"Artists not only document social change; they promote, inform, and shape it. Whether through music, plays, graphics, paintings, songs, films, media, architecture, textiles, jewelry, photography, poetry, sculpture, pottery, landscapes, written word, dance - art is powerful ... For art is the intellectual underpinning of social change; nowhere is there more potential and more need for art than now." ~ Maria X. Martinez from "The Art of Social Justice"
"Indigenous Eyes" by Susan Kelk Cervantes |
So as I began planning our trip, I was discouraged to find that much of what I thought I knew about the Mission District was blanketed by all of the Yelp descriptions of Mission "hipster" joints -- a term that I just recently discovered does not mean a type of women's underwear. Yes, there is a new cash flow that has come into this neighborhood; however, the unique culture has been largely preserved by its public artists. San Francisco has over 800 public murals -- many of these are quite famous: such as, the murals in Coit Tower and those by Diego Rivera at the Art Institute, City College, and the City Club. But out of these 800 murals, 328 of them are currently located in the Mission District. I love that so much of the history of this neighborhood is chronicled right out in public for all to experience: from the Ohlones to the Franciscans that founded Mission Dolores (San Francisco's oldest building) to the dairy farmers to the German and Irish immigrants post-Gold Rush to earthquake cottages at Dolores Park to Latin American immigrants -- art tells the story of these social changes everywhere in the Mission District. Murals to me are amazing. For all that think that art and the study of art history is a bourgeois pursuit, look at murals out in the open for all to see! We forget that some of our most famous works of art are largely considered murals; for example, Michelango's Sistine Chapel ceiling and the Creation of Adam could be considered a mural, as well as the ancient Roman wall art found in Pompeii as far back as 200 BC. It's true, however, that most people view modern murals as political statements. When I told friends that I was going to learn about murals during my San Francisco weekend, I think the image that conjures is more evident of the Berlin Wall or Keith Haring or graffiti. I think murals are all of that and more and a great way to rejuvenate a neighborhood. I think I'll go ahead and share some photos of what I experienced during my weekend with a brief trip log and links on how it can be organized over a 3-day weekend. For me, blogging about my trip is just a way for me to collect my thoughts all in one place, set the example for my homeschooled kids to write stuff, and perhaps expose my readers to another way of seeing a touristy destination.
Saturday at 1:30PM - Precita Eyes Classic Mission Mural Tour (24th & Alabama)
Precita Eyes Muralists working in Balmy Alley located between 24th & 25th Streets and between Treat & Harrison |
"Naya Bihana" by Martin Travers in Balmy Alley depicting the struggle for freedom in Nepal |
"Things Fall Apart" by Janet Braun-Reinitz in Balmy Alley with a quote from the poem "The Secong Coming" by W.B. Yeats |
Utility box depicting actual neighborhood residents. |
"500 Years of Resistance" by Isaias Mata on St. Peter's Church |
24th & York Playground & Splash-pad (right next to Panaderia La Mexicana for an afternoon snack) |
Tile murals at the Mini-park |
"Quetzalcoatl" mosaic play structure (his tail makes the splash area) |
Plantains for sale at the market |
Neighborhood flower vendor |
The view from the top with the Bay Bridge and Treasure Island in the top right |
Saturday & Sunday nights - The Inn of San Francisco (Van Ness & 20th Street)
The parlor of this gorgeous home |
Saturday night dinner - La Traviata (Mission & 24th Street)
Sunday at 11:00AM - San Francisco City Guides Mission Dolores Neighborhood Walk (Church & 20th St.)
The fire hydrant that saved the Victorian homes of the Mission District from the 1906 earthquake and fire |
Dolores Park |
New Mission Playground Water Play Area |
Soon to be re-opened Mission Pool with "New World Tree" mural by Susan Kelk Cervantes |
Lone earthquake cottage |
The Pirate Store at 826 Valencia - a great organization that assists kids with writing skills. Watch the TED talk: |
Very cool metalwork tree across from the plaque signifying the first site of Mission Dolores at Camp & Albion Streets |
Mission San Francisco de Asis (Mission Dolores) |
Sunday at 1:00PM - a walk through Clarion Alley (between Mission & Valencia and 17th & 18th Streets)
The grittier murals on Clarion Alley |
Sunday at 2:00PM - Brunch at Foreign Cinema (Mission & 21st Street)
Sunday night we went to an amazing wedding, but if you want to follow in our footsteps and don't have the invitation, I would recommend an evening in the garden and the hot tub of the Inn of San Francisco :) My son has written a post about visiting San Francisco City Hall which could be done the following Monday of a long weekend trip. My daughter has written a creative writing piece as an assignment for her writing group that involves a muralist lost in San Francisco City Hall which was inspired by her visits to both places. They both are excited to publish their pieces so I'm including them here in one family blog post. Enjoy!
