With its first seeds planted half a century ago, SOMArts has long been a hub for radical and cultural resources, currently sharing space with nearly 100 local nonprofit organizations. Thus, it’s the perfect home for their current exhibition, Making a Scene: 50 Years of Alternative Bay Area Spaces, celebrating both the venues and the visionaries who utilized those spaces to make the Bay Area’s self-propelled scene what it is today.
The exhibit is by no means inclusive of every group or space with roots in the Bay. SOMArts simply doesn’t have the space. Instead, the curators selected roughly 30 pieces of archival visual art from two dozen individuals or spaces for the installation, including Emory Douglas, Annie Sprinkle, Caleb Duarte and BAVC (Bay Area Video Coalition). Combined with these are new works by contemporary artists following in their footsteps.

Sunshine Velasco’s up-close-and-personal photographs of radical movements like Black Lives Matter and Palestinian resistance are intense with emotion. They feel personal and strong, unlike many of the images disseminated by mainstream media outlets.
Jeremy Novy’s collection of graffiti-influenced pieces resist the hetero-male dominated world of street art. Each small piece, stenciled on wood with spray paint, depicts sexualized men in fun, celebratory ways before the AIDS epidemic.

Marlon Ingram’s installation, Indigenous Tips for a Modern Now draws from the artist’s experience in Central and Southern Africa. While there, he noticed that locals, who knew little about how cellphones (and their bills) worked, were sold on costly devices and trapped in contracts. Constructed of plywood to resemble the informal market booths found throughout many African countries, Ingram’s installation provides alternative proposals for communication and connection between people and their environment.