SF’s Mayor Orders Review of Public Art & Statues
Thanks to ABC7 for letting us know that Mayor London Breed has called for a review of public art after crowds toppled three historic statues in San Francisco this weekend.
She has asked the Arts Commission, Recreation and Parks Department and Human Rights Commission to work with the community so that art, including statues, reflect the values of the city.
Mayor London Breed’s Statement on Public Art
There is very real pain in this country rooted in our history of slavery and oppression, especially against African-Americans and Indigenous people. I know that pain all too well. But the damage done to our park last night went far beyond just the statues that were torn down, and included significant damage to Golden Gate Park. Every dollar we spend cleaning up this vandalism takes funding away from actually supporting our community, including our African-American community. I say this not to defend any particular statue or what it represents, but to recognize that when people take action in the name of my community, they should actually involve us. And when they vandalize our public parks, that’s their agenda, not ours.
If we are going to make real change, let’s do the work with our impacted communities to make that change. To do that, I have asked the Arts Commission, the Human Rights Commission, and the Recreation and Parks Department and its Commission to work with the community to evaluate our public art and its intersection with our country’s racist history so that we can move forward together to make real changes in this City. Who and what we honor through our public art can and should reflect our values.
Read more at ABC7
Mayor @LondonBreed calls for review of public art after crowds topple historic statues of Francis Scott Key, Ulysses Grant and Junipero Serra in San Francisco’s Golden Gate Park. https://t.co/lbQOIc4guw
— ABC7 News (@abc7newsbayarea) June 21, 2020
Big clean happening in #GoldenGatePark after a crowd toppled 3 statues Friday, pedestals vandalized. https://t.co/A7KKe9l8xF pic.twitter.com/xKrv8jp4pi
— Cornell Barnard (@CornellBarnard) June 20, 2020