14 Women in the Community Mural Movement Eva Cockcroft Women's role in the community mural move- ment is much greater than is generally recog- nized. Major city-sponsored mural programs in Boston (Adele Seronde and Summerthing), New York (Susan Shapiro-Kiok and Cityarts), and Los Angeles (Judy Baca and Citywide) have been initiated and directed by women artists, who have given these programs much of their char- acter and philosophy. Women have led school mural projects, mural collectives, and mural- work with street youth. Whether working as individual muralists, members of coalitions, or in collectives, women have increasingly dom- inated the mural movement as a force for non- elitism, collectivity, and the practice of so- cial philosophies ranging from humanism to Marxism. Murals 'on urban walls reflecting the aspira- tions of neighborhood residents began as part of the more general social upheaval of the 1960s. Artists found themselves dragged into the social arena and forced to consider questions beyond those of pure form. By the late 1960s they could no longer avoid confronting questions concern- ing the relevance, audience, and uses of their art. A number of movements arose that tried to enlarge the audience and scope of contempo- rary art. Minority-group and politically active artists felt both a demand and an opportunity to create an art responsive to their special heritage and relevant to their own ethnic group, com- munity, or movement. Mainstream artists at- tempted to bring art out of the museums and into the cities in the form of urban super- graphics, environmental sculptures, street- works, and happenings. Out of the coincidence of these social and artistic forces the communi- ty mural movement began in 1967-68. The mural movement took on different forms in different locations, depending on which par- ticular combination of social forces spurred its beginnings. The first mural in Chicago, the 1967 Wall of Respect, was painted by 21 Black artists from the Organization of Black American Cul- ture (OBAC) and celebrated Black history and culture. It was a political-art happening involv- ing musicians and poets who played and read as the painting progressed. Although women art- ists participated in the Wall of Respect, they were not among those who continued the movement in Chicago and went from the OBAC wall to paint in Detroit. For a long time Vanita Green’s Black Women (1970) served as the token of women’s participa- tion in the Chicago mural movement. Green was 17, a high school dropout, when she saw William Walker painting the Peace and Salva- tion Wall of Understanding near the Cabrini- Green projects where she lived. After watching for a time, she asked Walker for paints and brushes and on a storage shed nearby painted portraits of famous Black women from Aunt Jemima to Angela Davis. Almost immediately afterwards, the wall was defaced with large splashes of white paint, practically the only de- facement in Chicago up to that time. When Green saw what the vandals had done, she com- mented, “Before, it was just a pretty picture, but it says more now.” In general, though, dur- ing those early years women found their place largely as assistants and apprentices in one of the two major community-based Chicago mural groups: Public Art Workshop, led by Mark Rogovin, and Chicago Mural Group, a multi- ethnic coalition led by William Walker and John Weber. In Boston, on the other hand, women played an important role in introducing the mural idea. Boston artist Adele Seronde’s proposal calling for the use of neglected city sites to transform the city into a museum was the start. Through the collaboration of Kathy Kane of the Mayor’s Office of Cultural Affairs, the Institute of Con- temporary Art, a number of Black artists, and Seronde, Summerthing was launched. It was the largest and most productive of the early mural programs, beginning in 1968 and peaking in 1970. The Summerthing program combined ele- ments of three distinct phenomena which had emerged the preceding year —the renaissance in Black culture (Wall of Respect), the “Summer in the City Paint-in Festival” and various clean-up programs, and the desire of environmental art- ists to work in urban spaces. Summerthing sponsored Black Power murals, children’s play- ground and pocket-park projects, and decora- tive walls—all within a framework allowing for neighborhood control. Under Seronde’s direc- tion, the program emphasized the sociological rather than the decorative aspect of public art. Many impressive walls were painted from 1968 to 1970, especially in the Black communities of Roxbury and South End—including the first women’s wall, Sharon Dunn’s Black Women, painted in 1970. Seronde is only one of many women who