Gay Mural Arson Shocks Artist

Kilian Melloy READ TIME: 4 MIN.

The artist who created an LGBT mural in the Mission district that has been vandalized multiple times said at a recent forum that he wasn't surprised the art was damaged, but he was shocked by an arson attempt on the project.

Los Angeles-based artist Manuel Paul, a gay man who's part of the Maricon Collective, created the Por Vida (For Life) mural that was installed at Bryant and 24th streets last month by Galeria de la Raza.

Por Vida depicts two lesbians looking at each other, a transgender man, and two gay men embracing each other. The mural was defaced three times in June, and on June 29 it was set on fire, leaving a third of the mural irreparably damaged. The strong response to the mural on social media and the vandalism have ignited conversations in the Mission around issues of homophobia, displacement, appropriation, and trauma within and outside the Chicano/Latino communities.

Galeria de la Raza hosted a community forum at City College of San Francisco's Mission campus Saturday, July 25. The meeting included panel discussions and an examination of how art incites dialogue.

According to Paul, the digital mural installation was created to honor San Francisco Pride Month, and inspired by the work of queer people of color.

"I wanted to do it for the Maricon Collective supporters," Paul said, "not just for the collective but for their audiences."

Paul said that there were mixed reactions to the mural, and there was a lot of positive feedback, which is what he likes to pay attention to.

"The negative, I feel like it was a little bit extreme," he said. "Because it was a mural that was going to be up there for a month, and I feel like some people didn't have patience with it. They wanted it to be erased."

Even though Paul anticipated that the mural would be vandalized, given the history of the murals that Galeria de la Raza hosted in the past, he didn't think someone would set it on fire.

"Other murals at Galeria de la Raza got tagged up," Paul said, "but I never thought of fire, or being torched."

During the forum's first session, some panelists spoke about their experiences coming out as queer. Gay activist and artist Joey Terrell remembers his mom calling him queer without knowing that he was. At the age of 15, he had an argument with her and yelled, "Yes, I'm queer." His mom broke down and cried, and said that she wished he was a drug dealer or a thug instead.

"But she came around and now she is my best friend," Terrell said.

Another panelist, muralist Carlos (Kookie) Gonzales, talked about how he used to be homophobic. He wouldn't want to be seen with gay people. But now he is a supporter of LGBT people.

"Everyone has a gay person in their family," Gonzales said.

Luciano Sagustume said that he came out as a lesbian, but after 10 years he realized that he was a transgender man.

"Before moving to San Francisco I never met a transgender person," he said. "When I come out as queer, as a lesbian, it didn't feel right to me till I realized that I'm a transgender man."

He said that the mural represented him as a trans man, and he was sad to see the amount of negative attention it received.

"I never thought that it would get burned," Sagustume said. "That is another level of hate."

Muralist Nancy Pili, another panelist, urged Galeria de la Raza to include misguided young people who feel ignored and dismissed.

"I think one of the biggest problems is that these young Latinos feel that their history has been written by others," Pili said. "We need to create workshops and help them show their work. We need to give them a space to tell their story."

Ani Rivera, the gallery's executive director and a queer Chicana who lives in the Mission, promised that Galeria de la Raza will continue to do outreach to both supporters and opponents of the mural.

"The gallery's neighbors are very concerned about their safety since Por Vida was lit on fire," Rivera said.

The community forum was sponsored by AIDS Healthcare Foundation, the Chicana Latina Foundation, National Center for Lesbian Rights, and Our Family Coalition.

Last week San Francisco police released video of the arson incident. The video, from a surveillance camera at Galeria de la Raza, 2857 24th Street, shows someone in a black hooded sweatshirt or jacket with white stripes on the shoulders, black pants, white tennis shoes, and white gloves approaching Por Vida, pouring liquid on it, and lighting the fire, which burns for about a minute and a half before the footage ends.

According to Officer Carlos Manfredi, a police spokesman, officers responded to the scene at 11:10 p.m. June 29, just after the fire started.

The suspect is described as a 6-foot-tall man, weighing 190 pounds and wearing a black cloth over the lower half of his face, according to police. He was last seen running south on Bryant toward 25th Street.


by Kilian Melloy , EDGE Staff Reporter

Kilian Melloy serves as EDGE Media Network's Associate Arts Editor and Staff Contributor. His professional memberships include the National Lesbian & Gay Journalists Association, the Boston Online Film Critics Association, The Gay and Lesbian Entertainment Critics Association, and the Boston Theater Critics Association's Elliot Norton Awards Committee.

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