A person tags the mural 'Carnaval on Mission' on Sunday Dec. 15, 2024. Photo courtesy of Antonio Barrera.
A person tags the mural 'Carnaval on Mission' on Sunday Dec. 15, 2024. Photo courtesy of Antonio Barrera.

Footage captured by neighbors shows a mural on Mission Street by deceased local artist Mario Cid Gonzalez being vandalized on Sunday night. It’s at least the second time the piece has been targeted, neighbors said.

In a video obtained by Mission Local, a woman is seen spray-painting over the mural, to the surprise of onlookers recording the act. For about 15 minutes, the woman tags over “Carnaval on Mission,” which details traditional dancers, lowriders and neighborhood theaters.

A woman is seen tagging the mural ‘Carnaval on Mission.”

The incident occurred around 10:30 p.m. on Sunday, at the front gate of Best Collateral pawn shop at 2449 Mission St. between 20th and 21st streets.

Antonio Barrera, a neighbor and witness, said the woman, who is blonde and wore white boots, a white coat and a white and brown scarf, had started spray-painting walls before reaching the mural. She started around the corner, at the laundromat at 20th and Mission streets. She then walked about half a block south, to the location of the mural, and started tagging it.

A close-up of the person who tagged the mural 'Carnaval on Mission' on Sunday Dec. 15, 2024. photo courtesy of Antonio Barrera.
A close-up of the person who tagged the ‘Carnaval on Mission’ mural on Sunday Dec. 15, 2024. photo courtesy of Antonio Barrera.

After 15 minutes of spray-painting, the mural, which honors the neighborhood’s Carnaval festival, had been turned into a shadow of what it once was. The faces of dancers, low-riders and iconic marquees are now barely recognizable. 

“I wasn’t the affected party here, but I feel frustrated to see how this person gets away with this,” said Barrera, in Spanish. “She didn’t even care that we were recording her. She didn’t say anything. She didn’t say why she was doing it.”

Asked if he, or anyone else witnessing the attack had called the police, Barrera said no. He says that when neighbors reported a similar incident a few months ago, police told them not to call if it wasn’t an emergency.

That previous incident, Barrera recalled, was to report the same woman.

“I was told then that the police could only do something if a unit happened to be driving by while a person was committing the crime,” said Barrera.

The San Francisco Police Department did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

On Monday afternoon, a few hours after the tagging, Omar Perez stood next to the mural. The rain had cleaned the streets and curbs along Mission, but did not wash away the spray paint on the mural. Perez said he knew the now-deceased muralist, Cid Gonzalez, and that the artist had been dedicated to this mural.

“Yes, I knew Mario. I saw him working on this piece so hard,” said Perez, who also said it was not the first time this mural had been vandalized. “He was such a happy person. Everyone here knew him.”

Cid Gonzalez died this year on Jan. 23, according to a GoFundMe from the time.

Perez recalled Cid Gonzalez as a lover of cumbias, especially the old ones, salsa and an avid dancer.

“He taught me some of his steps,” said Perez. “He was very talented and he had so much imagination.”

Local muralist Josue Rojas, who finished a “slow streets” mural on 20th Street last month, called Cid Gonzalez a true Mission muralist. 

“It’s hard to deny that he’s put in work in the community. I admired his work because he was a very independent artist. And he embodied the sort of Mission, like, ‘do it yourself’ kind of aesthetic,” said Rojas. “[his work] has delicacy and it also has roughness. He just did his own thing.”

Rojas said that since the pandemic, he’s seen more acts of vandalism targeting murals, which he described as very painful. The issues, he said, can be complex, and can include young taggers as well as non-locals and substance users.

“In many ways, murals were sacred and, for a long time, people would respect them,” said Rojas. “This post-Covid-19 era kind of vandalism that doesn’t respect murals.”

Rojas said he keeps tabs on his murals, and those of other artists, to restore them in case of vandalism. And when asked if you would be open to restoring “Carnaval on Mission,” he said he would, if given the chance.   

Mo Mosa from Mission Cannabis Club, where Cid Gonzalez painted two murals, remembered him as “a very nice guy and a good man,” one whose art he recommended widely to neighboring businesses.

Mosa lamented the vandalism, and said the owners of the pawn shop had installed cameras, in part, to protect the mural.

“It’s fucked up. It’s really bad,” said Mosa.

Despite the incident, residents can still see more of Cid Gonzalez’s work around the neighborhood. A serpent at the intersection of Mission and 20th streets, a serenata at Casa Lucas at 24th and Alabama streets, and a low-rider at 23rd Street and South Van Ness Avenue, among other businesses, such as restaurant Hermelinda at 2277 Mission St. at and Ambaro Salon & Barberia at 2915 24th St.

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Reporting from the Mission District and other District 9 neighborhoods. Some of his personal interests are bicycles, film, and both Latin American literature and punk. Oscar's work has previously appeared in KQED, The Frisc, El Tecolote, and Golden Gate Xpress.

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34 Comments

  1. “I was told then that the police could only do something if a unit happened to be driving by while a person was committing the crime.”

    Which is hilarious, because there are NO police from Mission Station out on the street after 9 p.m. Great work SFPD is doing.

