Thru THICK and THIN
July 23 – August 8, 2026
1201 Minnesota Street
Exhibition Warehouse Hours:
Thursdays & Fridays, 3pm - 7pm
Saturdays, 12pm - 6pm
In conjunction with the 2026 San Francisco Art Book Fair, Minnesota Street Project Foundation is pleased to present Thru THICK and THIN, an exhibition by Los Angeles-born, Bay Area-based artist Rose D’Amato.
Through a layered installation of windows, billboard structures, reflective paintings, and 8mm film, the exhibition surveys the typographic landscape of San Francisco’s recent past. In D'Amato's practice, streets become a metaphorical extension of time's transient nature, where objects, imbued with the marks of labor and human touch, transcend their materiality. Each work is not only a product of its physical creation, but reflects the history and influences that have shaped it. Through this interplay of space, time, and process, Thru THICK and THIN encapsulates the essence of craftsmanship as both a temporal and timeless pursuit.
On Thursday, July 23, for the Opening Night Preview of the 2026 San Francisco Art Book Fair, DJ TUFF and Nicolas Torres will spin a selection of vinyl records in dialogue with the installation.
Photo by Natalie Aleman.
Rose D’Amato (b. 1991, Los Angeles, CA) is a pinstriper and painter living and working in San Francisco, CA. D’Amato uses painting to create a personal archive of both the hand-painted signs in the built environment and the lettering she’s called on to paint for those around her. As a second-generation sign painter, D’Amato engages techniques inherited and learned through a years-long commitment to her family’s trade, working with airbrush, gold leaf, and hand lettering to create her own representations of their practices in motion. She hopes to hold and honor the visual histories of California subcultures in her artistic work.
Public Programs
Billboard Techniques Workshop with Rose D’Amato
Sunday, July 26, 12pm - 4pm
1201 Minnesota Street
Free and open to the public
Participate in a drop-in workshop for all ages exploring early advertisement and billboard techniques through tool use and painting. D’Amato will share insights into how the ghost signs of San Francisco came to be through the perspective of their original painters. Space is limited. Children must be accompanied by an adult.
Photo: Rose D’Amato, Thru THICK and THIN (2026), video still; courtesy of the artist.
