Planning for Wall + Response Exhibition at the San Francisco Public Library!

San Francisco Public Library

Maw Shein Win and I are excited to announce our Wall + Response project will be featured as an exhibition at the San Francisco Public Library for four months, opening Saturday, March 12, 2022 - July 30, with two public programs: Sunday, March 13 at 1pm and Sunday, April 30 at 1on

Two weeks ago we did a walkthrough of the space with curator Joan Jasper, exhibition designer Hannah Gribetz, and staff member Jesse Dutton-Kenny. Deep gratitude for the exhibition team!

We'll keep you posted as the opening dates gets closer.

Maw & Megan at the SF Public Library

About Wall + Response

In 2020/21 Clarion Alley Mural Project (CAMP) presented Wall + Response, a project featuring 16 poets responding to the social/ political/ racial/ justice narratives of four murals on Clarion Alley, curated by CAMP artist and organizer Megan Wilson and poet Maw Shein Win. Participants included:

  • Poets Heather Bourbeau, Aileen Cassinetto, Tongo Eisen-Martin, and Chris Stroffolino responding to the mural Justice for Luís D. Góngora Pat by Marina Perez-Wong and Elaine Chu, working with Justice4Luis

  • Poets Karla Brundage, Jennifer Hasegawa, Tureeda Mikell, and Kim Shuck responding to the work What We Want! by Emory Douglas/Black Panther Party / remix by CUBA D8, Mace

  • Poets Celeste Chan, MK Chavez, Paul Corman-Roberts, and Tim Xonnelly responding to the mural Affordable Housing/Vivienda Asequible by the SF Print Collective working with the Western Regional Advocacy Project (WRAP)

  • Poets Youssef Alaoui, Jason Bayani, Genny Lim, and Michael Warr responding to the mural The Arab Liberation Mural / Will To Live by Art Forces, Arab Resource Organizing Center (AROC), and Arab Youth Organizing (AYO)

Wall + Response was originally conceived to culminate in four quarterly public events to be presented on Clarion Alley.  However, due to the Covid-19 pandemic the poets instead were filmed by videographer Mahima Kotian and sound person Evan Karp, reading their work in front of the murals on Clarion Alley.  Kotian created videos for each  of the four series presented as online events (November,  February,  April,  and June) hosted in collaboration with the Booksmith.  All events were free and open to the public.

In addition to the events, Wall + Response produced an edition of 50 print portfolios featuring 15” x 26” posters of the murals and the poems, printed by Sun Night Editions, with handmade portfolio cases created by Asa Nakata.

Adriana Camarena and Luis Poot being filmed for Program One: Justice For Luís D. Góngora Pat

Development & Curation of Wall + Response

In 2019 CAMP artist and organizer Megan Wilson approached poet Maw Shein Win with the idea of co-curating a project that would bring poets together to respond to a selection of CAMP’s murals on Clarion Alley. Wilson and Win had collaborated on numerous projects over the previous 15 years,  including the ambitious 2-year collaboration Broadside Attractions | Vanquished Terrains that brought 24 Bay Area poets and artists together to create new works, culminating in a 2-month exhibition at Intersection for the Arts in 2012.  Win responded affirmatively, suggesting the title Wall + Response,  and the development and curation of the project began.

In selecting the murals for Wall + Response,  Wilson reflected on CAMP and its role in the community over the past decade in response to the hyper-gentrification that has plagued the Bay Area. The cultural shift has meant an epidemic of evictions, a significant decrease in Black and Latinx communities;  devastating income inequality,  an overwhelming number of people who are unhoused,  and a disturbing increase in police violence and fatal shootings of citizens by police.

In the midst of this harrowing transformation of a city once known for progressive values,  diversity,  and affordability,  CAMP had become a ‘destination’,  or as some have coined it,  ‘one of the most Instagramable spaces in San Francisco’,  due in part to a myriad of developments in the cultural landscape over the previous 10 years,  including increasing sales/use of smartphones with cameras;  an acceleration in numbers of social media companies and users,  most notably Instagram,  Facebook,  and Youtube;  and rising numbers of tourists every year.  This relatively new designation for a project that grew out of the neighborhood for the neighborhood,  had meant not just a global audience of more than 200,000 visitors directly on the alley annually,  it had also translated to millions of people viewing CAMP’s work through social media platforms,  numerous online publications,  and appearances in film and video productions,  including three Netflix series.  In response to the impacts of hyper-gentrification in the Bay Area and throughout the world and to the project’s growing visibility,  CAMP made the decision to prioritize projects that gave voice to local and global narratives in support of social,  economic,  political,  racial and environmental justice.

The four murals selected by Wilson for Wall + Response exemplify successful collaborations between artists and larger organizing forces to create public works and messaging that represent this collective effort.

Based on the walls selected, poet Maw Shein Win invited Bay Area poets whose practices include social and political community engagement. Win considered poets with diverse voices whose work speaks to the issues addressed in the murals: police brutality, societal inequities, affordable housing, and resilience in the face of injustice. Their poems honor not only the intent but also the lives depicted in the murals.

Kim Shuck and Emory Douglas on Clarion Alley

Wall + Response Process

Following the selection and pairings of the murals and poets, Wilson and Win created a schedule to present the series quarterly – fall, winter, spring, summer. The process for each program began with an online video meeting between the poets, artists, and creators of the murals (in the case of the murals Affordable Housing / Vivienda Asequible and The Arab Liberation Mural / Will To Live, which had multiple artists working with larger organizations to create the murals, the curators asked if the creators could please select one or two artists and organizers to represent each mural due to the limited capacity to manage/schedule the participants for each series). The meeting allowed for the artists and organizers to share the background and process for the creation of the mural; and for the poets to have the opportunity to ask questions. The poets were then given 6 weeks to write a poem in response to the wall. While there weren’t any limits for the length of the poem(s) to be read in front of the mural for the video; the poems included in the print portfolio were required to be 26 lines or fewer, including spaces. Several poets wrote longer works that were then edited to be included in the print portfolio. A month before the online events, the poets were filmed on Clarion Alley by videographer Mahima Kotian and sound person Evan Karp reading the poems they wrote in response to the wall. The poets were also invited to read additional works (up to 7 minutes). The artists and/or organizers were also filmed discussing the murals works and their work in the communities they serve. Kotian then edited the footage and added music by local Bay Area artists selected by the curators for the introduction and credits to create four short films. Each film was presented at a live online event hosted in collaboration with Booksmith, with an introduction by CAMP co-director Christopher Statton, followed by a Q&A with the poets, artists, organizers, and curators.

Celeste Chan being filmed for Program Three: Affordable Housing/Vivienda Asequible

Wall + Response Print Portfolio

The Wall + Response print portfolio is comprised of 15” x 26” poster/print broadsides printed by Sun Night Editions, which includes:

  • An introduction to the project

  • Sixteen signed black and white broadsides featuring a poem (one poem/poet) paired with an image from one of the four murals the poet was paired with to respond

  • Four signed broadsides featuring full color images of the four murals painted by artists working in conjunction with larger organizing forces and a description of the work

  • The curators’ signed broadside statement, featuring an image of Wall + Response artist/organizer curator Megan Wilson’s “Home/Casa” mural, accompanied by Maw Shein Win’s poem response CLARION CALL

  • Biographies of all participants

  • Colophon signed by Sun Night Editions and Asa Nakata

  • The portfolio box, designed and handmade by printmaker and book artist Asa Nakata

View more about the Print Portfolio HERE.

Sharif Zakout being filmed on Clarion Alley for Program Four: The Arab Liberation Mural / Will To Live