The Fifth Sacred Colour – Balmy Alley, Mission Dis…
A New Dawn – Balmy Alley, Mission District, San Fr…
From Cradle to Grave – Balmy Alley, Mission Distri…
Victorion: El Defensor de la Mission – Balmy Alley…
Things Fall Apart – Balmy Alley, Mission District,…
In the Hands of a Visionary – Balmy Alley, Mission…
After the Storm – Balmy Alley, Mission District, S…
Rising from the Ash Cans – Balmy Alley, Mission Di…
The Sun – Balmy Alley, Mission District, San Franc…
The Moon – Balmy Alley, Mission District, San Fran…
Mission Makeover – Balmy Alley, Mission District,…
Father Richard Purcell, In Loving Memory – Balmy A…
Rejoice – Balmy Alley, Mission District, San Franc…
Those We Love, We Remember – Balmy Alley, Mission…
Las Milagrosas – Balmy Alley, Mission District, Sa…
Hommage to Archbishop Romero – Balmy Alley, Missio…
Mission District Triptych – Balmy Alley, Mission D…
500 Years of Native Survival – Balmy Alley, Missio…
Manjushri – Balmy Alley, Mission District, San Fra…
The Number 14 Bus Blasting Off – Balmy Alley, Miss…
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Alley Cat Books – 24th Street Between Treat and Ha…
Jelly Rolls – 24th Street Near Folsom, Mission Dis…
The Bake Shop Window – 24th Street Near Folsom, Mi…
24th Street – Near Van Ness Street, Mission Distri…
San Francisco Gingerbread – 24th Street Near Van N…
Mexican Wrestling Masks – Mission Street near 24th…
Día de Muertos – Mission Street near 24th Street,…
Fresh Meat Seafood Market – Mission Street near 23…
Imperial Travel/House of Jeans – Mission Street be…
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Frog Men – Mission Street between 19th and 20th St…
El Capitan Theatre and Hotel – Mission Street betw…
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Blue Birds, Blue Sky – Clarion Alley, Mission Dist…
Taking Life As It Comes – Clarion Alley, Mission D…
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Street Art, No Graffiti – Street art, pas de graffiti
Street Art, No Graffiti – Street art, pas de graffiti
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Three Sacred Colours – Balmy Alley, Mission District, San Francisco, California


This mural-sculpture is located at the beginning of Balmy Alley. Balmy Alley runs between 25th and 24th streets in the Mission District, between Harrison and Treat. This block long alley is one of several great alleys in San Francisco with a highly concentrated collection of murals. The murals began in the mid-80’s as an outlet for artists’ outrage over human rights and political abuses in Central America. Today the alley contains murals on a myriad of styles and subjects from human rights to local gentrification and Hurricane Katrina.
"The Five Sacred Colors of Corn" is a mural created in 1991 by Susan Kelk Cervantes, Mia Gonzales and others. Susan Cervantes is one of the founders of the Precita Eyes Muralists Association and a member of "Las Mujeres Muralistas," the first all-women group of collaborative muralists. The mural features wooden sculptural elements and is inspired by traditional yarn paintings of the Huichol, an indigenous people who live in the Sierra Madre Occidental range in the western Mexican states of Nayarit, Jalisco, Zacatecas, and Durango.
For thousands of years, the vital staple of corn has been grown and celebrated by the indigenous peoples of Mexico and North America. Sacred rituals have connected the planting and harvesting of "maize" to weather, the gods, and the seasons, demonstrating the interwoven relationship between the people and the cycles of nature. The sustaining seeds and kernels hold both life and meaning for these communities. Part of the mural displays these words (in both Spanish and English): "The birth of a silence is written in the agony of a sigh"
"The Five Sacred Colors of Corn" is a mural created in 1991 by Susan Kelk Cervantes, Mia Gonzales and others. Susan Cervantes is one of the founders of the Precita Eyes Muralists Association and a member of "Las Mujeres Muralistas," the first all-women group of collaborative muralists. The mural features wooden sculptural elements and is inspired by traditional yarn paintings of the Huichol, an indigenous people who live in the Sierra Madre Occidental range in the western Mexican states of Nayarit, Jalisco, Zacatecas, and Durango.
For thousands of years, the vital staple of corn has been grown and celebrated by the indigenous peoples of Mexico and North America. Sacred rituals have connected the planting and harvesting of "maize" to weather, the gods, and the seasons, demonstrating the interwoven relationship between the people and the cycles of nature. The sustaining seeds and kernels hold both life and meaning for these communities. Part of the mural displays these words (in both Spanish and English): "The birth of a silence is written in the agony of a sigh"
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