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DESCRIPTION:Whose Public Art? Contested Histories, Practices, and Representations in 
 the 21st Century Public Sphere\n\nTuesday, Oct 22, 2019, 5:00PM - 
 7:00PM\nOsher Lecture Hall\nSFAI—Chestnut Street Campus\n800 Chestnut 
 Street, San Francisco, CA 94133\n\nGRADUATE LECTURE SERIES\nWhose Public 
 Art? Contested Histories, Practices, and Representations in the 21st 
 Century Public Sphere\n\n\nPanel discussion sponsored by the Art, Place, 
 and Public Studies program at San Francisco Art Institute.\n\nA decision 
 earlier this year by the San Francisco Unified School District Board to 
 “paint down” the Victor Arnautoff murals of the life of George 
 Washington at the public high school of the same name sparked local, 
 national and international debate, raising anew questions of how history 
 should be publicly represented, what public(s) art means to address, and 
 when and how dominant historical narratives should be reinterrogated by 
 elaboration, augmentation or erasure. This panel of artists and scholars 
 moves beyond mere controversy to speak to the urgent need for deep critical 
 discussion about how artists engage in broader practices of historical 
 remembrance, struggles for social justice and ongoing social debate 
 regarding the definition of the “public” in the 21st century. How do 
 artists work with and represent particular communities and histories? How 
 can art activate public space as pedagogical space, creating convening 
 places for empowered teachers and learners? Beginning to answer these 
 questions involves delving into the multiple meanings of art in the public 
 sphere, building on concepts of the ‘theatricality of power’ in 
 representational practices, cultural imaginaries, and built environments, 
 and expanding the ways that artists as activists might intervene in the 
 dominant narratives that structure our relationships to one another.\n\nSan 
 Francisco Art Institute occupies a special place in history of public 
 art-making—not only for the historic murals by Diego Rivera, Frederick E. 
 Olmsted and others on the Chestnut Street campus but for the ongoing 
 engagement of SFAI artists, teachers and alumnx in contemporary questions 
 of making art in public. The new Art, Place, and Public Studies program at 
 SFAI offers a unique opportunity for students desiring to further their 
 investigations of art in the public sphere—creatively, critically and 
 curatorially.\n\nFree + open to the public—Reception immediately 
 following panel discussion.\n\nPanel Co-Chairs: Robin Balliger and Jeannene 
 Przyblyski\nPanelists: Robin Balliger, Cristóbal Martínez, Refa One, and 
 Jeannene Pzyblyski\n\nDewey Crumpler’s recent video commentary on the 
 Victor Arnautoff murals at George Washington High School will also be 
 screened.\n\n\nTHE PANELISTS\n\n\nRobin Balliger, PhD, is Chair of Art, 
 Place, and Public Studies and Liberal Arts at the San Francisco Art 
 Institute. She earned her PhD in anthropology at Stanford and her research 
 in Trinidad focused on popular culture in the context of neoliberal social 
 and spatial transformations. Balliger’s current project is on Oakland, 
 particularly on arts, culture, and racial politics in the context of urban 
 restructuring. In 2019 she was invited to present her work at the Max 
 Planck Institute in Germany. Balliger has received fellowships from 
 Fulbright, MacArthur Foundation, and she was awarded the Textor Award for 
 Outstanding Anthropological Creativity. Her publications appear in The 
 Global Resistance Reader, Trinidad Carnival: The Cultural Politics of a 
 Transnational Festival, Media Fields Journal, and Race, Poverty, and the 
 Environment. Formerly, Balliger was a musician and founding member of 
 Komotion International, a legendary collective performance space that 
 exemplified the radical politics and creativity of San Francisco’s 
 Mission District.\n\nDewey Crumpler is Associate Professor of Painting at 
 the San Francisco Art Institute. His current work examines issues of 
 globalization and cultural co-modification through the integration of 
 digital imagery, video and traditional painting techniques. His work has 
 been exhibited nationally and internationally, and is featured in the 
 permanent collections of the Oakland Museum of California; the Triton 
 Museum of Art, Santa Clara, California; and the California African American 
 Museum, Los Angeles. Crumpler has received a Flintridge Foundation award, 
 National Endowment for the Arts Fellowship Grant, and the Fleishhacker 
 Foundation, Eureka Fellowship. A digital image of his murals has been 
 included in the 2017 Tate Modern’s exhibition “Soul of a Nation” in 
 London, England.\n\nCristóbal Martínez, PhD, is an artist in 
 Postcommodity and Chair of Art and Technology at the San Francisco Art 
 Institute. In his work, Martínez positions metaphors that mediate 
 complexity at sites of dromological, spatial, social, cultural, political, 
 ecological, and economic anxiety. By interrogating our human behaviors 
 within these contexts, his art reveals the complex and often incongruent 
 nature of our memories, behaviors, beliefs, values, assumptions, choices, 
 and relationships.\n\nPostcommodity has received grants from the Joan 
 Mitchell Foundation, Creative Capital, Art Matters, Native Arts and 
 Cultures Foundation, Mid Atlantic Arts Foundation, Ford Foundation Art of 
 Change Fellowship, and Harker Fund. The collective exhibited in: Contour, 
 5th Biennial of the Moving Image in Mechelen, Belgium; 18th Biennale of 
 Sydney in Sydney, Australia; 2017 Whitney Biennial, New York, New York; 
 documenta14, Athens, Greece and Kassel, Germany; the 57th Carnegie 
 International in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania; and the US/Mexico 
 Border.\n\nRefa One, an Oakland California native, has been instrumental in 
 the development of the innovative, unorthodox genre of art known as 
 “Aerosol Art” (Graffiti Art/Style Writing) for well over two decades. 
