Tuesday, January 19, 2016

Cleveland's Garden Valley Neighborhood House - in recent years and recent months....

With this being the latest in a series of long walks - at least digitally - back to what I call the "bridge area", I wanted to recap that since August 2011, I have begun to explore parts of two neighborhoods on Cleveland's East Side - Kinsman and North Broadway, stemming from my desire to see the preservation and re-use of the historic and abandoned "Sidaway Avenue Suspension Bridge" between the two areas. While I have definitely fallen away from the flurry of activity I gave to the project 3-4 years ago, I do not want to let go of it, so here is another lighting of the flame.

In regards to this article, readers are referred to my "big blog" (as I call it) of Sept. 2011, and its references to the Garden Valley Neighborhood House, or "GVNH" (see "Notes" below)....
GVNH in 2012 

In returning to this subject - of a long-time community center just a two to three-minute walk from the Sidaway Avenue Bridge, I am reminded of the Wizard of Oz, because while I have at least some level of heart and brain, I would be glad to have more of the executive capabilities of GVNH director Jan Ridgeway...
and the persistence and outspokenness of her work and life partner Quinton Durham, the initiator of a construction education program at GVNH....
Thanks to them and my own brand of both sleeping at the wheel and continued persistence, I've gone from a rough idea, perhaps as suggested by this earlier sign at GVNH for the "Durham Construction Trade Institute (DCTI)"....
to something more finished, like this slightly later one....
Since the persistence dates from close to four years ago, my first finished product here is really a short record and recognition of slightly earlier days at the Garden Valley Neighborhood House, not exactly 1924 as sharp eyes may have seen to the left in the photo just above, OR the 1960's and the happy days recounted by Kinsman resident Greg Wallace, but April 6, 2012, when I briefly met with Mr. Durham.

While this first posting will emphasize that visit, Jan Ridgeway, Mr. Durham and others have updated me on GVNH since then, including very briefly in August of last year and on Fri., Jan. 8, earlier this month, and I will comment on the 1/8/16 "dose of positivity", as I have called it, along with challenges which Ms. Ridgeway notes as well, in an update to this blog.

Since this is not exactly cutting-edge journalism, you could say that what Mr. Durham and others at GVNH want is still much needed - and more so with the renewed activism of "Black Lives Matter" and related activities since 2014 - and, with over four years since I last said this - I fervently believe that the vision of improved working-class and low-income communities has to include preserving some meaningful level of past landmarks, knowing that the loss of so many has contributed to another kind of demeaning of such neighborhoods, even as it can easily be seen as less so than drugs, violence and sub-human housing.

And so, from a 1930 bridge to the 1924 Garden Valley Neighborhood House....

My meeting of April 2012 was primarily with Mr. Durham, and he was generous to share his story of a Georgia upbringing in the 40's and 50's, largely one of family pride, including a father who was "the greatest farmer to ever hit Georgia" (according to the son at least:)) and where - acknowledging the tragedy of a harsh racism - that seems to have often been transformed into positives, as in his determined and sometimes outspoken demeanor of recent years, and in at least one other case I noticed, with 2012's DCTI shirts saying "Future Builders of America" and those words being inspired by the slogan of a White South Georgia school touting its "future farmers of America" in the 50's.

Durham started coming up to Cleveland at the age of 15 and moved here full-time in 1960. He spoke with pride of his own record, including being part of home construction in suburbs including Wickliffe, Willowick and Mentor. He volunteered a resume of constructing churches as well, partly as an earlier form of social service, with his contributing a discount in the construction costs of ones which struggled financially such as the Everlasting Missionary Baptist Church at St. Clair and Eddy in the northeastern section of Cleveland [and cited further in "Notes" at the end of this article].

While working in Kinsman, he also emphasized a sense of holding off a possible demolition of GVNH by parties who would have preferred the expansion of the Heritage View residences which are on two sides of it. This became part of a defense of reusing old buildings on his part and a support for preservation articulated in a later discussion with Ms. Ridgeway. [With his strong emphasis on the physical threat to the GVNH structure, I welcome the responses of others to see their view of GVNH and its survival at the time in question.]

At 70 (in 2012), his drive, according to him, was encouraged largely by a sense of how great the economic needs of many Black communities have been in recent years, and he at one point offered a typical night of going to bed at midnight, and waking up at 5, adding at one point -- "with our people in the condition they are in, how can you sleep?"

