Mission Mercado celebrates cultural art on city streets

The Mission Community Market celebrated their first outdoor farmers market of the year April 14, during which Supervisor David Campos spoke, live music played and a reproduction of a 200-year-old mural was revealed.

By Brian Rinker
The Guardsman

The  Mission Community Market celebrated their first outdoor farmers market  of the year April 14, during which Supervisor David Campos spoke, live  music played and a reproduction of a 200-year-old mural was revealed.

“This  kind of event is what makes the Mission special,” Campos said. He was  the first speaker to kick off the market’s season opening on Bartlet  Street between 21st and 22nd streets, just a block away from Mission  campus.

The  highlight was the mural, a reproduction of what was once the rear altar  for the Mission Dolores Church before it was replaced by a newer one in  1796. It has remained hidden from view for over 200 years. The mural is  thought to have been painted by the local Indians and overseen by  catholic clergy.

“It  is a unique artifact and may represent first contact with the native  people,” said Ben Wood, organizer of the mural’s reproduction. “There is  question whether the mural is native or Christian or a combination of  the two. It’s not clear.”

Back  in 2004 when Wood first became aware of the hidden altar, he contacted  archaeologist Eric Blind to help him. Together they began systematically  taking pictures of the altar by lowering a camera from the church  rafters. The space in between the old altar and the new one is so  cramped and dark that a person could neither see nor fit back there.

They  ended up with a “stitch work” of pictures of the top section of the  altar, which was then used as reference by three local artists to paint  the mural exactly how it exists now – worn, chipped, cracked and with  rafters peeking through.

The  mural took three weeks to paint and is located on the wall behind the  Mission Mercado, right across the street from City College’s Mission  campus.

“It’s kind of amazing,” Blind said. “It’s so nice to stand back and stare at it.”

The  mural is a permanent fixture, though Mission Community Market only  happens on Thursdays between 4 p.m. and 8.pm. It comprises vendors  selling fresh produce, music and art.

Email:
brinker@theguardsman.com