‘Hometown Heroes’ exhibit showcases San Jose athletes, artists – The Mercury News Today Us News


I doubt anyone really looks forward to going to San Jose City Hall unless they’re skipping through the delightful Sonic Runway or practicing their skateboarding tricks. But now there’s another reason to pay a visit that doesn’t require sitting through a meeting.

This week, the city unveiled “Hometown Heroes,” a three-piece exhibition that showcases San Jose sports figures — from NFL stars to roller derby players and synchronized swimmers — while also putting a spotlight on the artists and photographers who bring their images to us. It’ll be on display through July 31, as the region hosts Super Bowl LX, NCAA men’s basketball games and FIFA World Cup soccer matches.

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Artist Emilio Cortez stands with his mural, “San Jose Game Changers,” which is on display in the San Jose City Hall wing building as part of “Hometown Heroes,” an exhibit celebrating San Jose athletes, artists and photographers, on Tuesday, Jan. 20, 2026. (Sal Pizarro/Bay Area News Group)

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Digital screens throughout City Hall are displaying “The Community in Motion,” a rotating lineup of 44 sports photographs from 25 local photographers that capture people participating in all kinds of sports in San Jose, from Little League baseball to a Sharks game.

There’s also a display in the City Hall tower lobby featuring the work of Arnold Del Carlo, a professional photographer. Known to many just as “Del,” he chronicled a number of aspects of San Jose life with his camera in the post-World War II years. This exhibit focuses on his work on San Jose State’s athletic program.

But the most eye-catching piece is “Larger than Life,” the four vinyl murals adorning the long hallway in City’s Hall’s wing. Each of the four artists — Emilio Cortez, Elba Raquel, Sam Rodriguez and Alyssa Wigant — created a piece that works on its own, but taken together, they form a great tapestry of San Jose’s athletic heritage. They celebrate homegrown heroes like Jim Plunkett, Brandi Chastain, Steve Caballero and even Krazy George and highlight the lessons sports can teach us about adversity.

And, if you’re a Gen Xer like me, you’ll love Wigant’s woman-centered refresh of the ubiquitous Pee-Chee folders we all had in school with her piece, “She-Chee Folder.”

At the opening reception for the exhibition last Tuesday, San Jose Director of Cultural Affairs Kerry Adams Hapner also provided a rundown of the upcoming art installations and activations coming this winter and spring. They include the “Invisible Skies” event at City Hall on Jan. 31, “Minis,” featuring illuminated sculptures at City Hall created by Esteban Garcia Bravo and students from SJSU’s CADRE Media Lab, and “Free Throw,” an interactive projection-mapping installation by G. Craig Hobbs and the CADRE lab that’ll light up SAP Center in late March.


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