2016 The inaugural Sacramento Mural Festival in 2016 hosted a dozen artists who painted city walls over an eight-day period in August. The festival was primarily held on the city
grid in
Midtown where artists could be easily viewed painting large scale murals by pedestrians and cyclists. The festival included tours, presentations, pop-up events, and a final rooftop party.
2018 In 2018 Wide Open Walls received some national attention as the city hosted the opening of Sacramento native
Greta Gerwig's film
Lady Bird which had been filmed in the city. Prior to the opening of the festival film was commemorated with a mural painted by local artist Maren Conrad. Festival attendees were also able tow view the creation of
Shepard Fairey's fifteen story mural of
Johnny Cash standing in front of
Folsom Prison. Fairey conceived the image as part of his “American Civics Project” series and painted the mural in "hopes the artwork will prompt discussion of mass incarceration and the for-profit prison industry in America." Festival organizers continued to promote local artists who shared the diverse perspectives, philosophies, experiences, and heritage that make up the city and state. Of note is the work of Stan Padilla, a member of the
Royal Chicano Air Force, honoring the collective with a mural on the
Golden 1 Center and
California State University, Sacramento which donated a wall to a collaborative work completed by its alumni: SV Williams, Phillip Altstatt, John Horton, Raphael Delgado, Molly Devlin, Micah Crandall-Bear, Lopan and Ernie Fresh, Norm Ayles, Ursula X. Young, and Jose Di Gregorio. In 2018 the festival was recognized by the Arts & Business Council of the Sacramento Region and won the Sacramento Region Innovation of the Year Award.
2019 The 2019 festival continued to showcase diverse perspectives in street art expanding into Sacramento communities traditionally underserved by its
economy. California natives Raphael Delgado and Kirileigh Jones created colorful floral works to large city walls, while British artist (and sometime Sacramento resident) David Puck painted a series of murals concerned with
mental health awareness. Los Angeles artist Eliseo Art Silva, who immigrated to California from the Philippines, contributed a mural depicting the Filipino migration to a wall at California State University, Sacramento, which also provided walls for artists Hoxxoh and Jilian Evelyn.
2020 A scaled down version of the festival took place in September 2020 and featured works by Sacramento and Bay Area artists. == Criticism ==