 Immersed in HipHop culture as a youth, the walls of urban structures became 
 his canvas. Refa's refined HipHop calligraphy speaks to a legacy of style 
 writing, a cultural tradition born from the NYC subway painting movement. A 
 lifetime of involvement in HipHop culture via the Universal Zulu Nation 
 combined with his radical political awareness, has translated into a 
 successful career as a HipHop calligrapher, muralist, illustrator, 
 activist, and educator. Refa’s design aesthetic promotes African culture 
 as a vehicle for radical political and social change. His pieces are maps 
 of vision and reflection that capture the intellectual value and heritage 
 of the HipHop vernacular. His work has been featured nationally and in 
 various countries throughout Europe and the African continent. Refa One is 
 currently the director of AeroSoul, an international organization of spray 
 can artists from the African Diaspora.\n\nJeannene Przyblyski, PhD, is an 
 artist and historian, working on questions of people, place and 
 representational regimes, particularly in the U.S. and China. Przyblyski 
 has published widely on photography, media, visual culture and urbanism, 
 and produced creative public artworks that make visible the contested 
 landscapes all around us. Her most recent project, Some Place Chronicles, 
 was commissioned by the Los Angeles County Arts Commission to map in 
 bilingual artist’s books the history and culture of LA’s unincorporated 
 areas. Przyblyski was a San Francisco Arts Commissioner from 2004-2009 and 
 has held positions as Dean of Academic Affairs at San Francisco Art 
 Institute and as Provost of California Institute of the Arts (CalArts). She 
 is Distinguished Visiting Professor at the SFAI.\n \n\nImages (left to 
 right): (1) Dewey Crumpler, detail from Multi-Ethnic Heritage, a triptych 
 of murals completed in 1974 at George Washington High School as a response 
 to the controversial “Life of Washington” mural. Photo by Amanda Law; 
 (2) Postcommodity, With Each Incentive, 2019. Bluhm Family Terrace, Art 
 Institute of Chicago; Chicago, Illinois. Concrete, Cinder Block, and Steel 
 Rebar. Installation view. Courtesy of the Art Institute of Chicago; (3) 
 Refa One, detail of the newly unveiled Long Live Oscar Grant mural at 
 Fruitvale BART Station in Oakland, California. Courtesy the 
 artist.\n\n\nThe Arnautoff GWHS Murals, Identity Politics, Privatization &  
 Public Education\nhttps://youtu.be/iVF0eDdK5iw\n\nAlice Walker "They should 
 leave the mural and explain the mural to the children" The Destruction Of 
 The George  Washington High Victor Arnautoff 
 Murals\nhttps://youtu.be/XPFPTB_XZ6U\n\nSFUSD Board & Superintendent 
 Matthews Cutting  $300,000  From MLK Middle  School While Spending $850,000 
 To Censor GWHS Arnautoff 
 Murals\nhttps://youtu.be/Y5_NooOFegk\n\nCensorship, Not Destruction? SFUSD 
 Votes To Censor Arnautoff  Murals\nhttps://youtu.be/_UmLd091oFU\n\n"Paint 
 It Down" Rightists Disrupt Victor Arnautoff Mural Meeting In San 
 Francisco\nhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=K2CRDg4nBCg&feature=youtu.be\n\nDestroying 
 Arnautoff Murals As Payment For "Reparations"? SFUSD Bd Votes To Paint Over 
 Historic Murals\nhttps://youtu.be/fPpm8FUPC2c\n\nSF Debates Removal Of 
 Victor Arnautoff Murals At GWH\nhttps://youtu.be/rG6x4JS76j0\n\n"Erasing 
 History" SF Washington High & The Victor Arnautoff 
 Murals\nhttps://youtu.be/sxHijlewzoQ\n\nVictor Arnautoff: San Francisco's 
 Master Muralist of the 
 1930's\nhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=p5aYXYqcDNg&t=7s\n\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\n\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\n\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/\n\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/\n 
 https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2019/10/11/18827206.php
SUMMARY:Whose Public Art? Contested Histories, Practices, & Representations in the 21st Century
LOCATION:Osher Lecture Hall\nSFAI—Chestnut Street Campus\n800 Chestnut Street, San 
 Francisco, CA 94133
URL:https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2019/10/11/18827206.php
DTSTART:20191023T000000Z
DTEND:20191023T020000Z
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