Meet Miguel Garcia, in the center, with Shepard Fairey on the left and Aaron Huey on the right, Miguel is owner of De La Barracuda, a boxing club at 7769 Melrose. Miguel donated the wall for this installation. The prominent space normally rents for $15,000-20,000.
We arrive after an 85 mph trip from San Francisco at midday and the work is well under way. They started at 11 a.m. This is Shep walking briskly along the wall, directing the volunteer installers.
Volunteers have pasted all that can be done at ground level and are now boarding the scissors truck to reach higher spots.
They have gone through many buckets of wheat paste by the time we arrive.
Shep scoops up excess wheat paste.
Shep swabs the installed paper pieces with a thick coat of wheat paste.
Daryl Hannah and Aaron, who met her at the MountainFilm Festival in Telluride, Colorado this past May. She is now an avid supporter of his Honor the Treaties: Pine Ridge Billboard Project.
Daryl cuts paper snippets of the image to correct imperfections in the pasting. She was on site for several hours.
Aaron plots logistics with Shep.
Daryl and Chet Hay (Aaron's assistant) join Aaron and Shep to discuss some details of the installation.
Chet keeps the mural pieces organized.
Lakota pow-wow dancer's ear is hoisted for installation.
This is Sinuhé Xavier. He knows Miguel, the club owner, and after he met Aaron, he connected the two.
A large portion of the beautiful Lakota pow-wow dancer's face is being installed by Shep and other members of the team.
Aaron stacks paper strips for the next upload.
Shots taken by co-author Meteor Blades:
 
This figure with the outstretched arms is co-author navajo showing how extremely happy she is to be there.
Shep, Aaron, Meteor Blades, Shockwave and Lara. Honorary SFKossacks Represent!
Shep, navajo and Aaron.
Shep's presence being documented.
Watching and waiting for the next hand-off of paper.
Daniel Salin, a producer and curator for art shows and an installer for the famous international street artist Banksy, takes a break from working on the scissors truck. Daniel was connected with Aaron through Sinuhé. He has done the Barracuda wall before with Shep and photograffeur JR.
Documenting is done from all angles.
Daniel, Shep and Eric Becker
The face gets closer to completion.
Urban Indians: navajo and her daughter mangolind watch the mural's progress.
Aaron and Shep paste the mural's strips on the top edge of the wall.
Shep and Daniel, covered in wheat paste.
Aaron finishes the last square of paper!
He turns around with a grin.
Aaron, Daryl and Shep pose with the completed project.
Now for the Pièce de Résistance: The billboard is tagged with HONOR THE TREATIES.org
Chet, Aaron, Sinuhé and Daniel are happy to be done.
Sinuhé and Aaron snap pics of their work from across the street.
Aaron, navajo, Sinuhé, Daniel and Taylor Kent, who documented the project with a time-lapse camera across the street.
You can browse more than 290 of navajo's photos of the installation here by clicking the slideshow button.
| HOW YOU CAN DIRECTLY HELP THE LAKOTA: |
#1: Share and Tweet this diary with your networks.
Honor The Treaties at Facebook.
#2: Support the organization that directly helps the youth of Pine Ridge who are featured in the images above.
The Owe Aku International Justice Project DONATE is guided daily by traditional leaders and elders who speak our language and live our Lakota way of life. This approach has preserved our nation for 170 years against unyielding attempts to annihilate, assimilate and legislate us out of existence. Our goal is to do nothing more than continue the process left to us by our ancestors.
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