His depiction of his hard work was echoed by his ringtone at the time - with the well-known pop music words "Ain't no stopping us now, we're moving up...."
and I heard it at least three times during our interview and three more afterwards as I annotated quickly written notes from him.

In the auditorium and chapel for GVNH - an unheated and quieter place filled as we met there with clothes for area residents....
he gave one of several critiques of the Black community both nationwide and locally, and I would say they came out of frustration but also out of "tough love". At this spot, he offered a strong approval of the appeal for Black economic empowerment which he had just heard on the previous day at the Cleveland City Club, a long-time community forum where a Ms. Anderson had spoken the day before, advocating for more spending at Black-owned businesses by Blacks. [This campaign sounded familiar to me, and readers are encouraged to see "Further Readings" at the end of this article for more insight into the Andersons' efforts.]

His critique was joined at times with a more  compassionate message, including his noting a lack of access to work in construction for Blacks, and the comment at one point in reference to the "young Black man" in the inner city that "[firms] don't take him", adding that "it was the biggest mistake when they took the trades out of [public school education]".

To fill the void, he started his trades institute in 2007, noting that he had graduated over 300 students, with 67 in the most recent class (as of our Spring 2012 talk) and 53 in the session before that.

He also told me about kids in 2nd through 6th grades in a "wee-builders" program, saying they were learning math and science through the field of construction and showing me one of the products they had worked on in a building lab....

Ending partly on this one-time work in progress, as with this article at the moment, and on a note of "our future" in a sense, I hope to move on shortly to a partial sense of 2015 and 2016 at GVNH.

Further views of the auditorium and chapel at GVNH, which I saw as a beautiful space in its colors, curves and pointed arches on my first look at it in 2012, notwithstanding and in part because of its use as a store room for clothes at that time....





Notes

...the Andersons - For more on Maggie and John Anderson, one source is a 2012 story on PBS's Newshour including an interview with them, in both transcript and video at the first site below:
http://www.pbs.org/newshour/bb/business-jan-june12-makingsense_06-19/
or
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=77j_lB8TXig


Everlasting Missionary Baptist Church, 579 Eddy Road - A small picture of part of its facade can be seen here: https://www.facebook.com/pages/Everlasting-Missionary-Baptist-Church/155158484520784?v=info&tab=overview.


Garden Valley Neighborhood House - In my initial "bridge blog" of 2011- with the caveat that I have not re-read it entirely for this note:) - I refer to GVNH at least four times....

...starting early on at the end of the "Geography" section, about 10-15% of the way down (as the cursor goes:));

...40-45% of the way down in connection with the picture of Greg Wallace on his front steps;

...shortly thereafter for its west-facing mural (near the end of the paragraph beginning "Very appreciative of assistance from Ms. Kilbury...")

...and with a view of that mural in the footnote (numbered "iii", at least for this section of the blog) which accompanies that paragraph.



A building plan for 11914 Forest Avenue in Cleveland at GVNH [April 6, 2012]


Corrections

I have spoken of a meeting with Ms. Ridgeway on "Sat., Jan. 9" near the beginning of my first installment of this article, and our meeting was Friday, Jan. 8, 2016 as now noted. [JS, 1/25/16]


A brief update [posted Feb. 18, 2016]....

[I have removed this update to its own blog, posted tonight....Josh Silver, Feb. 22, 2016]

Thursday, January 14, 2016

An introduction to the worlds of the Coit Tower murals

[Note - Thanks to my readers for working with the need to cut and paste various url's if you wish to further explore my notes:)]

The Coit Tower is one of San Francisco's most famous landmarks, and the story of its colorful benefactress Lillie Coit is easily accessible (Endnote 1) but many people are unaware of its interior murals, and I was one of them prior to my recent visit to San Francisco. In addition, I was struck before I came there to learn that they are highly progressive in terms of a pro-labor spirit, even though these views permeated much of the air in their generation and 1930's "social realist" art. And while that thrust may be the first of the "worlds" I have alluded to above, a second world can be seen within their many details, whether serious, humorous or otherwise.

