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Overthinking Food & Drink Since 2006

Cayuga Park

  • 2024-07-06
  • san francisco
  • cool parks
  • wooden sculpture
  • public art
  • demetrio braceros
  • travel-guides
  • Cayuga Park

Lower Entrance
301 Naglee Ave

Upper Entrance
Roughly 2720 Alemany Blvd
San Francisco, CA

Website: https://sfrecpark.org/facilities/facility/details/Cayuga-Playground-234

I love exploring offbeat tourist attractions, so I decided to check out Cayuga Park after coming across a Reddit thread on spooky Bay Area locations. I wouldn’t call the sculpture gardens at the park spooky, but they definitely make for an interesting walk contemplating their meanings and the work that went into them!

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Demetrio Braceros, who worked as a gardener for the San Francisco Parks & Recreation department for 24 years, is the artist. The park appears fairly run-of-the-mill at first; there is a community center, basketball and tennis courts, a playground, and walkways. But the wooden figurines peak out from the gardens right away.

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The ones closest to the lower entrance are the most detoriated, and many more lively wonders await once you continue up the path and reach the grand lawn.

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Some of the sculptures seem to be of everyday events—a dad with his children climbing his back, a kid on a bike—but as you begin circling the lawn, the figures take on more of a sacred feel, potentially drawing from ancient religious practices, and Catholic folk iconography in particular (I am not an art historian, y’all).

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By the end of the loop, animals and even a dinosaur have joined the menagerie.

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Be sure to follow the little trails to find more works hidden within the greenery.

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The beautiful doors at the upper entry to the park were made by artist Eric Powell and are a suitable invitation to see the works of Braceros inside.

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It won’t take more than 30 minutes to take in all the sculptures, but why not bring a picnic basket and make an afternoon of it? If you go, let me know which sculpture you liked best!