebar about recurring end-of-semester nightmares.

Hollis graduated from UGA with two degrees—ceramics and art education. She student taught one year and got out in five total. After that, she and her boyfriend (now husband) applied for teaching jobs in Spain. They heard back almost a year later, and found themselves living in Zamora and staying for two years.

We chat about her time in Spain. They had such a good time the first year and got really embedded, making friends, working, learning Spanish, and joining a bicycling group that they decided to double-up and stay one more year. At the end of that run, though, pressures started to mount for them to return to the US.

They came back to Atlanta and Hollis got a job teaching ceramics at a high school. Not even 30 yet herself, she found it difficult to lead a group of kids who weren’t that much younger than she was. And they were going through their own hard times.

After one year teaching, when colleges came to recruit the teenagers, The Creative Circus ended up picking Hollis. It was a two-year “bootcamp” type of learning environment, geared toward careers in advertising. But before her two years were up, Hollis got a job in San Francisco.

Check back Thursday for Part 2 with artist Hollis Callas.

We recorded this podcast at Hollis’s studio inside of Chloe Jackman Photography in The Inner Richmond in November 2025.

Photography by Jeff Hunt

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