BEGIN:VCALENDAR
VERSION:2.0
X-WR-CALNAME:www.indybay.org
PRODID:-//indybay/ical// v1.0//EN
BEGIN:VEVENT
UID:Indybay-18824028
SEQUENCE:18971893
CREATED:20190618T054200Z
DESCRIPTION:ACT NOW TO Stop Destruction Or Covering Of SF Washington High Victor 
 Arnaugtoff Murals\nAgenda Item Details\nTuesday Meeting Jun 18, 2019  6PM - 
 Special Meeting Category GENERAL INFORMATION Subject Accessibility 
 Information - Irving G. Breyer Board Meeting Room Type Information 
 \n\nInformation on Accessibility to Meetings of the Board of Education\nSan 
 Francisco Unified School District General Administrative Offices\n555 
 Franklin Street, San Francisco, CA 94102\n(The Irving G. Breyer Board 
 Meeting Room is Wheel Chair Accessible)\nPlease See Attached Map\n\ny 
 Information - Irving G. Breyer Board Meeting Room\nB. INFORMATION ITEMS\n1. 
 IMPORTANT NOTICE REGARDING PUBLIC COMMENT ON ARNAUTOFF MURAL AT WASHINGTON 
 HIGH SCHOOL\n2. Discussion of Potential Options to Remove From Public View 
 the Arnautoff Mural at George Washington High School\n\n\n\nStop The 
 Covering and/or Destruction of the History Arnautoff Murals\n\n\n\nSF 
 School Board To Cover Or Destroy Victor Arnautoff Murals At Washington 
 High-Fate of controversial SF high school mural down to three 
 options\n\nJill Tucker June 17, 2019 Updated: June 17, 2019 5:04 
 p.m.\n\nhttps://www.sfchronicle.com/education/article/Fate-of-controversial-SF-high-school-mural-down-14008090.php?psid=aqSrz\n\nS.F. 
 school officials are expected to decide whether to destroy or keep the 
 historic mural at George Washington High School.Photo: Yalonda M. James / 
 The Chronicle\n\nA statue of George Washington stands near a controversial 
 mural at George Washington High School.Photo: Yalonda M. James / The 
 Chronicle\n\nSan Francisco school officials are expected to decide whether 
 to destroy or keep the historic mural at George Washington High School, 
 photographed in San Francisco, Calif., on Wednesday, April 3, 2019. The 
 historic mural depicts the treatment of American Indians and African 
 Americans.Photo: Yalonda M. James / The Chronicle\nThe San Francisco school 
 board will take a step closer to deciding the fate of a controversial mural 
 at George Washington High School on Tuesday, with the choices narrowed to 
 covering it up or painting over it.\n\nThe mural has generated outrage in 
 recent months among some students and community groups who say the images 
 of black slaves picking cotton and white settlers stepping over a dead 
 American Indian are offensive and inappropriate for children.\n\nYet, mural 
 supporters say the historic fresco, a Depression-era painting by Russian 
 emigre Victor Arnautoff, is an important piece of art that is actually 
 critical of oppression and imperialism and must be saved.\n\nThe school 
 board is expected to review three possible actions during a special meeting 
 Tuesday, with an hour of public comment devoted to the issue.\n\nTwo 
 options include obscuring the mural with a curtain, at an estimated cost of 
 $375,000, or blocking the public view with custom acoustic panels, which 
 could cost up to $875,000.\n\nThe other alternative is to paint over it — 
 at a projected cost of $600,000 — which would take three years to 
 complete. Painting over it would also include additional legally required 
 steps given that it would include the destruction of public property, 
 adding to the costs and time to complete it.\n\n\nEach option would require 
 environment impact reports, which increase the cost and time required to 
 complete, in addition to the price of supplies and labor.\n\nThe mural is 
 “huge and complicated,” and removing it from public view would be a 
 significant task no matter what the board decides, said district 
 spokeswoman Gentle Blythe.\n\n\nThough the controversial images are only a 
 small part of the large mural, the board’s final decision — expected 
 later this month — would affect the entire piece, Blythe said.\n\nEarlier 
 this year, a community task force, charged by district administrators with 
 recommending a course of action, voted to digitally archive the fresco and 
