When Kate Connell and Oscar Melara, also known as the artist collaborative Book and Wheel, unveiled Chispa, they had big plans for the future of their colorfully painted, roving art cart. (âWe like to think of it as an independent float,â says Connell.) On its first outing in August 2019 at the Visitacion Valley Greenwayâs Peace & Unity Festival, Chispa was the centerpiece of invocations, music and artwork, including a display of botanical drawings by one of the Greenwayâs founders, Anne Seeman.
But the giant, teal cart would only appear in public once more before the pandemic put a halt to community gatherings.
âWe were pretty excited after that event,â Connell says of the second, even larger production, a September 2019 Autumn Moon festival in McLaren Park. âWe had a lot of momentum goingâand then COVID happened.â
Kate Connell and Oscar Melara in their project ‘Moving Art House’ on the Mexican Bus in 2015. (Sibila Savage; courtesy the artists)
Now Connell and Melara, whose collaborative name is a shout-out to their former positions as a librarian and bus driver, have rethought one of Chispaâs central projectsâbuilding a portfolio of work by artists from Southeast San Franciscoâinto a format suited to pandemic-mandated restrictions. With We Trade, theyâre exchanging artwork by residents of Bayview/Hunters Point, the Excelsior District, the Portola and Visitacion Valley with anyone who mails Book and Wheel a creative work of their own.
âOne thing we really like about this that we couldnât do with Chispa is the range of things that people can trade us,â Connell says, naming playlists, recipes, photographic prints, poems and song lyrics. âSomeone sent us a short-run artist book. Someone else in the neighborhood made neighborhood-specific stickers.â
The Southeast San Francisco Artists Portfolio now contains the work of around 50 artists. âThe artists range in age, from their 20s to their 70s, and thatâs something thatâs really important to us,â Connell says, adding they also work to make the cohort âculturally reflective of the Southeast.â
The plan is to build a cultural archive of a part of San Francisco that is often quite literally left off the map. (Many, particularly those meant for tourists, stop at Cesar Chavez or even farther north.)
Kate Connell, Oscar Melara and SofÃa Vivanco Airaghi’s ‘The Cultural Map of Southeast San Francisco,’ first designed in 2016, is now in its third edition. (Courtesy Book and Wheel)
One of the prints We Trade participants can choose from is a direct response to that omission: a participatory map of Southeast San Francisco created by Connell, Melara, SofÃa Vivanco Airaghi and over 200 participants since 2016. It identifies art and performance spaces, parks and athletic fields, as well the locations of significant historical events. The map visually groups the four Southeast neighborhoods as an interconnected corner of the city.
Connell says when she and Melara first moved to the Portola District from the Mission over 25 years ago, it took them time to adjust to the lack of nearby cultural institutionsâor what they thought of then as cultural institutions. The Cultural Map of Southeast San Francisco demonstrates that a âcultural institutionâ isnât always a formal, physical arts center.
Other We Trade prints include work by Juan Fuentes, Sarah Smith and Charles Daboâall ready to fit into a standard letter-sized envelope.
Drawing by a young participant traded to Book and Wheel for a print from the ‘Southeast San Francisco Artists Portfolio.’ (Courtesy the artists)
While Connell in particular enjoys visiting their post office box and checking on submissions, for artists rooted in the social aspect of social practice, exchange-by-mail isnât quite the same. âWhen this was with Chispa, we would be out in the street posting posters, talking to people, handing out postcardsâjust having as many conversations as possible,â she says.
âRight now itâs several steps removed,â Melara agrees. âThereâs this weird tension between public projects and sheltering in place.â They miss the excitement of explaining Chispa to people, hearing what they think and encouraging them to engage.
Thankfully, building the Southeast San Francisco Artists Portfolio while in isolation has been an outlet for these desires. Part of Chispaâs funding, from Southern Exposureâs Alternative Exposure grant, was earmarked for artist commissions, and Book and Wheel was still able to make use of that money over the past year.
âThere were dark days when we realized we couldnât take Chispa back out for the foreseeable future,â Connell says, âand just the idea that we still had money to build the portfolio, get money to artists who needed itâeven though itâs a modest sumâis kind of what really made it possible to think about where to go with it.â
Visual artist Kaiya Canja Wong Jones and drag storyteller Severa Wang at the September 2019 Autumn Moon Festival. (Photo by Sibila Savage; courtesy the artists)
And even without an event on the horizon, theyâre still putting up posters (currently featuring the work of Kaiya Canja Wong Jones, a young artist from the Portola), to spread the word about We Trade beyond the confines of social media and email inboxes.
Running out of prints to exchange is a problem Connell and Melara welcomeâwith 500â1,000 copies of each artwork made in expectation of large public events and regular Sunday Streets appearances, Book and Wheel is excited to get the Southeast San Francisco Artists Portfolio into wider circulation.
And what will they do with the objects they receive? âKate has talked about aâwhat would you call it?â asks Melara.
âA stately zine!â she says. âAn exhibition would be great.â
Some of the artworks they receive may even come from farther afieldâa classroom in northern Quebec has promised to send drawingsâbut Book and Wheel is fine with that.
âSending out art from the Southeast lets people know whoâs working here,â Connell says.
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