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Site-specific mural by Barry McGee, photograph by David M. Allen
Project Title: Untitled
Recipient Organization: 509
Cultural Center/Luggage Store
Lead Artist: Barry
McGee
Genre and Date Awarded: Visual
Arts, December 1994
Completed: May
1998
Artist Barry McGee collaborated with the 509
Cultural Center to
create a site-specific permanent public artwork on the four inset
walls of a building located at Sixth and Howard Streets in San Francisco—an
area undergoing redevelopment over the last decade and one that has
long been home to low-income seniors, deteriorating single room occupancy
hotels, bars, and Filipino immigrant families. McGee, well-known
as “Twist”—the creator of many temporary, ephemeral
public pieces—proposed this as his first permanent mural. Collaborating
with the 509 Cultural Center and the neighbors in the building’s
vicinity, McGee created images that were closely tied to the site
and its characters. The mural was completed and dedicated in
late spring 1998.
The piece consisted of four 64 foot by 8 foot metal trays fitted
to and installed on the inset walls. Large portraits along
with smaller, more intimate renderings were enameled and spray painted
over the metal surfaces. The panels then were bolted to the
inset walls.
When he embarked on this project, Barry McGee intended to work on
a building located at Leavenworth and Turk streets in San Francisco’s
Tenderloin—a neighborhood where the 509 Cultural Center sponsors
many projects. However, the collaborators encountered unanticipated
resistance from the building’s absentee owners and similar
problems when they tried to move to different, nearby buildings. While
the South of Market’s Sixth Street corridor, where the project
was eventually produced, has a similar demographic profile to the
Tenderloin, it has long been a neighborhood where alternative arts
organizations and projects clustered. There the collaborators
found a receptive building owner.
The site approval effort took longer than anticipated, but more
dramatic was the project’s ultimate outcome. McGee completed
and installed the four panels by May 1998. Their installation
was celebrated with a party with the neighbors surrounding the building. A
few days later, one of the panels was stolen. McGee re-painted
and replaced it and reinforced the bolts on the entire piece. In
November 1999, the entire project was stolen. San Francisco
Chronicle reporter Eric Brazil claimed “For sheer heft
and volume, the great South of Market mural theft is a candidate
for The Guinness Book of World Records.” ArtWeek commented
in its January 2000 issue, “The robbery is an unfortunate example
of a public artwork falling into private hands. McGee’s
popularity, coupled with the high prices that his pieces command,
has supporters worried that the stolen mural might be intended for
sale in the art market.” It has not been recovered.
At the time of undertaking this project, Barry McGee had produced
a large body of temporary and ephemeral work in spray enamel. He
also had been part of several gallery exhibitions (at Center for
the Arts at Yerba Buena Gardens and the San Jose Museum of Art in
Northern California; Museu Lasar Segall in São Paulo, Brazil;
and other venues) in which he attempted to “‘bring stimuli
from the outside in,’ constantly recreating and reinventing
the ‘eternal wall,’ using spray enamel, mixed media,
and found objects.” He also had spent seven months in
São Paulo Brazil, working with young street artists through
a grant from the Lila Wallace-Reader’s Digest Fund/Arts International. Upon
his return, he collaborated with the 509 Cultural Center’s
teens and homeless residents on a temporary wall in the Sixth Street
Corridor of the South of Market in San Francisco.
The 509 Cultural Center is a Tenderloin/Sixth Street-based arts
and cultural organization, which seeks to enrich and empower the
cultural lives of the ethnically diverse, predominantly low-income
residents of its neighborhood. It produces public art projects,
gallery exhibitions, performances by new and emerging artists, and
an apprenticeship training program. It also serves as a drug
and alcohol free space for meetings, workshops, rehearsals, recitals,
and discussions.
Barry McGee

Exhibitions
- One-man exhibition/Installation, Center for the Arts at Yerba
Buena Gardens, San Francisco, California (1994)
- Installation, Museu Lasar Segall, São Paulo, Brazil (1993)
- “Twelve Bay Area Painters: The Eureka Fellowship
Winners,” San Jose Museum of Art, San Jose, California (1993)
- “Textures of Nature,” Berkeley Art Center, Berkeley,
California (1993)
- “Folklore,” 509 Cultural Center/Luggage Store Gallery,
San Francisco, California (1993)
- Installation, La Raza Graphics Center, San Francisco, California
(1993)
- Mary Porter Sesnon Gallery, University of California, Santa Cruz,
Santa Cruz, California (1992)
- “Wet Paint,” Southern Exposure, San Francisco, California
(1991)
- “3/Play,” Southern Exposure, San Francisco, California
(1991)
- Installation, Diego Rivera Gallery, San Francisco, California
(1991)
- “Wall of Resistance, Wall of Shame,” University of
California, Berkeley, Berkeley, California (1991)
- “Art Against the War,” Artists Television Access
Gallery, San Francisco, California (1991)
- Multicultural Show, Diego Rivera Gallery, San Francisco Art Institute,
San Francisco, California (1991)
- “Spray-can Art: Panels,” San Francisco Youth
Programs, San Francisco, California (1990)
- Group Show, Berkeley Art Center, Berkeley, California (1990)
- Mural, Community Students, Workers,” Chaugitillo Elementary
School, Chaugitillo, Nicaragua, Central America (1988)
- “Earthbook Mural,” with Juana Alicia and Cia Yang,
Skyline Community College, San Bruno, California (1987)
Awards
- Lila Wallace-Reader’s Digest Fund/Arts International Artist
Residency Program (1993)
- Eureka Fellowship, Fleishhacker Foundation (1993)
- Merit Scholarship, San Francisco Art Institute (1991, 1990)
- Canson Paper Award (1990)
- Sobel Scholarship, San Francisco Art Institute (1989)
Teaching
- Artist Resident Program, McClymonds High School, Oakland, California
(1992)
- Franklin Park Mural, California Conservation Corps, Oakland,
California (1992)
- “Life on the Water,” Installation, School of the
Arts, San Francisco, California (1992)
- Visiting Artist Program, McClymonds High School, Oakland, California
(1991)
Commissions
- Mural, Yerba Buena Center for the Arts, San Francisco, California
(1992)
- Market Street Art in Transit Program, San Francisco Art Commission,
San Francisco, California (1992)
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