About

ABOUT SUN SPOT CBD


We are a company of real people who have been dedicated to natural health options before this industry became what it is now. We are concerned with fair trade, animal cruelty and genetically modified ingredients and providing the best quality products and brands to you for the maximum benefits of relieving stress and supporting health during these challenging times.

We do not carry everything but everything we carry is quality. You deserve the best and we want to give it to you. If we can help you relax or feel better in any way then we are happy to do so.


Enjoy the Sun Spot,

Reggie Wise 

Founder/Creator

Stop by our Mission District storefront at: 3186 21st Street, San Francisco, CA 94110. We're open between 11am - 7pm, Tuesday - Saturday. We'd love to see you!


New Location!!  66 Gough Street, San Francisco, CA 941021. We're open between 11am - 7pm, Tuesday - Saturday. Come check us out!

I am proud to introduce you to the artist behind the logo for The Sun Spot Shop - Malik Seneferu!

Meet Malik Seneferu

An award-winning self-taught masters painter, draughtsman, muralist, sculptor, illustrator instructor and public artist. Seneferu’s work has traveled internationally and adorned books, magazines and newspaper covers. From New York’s Schomburg Center and DC’s Smithsonian to London then Durban South Africa's “War against Racism” even GOOGLE SF, his work is well known and enjoys live-painting while sharing his ArtMagnet invention to his viewers.

Memories of my childhood play a tremendous role in my approach to creating art today. In my early years my mother, a single parent, lived in fear for my health due to the environmental hazards of San Francisco’s Hunters Point district. I suffered with asthma. Therefore, my innate interest in drawing and painting became that of a marriage over sports modeling my pursuit for constant spiritual mental and physical elevation. 

Having siblings among others as viewers of my work challenged me to go beyond my limitations. I remember my late grandmother, a Barber and tailor, sewing for hours at her machine after coming home from work. I would sit at her feet and draw on a paper bag with a pen, marker, crayon or a number two pencil.

Art is an absolute liberation of my imagination, a tool I use to communicate and share my “inner-light.” I have regular memories of my childhood working at the local supermarket, helping elders with their shopping bags. Receiving tips helping my grandmother in her barber shop by sweeping up the hairs to find money mysteriously hidden in large clumps. At the end of each service, those who knew me would say, “Keep up the good work and never stop doing your art.” 

From these experiences, I have learned the treasure of focusing on minute details. Eventually, I realized in my artistic process that I too would hide treasures. 

Living with this artistic expression is ritualistic in act and meditative in thought. Many times in the midst of creating, I experience deja vu. The realization of a single moment is obsolete only until it is captured by a memory of a stroke; a thought or pause for observation that I have discovered represents reincarnation of that tangible moment. Because of this, the very act of creating fine art is imparted with the relationship and responsibility I have with THE CREATOR. “The purpose of my existence.”

I also feel it is my duty as a self taught artist to have an internal dialog with the viewer and in many cases the ancestors, where at this point I find inspiration for artistic expression as well as painting live in public. Fathering my child, serving my community, drumming, martial arts, poetry, philosophy and ancestral facts (history), all helps with the enhancement of my expression, to capture the Black, experience in America. 

I enjoy manipulating dry water-based paints, oil pastels, ink pen, found objects or assemblage. Book illustrations, portraiture, and public art projects have brought me closer to my community. The purpose of my compositions is to elevate the social, political, environmental and spiritual issues of people deeply challenged by oppression. This has been my greatest enrapture. 

Kenya and Haiti are places for instance that influence the bold and dramatic colors in my works. Henry Ossawa Tanner, Aaron Douglas, John Biggers and Jean-Michel Basquiat (to name a few) have inspired my artistic direction. Being an artist and growing up with-in low-income housing projects, surrounded by the early stages of Hip-Hop, had an immense impact on my ability to create freely. Although this bold lifestyle of music, poetry, art, dance, and intense research today seems barbaric. It nevertheless has influenced me to be boundless in my creative efforts to deliver messages of empowerment to the indigenous peoples of the world.

Share by: