A man poses next to a mural of four cartoon bottles on the outside wall of a store with prominent beer and wine signs.
Ian Beermann poses in front of his mural at Star Market & Deli on Leavenworth and Geary. Photo by Anne Li.

Ian Beermann is here to paint the town. Literally.

Born in Walnut Creek but raised in Modesto, Beermann filled his home with canvas paintings growing up. When his dad, a detective, replaced the backyard wood fence with cinder block, Beermann painted that, too. But Modesto didn’t have many artistic opportunities or, as he put it, “There’s only so many walls.” 

So, leaving Modesto behind, he moved in 2022 to San Francisco, found a place in Nob Hill, and started waiting tables by day and painting murals whenever he could.

A mural depicting purple and orange flowers in a red and yellow vase on a wood table. Mural by Ian Beermann
Beermann’s first mural, outside a florist’s workspace. Courtesy of Ian Beermann.

Soon after moving, he asked a businesswoman if he could paint a boarded-up window. He got a “yes.” And so came his San Francisco debut: A vase of flowers outside a florist’s workspace. Beermann called the experience a “bright spot,” adding: “Every time you hear a ‘yes,’ your eyes light up.”

Muralists often have a trademark image or style. Beermann said he is most inspired by Amanda Lynn, whose murals of figures or animals are often surrounded by lush, vibrant foliage. And, while he sometimes includes a flower or two, it is the banana that has become Beermann’s character. One example is on the side of Cannavine Cannabis Dispensary on 2nd Street. That banana is smoking weed. 

Beermann said he likes the banana’s yellow color, and finds that the line down the fruit’s middle makes his figures three-dimensional. The figure also gets a good response. Cannavine’s manager said Beermann’s mural made the dispensary a “landmark on the street.”

His dream project is to fill a huge space several stories high. He points out the wall of the Hobart Building as we walk past. “A 50-foot banana — why not?”

A man stands in front of a mural depicting a banana in a green shirt sitting on a rooftop smoking weed.
Beermann stands in front of his mural at Cannavine. It depicts a banana smoking weed. Photo by Anne Li.

Over time, Beermann has perfected his pitch to business owners to let him paint the facades. Negotiating prices, which range in the hundreds, can be a “struggle,” and depends on factors like square footage, creative freedom and whether he has to get on a ladder (he’s not fond of heights). But Beermann tells owners he’ll fix the mural for free if it gets graffitied — incentivizing them, he said, since graffiti fines can fall on owners otherwise.

“I’ve done plenty of work, which is good,” he said. “Some paid, some unpaid, but that’s just the way it goes.”

A mural depicting a window view of San Francisco, a chair and a houseplant, basked in neon pink light, next to a toilet.
Beermann’s painting inside The Birdcage’s bathroom has received praise from patrons. Photo by Anne Li.

Beermann has made a home in his “favorite city.”

“’Sup Ian?” asks the barista at Souvenir Coffee on Larkin Street, where we stopped for an interview. And when we duck into The Birdcage on Sutter Street, a community space and waiting area for the salon next door, co-owner Chauntae Moore gives Beermann a hug. The Birdcage’s bathroom features Beermann’s painting of a window view of the city, illuminated by pink lighting; Moore said patrons “love the vibe in there.”

A mural depicting bananas swimming.
Beermann’s mural at 18th and Guerrero caught Roman Ivanov’s eye. Photo by Anne Li.

But it was Beermann’s mural at 18th and Guerrero streets that caught Roman Ivanov’s eye. Ivanov, who moved to the Mission from New York with his wife two years ago, saw the mural, connected with Beermann on Instagram, met him at an art show and invited him to paint a mural in the couple’s backyard. The project took weeks of planning and painting; Ivanov threw a party last weekend to unveil it.

Ivanov said he was motivated by Beermann’s drive, adding that Beermann “truly, truly loves San Francisco.”

A mural depicting bananas in front of purple, orange and pink flowers.
Ivanov threw a party last weekend to unveil Beermann’s mural in his backyard. Photo by Anne Li.

Beermann is always on the lookout for spaces to paint. Sometimes he takes wood boards from alleyways, paints them and leaves them out for the next person to find. He even painted bananas on the kitchen and bathroom walls of his old apartment, though he had to paint over those when he moved out. That took “several coats,” he said.

He could go to canvas more, but for him, canvas feels “too transactional.” To Beermann: He paints, someone pays, and people never see it again. He likes painting murals because people get to enjoy the art for free, he said: “It’s more for the people.”

A painting depicting a banana holding two toilet paper rolls, one in each hand.
Beermann painted a banana in the bathroom of his Nob Hill apartment. He had to paint over it when he moved out. Courtesy of Ian Beermann.

Beermann has painted one ceiling and never wants to again, calling the project a “three-day ordeal”: “Your neck hurts, your arm hurts,” he said. And he dislikes heights.

His painting life is going well enough that when his girlfriend, also from Modesto, joined him, they found a larger apartment near Mission Bay. He still needs his day job, but if the art isn’t yet supporting him, he gets a lot of pleasure out of seeing strangers enjoy it. He saw a passerby snap a photo of his Hyde Out mural on California Street, he says, clearly thrilled.

A man poses in front of a mural depicting a banana picnicking in a field of flowers and juggling.
Beermann poses at his Hyde Out mural, where he once saw a passerby snap a photo. Photo by Anne Li.

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Anne Li is a reporting intern from Little Rock, Arkansas. She writes and edits for her campus newspaper, The Stanford Daily. Contact her at anne 'at' missionlocal.com.

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