Chris Drew on Thu, 13 Apr 2000 06:10:27 +0200 (CEST) |
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[Nettime-bold] Fw: ART-ACT Notes 19 |
To unsubscribe from ART-ACT Notes simply reply with unsubscribe in the Subject line. Shannon Burns enters a color statement for viewing in the ART-ACT. Check him out. http://www.art-teez.org/artists/sb1.htm Chris, My name is Homer Jackson. I am a Philadelphia based inter- disciplinary artist. For 15 years, I taught arts workshops in Philadelphia area prisons. Powerful experiences and intense learning environments..... ... For over a year now, I have had the wonderful opportunity to read your words. Being a part of the Forum for Cultural Exchange, I read quite a few people's thoughts. I always thought that your comments were from the heart. You speak from the place that is quite alien to many in the arts community, particularly academics. I always found your contributions to be valuable and enlightening. I also am excited by your newsletter project. I am also working on a publication. It is called SHINE and it is directed at Black artists. It is about our stories, our struggles, our solutions. I want to try to re-create in public, some aspects of our private conversations. Younger artists need to know their history. Older artists need to know that new history is being written. There is so much that needs to be discussed to break through the deafening silence from the official Arts community..... ....It also brought to mind an article/report by John Kriedler, which I hope to publish in my newsletter, called Leverage Lost: The Non-Profit arts in the post Ford Era. You can find it at: http://www.inmotionmagazine.com/lost.html Thanks for doing your thang. Homer Jackson NEWSFLASH, The University of Illinois at Champaign - Urbana - is holding a hearing on their Chief Illinowyk mascot, Friday, April 14th from 8am to 5pm. I spent the evening with a determined youth group at the Chicago American Indian Center. They know they are about to look into the eye of the storm. They are ready. That gave me pause. I did not expect to be at the youth meeting. The American Indian Center's board was holding a scheduled meeting across the hall. Robert Wapahi, our Board President and the artist in residence at the American Indian Center, pointed me toward the meeting of youth. I participated in the smudging ceremony, and took a seat in back. My plan is to take the Anti-Racist T-shirt Art Contest Tour on the road. If we have not received a lot of discussion yet from this idea our site is evolving, this comment flier we are floating, we will. This is the eye with potential uglyness on all sides - southern Illinois is Decator all over again. I will read statements from some of our artists at this forum. The event starts with organizations speaking for 8 minutes, first a pro speaker - then a con speaker. At noon they will allow individuals who registered previously to speak until 4or 5pm. Organizers told me that they also want to take written statements on this issue. To find out more about Mascot/Racism at the University of Illinois, in sports and in the media visit http://www.inwhosehonor.com/LINKS.HTML or for more about an early artist leader in this struggle, Charlene Teters visit http://www.rt66.com/teters To follow this event through the University's web site - visit http://www.uiuc.edu THE CONTINUING STORY... Hey-ho, Duluth Minnesota. Duluth in the summer time is a beautiful town located at the top of Lake Superior. Tourists, hunters and fishermen, flock there for its scenic rolling hills and mild temperatures cooled by the lake. The Minnesota state bird, the mosquito, is abundant throughout the warm season and absent in the winter. Tourists follow the same cycle as the state bird for the same reason. In the winter it gets so cold that the bay can freeze solid overnight. We are talking thirty, even occasionally fifty below zero, real temperature, in Fahrenheit. Ten to twenty below zero is common. What is more - it is a wet cold that seeps through clothing. Cold is very cold in Duluth. So why would I, in my wildest imagination, come up with the desire to move to Duluth for the winter? The answer is named Mona. My life as a photographer/artist and a community volunteer was at once gregarious and lonely. I met a lot of people - had a number of friends but focused too much on my photography to entertain a relationship. I was working on my "House of Mirrors" project for several months before the CETA Arts workers arrived at the Summit University Free Press. The "House of Mirrors" was a flop house on the "West Bank" in Minneapolis. The "West Bank" is an area just off the University of Minnesota's campus on the west bank of the Mississippi River. The main campus is on the east bank of the river. The West Bank was a long time blue collar community that had a substantial amount of affordable housing and a very active night life. It was a