San Francisco City Hall Review
by Patrick
Trapped
by Rebecca
The dense fog hung around me as I walked. Coils of it wrapped
around my ankles and made me slow down. I could barely see twenty feet in front
of me, but I knew where I was going. Everyone knew how to get to San Francisco City Hall .
Earlier that
day, as I watched the daily fog spill over Twin Peaks ,
I thought about how it would make a marvelous subject for one of my paintings. I
would need some more gray paint though, and whenever I bought a gallon of new
paint, it felt like I was paying with a couple years off my life. Was it really
such a crime to be an artist that I have to starve myself? I was eating
something, of course, but, surprisingly, a can of Spaghetti-Os every day isn’t
a sufficient diet.
I felt
trapped in my life, stuck in a downward spiral towards bankruptcy, unable to
escape because, let’s be honest, no sane employer would hire a person with
minimal education and no job experience, who has spent their life as an amateur
painter. Well, at least not a sane employer from a place where I could actually
make a living. The only reason I have those Spaghetti-Os is from the small
paycheck I get from working at Burger King.
I really don’t
make much money from my art; only on very rare occasions will someone want to
buy one of my canvases. I mostly try to get the city to pay for me to paint a
mural on one of their public buildings. I’m good at painting murals, I’m very
tall, and I like to add miniscule details to things. It’s easier to do that
when you have a larger “canvas.”
As I turned a corner, I could just see the
grandeur of City Hall through the obscuring fog. The shape was quite similar to
the Capitol Building
in Washington D.C. ,
but San Francisco ’s
City Hall is taller and has more gold on it.
I came up to
the front steps and began to walk up them, holding the notebook that had my
sketch of the hopefully future mural inside it, close to my chest. I came
through the doors and passed through the metal detector without trouble. I kept
walking straight until I came to the rotunda. It was a large hexagonal room
with golden street lamps at every corner, beautiful carvings into the walls,
and a marble centerpiece, the staircase. I stopped for a second to look around.
Above my head, one could see the walls arching in to meet the dome, the inside
of which was fully visible from the rotunda, with the four medallions,
Equality, Liberty, Strength, and Learning, each on their own corner of the
room. Across from the staircase, a depiction of Father Time was placed on the
wall above a clock that surprised me as I read the time. Only ten minutes until
the Hall closes!
With the
sudden need for speed, I climbed up the staircase, turned a corner and climbed
the stairs that I saw in front of me up to the fourth floor. When I got to the
top, I realized that I was a mess, and there was no way that anyone from the
city planning department would seriously negotiate with me about getting a wall
to paint if I looked like this. I located a bathroom and went inside to wash up
at the sink. I soaked a paper towel, then dabbed it at my face and on my neck,
brushed my hair, and straightened my clothes. I probably wasn’t going to be
able to actually get a permit today, but maybe I could at least schedule an
appointment.
I had just come
out of the bathroom, when every light in the building turned off. I stood there
for a moment with complete darkness surrounding me. I let my eyes get adjusted
to the light before I walked in the direction of the planning department office,
holding my arms out awkwardly in case something was in my way.
I knew how
to get to the office, but I wasn’t sure if I could make it there in darkness
without falling over the banister that looked down to the very first floor. So
I tried to keep to the wall because the other option would most likely turn out
very, very bad.
I stopped at
a big wooden door and put my face right in front of the plaque on the wall next
to it. In the poor lighting, I could just read “City Planning Department.”
I considered
ripping out one of the pages in my notebook and leaving a note, but it was
likely that no one would see my note if I slipped it under the door, and I
didn’t have any tape with me for attaching it to the door or wall. I actually
don’t have any tape in general. Also, even if I did have tape, then what? I
knew from previous news stories that when the Hall closed, they locked both the
inside and outside. So if you were stuck in the Hall at night (like I am) and
were planning on stealing some valuables (like I am not), you wouldn’t be able
to take the out of the building because you were locked inside. Basically, I
was stuck in City Hall.
So, with no
better option, I took off my jacket and balled it up. I then lied down on the
floor, with my jacket under my head, curled up, and fell asleep on the floor in
front of the City Planning Office.
The next
morning, I was nearly skipping down the street in excitement to get home to
gather up my supplies. After looking at my sketch, the city planners decided to
permit me to paint on the wall of a park. Not only that, but they agreed to pay
for the paint and pay me for painting the wall. They were letting me be free of my current predicament, both metaphorically and physically. And they
gave me a scone!