KQED's Gallery Crawl Waxes Street Art (Update)

KQED's vidcast Gallery Crawl spotlights art that doesn't hang on gallery walls. Some great shots of stencil art, as well as other forms of street art, here in San Francisco.

Note: The two stencil murals featured in this video are not by Scott Williams. Got that one wrong on both accounts (Scott's stencils are in the second one, along with Claude Moller, Stephen Lambert, Josh MacPhee, and others). The first stencil mural is by Claude Moller, Josh MacPhee, along with myself. You can see part of Scott's amazing mural while they're featuring Clarion Alley works.

Update: Hi Russell: Sarah Skikne passed on the email (below) regarding the misinformation in our Streets of San Francisco Gallery Crawl episode. Sorry it took so long for me to correct the error -- I was out of town due to a death in the family. Anyhow, I have corrected the video and that new version is online now, reflecting the artists you mentioned in your email.

From KQED's Web site:

After two years of shooting exhibitions in various Bay Area galleries, Gallery Crawl goes outdoors to highlight art that just cannot be contained. From large public sculptures to the smallest sticker, art can be found in just about every nook and cranny of the city.

A San Francisco Arts Commissioner as well as an artist and a professor at the San Francisco Art Institute, Przyblyski explains the process of how larger works like Claes Oldenburg & Coosje van Bruggen's "Cupid's Span" and Richard Serra's "Ballast" get commissioned. She also discusses how smaller things -- like stenciled phrases on the sidewalk and crochet covers on abandoned bike locks -- position the urban landscape as a communal meeting place where creative expression exists in both "permissioned" and "non-permissioned" forms.

While this episode is by no means comprehensive, we hope it will provide a small taste of what's out on the street (sometimes literally). Is it art? Is it vandalism? Is it beautiful? Is it visual clutter? These are questions we don't even attempt to answer, but its presence -- in myriad forms -- makes urban living that much more interesting.