Upon entry to the Tower, which for most people means buying a ticket for admission to its observation level, the eyes we are seeing above an archway to the tower's elevator foyer have been said to be those of one of the gods of this often ideological art world - Diego Rivera, and while I myself have accepted this as an urban legend, its persistence demonstrates Rivera's spiritual presence in the Tower.....
I hope many readers here will know Rivera not only for his one-time partner Frida Kahlo, but his elevation of the working man and woman, which I learned about when I was growing up in the 70's with occasional visits from the Cleveland area to his 1932-33 murals in the Detroit Institute of Arts, one of which can be seen here....
File:Rivera detroit industry north.jpg
["Detroit Industry", on the North Wall of the Rivera Court at the Detroit Institute of Arts; source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Rivera_detroit_industry_north.jpg]

While Rivera did not do any of the murals in the tower, his Detroit murals were very recent at the time and were preceded by a mural in 1931 in San Francisco at the San Francisco Art Institute, perhaps under a mile west of the tower. While I was unable to see this work on my SF visit, it honors the working class in terms of people who can generally be seen as "laborers", but also artists working to produce a mural, and is loftily titled ""The Making of a Fresco Showing the Building of a City." [See http://amormundi.blogspot.com/2014/05/san-francisco-art-institute-touts-diego.html for a fine picture of the mural.][Endnote 2 on the Rivera "urban legend" above.]

Almost as soon as I saw these eyes....I began to see what amounted to two dozen details or more over the hours I studied the murals, thanks in part to informative labels; just as the causes which fueled these paintings constitute a kind of "macro" world, the details make up a number of micro-worlds, ranging I'd bet from subtle ones which I do not know to recognitions of the Coit Tower art project and particular artists involved in it, to obvious ones, at least with a little knowledge of 1930's history.

Examples within that last category include the support of 30's "New Deal" programs to restart the economy, workers' rights, etc., and references to concrete realities and ephemera of life 80-85 years ago, such as a showing of Charlie Chaplin's movie "City Lights".  A few of the latter, with semi-careful study, might seem as obvious in a way as product placement ads in movies today, while the products at the base of the tower are sometimes the ideas of Communism, Socialism, and the like.

Diagonally across the front hall from the door to the elevator area, there is both a cautionary view of new technology in the 30's such as the building of massive hydroelectric dams, implying their power to environmentally destroy as well as to provide, and at one point, off to the side, the detail of very rich tourists off for a limousine ride in which the poor tent-dwellers nearby are themselves objects of touristic interest....
The context here includes the struggling family they are observing and a recently-built dam....
In quick succession thereafter, moving to the left or west, you have workers presenting a strong and somewhat unnerving front as they strike and then scenes including dockside work, certainly a huge part of San Francisco's landscape at the time. Both strikes and shipping, as well as other elements, came together in 1934 in the city's "Maritime and General Strike", the only general strike in the history of the U.S. [Endnote 3].

Turning the corner to the west side of the Tower, the panorama of production there appears very Rivera-esque, at least going on his Detroit murals, with "Industries of California" illustrating packaging and canning....
While this segment may at once be realistic, repetitive and muted in color beyond the blues in the outfits of female assembly line staffers, another working scene across the base of the tower is both delightfully colorful and idealized as well.  

"California Agriculture" IS authentic in depicting an "NRA" stamp on fruit boxes, seen at the lower right here....
noting support of fair competition under the New Deal's National Recovery Administration, but its first-floor label may or may not be critical in saying that it does not show non-Caucasian farm workers and in perhaps suggesting they were already a sizable part of the farming workforce 80 years ago. Additionally, it is described in the afore-cited architectural guide as showing a "prettified picture of farmworkers" dressed in  "romantic garb" and an inaccurate implication of small family farms as a big part of 20th-century California farming [Endnote 4].

