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<!--Generated by Squarespace Site Server v5.11.5 (http://www.squarespace.com/) on Sat, 31 Jul 2010 06:47:59 GMT--><rdf:RDF xmlns:rdf="http://www.w3.org/1999/02/22-rdf-syntax-ns#" xmlns:rss="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/" xmlns:dc="http://purl.org/dc/elements/1.1/" xmlns:sy="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/syndication/" xmlns:admin="http://webns.net/mvcb/" xmlns:content="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/content/" xmlns:cc="http://web.resource.org/cc/"><rss:channel rdf:about="http://www.thepublicstudio.org/stories/"><rss:title>Stories</rss:title><rss:link>http://www.thepublicstudio.org/stories/</rss:link><rss:description></rss:description><dc:language>en-US</dc:language><dc:date>2010-07-31T06:47:59Z</dc:date><admin:generatorAgent rdf:resource="http://www.squarespace.com/">Squarespace Site Server v5.11.5 (http://www.squarespace.com/)</admin:generatorAgent><rss:items><rdf:Seq><rdf:li rdf:resource="http://www.thepublicstudio.org/stories/2010/5/12/in-praise-of-staying-put.html"/><rdf:li rdf:resource="http://www.thepublicstudio.org/stories/2010/2/9/a-neighborhood-canvas.html"/><rdf:li rdf:resource="http://www.thepublicstudio.org/stories/2010/1/25/art-therapy-for-a-city-on-the-mend.html"/></rdf:Seq></rss:items></rss:channel><rss:item rdf:about="http://www.thepublicstudio.org/stories/2010/5/12/in-praise-of-staying-put.html"><rss:title>In Praise of Staying Put</rss:title><rss:link>http://www.thepublicstudio.org/stories/2010/5/12/in-praise-of-staying-put.html</rss:link><dc:creator>kyla</dc:creator><dc:date>2010-05-12T19:17:24Z</dc:date><dc:subject></dc:subject><content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><span class="full-image-block ssNonEditable"><span><img id="asset_119235" class="imageFull" src="http://pre.cloudfront.goodinc.com/posts/post_full_1271957146stay_put_003.png" border="0" alt="" /></span></span></p>
<p><strong>There's something very American&nbsp;about mobility</strong>. We like our freedom to roam, to follow opportunity, to move westward as the saying goes. We like our mobility so much that 40 million of us will relocate this year. It's not at all unusual for a single family in a single lifetime (or for a single person in their twenties) to move at least a few times.<br /><br />"The continent is said to have been discovered by an Italian who was on his way to India,&rdquo; writes Wendell Berry in&nbsp;<em>The Unsettling of America</em>. &ldquo;The earliest explorers were looking for gold which was, after an early streak in Mexico, always somewhere farther on.&rdquo;<br /><br />Back in the days of family farms we tended to stay put. Families had lots of babies&mdash;the better to raise a barn with. Those babies had more babies and small towns grew up, like the one where my grandparents have lived in Kentucky for the last 80 years and their grandparents lived for 80 years before that. Then the Industrial Revolution happened and people flocked to cities, those bulging engines of opportunity.<br /><br />A hundred something years later, smack dab in the middle of an information revolution, we can supposedly be anywhere and work from any place. Yet with ever more frequency, hoards of us leave the places where we grew up and converge in one of five major metropolitan areas, the cultural and economic hubs of America. That gravity lured my own father to leave a small Kentucky town, and the urban engines continue to attract human, creative, and economic capital. But if cities are self-fulfilling prophecies, what happens to places like Maceo, Kentucky; Youngstown, Ohio; and Braddock, Pennsylvania, when our grandparents die?<br /><br /><strong>Braddock, Pennsylvania&nbsp;(population 2,500)</strong> is a town people often point to when talking about what's wrong and right in America. Home to Andrew Carnegie's first free public library, and once more densely populated than Brooklyn, New York, it has, like many post-industrial cities, lost much of its population, housing stock, and businesses&mdash;in Braddock's case 90 percent of it. But the closure of its hospital in January&mdash; with it the only ATM and sit-down restaurant&mdash;might be the most frustrating loss for John Fetterman, the tattooed, Harvard-Kennedy-schooled mayor. Fetterman has been in office for five years and he's fed up with the continued collective memory loss of small town America.<br /><br />When will places like Braddock get a little attention from urban theorists like Richard Florida, author of&nbsp;<em>The Creative Class</em>, wonders Fetterman.&ldquo;Hey Dick, why don't you get out and push instead of driving around in your Land Rover?"&nbsp; It's been a long day, one can assume, and Fetterman, understandably, has a bone to pick.