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PRODID:SFPL Web Calendar
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UID:123294@sfpl.org
DTSTAMP:20250704T010000Z
DTSTART:20250704T010000Z
DTEND:20250704T024500Z
SUMMARY:Exhibit: Opening Reception – Harry Williams: Jones & Ellis Street Project
DESCRIPTION:<p>Join us for the opening night of <a href="https://sfpl.org/exhibits/2025/07/03/harry-williams-jones-ellis-street-project"><i>Harry Williams: Jones & Ellis</i></a>, a striking street photography exhibition that centers the dignity, humanity and presence of Tenderloin residents through large-scale portraiture and street art.</p><p>This exhibit features work from Williams’ Jones & Ellis Street Project, a grassroots effort documenting the lives of people in one of San Francisco’s most misunderstood neighborhoods. Through intimate black-and-white photographs Williams invites us to look closer, question our assumptions and see our neighbors with deeper empathy.</p><p>Be sure to check out the wheatpaste installation on Fulton Plaza, near Hyde Street.</p><p>Presented as part of <a href="https://www.sffirstthursday.org/">SF First Thursday Art Walk</a>.</p><p>Williams is a San Francisco-based photographer and visual designer whose work documents overlooked communities with deep empathy and respect. Originally from West Jefferson, Ohio, Williams studied photography at The Ohio State University before traveling extensively through Southeast Asia, where he refined his immersive street portraiture style. He is known for his long-term photo essay on the Black Hmong Hill Tribe in Vietnam and, more recently, for his ongoing <i>Jones & Ellis Street Project</i>—a public, open-air gallery in San Francisco’s Tenderloin District that honors the lives of local residents through intimate, wheatpasted black-and-white portraits.</p><p>Williams' work has been shown at Bolinas Museum, San Francisco City Hall, and the Commonwealth Club, among others. His self-published monograph, <a href="https://sfpl.bibliocommons.com/v2/record/S93C6222457"><i>Eye See You</i></a>, brings together years of street photography. Grounded in trust and connection, his images amplify voices on the margins while challenging viewers to confront their own assumptions.</p><p>Connect:&nbsp;</p><p><a href="https://www.harrywphoto.com/">Harry Williams - Website</a> | <a href="https://www.instagram.com/hwilliamsjrphoto/">Harry Williams - Instagram</a>&nbsp;<br>&nbsp;</p><p>In the Press</p><p><a href="https://www.kqed.org/arts/13972965/harry-williams-tenderloin-homeless-street-photography"><i>In Portraits of Tenderloin Residents, a Delicate Balance of Art and Hardship</i></a><i>&nbsp;</i> by Pendarvis Harshaw, KQED</p><p><a href="https://48hills.org/2024/05/photographer-documents-tenderloin-lives-dignity-harry-williams-jr/"><i>A Photographer Documents Life On a Tough Tenderloin Corner with Dignity</i></a><i>&nbsp;</i> by Dorothy O’Donnell, 48 Hills</p><p><br>&nbsp;</p><p>&nbsp;</p>
LOCATION:Main Library - Art, Music & Recreation Center Exhibit Space - 4th Fl
CLASS:PUBLIC
TRANSP:TRANSPARENT
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DESCRIPTION:Event Reminder - Exhibit: Opening Reception – Harry Williams: Jones & Ellis Street Project
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