Description
Richard William Evans (1942 January 20-2023 April 26) was a Black, gay artist, community advocate, and participant in the
“back-to-the-land” movement in Northern California. As a member of the Stellar Arts Collective, Evans helped to create “The
Power of the Sun,” a large-scale stained glass installation that was displayed in the State of California office building
at 455 Golden Gate Avenue in San Francisco from 1979 until the artwork’s destruction in a protest in 1991. A proposal; promotional
materials; newspaper clippings; photographic slides, snapshots, and film positives; an oral history interview, and a digital
film document Evans's artistic work with the Stellar Arts Collective.
Background
Richard William Evans (1942 January 20-2023 April 26) was a Black, gay artist, community advocate, and participant in the
“back-to-the-land” movement in Northern California. As a member of the Stellar Arts Collective, Evans helped to create “The
Power of the Sun,” a large-scale stained glass installation that was displayed in the State of California office building
at 455 Golden Gate Avenue in San Francisco from 1979 until the artwork’s destruction in a protest in 1991.
Evans was born in Baltimore in 1942. At 18, he moved to New York City, where he lived for six years before moving to Paris
in 1966. In 1967, he left Paris for San Francisco, where he participated in the city’s countercultural and gay scenes. In
the early 1970s, Evans joined several friends in moving “back-to-the-land” in Humboldt County, California.
In the late-1970s, Evans returned to San Francisco. In 1978, Evans formed the Stellar Arts Collective with Dick Jenkins, Janice
Besser, Albert Marsh, Kim Hick, and Lou Galetti. The Collective applied to the State of California’s Art in Public Buildings
program, proposing to install a stained glass ceiling, chandelier, and windows in a State office building in San Francisco.
The Collective’s proposal was accepted, and they assembled and installed the artwork, “The Power of the Sun,” over the course
of 1979, debuting the work to the public in 1980.
In 1991, the windows were destroyed during a protest against California Governor Pete Wilson’s veto of AB101, a bill that
would have made it illegal to discriminate on the basis of sexual orientation in employment.
In the early-1980s, Evan returned to Humboldt County with his partner Richard Beyer. Beyer and Evans lived in a house they
built together in Zenia Bluffs until Beyers death from complications related to AIDS in 1995. In the 2000s, Evans moved to
Eureka, California, where he was active with the Redwood Community Action Agency and the Westside Community Improvement Association.
Evans died in April 2023.