place to go in the sixties to buy drugs and to connect with the hippie scene in the Twin Cities. The University of Minnesota's Art School had their studios on the West Bank. I could shoot photos in the "House of Mirrors and skip over to the darkrooms in the Art School to process the film when I first began this project as a student at the University. Developers were buying land at every opportunity with the goal of gentrifying the West Bank. They were remaking it into expensive high-rise apartments and building nightclubs with cover charges to keep out the lower income residents. They used the allure of the artists living there to draw higher income renters to the area. There was organized opposition by those who called it home but they had little financial clout and all the other forces - including the University of Minnesota - were on the side of the developers. Naturally, the artists who were used to start the process off were among the first to be moved on when the rents rose. The "House of Mirrors" was another obstacle in the developers' way. It was owned by an ex-state senator,, Ralph Maywood. He knew how to bargain to get the most out of those buying up the West Bank. Ralph Maywood had sold himself as a working man's representative pandering to the prejudices and fears of his constituency to become elected to the state Senate while other men his age were heading off to World War II. His career in the Senate was not notable. He worked his way onto a committee that oversaw regulation of Old Folks Homes in the state of Minnesota. He bought a string of them around the Twin Cities. These he managed for nearly twenty years housing many of the aging residents who had voted him into office. Those poor soles suffered for their support of the Senator. He neglected all of his clients horribly. In the late fifties, as a new generation of politicians climbed into power he was not able to maintain his power base. The Minneapolis Star & Tribune exposed his homes for their dangerous conditions and for the negligent care the elderly received. He lost his license to operate all of his homes. Then he lost his Senate seat. He sold all his properties except the one on the West Bank, the "House of Mirrors." This he reopened as a flophouse and managed while living on the premises. Glen was an ex-pimp, busted in Iowa after he became involved with an underage business partner. He was transferred around while doing Federal time because it was an Interstate offense, "crossing state lines" as he told it. He came to the Twin Cities once he got out of prison. Ralph made trips to the welfare office to help some of his "regular" tenants collect their rent payment for him. Glen landed in the "House of Mirrors" after meeting Ralph Maywood at the welfare office. Just out of prison, Glen was not so proud as to be unable to see the humanity in the "regulars" trapped at the "House of Mirrors" in Maywood's manor. He saw through the ex-Senator. Glen was not a "regular." In his early thirties, he had a lot of life to look forward to. Glen enjoyed life too much to be caught - ".like a fly on fly paper," as he said one day referring to a "regular." Whoever he referred to - it fit quite a few of the broken men who stayed there. Glen became part of my art project. Glen was teaching himself the guitar. It was through Glen, who liked to hang out at the night spots where music was performed, that I met Mona. The two months I had planned to spend living at the "House of Mirrors" were nearly over. That night Glen and I were on our way over to the Northside of Minneapolis to catch a band he hoped to sing for. It was an African American establishment featuring jazz and blues we meant to visit. We expected to have a party good time. We met Mona at the bus stop outside the "House of Mirrors" at the intersection called "Seven Corners" for the seven corners at that spot. Glen introduced himself to her lit up a conversation. She liked music and agreed to hook up with us that night. At the club - Glen and Mona disagreed discussing the role of women. She jumped up and did a solo dance with a booty shake just for me - or so I thought. Glen was not happy. They had another argument later outside. Mona took the bus back to the West Bank but not before she had given me a phone number. Later I called her up and she invited me to meet her where she was staying with friends on the west side of St. Paul - far from the West Bank of Minneapolis. When I visited her we connected and she came to stay with me for a week before returning to Duluth, Minnesota where she had recently left to visit the Twin Cities. Mona put Duluth on my mind. All I needed was an excuse. NEXT "Running out on my Slumlord or Can't you make any money in Photography?" _______________________________________________ Nettime-bold mailing list Nettime-bold@nettime.org http://www.nettime.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/nettime-bold