
Your Guide toSan Francisco's Public Art This Winter
In San Francisco, the city is our canvas. No matter which neighborhood you’re exploring, you’re bound to find some breathtaking—and free—art.
San Francisco’s ethos of innovation, spirit of creativity, and pleasant year-round climate all work together to make the city the perfect place for public art. Here are some of our favorite selections of the inspiring artwork you’ll see when you’re out and about.
Slow Street Murals
SF Parks Alliance installed five large temporary street murals on Slow Streets across San Francisco as part of their Slow Streets, Fast Friends project, designed by Josué Rojas and Matley Hurd. Hundreds of community members participated, including many who helped paint the murals in their neighborhoods. The five murals are painted on Slow Streets in the following SF neighborhoods: NOPA, the Haight, Sunnyside, Dogpatch, and the Mission.
NOPA
This ground mural features a flock of parrots that regularly visit the neighborhood, dahlias (the official flower of San Francisco), and a depiction of the Golden Gate Bridge.
Haight
The Page Street mural alludes to Page’s emerging role as a wildlife greenway while incorporating local landmarks important to the neighborhood.
Sunnyside
The Hearst mural calls to local pollinators, illuminated by sunrise and sunset imagery.
Dogpatch
The Minnesota Street mural showcases Dogpatch’s industrial past (Victorian homes, cranes, shipbuilding, steel, ironworks), its natural elements (the waterfront, sunny blue skies, trees, native plantings), and the neighborhood’s proud artisanal culture (architecture, fashion, art and design studios, museums and galleries, local shops).
Mission
The 20th Street mural melds the sights of food and drink from the neighborhoods’ bars, restaurants and coffee shops.
Central Subway Station Artworks
The San Francisco Arts Commission collaborated with the San Francisco Municipal Transportation Agency to curate a diverse public art program that includes ten permanent and free site-specific artworks by twelve artists. They are placed inside and outside of the four Central Subway stations in SoMa, Union Square, and Chinatown.
Chinatown-Rose Pak Station
Yangge: Dance of the Bride and Yangge: Dance of the New Year
These two large laser-cut metal artworks painted a vibrant red by Yumei Hou greet visitors, depicting a Chinese folk dance and showcasing scenes from celebrations like weddings and New Year.
Arrival
Tomie Arai's artwork depicts the neighborhood’s history and community through large-scale architectural glass images, showcasing scenes from gardens to the port of San Francisco.
A Sense of Community
This vibrant ceramic tile mural by Clare Rojas highlights diverse Silk Road textiles, symbolizing Chinatown's community.
Union Square/Market Street Station
Lucy in the Sky
Erwin Redl's illuminated installation of 500+ LED panels spans nearly 670 feet, creating a kaleidoscopic effect that visitors can pass under.
Silent Stream
Jim Campbell and Werner Klotz's stainless-steel sculpture, which hangs above Muni riders on the platform, resembles an underground creek.
Convergence: Commute Patterns
Artist team Hughen/Starkweather created a glass artwork that layers a topographic map of San Francisco with painted circles representing commute patterns.
Yerba Buena/Moscone Station
Node
This spiraling sculpture by Roxy Paine can be seen from blocks away, rising 102 feet despite its deceptively thin circumference. Locals still argue over what it represents. A beanstalk? A young tree? A crack in the Earth?
Arc Cycle
Catherine Wagner transformed her 1970s construction photos of The Moscone Center into large-scale granite and glass artworks that are displayed within the station.
Face C/Z
Leslie Shows's artwork features a pyrite-inspired design, symbolizing shifting values and Bay Area gold rushes.
4th & Brannan Station
Microcosmic
This wind-activated sculpture by Moto Ohtake is mounted on a 40-foot light pole and creates varied movements through 31 rotating points, providing infinite combinations.
Downtown San Francisco
Like an open-air museum, downtown San Francisco offers art in many variations, both indoors and outdoors.
One of downtown SF's latest art additions is the Battery Bridge Mural by Talavera-Ballón. Outside 555 California Street, you’ll find the Bankers Heart sculpture (officially named Transcendence) by Masayuki Nagari.
The bronze sculptures of Douglas Tilden's Mechanics Monument commemorate industry at Market, Bush, and Battery streets. At 465 California Street, the historic Merchants Exchange Building boasts maritime murals by artist William Coulter.
In the Main Hall of the historic Mining Exchange Building at 350 Bush Street, you can view two sailboat paintings by artist Christopher Brown. Outside the building, Artificial Rock No. 149 showcases a sculpture by Zhan Wang.
At Rincon Park along the Embarcadero, you can find Claes Oldenburg and Coosje van Bruggen’s Cupid's Span, a giant bow and arrow sculpture that draws inspiration from the myth of Eros, whose arrow piercing the earth symbolizes fertility and vitality.
Outside the southeast entrance to San Francisco's Ferry Building, you can view the iconic 2025 Hearts in SF sculptures. The first by artist and graphic designer Isabelle Hung, titled Japanese Tea Garden evokes the pagoda and surroundings of the Japanese Tea Garden in Golden Gate Park. The second, titled SŌL, by artist Dev Heyrana, is a beautiful orange and pink abstract piece.
Across the downtown campus of Yerba Buena Center for the Arts, you'll find the work of artists who are cultural anchors and change-makers. Visit them today and explore site-specific artworks by local artists including Masako Miki, Innosanto Nagara, and others.
Illuminate SF
Celebrating San Francisco's creativity and innovation, Illuminate SF highlights the city's public light art with installations that are mostly accessible by public transportation and free to enjoy. Installations can be found throughout the city's many neighborhoods, and during the holiday season, Illuminate SF's Festival of Light features stunning, site-specific outdoor installations across the city that dazzle San Francisco.
San Francisco City Guides
Beginning in 1976 with librarian-led tours of City Hall, San Francisco City Guides has expanded to more than 275 volunteer ambassadors offering more than 70 tours. Several tours highlight the city's beautiful murals, like “Mission Murals”, where the wall paintings first appeared in the 1970s and soon became central to the area’s identity, and “Scandalous Murals of Rincon Center”, which showcases 27 murals by Moscow-born artist Anton Refregier that challenged the traditional, patriotic view of America in the 1950s. Other walks with an artistic focus are centered around film, history, and architecture. Advance registration is recommended, but walk-ups are welcome.

"Bay Lights" to Return Bigger and Brighter
For a decade, the Bay Bridge shimmered from dusk to dawn with Leo Villareal’s Bay Lights sculpture, the world’s largest LED light installation at its debut. The lights went dark in March 2023 due to harsh conditions along the bridge, but will return with double the number of lights! In Bay Lights 360, Villareal’s new iteration of the installation, 50,000 white lights will be affixed to the northern edge of the bridge’s western span and wrap around the cables, making the 1.8-mile installation visible from more vantage points.


Explore Our Visitor's Guide
Check out our free San Francisco Traveler visitor's guide and learn how to explore San Francisco like a local.