px

To Cause to Remember

From artist's website: Statue of Liberty Mural Restoration: 2013
It is surprising when a work of art becomes a symbol with the lasting power to transform our public space and our conversation.  The San Francisco Human Services Agency contacted me in 2013 to find out if I could restore my 1992 mural “To Cause to Remember”, better known as the Statue of Liberty mural.  The Liberty is the national symbol for “America the Free” accompanied by her classic quote ending with“…Send These, The Homeless, Tempest-Tost To Me…”.  When I returned to the SOMA Homeless shelter I found it to be the site of the increasing face of poverty in the United States and the proof that something can be done to help people.  New staff are brought out during their training to look at the mural to consider its meaning.  This symbol, the fallen Liberty, speaks to the issues of poverty, immigration, mental illness, incarceration, drugs, war veterans, families and the elderly. The question is how important is it to have art that speaks directly to the issues of justice and equity in our urban spaces? This work of art has weathered the test of time. The Liberty in recline has proven herself to really mean something to the people who live with her chains and to those who remember what she means.
Created on January 1, 1970
St. Vincent de Paul Society, 5th Street, San Francisco, CA, United States
Navigate
Hunted by Natalie Cowan.
Pictures by @chasingspraypaint.

Marker details

Date created1970-01-01T00:00:00.000Z
Marker typeartwork
CitySan Francisco
CountryUnited States
What3Wordschin.giving.method