<br /><br />For Fetterman, Florida's school of thought feels too theoretical: It's not grounded in the realities of places like Braddock. Before we add another bike lane in Portland or MUNI stop in San Francisco, he wonders, why don't we get a grocery store for Braddock? A job or two for Gary? How about fixing those broken windows at Union Station in Detroit? "Why keep gilding those lillies," asks Fetterman. Florida's bestsellers do not represent the realities of much of the United States&mdash;the Braddocks or the Gary, Indianas."<br /><br />&ldquo;Let [Florida] do the sociological nose jobs. Let him be the plastic surgeon. I'd rather work on the serious diseases,&rdquo; says Fetterman. While it may be unfair to compare Florida to a plastic surgeon, thinking of Fetterman as an oncologist is actually a pretty useful metaphor. What he's dealing with is more like a malignant cancer&mdash;spreading beyond Fetterman's borough to places like Ravenswood, West Virginia, and Youngstown, Ohio. Braddock, it seems, is not just Fetterman's problem.<br /><br />But Florida is not exactly a provocateur. His premise seems almost obvious. &ldquo;Where you choose to live will greatly affect everything from your finances and job options to your friends, your potential mate, and your children's future,&rdquo; he writes. &ldquo;The place we choose to live affects every aspect of our being.&rdquo;<br /><br />Much of Florida's work focuses on the five most economically successful regions of the United States, how they got there, who got them there, and why you, urbane 21st century city dweller, should be there or mold your city after them. &ldquo;In the United States, more than 90 percent of all economic output is produced in metropolitan regions, while just the largest five metro regions account for 23 percent of it,&rdquo; Florida writes. &ldquo;A growing number of us have the opportunity to choose a place that truly fits our needs.&rdquo;<br /><br />Or do we?<br /><br />Surely there are millions of people who couldn't choose to live in one of these clusters even if they wanted to, which by the way, could be a good thing. A migratory, mobile, and &ldquo;footless&rdquo; population as E.F. Schumacher called it in his prescient, 1973 classic&nbsp;<em>Small is Beautiful</em>, may be a boon for the economy in the short term but bad for our society in the long term. &nbsp;<br /><br />&ldquo;They freely talk about the polarisation of the population of the United States into three immense megalopolitan areas,&rdquo; wrote Schumacher. &ldquo;The rest of the country being left practically empty; deserted provincial towns, and the land cultivated with vast tractors, combine harvesters, and the immense amounts of chemicals. If this is somebody's conception of the future of the United States, it is hardly a future worth having.&rdquo;<br /><br />And therein lies Fetterman's bone. The thriving, 21st American cities that produce most of our economic output are the &ldquo;it cities.&rdquo; They continue to monopolize the resources and capital (both human and financial) that places like Braddock so desperately need and they continue to the polarize the population, leaving smaller towns like his in crisis. But could cities suffer from their own hyperbole? If where we live has become another way of branding ourselves and we continue to move to urban centers with like-minded people, color coding our states according to political affiliation, do we encourage the kind of polarization that FOX News and MSNBC trade on?<br /><br /><strong>I like my neighborhood.</strong>&nbsp;I like the fish taco place on the corner. I like that my mechanics play Bach. I like that I can get a croque monsieur or Korean BBQ in a short walk, and I especially like that I can buy&mdash; or borrow&mdash; almost any kind of book my heart desires whenever my heart desires it. I live in a walkable, bikeable, liveable place: the kind of place Jane Jacobs might like, if it wasn&rsquo;t in Los Angeles.<br /><br />But it is not the place where I learned to ride a bike or where I ate tomatoes from my grandmother's garden. Like many of my peers, it is among a handful of places I have called home in my twenties. And that may be most damaging part of our city fetish: the pervasive &ldquo;footlessness&rdquo; that it inspires. And while places like Braddock need the artists and students to move in, they also need those people to stay, to pay the taxes that fund schools and crosswalks and libraries&mdash;the things that build sustainable, local economies.<br /><br />&ldquo;This thing we are calling mobility keeps people from learning their lessons,&rdquo; noted Wendell Berry in 1999. &ldquo;Their idea is that you can completely mess up somewhere and then go somewhere else, or you can completely succeed somewhere and go somewhere else. In either case you don't know what the effects are. Sometimes people cause worse effects by their success than they do by their failure. Gary Snyder said the right thing: Stop somewhere, just stop.&rdquo;</p>
