Related Events
Crosstown Arts resident artists Jessica Sabogal and Shanna Strauss will present artist talks.
Free and open to the public
Jessica Sabogal is a cuir Colombian-American muralistx from San Francisco whose large-scale public artworks attempt to document and disrupt. Sabogal has consistently reinvented what it means to be a female muralist in a male-dominated industry by utilizing her medium for social change, action, and empowerment.
Her murals have been commissioned by Facebook, Google, 20th Century Fox, the University of Southern California, the University of California, the University of Arizona, and the University of Utah, among many others. In 2016, Sabogal received KQED’s Women to Watch Award and the following year was commissioned by the Amplifier Foundation for the 2017 Women’s March, after which her “Women Are Perfect” campaign gained international acclaim. Sabogal’s work has since been featured in national and international news and media sources including CNN, The Wall Street Journal, The Huffington Post, and The New York Times.
Jessica Sabogal often works with artist Shanna Strauss, her life and collaborative partner. Essential to their practice is a system of similar core beliefs — feminist, radical, pro-people, and engaged in social change. Their interdisciplinary work implies that collaboration is at the heart of self and community. Both draw inspiration, connection, and influence from contemporary political and social movements, which have always used artistic expression as a critical form of resistance against forces that wage and risk their erasure. For their viewers, Sabogal and Strauss create collective narratives of diaspora rooted in kinship and solidarity. The pair have been commissioned by The California Endowment, the University of California San Francisco, the Euphrat Museum, and the PHI Foundation. Most recently, they received the Kala Art Institute 2020-2021 Fellowship Award.
As a Tanzanian-American, biracial, bilingual woman, who was raised in Tanzania and later moved to the U.S. and Canada, Shanna Strauss has had to navigate multiple identities, geographic locations, histories and cultures. This reality led her to an interest in diaspora identities and what it means to live between different worlds. In her work, she explores identity and belonging and how oral tradition, spirituality, and family legacy are transmitted inter-generationally, across time and place. Working predominantly on found wood, she creates mixed-media portraits by combining photo transfer, painting, wood burning, wood carving, beads, fabric and other materials — all selected for their symbolic and cultural significance.
Strauss often works with artist Jessica Sabogal, her life and collaborative partner. Essential to their practice is a system of similar core beliefs — feminist, radical, pro-people, and engaged in social change. Their interdisciplinary work implies that collaboration is at the heart of self and community. Both draw inspiration, connection, and influence from contemporary political and social movements, which have always used artistic expression as a critical form of resistance against forces that wage and risk their erasure. For their viewers, Sabogal and Strauss create collective narratives of diaspora rooted in kinship and solidarity. The pair have been commissioned by The California Endowment, the University of California San Francisco, the Euphrat Museum, and the PHI Foundation. Most recently, they received the Kala Art Institute 2020-2021 Fellowship Award.