Scott Williams, 'greatest of all stencil artists'...

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ph Carrie Galbraith

Scott Williams, ‘greatest of all stencil artists,’ dies at 67 (Original Post)
by OSCAR PALMA 
JUNE 12, 2024, 5:00 AM 
for Mission Local (Donate to support

It was the early ‘90s and the Mission was boiling, fermenting with artists from all over the world. At least that’s how Clarion Alley’s Project co-founder, Aaron Noble, recalls it: An artistic melting pot. And one of the premier artists at the time, a painter fueled by coffee, tobacco and burritos, was spray-painting institution Scott Williams

Williams, who lived at his apartment at 20th and Shotwell for 35 years, died Sunday, May 26, at Zuckerberg San Francisco General Hospital. He was 67 and succumbed to an infection, according to his family. 

Williams was one of the first artists to paint a mural in Clarion Alley after Noble and other artists started the project in 1991, Noble said. The two cultivated a friendship that lasted through the ‘90s before Noble moved to Los Angeles in 2000. 

“His work was everywhere, literally out on the street and indoors and outdoors, on cars driving by. You couldn’t avoid it,” said Noble. “He was a stencil artist. He was the stencil artist. He was the greatest of all stencil artists.” 

Some of Williams’ stencil pieces decorated local favorites, such as Burger Joint, Leather Tongue Video, Pedal Revolution, Chameleon Bar, Armadillo on Fillmore Street, DNA Lounge, Amoeba Records and The Lab. His painting at The Lab is the only one remaining, Mission Local has found. 

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Detail of Scott's Pedal Revolution mural (1999).

Williams started using stencils in the early ‘80s, when he cut images from magazine pages and glued them onto the pages of a notebook. 

“I had this idea in the back of my mind, ‘What if I was to take a photograph and cut out all the dark parts and spray paint through that? I wonder how that would look.’ I remember thinking about that for several months,” Williams said in the 1991 documentary Spray Paint. “I thought, ‘this might not work, so I won’t spend much time on it,’ and I just did it really quickly, and sprayed it once, and I was surprised how well it came out.” 

Williams was born in Los Angeles and grew up in Santa Barbara. He arrived in San Francisco in 1979, and started doing stencil work shortly afterward. He received the 2005 Adaline Kent Award, which recognizes promising artists in the state, and his work has been featured at the Yerba Buena Center for the Arts and the San Francisco Art Institute. 

After more than a decade using spray paint, Williams switched to an airbrush machine in the early to mid-‘90s because the latter was less toxic, some of his friends said. Toward the end of his life, he returned to making collages in books. 

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“Recently, he showed me a series of 8.5-by-11-inch pages he’d been working on since 2020, his pandemic series — abstract magazine scraps collaged, around 50 pages in all — no people, no text. Brilliantly dense stuff which rivals earlier spray-stencil abstract work,” said his friend and client, Robert Collison. 

Friends described Williams as smart, soft-spoken and well-read — a Marxist who thought Lenin was underappreciated. One of his pieces is a portrait of the trio Lenin, Marx and Colonel Sanders. 

He liked super carnitas burritos from El Farolito, Cafe Bustelo, Export A’s cigarettes, crusty sourdough and an occasional Negra Modelo. He hated sports and television, though he did sometimes use the latter as a metaphor. 

“You watch television, and things are changing irrationally from one point to the other, from 500 dead in China to a dog food commercial,” he said in Spray Paint. “That’s a dominant feature of our culture. These images are hitting us, one after another, and not in a particularly sensible order. Maybe if you stood back far enough from it, there would be a point where it would make sense.” 

Annice Jacoby, a writer, artist, curator, advocate for public art and author of the 2009 book “Mission Muralismo,” said Williams’ work is complex and mysterious, an oeuvre that commands attention. 

Comparing him to “Andy Warhol or Robert Rauschenberg or any of the so-called fine artists” of the late 20th century, Jacoby said he was “just as avant-garde, but directly in the street at the same time.” 

“He also had some sense of ‘no surface was safe,’ just like Michael Roman, a mixture of political imagery, pop culture and juxtapositions,” she added. “He definitely was kind of the king of it at that time.” 

Noble recalled his “amazing library of imagery” that Williams called “stored energy.” “It was this surrealist mashup with pop cultural images from all different eras and different mediums, all mashed together in a timeless, flickering, vibrating, interdimensional collage.” 

Russell Howze, the author of the 2008 book “Stencil Nation” and founder of stencilarchive.org, met Williams in the early 2000s after documenting his work throughout the city. For years afterward, he visited the artist’s apartment to photograph his work, images he would eventually use for his website. He remembers him as a teacher and mentor, a person who deflected talking about his art. 

“He seemed meek and mild, but if you look, his art was very bold, very strong. He wanted to fill in every last millimeter of space, and he just took these normal, mundane clips of art and created these otherworldly pieces,” said Howze. “He definitely had this punk aesthetic. He was right there in the middle of all of that in the late ‘70s and early ‘80s.” 

Punk is how longtime friend and fellow artist Fred Rinne met Williams in 1981. 

They were both fans of the Cramps, a band with New York and Sacramento roots, and became “darn near family, a tribal family” to one another, said Rinne. “It all happened because of punk rock.” 

Williams’ death came as a shock to his sister, Lissa Williams, who spoke to her brother a few days before he was sedated and never regained consciousness. She recalled her brother as a gifted raconteur. “The last time we spoke, he was feeling good and ready to come home and work on new projects.” 

She said he would have been happy to read at least one of the latest headlines: “He would have been so happy to see that Donald Trump was found guilty.” 

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