<div><span style="color: #000000; font-family: Arial, sans-serif; font-size: 14px; line-height: 20px;"><br /></span></div>]]></content:encoded></rss:item><rss:item rdf:about="http://www.thepublicstudio.org/stories/2010/2/9/a-neighborhood-canvas.html"><rss:title>a neighborhood canvas</rss:title><rss:link>http://www.thepublicstudio.org/stories/2010/2/9/a-neighborhood-canvas.html</rss:link><dc:creator>kyla</dc:creator><dc:date>2010-02-10T00:36:50Z</dc:date><dc:subject></dc:subject><content:encoded><![CDATA[<p style="font-size: 60%;">&nbsp;</p>
<p><em><img class="wp-image-36906 size-full alignnone" title="row-houses-before-and-after.2410" src="http://user.cloudfront.goodinc.com/community/aliciacapetillo/row-houses-before-and-after.24101.jpg" alt="row-houses-before-and-after.2410" width="275" height="182" /></em></p>
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<div><span style="color: #000000; font-family: Arial, sans-serif; line-height: 20px; font-size: 100%;">When Assata Richards moved into one of the newly renovated row houses in Houston&rsquo;s Third Ward in the winter of 1996, she knew her life had changed. Richards had been living with her young son and eight other people in a two-bedroom apartment in the &ldquo;Bottoms,&rdquo; the most economically depressed area in one of the city&rsquo;s oldest African American neighborhoods. Eager to go back to school after a several year hiatus, she jumped at the opportunity to join the Young Mother&rsquo;s Program, an arm of&nbsp;<a href="http://projectrowhouses.org/" target="_blank">Project Row Houses</a>, the community revitalization and public art endeavor. Richards, one of the first five women in the program, recalls the immediate impact of moving into her new home. &ldquo;It was like being in a smoky room and walking into fresh air,&rdquo; she says. &ldquo;I knew that things were going to be ok.&rdquo;<br /><br />Project Row Houses was born when a group of high school students visited artist Rick Lowe&rsquo;s studio in 1992 and challenged him to make art with community impact. Lowe, then a practicing painter, was convinced that his art needed a practical application and spent the next few years building a small coalition of volunteers, fellow artists and community organizers to rehabilitate an abandoned 1 1/2 block site of twenty-two shotgun style houses in Houston&rsquo;s Third Ward. &ldquo;I treated it like I would any art project,&rdquo; says Lowe. &ldquo;Are the essentials there? The first thing I did was find people to support the project.&rdquo;<br /><br />Lowe&rsquo;s inaugural endeavor&ndash; cleaning up that first block&ndash; was not glamorous or a textbook interpretation of art, but one not without precedent. One of Lowe&rsquo;s biggest influences, German artist Joseph Beuys, planted 7,000 oaks throughout Kassel, Germany with an army of volunteers; in the process initiating a conversation around civic action, social change, and artistic expression. Lowe works with Project Rowe Houses&rsquo; staff and residents to help them understand that they are making creative acts. &ldquo;We were art in and of itself,&rdquo; says Richards. &ldquo;We were creating art. We were changing ourselves.&rdquo;<br /><br />Over the last seventeen years Project Row Houses has evolved into a smorgasbord of art and social services considered by many to be one of the most visionary public art programs in the country. &ldquo;You begin to see that art is not this static thing that sits on a wall but something that has relevance,&rdquo; says Richards. Throughout the year Project Row Houses hosts visiting artists, after school programs, even urban garden installations.<br /><br />Several of the houses are dedicated art spaces hosting interactive installations focusing on issues critical to Houston&rsquo;s Third Ward.&nbsp;<a href="http://projectrowhouses.org/young-mothers-program/" target="_blank">The Young Mother&rsquo;s Program</a>, which moved Richards from a cycle of crisis to earning her PhD, has helped 50 young mothers through a comprehensive approach including deeply subsidized housing, weekly workshops (on topics like financial literacy), and counseling. Many of these women go on to careers as artists, accountants or in Richards&rsquo; case, professors.