A person walks past a modern building with blue and red tiled walls and decorated windows on a sunny day.
Black and white photos in ‘The Window Project’ capture a child’s POV of life in the Mission

A teen biker pops a wheelie. A couple locks hands in an arm-wrestling match. In another photo, a child, around 10 years old, playfully presses his face up to the camera lens. 

Dozens of black-and-white photos like these now line the paneled windows of Galería de La Raza’s Studio 16, at Shotwell and 16th streets, in an exhibit titled “The Window Project.” 

The roughly 10-foot-tall installation owes its life to an unusual quarter: Mission District elementary school students.

Children from Leonard R. Flynn Elementary School in the Mission took all the photos on display, the result of a collaboration between the students, Galería de la Raza, and Sergio De La Torre, an artist and University of San Francisco fine arts professor, who also enlisted his students to help with the effort. 

The mural, which has its opening reception this Saturday, Sept. 13, from 6 to 10 p.m., features photos overlaid with geometric shapes, splashes of color, a map of the Mission and messages like “We Keep Us Safe.” The enormous piece stretches from the 16th Street side of the building to Shotwell Street. 

A city bus is stopped at a street corner near a building with turquoise tiles and abstract art on the windows.
“The Window Project” at 16th and Shotwell streets offers messages like “We Keep Us Safe.” Photo by Sage Rios Mace.

The kids needed little prepping. After just a single workshop led by De La Torre’s students, the young artists hit the ground running with Canon Rebel EOS cameras to document life in their neighborhood. 

They photographed dozens of scenes: The backside of a woman with long hair making a purchase from a bakery, a tray full of Mexican sweet breads, a cruiser bicycle with a woven basket decorated with flowers and many more.

“We received about 250 photos from the kids,” said De La Torre. Diego Gomez, a design student in De La Torre’s Artists as Citizens class, chose a final 30 photos for the mural; the others remained with the students as keepsakes.

“I really wanted to choose the photos that represent the personality in their community, and how they interact with their neighborhood and each other,” Gomez said.

A bus stop shelter with geometric and abstract white patterns on glass, reflecting two people interacting behind the glass near a city street.
Two elementary school children play a hand-clapping game in a photo part of the Studio 16 installation on 16th and Shotwell streets. Photo by Sage Rios Mace.

A faded Mission District map anchors the piece. Geometric and colorful shapes overlaid on top of the photos represent the neighborhood’s empty storefronts — shops that were once beauty salons, restaurants, electronic stores and more, all now shuttered.

Two Sankofa gates — iron gates commonly seen in the Mission — frame the entrance to Studio 16.

One is a gate made of the cempazuchitl flower, the marigold common in the neighborhood. The other gate has paper cut-outs of flames and is called the Gate of Fire, a nod to the history of buildings catching on fire in the Mission, De La Torre said. 

Also tied into the mural: Messages on remittances, the money immigrant communities send home.

A sign on a window states that the true value of remittances may be up to 50% higher than official figures due to the use of informal money transfer methods.
A panel with a message on the value of remittances displays on 16th and Shotwell streets. Photo by Sage Rios Mace.

One message reads: “$38.34 billion in remittances. The substantial inflow of remittances provides crucial support for domestic consumption, investment and overall economic stability in the Philippines.”

The university students also incorporated the logos of wire-transfer companies like Western Union and Elektra into the panel, adding their own twist to substitute the logos with “know your rights” messages for dealing with Immigration and Customs Enforcement.

Two of his students, De La Torre said, “started playing with ‘How can we change the message that you get from these places?’ Instead of sending money, ‘Why don’t we tell people about their rights?’”

The students replaced the names of the companies with messages on rights you have when facing ICE.

One says, “You have the right to not sign.” Another reads, “You have the right to not answer an immigrant agent’s questions.” 

The signs — in different languages, including Spanish and Vietnamese — hang in small rectangular windows located above the primary panels.

A building window displays signs reading “You Have Constitutional Rights” in Chinese, Vietnamese, and English.
Two “Know Your Rights” signs hang as part of the public art installation at Studio 16 on Shotwell and 16th streets. Photo by Sage Rios Mace.

The vulnerability of the Mission’s immigrant community was top of mind when designing the mural. Before the class settled on the final concept, they brainstormed other ideas, like using the faces of street vendors in the Mission. But the university students considered ICE and nixed the idea.

“It was very sensitive, because of what was going on around that time in January,” said De La Torre. “ICE raids were coming to the city.”

Gomez said, “We thought, ‘Let’s not put anyone’s faces on the final mural or represent the vendor,” because we want it to be a piece that stands for the community and that doesn’t work against it.’”

So they handed over the cameras to kids instead. Perhaps predictably, the youth spent a lot of time photographing their own faces.

“A lot of the photos taken by the kids were just of each other,” said Gomez. They seemed to have great fun doing so, he added — even if many of them were out of focus. ”The photos speak to what represents the Mission for the people who live here.”

Glass storefront with abstract art on the windows on a city street corner, modern building facades, and a crosswalk signal visible.
“The Window Project” on the corner of 16th and Shotwell streets. Photo by Sage Rios Mace.

The Window Project is up until May 31, and has its opening community celebration this Saturday from 6 to 10 p.m. at La Galería de La Raza, 2480 16th St., San Francisco, CA 94110.

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I'm covering immigration for Mission Local and got my start in journalism with El Tecolote. Most recently, I completed a long-term investigation for El Centro de Periodismo Investigativo in San Juan, PR and I am excited to see where journalism takes me next. Off the clock, I can be found rollerblading through Golden Gate Park or reading under the trees with my cat, Mano.

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3 Comments

  1. If you’d like to know what Mission District kids see, you don’t need any fancy nonprofit photo program.

    We’ve set up an instagram, @missioncarnival, that details street and sidewalk conditions around Marshall Elementary School.

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    1. Jackie and the nonprofit cabal would rather psychologically traumatize kids and working class Mission residents than inconvenience the out of town junkies who have taken over the neighborhood. Sad but true.

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