Saturday, January 10, 2009
Workshop in Review
Friday, January 9, 2009
Arts Programs Still Alive in Dorchester
Vivienne shows Jordan (left) and Raianne (right) how to use paper mache.
Raianne, a precocious student who describes herself as "very girly" and an aspiring fashion designer, poses while taking a break from her paper mache figure.
A shot taken by Celine, Terence holds up the mask he is working on in the afterschool DotArt class.
Celine is excited to complete her paper mache figure, which will eventually become a puppet.
-Jessica Bal
Captain Paul "Sasquatch" Cohan
Cape Pond Ice
Scott Memhard stares out at the ocean from the top of Cape Pond Ice on Saturday, January 4, 2009. Cape Pond Ice was founded in 1848 to provide ice for the fresh fish industry. Memhard has steered the company towards diversifying its products in response to the diminishing size of the Gloucester fleet. [Erika O'Conor]
Mittens, Tea and Neighbourhood Politics
cups of tea.
The meeting was led by May Lui, a community organizer at CPA and covered topics ranging from efforts to renew legislation providing for a bilingual ballot to the donation of mittens for the elderly residents. I was struck by the warmth of the interactions between the residence as well as the intensity of their debates, which confirmed Lissete's assertion that the elder members of the community were among the most active.
Many of the residents had immigrated in their youth and had formed strong friendships in the process of organizing the community. Although I was an obvious outsider, they welcomed me into their circle and insisted on offering me tea, cake and even a pair of mittens.
Thursday, January 8, 2009
Intershell
Alex Lopez packs and weighs bags of clams at the old Intershell building in Gloucester on Wednesday, January 8. Lopez commutes daily from Lynn to Gloucester, where he has been working for five years. [Erika Volchan O'Conor]
Shepard Fairey
Others felt that Fairey's work is an interesting topic of discussion for the art world. I spoke with Ricardo Barretto of the UrbanArts Insitute at MassArt and we touched on topics of guerilla art and its place in contemporary artistic study. Though he does not necessarily support illegal artwork, Barretto recognizes the interesting discussion it can spur. I stopped in at an art gallery on Newbury street and spoke with Joshua Buckno about the ICA event. He felt that in a way, placing Fairey's work in a gallery destroyed the "guerilla" aspect of it and cheapened the pieces in some sense.
Discussions with graffiti artists themselves added another dimension to the debate. Caleb Neelon, who has tagged in the past but developed his work into a successful career and now does commisioned pieces, stressed that street artists have to gain the respect of the graffiti subculture, which isn't always easy. As I passed by examples of Fairey's work in Central Square (pictured) some angry scrawls seemed to reflect this disrespect for someone who many may view as a sold-out artist. "SHEPARD FAIREY IS A POSER," read one such note. Some in the graffiti community may not dismiss Fairey for the evolution of his work and its shift to legal space. "You can't blame someone for making a buck," said one.
-Jessica Bal
Russell Sherman's Lady Jane
Sad Saxophone
Harvard Strings
When You Can't Do Any Worse
My project is centered on Vinnie Panico, a retired volunteer social worker who offers his time to the homeless free of charge but still has to stand in line at food banks and stay up to date with free meals at shelters to get by. He is a truly inspiring figure. After spending his life working at the Massachusetts State House he went down Park St. to Saint Paul's Episcopalian Church to give his time to the needy, even though he's never had much to give. He told me his story when I spent the day with him, and also took me to the Paulist Center/food bank and showed me where he used to work.
Vinnie Panico, a volunteer social worker, stands outside of the Paulist Center Food Bank, feet from the Massachusetts State House where he worked all his life. Panico lives retirement check to retirement check but still gives himself to helping those who are less fortunate than him.
Maria asks for money in Harvard Square early on the morning of January 8th. Shereceives unemployment insurance from the government but relies on panhandling to buy luxury items like cups of coffee.
Islam on the Streets
A muslim woman wearing a burqa gets off the T at Roxbury Crossing to go to the ISBCC on Tuesday, January 6, 2009. The ISBCC has been drawing worshippers from around Boston, altering the shape of Muslim congregations of Greater Boston.