<br /><br />Other cities have adopted Lowe&rsquo;s &ldquo;art in the shape of neighborhood redevelopment&rdquo; tactic. Edgar Arceneaux, the artist behind the&nbsp;<a href="http://wattshouseproject.org/wp/?page_id=2" target="_blank">Watts House Project</a>, studied under Lowe before incubating the project on LA&rsquo;s south side. Lowe&rsquo;s vision will extend next to Anyang, South Korea where he will lead a project to empower small business owners and displaced residents. When he returns to Houston, Richards, who now heads the Young Mother&rsquo;s Program, will be there along with a new round of installations, the recently donated, solar powered Zerow House and a community of visiting artists and residents. &ldquo;Project Row Houses took on this enormous endeavor, to revitalize this community,&rdquo;&nbsp;says Richards. &ldquo;But the revitalization was within ourselves.&rdquo;</span></div>]]></content:encoded></rss:item><rss:item rdf:about="http://www.thepublicstudio.org/stories/2010/1/25/art-therapy-for-a-city-on-the-mend.html"><rss:title>art therapy for a city on the mend</rss:title><rss:link>http://www.thepublicstudio.org/stories/2010/1/25/art-therapy-for-a-city-on-the-mend.html</rss:link><dc:creator>kyla</dc:creator><dc:date>2010-01-26T04:15:43Z</dc:date><dc:subject></dc:subject><content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><span class="full-image-block ssNonEditable"><span><img style="width: 400px;" src="http://www.thepublicstudio.org/storage/Cross-Border%20Communication.jpeg?__SQUARESPACE_CACHEVERSION=1265762615103" alt="" /></span></span></p>
<p><em>View of the Windsor Chrysler Building</em></p>
<p><em><span style="font-style: normal;">Not long ago, if you had stood at the edge of Detroit and looked south&ndash; across the river to the neighboring city of Windsor, Ontario&ndash; you might have spotted an odd but fascinating, billboard-sized projection. &ldquo;We&rsquo;re in this together,&rdquo; it beamed in thick block letters. Using a borrowed projector and Windsor&rsquo;s riverside Chrysler building as canvas, Justin Langlois and his posse from&nbsp;<a href="http://www.brokencitylab.org" target="_blank">Broken City Lab</a>&nbsp;launched their Cross Border Communication project in the Fall of 2009 with a series of dispatches for the people of Detroit. &ldquo;The message was meant to be read in a few different ways,&rdquo; says Langlois. &ldquo;It&rsquo;s both we need to work on things together and we kind of screwed each other&hellip; so we&rsquo;re in this together.&rdquo;</span></em></p>
<p>Windsor&rsquo;s co-dependent relationship with its once-booming and now-failing sibling city has been both blessing and curse. Both cities lead their countries in unemployment rates and Windsor has the highest residential rental vacancy rates in Canada. Langlois founded Broken City Lab as a way to explore the transnational intertwining of these two towns, and chart a path forward for Windsor.</p>
<p>Founded in 2008 as Langlois&rsquo; graduate thesis project at the University of Windsor, Broken City Lab now has six members ranging in age from 18 to 26. It&rsquo;s an artist-led urban improvement group&ndash;a sort of art therapy collective for a city in need of triage.</p>
<p>In the same way that groups like&nbsp;<a href="http://www.good.is/post/bright-orange-2/" target="_blank">Object Orange</a>&nbsp;call attention to blighted buildings throughout Detroit, Broken City Lab uses idealistic interventions to draw attention to some of Windsor&rsquo;s very real problems. For &ldquo;Text in Transit,&rdquo; the group partnered with Windsor Transit and other city agencies to make use of underutilized ad space to address Windsor&rsquo;s reputation as a stopover city. All over town, signs read<em>There is a future here</em>,&nbsp;<em>You are right where you need to be</em>, and&nbsp;<em>The automobile can only take us so far</em>. In &ldquo;100 Ways to Save the City,&rdquo; locals texted, tweeted, and emailed their ideas to be projected onto a building in downtown Windsor.</p>
<p>If Langlois is lofty in his vision, he is also pragmatic in his goals. &ldquo;I hope [the lab] can continue to keep me and the people involved interested and wanting to talk about this place where we live,&rdquo; he says. &ldquo;I hope we can initiate that conversation for the city.&rdquo;</p>
<p>The lab&rsquo;s upcoming initiative, a five-month long dialogue with Windsor funded by the&nbsp;<a href="http://www.arts.on.ca/site4.aspx" target="_blank">Ontario Arts Council</a>, begins in earnest this Sunday, January 24 with a workshop aimed at collecting oral histories of Windsor. In February, Broken City Labs will launch<strong>&nbsp;</strong>&ldquo;Sites of Apology/Sites of Hope,&rdquo; and call on residents to map and mark places that deserve attention. &ldquo;We have a scrap yard at the center of the city,&rdquo; says Langlois. &ldquo;You can see it as a big rusty spot on the Google map and it&rsquo;s been there forever. I don&rsquo;t want to say to my brother&rsquo;s children 20 years from now, &lsquo;my bad, sorry we didn&rsquo;t take care of that.&rdquo;</p>]]></content:encoded></rss:item></rdf:RDF>