In the panorama of "City Life" on the south side of the ground floor, there is at once liveliness and diversion as well as despair and the heartlessness that came at times with the deep economic tragedy of the 1929 crash, as one studies the details in the central portion here....
To the left of the Tower sales door, you may be able to see both a car crash in the background and an armed robbery in the foreground....
To the immediate left of the Tower's ticket booth, which itself may play a "news counter", there are the diversions of journalism, ending at the bottom with the sultry actress Mae West, noted in the tower label as a subtle critique of new standards at the time against "indecency" in movies....
and to the right, you have more "issue-oriented" publications, again in part Communist and Socialist and including the one-time magazine "Masses", just below....[Endnote 5 - I realize this is usually the point at which many people stop reading, but this endnote will be....less "dry", one might say - and pun intended? - so I hope you will cursor down to it:)....]
Almost exactly across from this side of the "newstand" is a heroically-sized depiction of a "Stockbroker"; on the surface this is a quintessential capitalist, but it turns out that the likely model is someone who in part symbolized help for the little guy in terms of his loans and related acts - Amadeo P. Giannini, the founder of San Francisco's Bank of Italy and then its successor - the Bank of America....
Along with likely cameos of celebrities in their fields such as this one and a (sly?) insertion of Rivera - setting type at the top center in this scene of "Newsgathering" at the southwest corner of the tower...
....there are also a number of depictions of the Tower artists and what are almost advertisements for the Tower mural series, following in part the precedent of self-referential art since that of Medieval cathedral reliefs and Renaissance paintings, but to such an extent that I wondered what caused this profusion, and can only begin to imagine the buoyancy of the setting, where, released to some extent from the trials of unemployment in America's worst depression, even if with just $38 a week as their salary (Endnote 6), free to express their ideologies, with a sizeable youth quotient among them (Endnote 7) and no need to write in long sentences like this one (just kidding!!), but seriously....I can only begin to conclude those were reasons for the confident level of depictions for at least some of the group's players, including (if not as youthful as some), Lucien Labaudt, cleaning cows in "California Industrial Scenes"....
and John Howard, very close by, "next to" an actual Tower window and peering over silage in one of the trompe l'ceil arrangements of the mural series....
along with their context....
Also, however positive, the Tower art effort is presented as part of the ferment of the 30's and what at the time was a very difficult landscape for many Americans and the increasingly dark landscape many observed in the world, in Germany and elsewhere; the news of art coming to the Tower is conflated in the right side of the painting "Library", where there is a headline regarding farm foreclosures in North Dakota (to the lower right), massacres in Austria (top center) and other domestic occurrences some of which reflect contemporary tensions - including the demolition of famous leftist murals by Rivera at Rockefeller Center (announced below the news from Austria)....
While Coit artist John Langley Howard is shown reaching for a copy of "Das Kapital" in the lower left portion of the "Library" scene above, Clifford Wight, one of the Tower artists fighting rising fascism in the world, really stretched the envelope when given the freedom to work within the three small rectangular spaces seen between the beams and above the west-facing window in the image here....
While he painted passages titled "New Deal" and "Democracy",  he chose for his third and final message to announce "Workers of the World Unite", but also accompanied that with a hammer and sickle, and, in the controversy that followed, all of the images were stripped from their wall spaces, as the first two babies were thrown out along with what was seen as the especially offending Communist bathwater of the "Workers..." passage.

One further inaccurate outflow here was the misleading impression given when this pro-Communist message was shown as having been painted above the "Library" image, as Tower guide Ari Thompson showed me here....
[source: Coit Tower/San Francisco/Its History and Art, by Masha Zakheim Jewett (SF: Volcano Press, 1983), p. 50; Jewett was the daughter of the artist of "Library", Bernard Zakheim (1896-1985)]

While the trio here was removed from its wall segments, other messages were allowed to remain, even a fist promoting the need for social revolution, above the exit doorway, and visible at https://juliacoynerrobinson.wordpress.com/tag/coit-tower/#jp-carousel-277.

In a more secluded area of both the first and second floors, the temperature definitely moderates - as I culminate this selective Tower art survey - with a series of paintings dealing with the pleasures of contemporary life in the 30's. It is interesting that despite being apolitical, at least on the surface, they are not open to the general public except by an $8 fee per guest, a minimum of 4 guests and a maximum of 8 patrons at a time. [Endnote 8]

My special thanks for seeing them goes to Ari Thompson, Morgan Grimm (a tower manager), his father Terry Grimm, and Hiro, a tower cleaner and guest services staffer.

Perhaps appropriately - given the unseen nature of these paintings for visitors in general, I cannot easily provide my own images of perhaps the most dynamic of these works, having taken a video of it which I may not be able to download here. It is the first segment to be seen as you leave the elevator foyer, and, going through doors to the left of the elevator, wind up a curving staircase to the second floor, where you may be delighted by a view of the life along hill-climbing - and cable-car-famous - Powell Street. Two slivers of these views may be seen in the first and third images just below, and two other view venues are....

https://www.flickr.com/photos/greatestpaka/4449305408/, which offers a partial sense of the left side as one walks up the stairs,

and...

http://blog.sfgate.com/artsandnot/2014/09/30/rare-look-at-7-upstairs-murals-at-coit-tower/#photo-539434, for views 3-7.