Wednesday, January 7, 2009
Finding a Way In
My first few days in Chinatown were frustrating, to say the least. A large proportion of the people I attempted to shoot on the street did not speak English and were extremely reluctant to talk to me or let me photograph them. As I became more familiar with the neighbourhood, I realized that it was split into two very different areas. The Eastern portion, adjacent to the financial district, is teeming with restaurants and shops, whereas the predominantly residential area by New England Medical Center is home to a surprisingly high number of community organizations. On Monday night, I found out about a ping pong club which met at the Chinese Consolidated Benevolent Association. Unlike the people I approached on the street, several members of the CCBA welcomed me and eagerly discussed their views on Chinatown, urban planning, education, music and other topecs.
I had a somewhat similar experience at the Chinatown Progressive Association, where I had scheduled an interview with Lisette Le. Lisette was initially slightly skeptical, warning me that she did not want to talk to me if I was planning to give a inaccurate, premediated impression of the neighbourhood. I told her that I had done quite a bit of background research and intended exactly the opposite - I wanted to expose misconceptions, hear the perspectives of residents and describe what the community. She seemed satisfied, if not slightly impressed, by my efforts to accurately portray Chinatown and agreed that it often seems to be a very introverted community for outsiders, but asserted that it happens because many residents are vulnerable, not because they are exclusive. Interestingly, Lisette's explanation was a pretty accurate representation of my own experiences - upon approaching people on the street, they were often guarded, but once I met a few people and showed them that I did not intend to take advantage of them, they were happy to open up to me.
- Alykhan Mohamed
Halfway There
Having spent four consecutive days at Washington-Beech, I’ve spoken with residents and heard a variety of opinions regarding redevelopment. My meeting with a representative at the Boston Housing Authority was informative, but my difficulty breaking through the bureaucracy (and what I perceived as more than a touch of condescension) confirmed the frustration that many residents feel with “the system.” And speaking with the project’s Tenant Task Force demonstrated the assets of the community that may not be visible to the outside eye.
But thus far my lack of success in creating a real connection with someone has left me without a central character to focus on. While I have enough quotes and information to write a lengthy article, the gaping hole in my photographic essay increases my worry with only three days left. The human connection is what this story is about, but at this point I suppose I can only allow this to push me further.
A courtyard at Washington-Beech appears desolate despite the fact that residents have not yet been relocated from this section. In sharp contrast, the new designs feature townhouse units with individual entrances, private back yards, and a great deal of green space.
- Alison Coffey
NABBing Taggers
Graffiti and historic architecture collide near the Old South Church in Copley Square.In addition to meeting Detective Kelley and O'Loughlin at the Boston Municipal Courthouse, I also spoke extensively with Anne Swanson and Kathleen Alexander, co-chairs of the Graffiti NABBers (Neighborhood Association of the Back Bay). They were very vocal about their opposition to vandalism and have worked tirelessly for many years to eliminate it from the streets of the Back Bay neighborhood, spending 10-40 hours per week scrubbing tags from UTAH and others off buildings in the area.
Anne Swanson of the Graffiti NABBers, looks across the street to some graffiti and expresses her concern, in front of the Boston Municipal Courthouse after Bremner's appearance.
We met in the Boston Public Library and discussed their work with the NABBers. They mentioned that graffiti writers are often not aware of the extreme costs of their "form of entertainment". Swanson mentioned that during one case, she sat by the tagger himself completely by coincidence. He leaned over and asked "Are you the NABBer?" and then, instead of a confrontation, an apology followed. Perhaps with more education and awareness of the effects of graffiti on communities like the Back Bay, some vandals may change their minds about what they do with their free time.
Kathleen Alexander of the Graffiti NABBers counts off the reasons why graffiti in historic neighborhoods like the Back Bay is unacceptable. She described her anti-graffiti work alonside Anne Swanson in the Boston Public Library, an example of one of the priceless works of architecture that they strive to protect.
