San Francisco Chronicle

Breed, during visit to SFMOMA, says arts can play key role in reviving city.

Breed, in SFMOMA visit, says events can help city spring back

- TONY BRAVO

Art can be an equalizer: When you and someone else are both viewing an evocative work, something about that shared experience can be revealing.

On April 1, I was invited to tour the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art with Mayor London Breed. Like any politician, Breed brings an agenda to her public appearance­s — in this case, to remind the Bay Area that, after a year of pandemic, the city’s museums are reopening to the public. But there were moments during her visit where I thought the mayor let go of official business.

I wondered what personal connection Breed would find in the work, given her role in the year’s headlines.

The shows, “Bay Area Walls” and “Close to Home: Creativity in Crisis,” are both inextricab­ly tied to the present. “Walls” is presented over three floors at the museum and includes murals and site installati­ons by local artists reacting to the coronaviru­s and recent social reckonings. “Close to Home” highlights seven Bay Area artists’ responses to the same events, with an emphasis on how the disruption of daily life changed their artistic practices.

Joining Breed were Vallie Brown, director of San Francisco Grants for the Arts; Ralph Remington,

director of cultural affairs at the San Francisco Arts Commission; SFMOMA Director Neal Benezra; its board president Diana Nelson; Chief Curator Janet Bishop and Photograph­y Curator Corey Keller.

“It’s been a year,” Breed said as she arrived from a news conference at Moscone Center. “We feel like we’ve all been in COVID jail. It’s time to break out and live a little bit.”

In recent weeks, Breed has publicly upped her support for the arts, timing that may have influenced her visit: On March 25, the city launched a new guaranteed income program that will give 130 San Francisco artists $1,000 a month for six months. And in February, Breed proposed a backfill of the Propositio­n E Hotel Tax Fund, which helps support local arts.

“I’ve already made a commitment in my budget at least for the next two years to backfill a lot of those anticipate­d cuts,” Breed said. “But I think San Francisco is going to come alive again and that, fingers crossed, this is a program that can continue.”

Breed said repeatedly during her visit that she wants to see art, and artists, interactin­g on the front lines as restrictio­ns lift. Imagine what it would be like to see people dancing down the staircase at the museum, she asked, or painting in the lobby.

Her personal taste is art that’s up close and audience participat­ion-driven: parades, festivals and events that are centered in local communitie­s. During her 10 years as director of the African American Arts

and Culture Complex, she said she developed an understand­ing that some artists need more specialize­d support than others.

“I had this one artist who drove me nuts, but when he got on that stage ...” Breed said of one performer who had trouble navigating intricacie­s of arts funding. “He didn’t know how to do anything other than being a dancer and a choreograp­her. That was his life. That’s why choosing the arts to pilot this (guaranteed income) program was so important. I want people like that to be their best creative selves.”

After viewing Liz Hernandez’s mural “Conjuro para la sanación de nuestro futuro” (“A spell for the healing of our future”), which consists of images of lungs, handwashin­g and other emblems of the year in a political poster style, Breed and Benezra chatted about artists the mayor appreciate­s. Breed mentioned Romare Bearden, a painter and collage artist exhibited at SFMOMA in 2004, whom she also featured at the African American Arts and Culture Complex. She came to the show at SFMOMA several times to see the work of the influentia­l Black artist.

In the next gallery, a photograph by Erina Alejo, part of her series “My Ancestors Followed Me Here,” sparked a moment of recognitio­n in the mayor. Breed pointed out a photo of a Mission neighborho­od mural by Ronnie Goodman, a San Francisco painter and former distance runner who died in 2020 at age 60.

Goodman was well known for his vivid use of color and the distinctiv­e style of figures that appeared in his work: He was also known for being unhoused in recent years and setting up shelter in the Mission District. In 2011, after he was released from incarcerat­ion, Goodman’s work was shown at City Hall, a show Breed helped organize.

“I knew him; a lot of my friends bought his artwork,” Breed said. “All of his pieces sold. I made sure he got 100% of his proceeds.” Later, Goodman’s work was loaned to Breed by a friend to hang in her mayoral office. Hearing Breed talk about him, Goodman sounded like the kind of person Breed is trying to reach with the guaranteed artist income program.

The visit lasted about 45 minutes, a decent amount of time for a public official to be anywhere. As the mayor prepared to leave, she and Benezra talked about SFMOMA’s ongoing loans of artwork for her office.

Breed asked what other works might be available to refresh the spaces. After all, City Hall, too, was preparing for a return to something resembling prepandemi­c life.

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 ?? Photos by Mike Kai Chen / Special to The Chronicle ?? San Francisco Mayor London Breed speaks to patrons during a visit to the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art.
Photos by Mike Kai Chen / Special to The Chronicle San Francisco Mayor London Breed speaks to patrons during a visit to the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art.
 ??  ?? The San Francisco Museum of Modern Art has reopened with the exhibition­s “Bay Area Walls” and “Close to Home: Creativity in Crisis.”
The San Francisco Museum of Modern Art has reopened with the exhibition­s “Bay Area Walls” and “Close to Home: Creativity in Crisis.”
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 ?? Mike Kai Chen / Special to The Chronicle ?? San Francisco Mayor London Breed walks up the SFMOMA stairs with museum Director Neal Benezra.
Mike Kai Chen / Special to The Chronicle San Francisco Mayor London Breed walks up the SFMOMA stairs with museum Director Neal Benezra.

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