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    1. Yeah, the Mission Police are a total joke! Whenever I’ve reported criminal activity to them (such as people blatantly filing serial numbers off of stolen bicycles in broad daylight) – they’ve asked: “Did you SEE them steal the bicycles? Then how do you KNOW they are stolen???” Um, yeah, ’cause I always file my serial numbers off of the bikes when I buy them…????

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  2. That’s not a good ending to this article. Yes it’s true that muralists/artists walk away from their work knowing that all sorts of elements may alter their work because it’s out in the public but the community murals are the life of the people in visual color and speaks of a long established legacy. Murals are a gift to the community and the community, for the most part, defends them. That lady is sick. Hope she gets help in the right way cuz smashing on our art might get her some bad medicine.

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    1. Keep going with this story, she’s still at it in the Excelsior and there’s no way to get the police to help unless there’s a big public outcry. My husband chased her away from one on Santa Rosa and she went on to another one! He called the district supervisor too, maybe if more people do that? Scary to think about all the beautiful murals at risk!

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  3. > “In many ways, murals were sacred and, for a long time, people would respect them,” said Rojas. “This post-Covid-19 era kind of vandalism that doesn’t respect murals.”

    I’ve noticed this, and it’s sad. There used to be a big mural at 14th & Shotwell on the side of Foodsco. In 2020-1 it started getting increasingly tagged over, and in 2022 it was painted over to just a white wall for the first time in at least a decade.

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  4. To Carlos:stop her? if you touch that woman, you are going to jail; Remember that you live in SF where victims are voiceless and criminals get a free ride.

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    1. NOT TRUE. If you see someone committing a crime you can detain them until police arrive, and if they attack you can defend yourself. Of course there are wrong ways to attempt this and that’s why professionals will tell you not to, however it’s perfectly legal to stop someone if you’re right about it and can prove it unambiguously to law enforcement. See the video of the cafe worker throwing the robber to the ground with punches in the other story.

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  5. I agree with SPIE.
    The tone of the story is less hopeful/positive than I would have wanted TBH. Even though what I said is true.
    Murals are our gift and are really hard work.
    YES— as muralists our work is open to all sorts of elements, not least of which, erasure, gentrification and disrespect— it’s stil ABSOLUTELY IMPORTANT to maintain and tend to the murals.
    I think more should be done to maintain, protect and uphold each mural for as long as possible, including varnish, graffiti removal and education programs for the public.
    This lady should not be free to destroy something that is for the whole community.

    The tragedy is that the artist CID, a legend who is no longer with us — is not around to restore and clean up his work.

    Also
    Lots of people benefit from murals.
    They attract people from all over the world —There’s entire groups of people who make a living making tours. There are neighborhood/ city associations that can help maintain and restore our cultural legacy via murals.

    Local and Legacy Muralists are out here alone in many ways and really need support—
    — Respect + Love —
    RIP CID

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  6. Is the dog in the photo her look out accomplice?

    Seriously, this woman needs to be stopped. A water hose might do the trick next time someone spot her spray painting.

    Also, does anyone here have contact with TV news people to spread the word on her?

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    1. I think it’s fine to rip the spray can out of her hand, but you can’t exhort other people to do it. Most people draw the line at a physical altercation and that’s okay.

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    2. The police need to be taken to task for their lack of interest in doing their jobs! But also – this woman’s face is clearly visible. Find her. Charge her. And stop her from desecrating our neighborhood ever again!

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    3. ML has an article on the front page right now with video of a person who intervened in a crime getting sprayed with bear mace.

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  7. This woman is having a mental issue. Maybe she is traumatized and lashing out at the artist, the content, or that which cannot be known. She is not a Tagger, so don’t lump her into something you don’t understand. She is clearly on a mission (pun intended) that is guided by voices we do not hear and cannot understand. I hope she gets help and finds peace.

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  8. It’s very disturbing that vandalism of this and any other type seems to be the lowest priority for the police. Something is seriously wrong when aesthetic values are not taken seriously. If laws have to be changed, they should be!

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  9. This is terrible, in other cities somebody would have clipped her. As you see, she has a guide dog and is probably on the spectrum. Somehow, she has been transfixed on this mural, I hope she eventually gets help so that she can understand what the hell she’s doing.

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  10. gosh she’s just expressing her artistic wishes, much like a lot of local artists in the bay. no need to call the cops, they’ll just put her in the system. we love supporting independent artists here, so let’s let her flourish!

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  11. Anna Sorokin wannabe, I know that $900 SF Standard subscription has you burnt, but there are better ways to vent your frustration.

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  12. Another low life leech who needs to face reality. We now know what she looks like.Can someone who knows her out her so we can decorate her building for Christmas?

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    1. Post it up on NextDoor, spread it on Facebook, put up Wanted Posters – she really needs to be stopped ASAP before she can cause any more damage. The picture is perfectly clear – does anyone know her???

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  13. I don’t condone this activity, but I think the article quote from Rojas said it best regarding ” kissing the murals”. Honestly, once you put them up, it is a surprise to most artists that the murals can last more than a single day.

    In the graffiti/tagger community, it’s well known to spray over other people’s work, which is what’s happening here.

    When Banksy hit SF with murals, most of his pieces were targeted immediately. Also, tagged was the work of that moron with the honey bears.

    I’m not a fan of ruining someone else’s beautiful work, but these murals are finite.

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