START at 24th/Mission BART station. There is a mural right there at the station- we can pop up/around the BART plaza and shoot a little then head down 24th.
- 24th/Lilac Ally
- 24th/ Capp (there are utility box murals that are part of larger utility box mural project)
- 24th and Balmy (AIDS memorial mural + others)
- 24th and Florida (big church mural)
- 24th btwn Bryant/York Mini Park
- 24th...
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START at 24th/Mission BART station. There is a mural right there at the station- we can pop up/around the BART plaza and shoot a little then head down 24th.
- 24th/Lilac Ally
- 24th/ Capp (there are utility box murals that are part of larger utility box mural project)
- 24th and Balmy (AIDS memorial mural + others)
- 24th and Florida (big church mural)
- 24th btwn Bryant/York Mini Park
- 24th and Potrero
- Turn and head to Shotwell
- shotwell btwn 22nd/23rd
- there are more murals at 18th/Valencia and 17th and Valencia
END at Tartine
(special thanks to Amanda Blanton for creating this tour route)
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San Francisco fairly teems with murals. Since the 1970s, groups of artists have worked to transform the city's walls into canvases, art accessible to everyone. Muralists here fall into two loose categories: those in the Latin American tradition of addressing political and social justice issues through art, and everyone else (those who simply paint on a large scale and like lots of people to see it).
Rediscovering the work of Mexican liberal artist and muralist Diego Rivera in the 1960s, Latino muralists began to address public issues on the community's walls. Heavily Latino since the 1970s, the Mission District became the collective canvas for these artists. The Precita Eyes Mural Arts Center emerged to support those artists and galvanize collaborative projects in the neighborhood. Early on, the San Francisco Arts Commission hired the center to create murals all over town. Of the 800-plus murals that adorn city surfaces, a good quarter of them were painted by muralists associated with Precita Eyes.
Bright Sunbelt colors reflect the medium's historical geography; in contemporary work, look for anime and woodblock cuts along with traditional Latino symbols. Murals are considered permanent, and aren't painted over without consulting the artist. Keep your eyes peeled as you wander the city and you'll begin to discover art everywhere. Here are the best and brightest of the Mission District:
826 Valencia. Fans of graphic novelist Chris Ware will want to take a good look at the facade here. Ware designed the intricate mural for the storefront, a meditation on the evolution of human communication.
Balmy Alley. The most famous of the Mission's murals—a vivid sweep from end to end. This group series began in 1971 and still gets new additions.
Clarion Alley. A new generation of muralists is creating a fresh alley-cum-gallery here, between Valencia and Mission streets and 17th and 18th streets. The loosely connected artists of the Clarion Alley Mural Project (CAMP) represent a broad range of style and imagery. Carpet-draped Indonesian elephants plod calmly down the block; kung fu movie-style headlines shout slogans. The works here offer a dense glimpse at the Mission's contemporary art scene.
Shotwell Street grocery. A bit off the beaten path but well worth the detour is Brian Barneclo's gigantic Food Chain. This adorns the grocery store on Shotwell Street between 14th and 15th streets. It's a retro, 1950s-style celebration of the city's many neighborhoods (and the food chain), complete with an ant birthday party and worms finishing off a human skull. But in a cute way. Barneclo fans can see more of his work at cool watering hole Rye and hipster restaurant Nopa.
24th Street. Several murals in the Mexican political tradition adorn the buildings along 24th Street, including St. Peter's (at Alabama Street) and even McDonald's (at Mission Street).
Women's Building. Maestrapeace—the impressive, towering mural that seems to enclose this building—celebrates women around the world who work for peace.
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Austin