A utility box painted with a red heart, an eye in the center, surrounded by yellow rays and red teardrop shapes; "Monica Magoto 2025" is written at the top.
Artist Monica Magtoto, who was born and raised in San Francisco, described her utility box murals as love letters to the city. The one featured here is on the corner of Dolores and 15th Streets. Photo by JL Odom

Guerrero Street is a bustling thoroughfare for people making their way through the Mission. 

And for artist Monica Magtoto, it’s an ideal stretch of road to showcase her art. 

Magtoto’s work is now featured on 10 sidewalk utility boxes, seven of which are on the corner of Guerrero, between 14th and 22nd streets. The boxes, usually painted dark green, are used by the city to house electrical equipment for regulating traffic.

A person stands next to a painted utility box featuring a red candle, yellow rays, and red and yellow abstract designs on a city street corner.
Artist, energy worker, and yoga instructor Monica Magtoto stands beside her utility box mural on Guerrero and 22nd Streets. She painted ten utility boxes in total; seven of them are along Guerrero. Photo courtesy of Monica Magtoto

“You get people who are crossing through the neighborhood to go more to the Mission side,” Magtoto said. “You get people who are crossing back over to go more towards the Dolores, Noe Valley, Castro side. So, for me, it’s the perfect location.”

Her other three boxes are on Dolores Street, on the corners of 14th and 15th streets, and on Folsom, on the corner of 14th.

Magtoto is also a yoga instructor and an energy worker. In the latter capacity, she incorporates “reiki, curanderismo, somatic work and other energy work and spiritual modalities.” She painted each of her utility boxes black before layering on images such as hearts, butterflies, candles, suns, moons, flowers and skulls in vibrant red, yellow and white. 

Each box has a unique design, but all have a unifying theme: Healing. 

“Our city’s been through a lot, and for me, this set of paintings was a little bit of a love letter. Like, ‘If I could heal the spirit of the city, this is where I would start,’” she said.

Magtoto is one of the artists selected for the “Paint the City” project backed by two San Francisco-based nonprofits, Paint the Void and the Civic Joy Fund

The project’s first round includes 24 artists and 241 city utility boxes, 39 of them in the Mission. 

Other Paint the City utility boxes in the Mission feature Jane Kang’s Korean-themed murals on Dolores and Church streets, native birds by Claudio Talavera-Ballón, and various colorful illustrations, including renderings of city fixtures such as Sutro Tower and the Roxie Theater, by Shirley Lee.

Magtoto, a fourth-generation San Franciscan, said she draws inspiration from her multicultural background which includes Filipino, Mexican, Irish, and Cape Verdean family members, as well as from her connection to the city and its diverse community. 

“Like a lot of people in San Francisco, my family was adjacent to the Catholic Church, but my mom was more like, ‘Get the basics, and then develop your own way of being with nature and with spirit,’” she said.

As an energy healer, she said, she’s interested in the connection between the physical and the spiritual, and carries that over into her art.

A painted utility box on a street corner features red, yellow, and white abstract designs, including an eye and patterns, with "Monica Magoto 2025" written at the top.
Monica Magtoto’s vibrant-colored utility boxes, each situated near a street corner, have garnered the attention and praise of passersby in the Mission neighborhood. Photo by JL Odom.

“How we exist in our bodies and how we can attack things from both angles; that intersection is really important to me,” she said.

On one utility box, on the corner of Guerrero and 15th streets, Magtoto painted a rendering of the Three of Swords tarot card, with white-outlined swords piercing a bright red heart.

“That card is about healing, and about removing the swords one by one. So if you find yourself with those three swords in your heart, you can’t really move. Any way you move, it hurts, so you pull each out, one at a time, and deal with it,” she explained.

Magtoto appreciates the attention her boxes get from passers-by. People say, “‘Oh, I saw you painting on Guerrero!’ It’s not often I get to paint and just do my own thing, too. So having this be really authentically me and having people resonate with that and recognize [my work] has been a really high point for me.”

Best of all, perhaps, family members are delighted. 

“My family getting to see my work, and sending me photos that they’re taking in front of the boxes when doing errands or going out to dinner — that’s the dream, right?”

A utility box painted with a red heart pierced by five swords, surrounded by clouds, stars, a sun, and a crescent moon on a city street corner.
A utility box at the corner of Guerrero and 15th Streets, painted by Mission artist Monica Magtoto, features celestial imagery and a reference to the Three of Swords tarot card. Photo by JL Odom.
A utility box on a city sidewalk painted with a large white and yellow flower, butterflies, and stylized skulls on a black background.
The imagery on Magtoto’s utility boxes draws from her multicultural background, spirituality, energy work, and love for San Francisco. The one featured here is located at Guerrero and 17th Streets. Photo by JL Odom.
A utility box painted with a red heart, an eye in the center, surrounded by yellow rays and red teardrop shapes; "Monica Magoto 2025" is written at the top.
Artist Monica Magtoto, who was born and raised in San Francisco, described her utility box murals as love letters to the city. The one featured here is on the corner of Dolores and 15th Streets. Photo by JL Odom.
Traffic utility box at a city intersection painted with a hand, a yellow crescent moon, sun rays, a red rose, and the name "Monica Magtoto 2025" on the top edge.
Each of Monica Magtoto’s utility boxes has a black background, with red, yellow, and white images on its sides, front, and back. The colors are associated with healing and orishas (deities). Photo by JL Odom.

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4 Comments

  1. What a hero. Maybe the city, which is broke mind you, can pay me to come paint the front of Monica’s home in whatever manner I chose.

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  2. Thank you for your artwork.

    Unfortunately , the idiots who vandalize the city and every property , have ruined other places that artists have painted .

    Why does Sf allow thugs to spray graffiti on everything .

    These people need to be found arrested , fined , clean up the graffiti everyday for years and jailed .
    They have demonstrated an inability to exist in public .

    Graffiti vandals and drug dealers are the worst examples of human beings .
    Time to go after them.

    Persons like the woman in this article are a good asset and we appreciate their art .

    Graffiti is not art . It is a crime .

    Come on SF
    , get it together before the whole place is a drug den , graffiti hell hole .

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