-Jessica Bal
Tuesday, January 6, 2009
More than a haircut
Finest Touch
A Hideaway Spot for Tags
Amy, a waitress at The Phoenix Landing in Central Square, stands in the closed-off alleyway next to the restaurant which is filled with tags. Restaurant owner Joe McCabe sees no problem with the graffiti near his establishment and in fact has met many of the writers who are responsible for the work. (Jessica Bal)
Fresh Fruit in the Financial District
"For Progress We Must Have Sacrifice"
A stairwell in Washington-Beech shows its need for redevelopment. While residents look forward to improvements in infrastructure, relocation remains a cause for concern. But Meena Carr, President of the Washington-Beech Tenant Task Force, explains that progress cannot come without sacrifice.
Meena Carr, President of the Washington-Beech Tenant Task Force, traces the layout of the planned development. After demolition and reconstruction, which will begin this year, Washington-Beech will have 342 on and off-site affordable rental and for-purchase housing units.
- Alison Coffey
Tight Knit Community
Hair v. Razor
Cleaning Shop
Perfect Cuts
Gloucester Day 1
At 11:00 I met with Rhonda Faloon, director of the museum. This space, Faloon said, “houses the treasures of Gloucester.” The museum is directed toward the residents of Gloucester, artist and art researchers, as well as summer tourists. They host many free educational programs including a lecture today on a famous poet of Gloucester. Art is still alive in the city and contemporary works are displayed in temporary exhibits. This includes Jeff Weaver’s painting of the Bird’s Eye, a controversial topic at the moment. Many citizens are protesting the governor’s idea to tear down a historic building in “the Fort” and replace it with a large hotel. Faloon proceeded to give me the contact information for Scott Memhard of Cape Pond Ice. Before I headed out, I was treated to a tour of a beautifully maintained 18th century home of a Gloucester captain. The riches of that time were evident in the British porcelain, decorate piano, and handsome portraits.
Heading to Cape Pond Ice, I asked a man directions and continued to inquire whether he was a fisherman. Indeed he was. He asked me if I had heard the news. What news? “This morning a boat exploded and two men were lost.” I listened incredulously. What? How? He thought it was probably due to hydrolics, that the Coast Guard had only recovered one body and that the other was still missing.
News travels fast. At Cape Pond Ice my initial conversation with Scott was interrupted by one of his employees who shared the same information that I had just learned. With a hint of dark humor, Scott turned to me and said, “that is how we lose one more customer,” “and a friend” retorted his employee. A somber nod was Scott’s only response. Both men stood in silence.
Stacked against the office walls are T-shirts with large snow flakes and a poster of the character, Bugsy from the Perfect Storm , sporting said shirt. The ice from the Andrea Gale, in reality and for the film, was bought from Cape Pond. On an adjacent wall are posters of men in early twentieth century winter garb, picks in hand and a large frozen lake in the background. As I was led into the next room, it was clear that times had changed. Through the dim light, the room was fascinating. Machines with frost clinging to their metal exteriors stretched and twisted across the wooden floor. Hooks dangled ominously in the background and an imposing container of ammonium gas kept the facility steadily below freezing. In the second room we entered were large slabs of ice, 4x2x1. He showed that, unlike any other material, these heavy ice slabs (six pieces to a ton) could be slid across the wooden floor “like hockey pucks.” I gave one a push, but upon learning that a broken foot is the most common injury, decided observation would be good enough.
We exited a door to a small loading dock where two boats were tied up. While Scott showed how the tubing could transfer one ton of ice to the boats’ hulk per minute, a helicopter flew in across the harbor. We watched in silence. It was the Gloucester Coast Guard.
To be continued...
