Tag Archives: Art in Storefronts

Mrs. Teriosa

21 Dec

One of the Mission Art in Storefronts projects that was implemented was a fortune telling service called Mrs. Teriosa, where you write your question on a card and drop it into a slot. Mrs. Teriosa, who are really Kelly Ording and Jetro Martinez, then posts the original and a reply card in the window. Mission Loc@l, a “hyperlocal” web magazine, have a few photos of the questions people have been asking in What We Want to Know (I, II). What we want to know, it turns out, is mostly relationship-related, for better, or in this case, for worse. I should go check it out soon, maybe ask her what photographs I should take next, what I should have for dinner tomorrow…

A little bit about Mission Loc@l:

Mission Loc@l believes that by covering a neighborhood fairly and thoroughly, we can build community and a sustainable model for quality journalism. As part of that effort, we seek collaboration and experimentation that will serve the community we cover and journalism. In the Mission District that means being a bilingual site and using print, multimedia and video to deliver information that offers diverse residents a way to connect and stay informed.

The site launched in October 2008, opened an office in the Mission District in January and many of us are Mission residents.

They have a feature call Sunday Morning Walk that’s pretty fun. Looks like the Mission alright.

SF street art

2 Oct


Simmons and Belonax

Remember that Art in Storefronts initiative? The chosen artists have been announced, and the most interesting to me is Simmons and Belonax’s “Everything is Okay” neon sign installation proposed for Central Market St, not the least because there is a mock-up photo.

There is also Market St poster plan for next year that includes some work by Bihn Danh. One can only hope daguerreotypes are involved, but maybe that’s asking too much for street posters. The project is described as:

The final series, by artist Bihn Danh, called The Wonderful Life of Gardening, will be installed from April 5 to July 1, 2010. This series incorporates photographic collaborations with San Francisco gardeners, including some of those who tend garden plots under the San Francisco Recreation and Park’s Community Garden Program.

There’s also a bit of strangeness brewing. As, I assume, a part of the SF Planning Dept’s plan to prettify the Mission (I heard about this in the Mission Dispatch, and it certainly explains the construction on Valencia St), the SF Arts Commission announced the winning proposal for a Valencia St installation as Michael Arcega‘s, but it was a close one between Arcega and Brian Goggin. Apparently one of the jurors on the deciding panel voted with a fraction, and when he was told he couldn’t, threw the deciding vote to Mike. I’m not really sure what was going on behind the scenes, but Goggin saw an opening, and with some mobilization he has won a revote. Not sure when it is happening since I only heard about this today, but if you’re a local, you might want to take a look at the two proposals and let Mary Chou (Mary.Chou [at] sfgov.org) know if you, as a community member, have any views.

Personally, I think Mike’s proposal is a lot more functional and meaningful as a part of the daily activity of the community, though it looks like Goggin has more experience in street installation. In the interest of full disclosure, I have to say that he was the TA to one of my art classes a while ago and I am swayed by the fact that the work he showed us in class was very interesting. Not to mention he is a nice guy! So if you have thoughts, shoot off an email. Who knows if community messages will make a real difference, but it can’t hurt, especially since one of the main goals of all these projects is to build a few spots where it’s pleasant for people to hang out and to make the area more pedestrian friendly.

UPDATE: From Kate Patternson of SFAC:

There is a lot of misinformation flying around about the recent Valencia Streetscape Public Art Project artist selection process. Here are the facts:

Essentially, when the panel met and originally voted it appeared that Michael Arcega had the highest score and was declared the winner. However, afterward the staff reviewed the votes and realized that there was an error in the scoring, which invalidated all of the votes. In order to rectify the situation, we are going to redo the last selection panel meeting and all original project finalists will be included. This has nothing to do with any particular artist, it is simply a mistake, which we are going to correct.

The final selection panel meeting is currently scheduled for October 14. More information will be posted soon.

Art in Storefronts

21 Jul


Remnants of a GNC, 24th St.

An “attractive display to draw potential renters” sets off an alarm or two, but Art in Storefronts sounds like a good little project with a local focus if you can make a new piece in time. They seem to be more receptive to multimedia installations but if you print large, I’d imagine it would work. More info is available in the application form available from the SFAC website. The run-down:

- Deadline to apply: Aug. 14, 2009
- Applicants may be an individual or an artist collective / organization.
- Applicants must be based in San Francisco.
- You may apply for more than one neighborhood, each with a separate application.
- Only new artwork made specifically for this project will be considered.
- Proposals must respond to the history or unique character of the neighborhood.
- Priority will be given to artists that live or work in the neighborhood.
- Selected artists will be given $500 to cover artwork production expenses and time.

Installation
Sept. 1-20: Central Market (From 5th to 9th), 10 storefronts
Oct. 1-23: Bayview (3rd St from Evans to Williams), 3 storefronts
Oct. 1-30: Tenderloin (Taylor from Market to Ellis), 3 storefronts
Oct. 1-Nov. 20: Mission (24th Street Corridor from Mission Street to Potrero), 3 storefronts

The project will run through January 2010.