At the top of Powell Street, so to speak, there are views of collegiate sports above you and to the left....
and also straight ahead, "Sports" more broadly, as per the mural title here....
and, to your right, "Children at Play"....
While these views continue the lightness of the second floor themes, they may have been part of their project's message of empowerment, as the second image ("Sports") was done by a Japanese-American - Edward Takeo Terada, noted in endnote 7 below - and the childrens' painting by an Afro-American, Ralph Chesse, who Ari has informed me gained great local reknown over the 17-year run of a TV show, "Brother Buzz", which debuted in 1949 and which she wrote of as a "puppet show that taught children to be kind to animals". [Endnote 9]

At the end of the second floor, you have images of "Home Life" including a father reading a newspaper as presented by artist Jane Berlandina....
and a house party....

While this beautiful domestic cul-de-sac caps this part of my presentation, I would take my cue from these last two mural pictures, encouraging all of my readers here to "read" these murals further - up close if possible - and/or with a digital house party in your own residence!

My own on-site study party shortly after Christmas could not have been possible without the four people I've noted above, so I hope you'll read more about them as well in the "Acknowledgements" following the endnotes.



Endnotes

1. Lillie Hitchcock Coit (1843-1929) fell in love with the excitement of fighting fires in her adopted city of San Francisco as a girl and - making a long and fascinating story short (or shortening the short version I've been exposed to:)) - her support of local fire companies and the city more broadly led her to leave $125,000 to the city with the general goal of beautifying it.

Remarkably for our perspectives today, that was the Coit Tower's cost, once it was determined as the best use for that amount, according to a brochure I obtained at the tower, with its main title "The Story of Coit Tower And Its Art...." It is undated but gives credit to the San Francisco Recreation and Parks Department.

2. Ari Thompson, a Tower guide, noted in an e-mail to me of Jan. 1, 2016 that the eyes above the entry to the elevator foyer are not those of Rivera, adding that... "[n]ot only did the artist [Ray Boynton] say it was Old Man Weather, but if you look at the image itself, the eyes are surrounded exclusively by weather elements... rain, lightening, moon, sun, and clouds."

3. Randolph Delehanty, San Francisco/Walks and Tours in the Golden Gate City, New York: The Dial Press, 1980, p. 69.

4.  I thank Ari Thompson for noting the label text, just below, in an e-mail of Jan. 12, 2016 and her observing, in fairness, that it is not clear if it is referring to non-European-Americans in agriculture of today or of the 1930's....
"In contrast to modern agriculture...the workforce is entirely
European-American, excluding the many agricultural workers of Mexican and Asian descent."

and ibid, p. 70.

5. In reference to subjects such as Mae West, a lascivious element appears at least a few times in these murals, perhaps the most notable one being in a segment on the timber industry, where one is able to see sexual graffiti which may only be delicately alluded to in Randolph Delehanty's guide, where he writes that if you "[l]ook carefully in the mill" you can "find the primitive and communicative roots of all art in a worker's graffito on a pillar" [p. 69]; here is the likely inspiration to which he refers....
and with its pillar in context near the upper center of this next image with the general scene ironically (or deliberately?) next to the women's restroom....
I also learned of a painting at San Francisco's "Beach Chalet" painted by Lucien Labaudt, one of the tower artists, which is very likely to be deliberately phallic, so feel free to give it a look about 40% of the way down at "Lillie Coit's Tribute to Pyromania" [http://foundsf.org/index.php?title=Lillie_Coit's_Tribute_to_Pyromania], where you will see the Tower's supervising architect Arthur Brown, Jr. holding an image of the Tower....at a certain angle, and then jetting water "coming out" of the "Tower" above that....a veritable TRIPLE-entendre, reflecting in part Lillie Coit's love of fire-fighting as entertainment....

It appears that the manly Brown scene and other murals are still happily viewable at the Beach Chalet in Golden Gate Park, as per http://www.atlasobscura.com/places/beach-chalet-wpa-murals.

[On a drier:) but still important note, -- Howard of Brown's firm was the main designer for the Tower.]

6. 2nd panel of the brochure noted in endnote 1 - "The Story of Coit Tower, under the sub-section "The Murals".