-Erika Volchan O'Conor
Tagging in Central Square
Monday, January 5, 2009
[Alykhan Mohamed]
Roxbury Mosque Towers Above All Others
An event staff member at the Reggie Lewis Athletic Center monitors buses lined up for a community track event on January 4, 2008. Located across the street from the Islamic Societ of Boston Cultural Center (ISBCC), the Athletic Center played host to large events in the Muslim community before the new Cultural Center was built. The ISBCC is now the largest Islamic center in New England. [Meredith Klein]
Michael's Money Cup
Michael shows me his Dunkin Donuts cup half full of donations from park patrons. Michael can barely afford to pay the $70 dollars a night required to pay his rent, but has no job and does not receive unemployment payments from the government because he tries to sell his paintings in Boston Common. [Aalok Kanani]
Washington-Beech
The most successful approach I tried yesterday was to plant myself in the laundromat just across the street from Washington-Beech. When my 7 a.m. efforts to chat up residents at the bus stop were hindered by a lack of people, a lack of buses running on Sunday, and well-below freezing temperatures, I found myself taking refuge inside the much warmer Leisure Laundries and drawn in by the long-winded and passionate accounts of Carmen, who has worked there for the last several years. She spent a good deal of her life living in Columbia Point, formerly one of Boston’s most notorious housing projects, and the first to undergo a mixed-income redevelopment that was something of a precursor to HOPE VI. With many of her customers coming from just across Washington Street, I have found myself with plenty of residents to talk to as the laundry spins.
Carmen gazes at the Washington-Beech housing project through the door of the laundromat where she works. Labeled as “severely distressed” by the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development, the project was awarded a $20 million HOPE VI grant in March and will soon be demolished and rebuilt with both public and affordable housing units.
- Alison Coffey
Unemployment in Boston
I spent the rest of the day with people who relied on begging to pay the bills. In the photo I put up is Diane, a woman who has given up on finding work and relies on the pocket change of strangers to pay her $800 per month rent. After hanging out with Diane for a while I spent some time with Michael, a supposedly former politician, artist, and activist who did not receive unemployment benefits because of the few paintings he sold every month. Michael pays $80 a night to stay at a hotel, and took me to St. Paul’s church where he went some days to grab a free lunch. After today my project has become more focused, and is now looking at the contrasting experiences of the elite who find themselves unemployed and the poor in the same situation.
At night I met with Tom Arabia, a socialist pro-Palestine activist who is one of the leaders of Boston Stands with Gaza. While I am still pursuing the unemployment story with full force, I was intrigued by the pro-Gaza protests in Boston on Monday and have decided to also pursue a story about the movement in Boston. Tom told me how he radicalized around the issue of Palestine and told me about his hopes of forming a greater coalition for Palestine, for which there will be a meeting tomorrow night.
-Aalok Kanani
The Ice Cream Shop's Best Kept Secret
Apart from scooping ice cream, Durand organizes open studio events and supports the arts community as a member of the JP Arts Council. He displays the work of local artists (including his own just recently) in the ice cream shop on a rotating basis. The building which now serves up milkshakes and waffle cones was once a firehouse and, for a time, housed an art gallery and performance space. Durand noted that as Jamaica Plain has grown as an artistic community and attracted more residents, the consequential higher cost of living has pushed many artists and studios out of the area.
Artist Thomas Durand carries one of his larger art pieces past the work of a fellow Jamaica Plain artist in the upper level of J.P. Licks Ice Cream Shop. Durano has his own darkroom on the second floor of the building.
Durand himself has secured a space upstairs from the ice cream shop for his own darkroom. Behind the EMPLOYEES ONLY door, a whole realm of hidden photography unfolds. Next to a urinal (evidence of the men's bathrooms from the firehouse) sits an ashtray and some prints alongside a list of yet-to-be-completed projects. Clothespins for drying the photos twirl in an alcove just above remains of showers. It's a place to pursue his work, and Durand doesn't mind the stacks of cow mugs and spotted merchandise in the adjacent room.
A detail of Durand's darkroom, where an unlikely mix of materials meet.Though his story may not relate directly to the fundamental conflict of art and crime in my topic, Durand's profile reveals a bit about the artistic atmosphere of Jamaica Plain and the difficulties facing Boston artists-expected to become worse with the current economic crisis. With less and less space to make art, where can locals express themselves? Where can they find an audience? Maybe the answer lies in the city streets.
-Jessica Bal