Before “street art” became a globally recognized genre, Barry McGee and Margaret Kilgallen were charting their course—one rooted in graffiti, freight trains, hand-drawn signs, and the layered rhythms of the city itself. This rare 12-minute Art21 segment, first aired in 2001, offers an intimate look into their daily lives and creative processes as they prepare for professional exhibitions, walk the tracks with grease markers, and draw inspiration from the overlooked details of the urban environment. It’s a snapshot of a pivotal moment—both for these artists and for the emerging intersection between street-based practices and the contemporary art world.

Filmed in and around San Francisco, the video captures the couple’s quiet intensity as they work side by side in their home studios and wander through city streets, sketchbooks in hand. Kilgallen’s fascination with folk art, typography, and the quiet strength of everyday women is evident in her brushwork and storytelling. At the same time, McGee’s background in graffiti writing (under the name “Twist”) infuses his work with raw immediacy and empathy for the margins. Together, their work bridges the privilege of formal art training and a DIY ethos of that time, resisting slickness in favor of the handmade, the weathered, the real.

In a brief sequence at a local railyard, the artists point out their favorite freight markings and leave their own, adding to an ongoing visual conversation that spans the continent. Here, we can witness the full scope of their practice: part art history, part subculture explorer, part ephemeral, anthropological act of communication. The video doesn’t over-explain; instead, it allows the viewer to observe, to absorb, and possibly feel the quiet devotion these two artists have for their work, even as they negotiate their paths.
Aired initially just weeks before Kilgallen’s untimely passing in 2001, this footage now carries added weight. It serves not only as documentation of two artists at work but also as a rare and moving record of their shared vision—a world built from signs, symbols, and experience, where the boundary between art and life is barely visible.






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