7. Examples of younger artists and their Coit contributions include Maxine Albro ("California Agriculture", 1903-1966), Harold Mallette Dean ("Stockbroker", 1907-1975), Edward Terada ("Sports", 1908-1993) and Frede Vidar ("Department Store", 1911-1967).

Sources consulted here, noted after each artist, are, for....

Albro - Tower labels and http://www.sullivangoss.com/maxine_Albro/#Biography

Dean - those labels and http://www.annexgalleries.com/artists/biography/3267/Dean/H.+Mallette

Terada...
https://art.famsf.org/takeo-edward-terada and an excerpt at... Depression-Era Murals of the Bay Area, Nicholas Veronico et al (Charleston, S.C.: Arcadia Publishing Co., 2014) at     https://books.google.com/books?id=agwaAwAAQBAJ&pg=PA15&lpg=PA15&dq=Edward+Terada+1908&source=bl&ots=nVc-268O8Y&sig=-ptIiFbT6n-d-ZpB9dH0cKJVskg&hl=en&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwj41e_WtYnKAhUS22MKHSPiB0QQ6AEIKzAD#v=onepage&q=Edward%20Terada%201908&f=false 

Vidar...
https://americangallery.wordpress.com/2010/03/03/frede-vidar-1911-1967/.

8. Initial readers to my blog since Thurs., Jan. 14 would have read that the second-floor paintings are not open to visitors in general "except by a $7 fee per guest and a limit of 6 patrons at a time", as per the 2nd panel of the brochure noted in endnotes 1 & 6, under the sub-section "The Murals", and my improved information above is thanks again to Ari Thompson, from an e-mail to me of Fri., Jan. 15 where she also notes that the San Francisco Art Commission has a limit of 8 visitors at a time on the second floor because of the greater need to protect the artworks there within their narrower stairway and hallway respectively, as compared with the ground level.

The $8 fee per person cited above also includes a guided tour of the first-floor murals. [JS/Jan. 17, 2015]

9. In her e-mail of Jan. 15, mentioned in note 8 just above, Ari adds that in the period between his Tower work and becoming "Brother Buzz", Chesse worked as a puppeteer, primarily in childrens' theater.




Acknowledgements

Grimm, Morgan, and Terry Grimm.  Morgan, pictured here in the elevator foyer with parts of the works "Bay Scene" to the right (by Jose Moya del Pino) and "Bay Area Hills" (by Rinaldo Cuneo) to the left....
- is a manager of Coit Tower, working under his father Terry, while the City of San Francisco continues to own it.

When I asked Morgan a question he may have gotten hundreds of times, he responded that while he was not related to (a couple of famous authors:)) he said that "my wife's father is Davy Crockett V" and "my side of the family is related to Jesse James" (as per his grandfather) so that, for his daughter, "she's got Davy Crockett and Jesse James".

Hiro, seen here in front of the work "Library"...
provides both visitor assistance and cleaning services at the Tower.

Thompson, Ari. Ari, seen here next to "Machine Force" by artist Ray Boynton....
has been great in pointing out aspects I might not have otherwise realized, both during my Tower visit and with follow-up questions.

She spoke of loving her work at the Tower, largely as a guide, in terms of the "problem-solving of trying to make it a pleasant experience for the people while still trying to protect the art - which is not always easy to do".

Within a varied life which has included being a database manager at UCSF (University of California at San Francisco), working for the San Francisco Symphony and selling bath salts at the city's Pier 39, one consistent element for Ari has been 53 years as a city resident and the last 51 just a block-and-a-half from the Tower.

Thanks to all of these Tower staffers for all of their time on Sat., Dec. 26, 2015 in helping me to better understand a few small layers of the art around them.




Sources

[Abbreviations here include "CT" for Coit Tower]

Austrian violence in 1934 -- noted in my brief research as being part of an Austrian civil war of that year, at http://www.fsmitha.com/h2/ch19vienna.html.



Berlandina, Jane (artist of CT murals) http://www.sfgate.com/bayarea/article/Coit-Tower-s-long-hidden-murals-finally-being-5867664.php or "Coit Tower’s long-hidden murals finally being revealed",
and...




Chessé, Ralph (1900-1991) --  http://www.chesseartsltd.com/ralphchesse.html and "Georgia Museum of Art to focus on artist and puppeteer Ralph Chessé" at http://news.uga.edu/releases/article/georgia-museum-art-ralph-chesse/.