 then paint over it. The group decided the “mural does not represent SFUSD 
 values,” Blythe said following the vote.\n\nStudent Briana King described 
 the images as “rude and disrespectful.” Other critics said such images 
 belong in textbooks or museums, not on the wall of a school where students 
 must see them everyday, endlessly reminded of how African Americans and 
 American Indians have suffered.\n\nThose images, said Lateefah Simon, a 
 Washington High graduate and BART director, “are not for glory, and they 
 are not for show.”\n\n\nThe controversy has gained national attention, 
 with several organizations, including the National Coalition Against 
 Censorship, urging the district to save the mural.\n\n“NCAC strongly 
 urges the district to consider the serious ramifications of the 
 irreversible act of destroying an artwork, as well as the precedent it 
 would set for other works installed in San Francisco public schools that 
 could spark strong emotions in the future,” according to a May 6 letter 
 sent to Superintendent Vince Matthews. “We ask the district to leave the 
 murals in place and provide additional context and programming around 
 them.”\n\nThis isn’t the first time there have been calls to remove or 
 destroy the 86-year-old mural, one of many pieces of public art created in 
 San Francisco as part of President Franklin Roosevelt’s New Deal 
 employment projects.\n\nIn response to similar concerns raised in the 
 1960s, artist Dewey Crumpler, who is black, was hired to paint additional 
 works at the school. The so-called “compromise murals” depicted 
 Latinos, Native Americans, Asian Americans and African Americans overcoming 
 oppression.\n\nYet, this time the effort to remove the frescoes has 
 momentum, including support from school board President Stevon Cook who 
 said he would like to see the mural removed or painted over.\n\nMural 
 supporters, including the school’s alumni association, say they will sue 
 to stop any effort to destroy the artwork.\n\nJill Tucker is a San 
 Francisco Chronicle staff writer. Email: jtucker@sfchronicle.com Twitter: 
 @jilltucker\n\n"Erasing History" SF Washington High & The Victor Arnautoff 
 Murals\nhttps://youtu.be/sxHijlewzoQ\nHistorian and geographer Gray Brechin 
 talks about the effort to destroy the historic Victor Arnautoff murals at 
 Washington High in San Francisco. He discusses the history of the murals 
 including their exposure of the history of George Washington.  He also 
 discusses other efforts to remove murals at Coit Tower and at Rincon annex 
 because of their political content.\nFor additional media:\nVictor 
 Arnautoff: San Francisco's Master Muralist of the 
 1930's\nhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=p5aYXYqcDNg&t=7s\nWhen 
 conservatives went to war over SF post office 
 murals\nhttps://www.sfchronicle.com/chronicle_vault/article/When-conservatives-went-to-war-over-SF-post-13912445.php\nThese 
 High School Murals Depict an Ugly History. Should They 
 Go?\nhttps://www.nytimes.com/2019/04/11/arts/design/george-washington-murals-ugly-history-debated.html\nMurals 
 at Washington High School Stoke Debate: Board to Decide Their 
 Fate\nhttps://sfrichmondreview.com/2019/04/30/murals-at-washington-high-school-stoke-debate-board-to-decide-their-fate/\nMurals 
 at Washington High School Stoke Debate: Board to Decide Their 
 Fate\nhttps://sfrichmondreview.com/2019/04/30/murals-at-washington-high-school-stoke-debate-board-to-decide-their-fate/\nThis 
 interview was done by Steve Zeltzer of WorkWeek radio on 
 5/28/19.\nProduction of Labor Video Project\nwww.laborvideo.org\n 
 https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2019/06/17/18824028.php
SUMMARY:ACT NOW TO Stop Destruction Or Covering Of SF Washington High Victor Arnaugtoff Murals
LOCATION:San Francisco Unified School District General Administrative Offices\n555 
 Franklin Street, San Francisco, CA 94102
URL:https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2019/06/17/18824028.php
DTSTART:20190619T010000Z
DTEND:20190619T030000Z
END:VEVENT
END:VCALENDAR
