Artist Philip Sager’s introduction video is about “Family Frames” which explores loss, fragmentation, and time through the way identity is reshaped in public space.

“I enlarge my childhood family photographs (about two feet) and wheat-paste them across San Francisco, returning to document how weather, grime, tags, tears, and public interventions transform them. As the portraits fade and fracture—without my adding content—they echo my own family’s disintegration while moving private archives into civic view”.

These interventions become co-authorship: collective memory layers onto personal history until the images feel shared. Blending constructed and documentary approaches, the work invites dialogue about visibility, consent, time, and eroding connection—less restoration than testimony, and a personal elegy made with the street.