For "Children at Play" -- https://livingnewdeal.org/projects/coit-tower-chesse-mural-san-francisco-ca/ and http://www.chesseartsltd.com/wpa-style.html.

Tower manager Terry Grimm felt that the aesthetic of Chesse's work as a puppeteer is reflected in the second-floor images of "Children...." 




City Lights (Chaplin film) -- http://www.filmsite.org/city.html and https://www.criterion.com/films/27558-city-lights



Giannini, Amadeo Peter (1870-1949). http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/theymadeamerica/whomade/giannini_hi.html and http://www.biography.com/people/ap-giannini-38693.




Hammer & Sickle image at the Tower...."Coit Tower/Historical Essay" at 

http://foundsf.org/index.php?title=Coit_Tower and an essay 

"Coit Tower: Part II" at https://juliacoynerrobinson.wordpress.com/tag/coit-tower/



Howard, Henry Temple (1894-1967). http://archives.ced.berkeley.edu/collections/howard-henry-temple,
http://socialarchive.iath.virginia.edu/ark:/99166/w6cm0mzf,
and,
from an excerpt of page 247 of a "National Trust Guide" for San Francisco....
https://books.google.com/books?id=rbAFNxPiVmcC&pg=PA247&lpg=PA247&dq=Henry+Howard+-+architect+-+Coit&source=bl&ots=w6iFkBFYQV&sig=j1j4K_e2b-g8VMqkTdJl_h1q768&hl=en&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwjalpG57aDKAhXB2R4KHTBPDHI4ChDoAQg3MAI#v=onepage&q=Henry%20Howard%20-%20architect%20-%20Coit&f=false



North Dakota Moratorium. Based on the sub-site "Exhibits - North Dakota Governors - William Langer", at http://history.nd.gov/exhibits/governors/governors17.html, and what I can see in the painting "Library" - N.D. Governor William Langer declared a halt to farm foreclosures in 1934 to help impoverished farmers.



"Powell Street" mural leading to the Tower's second floor; see also http://www.sfgate.com/bayarea/article/Coit-Tower-s-long-hidden-murals-finally-being-5867664.php or

http://www.sfgate.com/bayarea/article/Coit-Tower-s-long-hidden-murals-finally-being-5867664.php or "Coit Tower’s long-hidden murals finally being revealed".


Rivera, Diego (1886-1957) -- Detroit Murals

"Industry and Technology as the Indigenous Culture of Detroit" http://www.dia.org/art/rivera-court.aspx

"Detroit Institute of Arts", a sub-section of "An Analysis of Diego Rivera's Exhibitions in the United States", at 
http://www.umich.edu/~ac213/student_projects06/sdtber/Detroit%20institute.html.




Rivera mural at the San Francisco Art Institute

"Diego Rivera Mural" at http://www.sfai.edu/about-sfai/diego-rivera-mural


"Communist Ideology for Capitalist Clients", p. 46 of Diego Rivera, 1886-1957: A Revolutionary Spirit in Modern Art
as reproduced at https://books.google.com/books?id=pvyfaFpm2pgC&pg=PA46&lpg=PA46&dq=rivera+mural+san+francisco+art+institute+1931&source=bl&ots=lPq7N4cqZU&sig=C6XmIWFg2g6UCjQE4nPhUNPrZEA&hl=en&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwj-k5bBxYHKAhUB6WMKHRPDBDs4ChDoAQhEMAc#v=onepage&q=rivera%20mural%20san%20francisco%20art%20institute%201931&f=false

"San Francisco Art Institute", at http://www.latimes.com/travel/la-trw-sfartinstitute-photo.html
"Diego Rivera: The Making of a Fresco", at http://art-for-a-change.com/blog/2011/12/diego-rivera-the-making-of-a-fresco.html.


Terada, Edward Takeo - his "Sports" mural on the Tower's second floor...
https://livingnewdeal.org/projects/coit-tower-terada-mural-san-francisco-ca/ and https://rkd.nl/en/explore/images/223214.


Zakheim, Masha.
Obituaries at http://www.legacy.com/obituaries/sfgate/obituary.aspx?pid=169782693 and within the website of "Telegraph Hill Dwellers" at http://www.thd.org/2014/coming-events/.