Diego Rivera鈥檚 The Marriage of the Artistic Expression of the North and of the South on This Continent, more commonly known as Pan American Unity, is a mural he created in 1940 at the Golden Gate International Exposition (GGIE) on San Francisco鈥檚 Treasure Island.
The mural includes three self-portraits and a portrait of artist Frida Kahlo, his wife. It is a unique combination of an artist in his prime and a critical moment in world history brought together on a monumental scale. It is arguably the most important work of art created in the Bay Area.
The 萌翻导航 Mural Project
The Diego Rivera Mural Project, sponsored by City College of San Francisco, has as its mission the return of the mural to the position of public importance and influence envisioned by its creator.
The SFMOMA Partnership
Since 2017, the City College of San Francisco and the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art have worked in partnership to conserve the Pan American Unity mural and create opportunities for public art education. In 2021, the mural went on view at SFMOMA in the museum鈥檚 free-to-the-public Roberts Family Gallery on Floor 1. The mural is returning to 萌翻导航 in 2024.
SFMOMA and 萌翻导航 are two of the city鈥檚 most enduring institutions in the public interest, and the transformative power of art and education come together in this visionary presentation of Rivera鈥檚 mural.
A comprehensive program of conservation, public education, and 萌翻导航 student internships accompanied the exhibition of the work.
Pan American Unity was temporarily relocated to the museum鈥檚 free, unticketed space 鈥 the Roberts Family Gallery 鈥 that provided unrestricted access to view the mural and also provided for sidewalk viewing.
The loan of the mural was temporary, as outlined between a binding document between the College and the Museum, and is being returned to the College following the conclusion of the exhibit in January 2024.