COVID Art.jpg

Panel: Artists Embedded at SF COVID Command Center

A partnership with San Francisco Arts Commission and San Francisco City and County COVID Command Center
Thursday, 7/15/2021
7:00 - 8:15
Virtual Library
Address

United States


SF’s COVID Command Center Artists in Residence will discuss their experience serving the city and the role of art and artists during the pandemic. This unique residency was the only one of its kind in the US. Artists include Mabel Jiménez, S. Renee Jones, Ajuan Mance and Bo (Luengsuraswat) Rittapa. Meg Shiffler, San Francisco Arts Commission and the COVID Command Center Artists in Residence organizer, will moderate the panel.

 

YouTube Live

 

The San Francisco Arts Commission partnered with the City’s COVID Command Center and the San Francisco Public Library to present a unique residency program providing four Bay Area artists with compensation and unprecedented access to the City’s COVID-19 response, prevention and recovery operations and the hundreds of City employees deployed as Disaster Service Workers. Each artist, two photographers and two comic artists, spent three months embedded at COVID Command and in the field with various outreach and support teams (food, housing, supplies distribution…). At the end of the residency period, the artists created photo and illustration portfolios which will become part of the SFPL's COVID Community Time Capsule. The role the artists and their narratives will play in how this moment in history is recorded and perceived in the future is incredibly powerful. Their stories about individual and collective resilience will sit alongside the data, press and community photos in the City’s archive.

 

Image removed.Bo (Luengsuraswat) Rittapa (pronouns he/his/him) is an interdisciplinary scholar-artist whose work spans across the mediums of visual art, comics, writing, performance, filmmaking and culinary business. He approaches cultural production as a commitment to working against the grain artistically and interpersonally to cultivate collective resilience from ground up. Bo believes that visual storytelling is a space through which to rework memories and narrate the possibilities of belonging at precarious intersections. His comics are work of queer memory that honors vulnerability as a source of power, resistance and healing. Website

 

Mabel Jiménez (pronouns she/her/hers) is an independent photographer and reporter based in San Francisco. Being raised in Tijuana, 15 minutes from the Mexico/U.S. border, themes of biculturalism and immigration have influenced her photographic and journalistic work. She has documentedImage removed. San Francisco’s Latino community since 2008 and is the former Photo Editor for El Tecolote bilingual newspaper, where she continues as a regular contributor. During her seven-year tenure in the position, she created, produced and curated a yearly group photography exhibit showcasing the newspaper’s best photojournalism. 

Website | Instagram 

 

 

Ajuan Mance headshotAjuan Mance (pronouns she/her or they/them) is a Professor of English and Ethnic Studies at Mills College in Oakland, California, and a lifelong artist and writer. In both her scholarly writing and her visual art, Ajuan explores the complexities of race, gender and identity in the U.S. She is the author of the publications: Inventing Black Women: African American Women’s Poetry and Self-Representation, 1877-2000 and Before Harlem: An Anthology of African American Literature from the Long Nineteenth Century. An artist, illustrator and comic creator, she has participated in solo and group exhibitions as well as comic and zine fests. In 2021, her 1001 Black Men sketchbook project will be released in book form. Website | Instagram | Twitter

 

 

Image removed.S. Renee Jones (pronouns she/her or they/them) is a photographer, educator and gallery director. For the past 25 years, Jones has worked with the Sixth Street Photography Workshop. Jones began her engagement with SSPW when she was homeless, and now she teaches beginning photography, advanced photography, studio lighting, portraiture, Photoshop and gallery exhibition preparation to participants living below the poverty line. Jones also studied psychology and art therapy at San Francisco State University. When taking photographs Jones asks herself, “…what causes my soul to connect and gather in that which surrounds me, what moves beyond mimicry, the splash of color or visual trickery, leading me to my next moment of healing. Website 

 

Connect with the San Francisco Arts Commission - Website | Twitter | Instagram | Facebook

Press 

48 Hills - WPA, but make it COVID: Artists document pandemic for city time capsule

SF/ARTS - Artists As Our Culture Keepers


Learn from world-class designers, artists and experts in their fields. 

Summer Stride is the Library's annual summer learning, reading and exploration program for all ages and abilities. Read and learn with the Library all summer long.


This program is sponsored by Friends of the San Francisco Public Library.


Attending Programs

For questions about the program or help registering, contact sfplcpp@sfpl.orgAll programs are drop-in (no registration necessary) unless otherwise noted. All SFPL locations are wheelchair accessible. For accommodations (such as ASL or language interpretation), call (415) 557-4557 or contact accessibility@sfpl.org. Requesting at least 3 business days in advance will help ensure availability.

Notice: This event may be filmed or photographed. By participating in this event, you consent to have your likeness used for the Library’s archival purposes and promotional materials. If you do not want to be photographed, please inform a staff person or the photographer. A sticker will be provided to help identify you so that we can avoid capturing your image.


Public Notice and Disclaimer

This program uses a third-party website link. By clicking on the third-party website link, you will leave SFPL's website and enter a website not operated by SFPL. This service may collect personally identifying information about you, such as name, username, email address, and password. This service will treat the information it collects about you pursuant to its own privacy policy. We encourage you to review the privacy policies of each third-party website or service that you visit or use, including those third parties with whom you interact through our Library services. For more information about these third-party links, please see the section of SFPL’s Privacy Policy describing Links to Other Sites.

The views and opinions expressed in programs presented by groups unaffiliated with SFPL do not necessarily reflect the official policy or position of SFPL or the City.