

Library of Congress by Congresswoman Barbara Lee as a “Local Legacy.” Become a Sponsor! The Día de los Muertos Festival was inducted into the U.S. LOUIS SUNNYSIDE TAMPA TELEGRAPH HILL TENDERLOIN TREASURE ISLAND TRENTON TUCSON TULSA TWIN PEAKS UNION SQUARE UPPER HAIGHT VISITACION VALLEY WASHINGTON, D.C.The Oakland Día de los Muertos Festival is a free, outdoor festival that brings over 100,000 people to the vibrant, culturally-rich Fruitvale neighborhood to enjoy world-class live music, family-friendly games, rides and activities, traditional Latin American artisans, and the stunning altar artistic installations created by community members paying homage to los Muertos. After, we’re still in this pandemic, and as we remember the dearly departed, we’d rather not add to their ranks.Ĭities ALAMO SQUARE ALBUQUERQUE ALCATRAZ ANZA VISTA ATLANTA AUSTIN BAKERSFIELD BALTIMORE BAYVIEW BERNAL HEIGHTS BOSTON CASTRO CHARLOTTE CHICAGO CHINATOWN CINCINNATI CIVIC CENTER CLEVELAND COLE VALLEY COLORADO SPRINGS COLUMBUS CORONA HEIGHTS CORPUS CHRISTI COW HOLLOW DALLAS DENVER DESIGN DISTRICT DETROIT DIAMOND HEIGHTS DIVISADERO DOGPATCH DUBOCE TRIANGLE EL PASO EMBARCADERO EXCELSIOR FILLMORE FINANCIAL DISTRICT FISHERMAN'S WHARF FOREST HILL FOREST KNOLLS FRESNO GLEN PARK GOLDEN GATE BRIDGE GOLDEN GATE PARK GREENVILLE HAMPTON ROADS HARRISBURG HAYES VALLEY HONOLULU HOUSTON HUNTERS POINT INDIANAPOLIS INGLESIDE INLAND EMPIRE INNER RICHMOND INNER SUNSET JACKSON SQUARE JACKSONVILLE JAPANTOWN KANSAS CITY LAKE SHORE LAKE STREET LAS VEGAS LAUREL HEIGHTS LONE MOUNTAIN LOS ANGELES LOUISVILLE LOWER HAIGHT LOWER NOB HILL LOWER PAC HEIGHTS MARINA MEMPHIS MIAMI MID-MARKET MIDTOWN TERRACE MILWAUKEE MINNEAPOLIS MISSION MISSION BAY MISSION TERRACE NASHVILLE NEW ORLEANS NEW YORK NOB HILL NOE VALLEY NOPA NORTH BAY NORTH BEACH OAKLAND OCEAN BEACH OKLAHOMA CITY OMAHA ORLANDO OUTER RICHMOND OUTER SUNSET PACIFIC HEIGHTS PARKSIDE PHILADELPHIA PHOENIX PITTSBURGH POLK PORTLAND PORTOLA POTRERO HILL PRESIDIO PRESIDIO HEIGHTS RALEIGH-DURHAM RUSSIAN HILL SACRAMENTO SAN ANTONIO SAN DIEGO SAN FRANCISCO SAN JOSE SEA CLIFF SEATTLE SOMA ST. Snacks and beverages will also be provided.“Ī few face-painted skeleton people might still show up and proceed down 24th Street and through the usual procession path, but nothing formal is planned. Face painting will be available from 5-6PM, and Teokalli will perform an Aztec dance and ceremony at 6PM. According to the host Tenderloin Community Benefit District, “Activities will include a drum circle, photobooth and coloring.
Dia de los muertos 2021 sf plus#
That gathering will feature the Afro-Latino youth dance group Loco Bloco, plus other musicians and dance collectives.Īnd over in the Tenderloin, they’re planning a kid-friendly Day of the Dead celebration at Boeddeker Park. There also appears to be a small outdoor gathering planned outside the Buena Vista Horace Mann elementary school at 23rd and Bartlett Streets. outdoor performance by musician Inti Batey. The center’s Day of the Dead’s celebration Ni Tanto Ni Tan Muertos- Neither So Much, Nor So Dead (6 p.m.-10 p.m.) “will have altars dedicated to: Hug Lu (visual artist), Ann Halprin (dancer), Jack Hirschman (poet), Yolanda Lopez (visual artist),” plus Aztec Dancers, poetry, a screening of the mini-documentary Shamans In The City, and a 9 p.m. Meanwhile, though, the Mission Cultural Center will revive their annual in-person event, though it is a $5-$10 sliding scale admission. Let’s come together and honor our ancestors by remembering their gifts in this sacred ceremony." “ Join our YouTube Channel to view or watch on Facebook Live.


“Please join us on November 2nd at 7 pm PST for the Virtual Festival of Altars,” their website says. The big annual Mission District Dia de los Muertos procession that has been organized by the Marigold Project since the 1970s will again be an online livestream. That particular celebration will be online again Tuesday night, out of safety concerns, but the Mission Cultural Center is still holding a (not free) in-person Day of the Dead celebration, and there are a couple of other small gatherings about town tonight. San Francisco will still observe its annual post-Halloween, November 2 Dia de los Muertos celebrations Tuesday evening, but not in the normal fashion of proceeding through the Mission District and ending with large-scale altar installations at Potrero del Sol Park.
