September 9, 2005

Public Art, Public Conversation
Hearts in San Francisco (Remix)
By Anonymous

-- Read the Hearts in SF response to this essay

To me, "Hearts in San Francisco," the 2004 citywide exhibition of heart-shaped "art" lacked a certain, well, heart. I eagerly shared my feelings with whomever would listen. Wells Fargo had one covered in special commemorative coins, a display of wealth I consider offensive in the name of public art. Few of the more than one hundred artists commissioned took any risks, visual or otherwise. In a time of war, this is hard to stomach. While I was relieved to see one work by Rigo that had some sense of humanity, I was genuinely disappointed by the invasion of such toothless art in a city with such a rich field of talent.

We were having beers after work when N said, "We ought to make our own and put them all over the place." I said, "If you're serious, I'll put resources into it." A deal was struck, and we began to work on the project. N had access to a Computer Numerically Controlled tool, which would cut the shapes. I wanted practice on a drawing program, so we started work while we were still trying to come up with good concepts and placement ideas for our hearts. We would religiously copy the originals to scale, and would make the hearts out of half-inch plywood bolted together with an angle iron. Three hearts seemed doable, especially if N brought K on the scene.

There were lots of details to work out, but I think we came up with three good responses to "Hearts in San Francisco." K's was a war message, titled Lucky in Love, but Not in War, played off the shape of the heart, depicting a four-leafed clover. N's heart, Weapon of Mass Destruction, was upended with the point facing the sky, like a missile, and was covered in camouflage paint and military-style stencils. Mine, Home is Where the Heart is, was a shelter that could sleep two. It was complete with a bed, dry socks, towels, a photo gallery and a message board.

We loaded the hearts in the back of my pick-up truck. We were cheered for and stared at as darkness fell upon us. Dressed in coveralls, we piled out at the bottom of Market Street on the Embarcadero, and as fortune had it, we were nestled amid a cancer fundraising walk. We put out orange cones and unloaded. No one bothered us, and no one asked any hard questions.

It appeared to be no one's job to remove our work, so it survived for days, before apparently capturing the attention of, who else, but the "Hearts" people. How else could we explain away the eyewitness account of a certain obscure brand of rental truck we had previously seen load and move the official art. In the four-and-a-half days it stood in Justin Herman Plaza, many people wrote greetings and supplied feedback on my piece, but I missed seeing it that last day. N, K and I had just decided to do an interview with The San Francisco Chronicle. Our hearts disappeared less than an hour before we were supposed to meet our interviewer. This allowed for our anonymity to remain, which I appreciate, along with the irony.

I think our hearts changed the context of the sanctioned art--and improved it. We succeeded in punctuating the exhibition in a subtle and artful way. It set us back a few hundred dollars, but I would certainly do it again. Feedback


  The Expo for Independent Arts is the Bay Area's only grassroots connection fair for independent arts, music & culture!

Join the Expo Email Listserv

Participate in Expo 2008: Exhibit, sponsor, volunteer

Bay Area Arts Calendar: Events, D.I.Y. workshops and more.


The Expo is made possible in part by the generous support of the folliowing sponsors: 924 Gilman Street
KUSF-FM
FunCheapSF
The SF Bay Guardian
The Walter & Elise Haas Foundation
The Wallace Alexander Gerbode Foundation
The San Francisco Foundation
The William and Flora Hewlett Foundation
The Zellerbach Family Foundation.

Expo Staff


The D.I.Y. Library
How-to articles from Expo 2000-2005
-Music
-Health
-Venues
-Performance
-Business
-Funding
-Misc.

Stay up to Date
Subscribe to the Expo email list for udpates on our events and services, plus monthly bulletins about nonprofit arts in the Bay Area.


Expo History

Expo 2007
-Attendees, workshops & performances

Expo 2006
-Press Kit

Expo 2005
-2005 Attendees, Performances & Workshops
-Public Art, Public Conversation
(updated Sep. 9 '05)

Expo 2004
-Event Wrap-Up
-2004 Attending Groups A-Z

Expo 2003
-2003 Event Wrap-Up
-2003 Attending Groups A-Z
-2003 Photo Gallery

Expo 2002
-2002 Press Coverage
-2002 Attending Groups A-L
-2002 Attending Groups M-Z

Expo 2001
-2001 Participating Groups A-Z

Expo 2000
-2000 Video Clip
-2000 Photo Gallery
-2000 Participating Arts Groups A-Z


about independent arts & media
support us


Search



HOME | NEWS DESK | RADIOSEGUE | EXPO | DONATE | ABOUT | COMMUNITY |
All contents copyright ©2008 by the authors and creators.