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We Are Family: Building Connective Tissue through Community Art

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On December 2nd, 2015 I gave a TEDx talk for the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee about why community art has become such a passion in my life. You can read the description of my speech on the TEDx UW-Milwaukee website and watch the video there and on youtube beginning in April, 2016. What inspired my speech was a long drive from visiting friends in rural Janesville, WI. to my hometown of Milwaukee, WI where I was originally born and have lived my adult life now for over 10 years. 7 of those years I've been practicing as a community artist, with clients ranging from arts and environmentally based non-profits; public schools, social service agencies to churches - all interested in integrating arts into a mainstream environment. On the drive I was struck by the sudden awareness that we are all Family. That we really are family. Not in principle just because its a nice idea, but in actuality. And, that bonds created between us through shared experiences give rise to a hidden...

'The Flower of Life' mural for Concrete Dreamers at The Spot 4MKE

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'The Flower of Life' mural on asphalt at The Spot 4MKE, 5th and Wisconsin Ave On October 29th. 2015 I completed this approx. 5,000 sq ft ground mural in collaboration with Concrete Dreamers at The Spot 4MKE   in downtown Milwaukee, WI on N. 5th St and W. Wisconsin Ave. An article written by the funders of The Spot 4 MKE - Project for Public Places - was published worldwide and highlights the artwork  here .  The project stemmed from a temporary placemaking lease of a parking lot initiated by Creative Alliance Milwaukee (CAM) with the City. *Note: As of April 30th, 2016, the lease will not be renewed to CAM and the parking lot mural and site will be returned to its original condition and city ownership per the lease agreement. 'The Flower of Life' was a collaborative effort between myself and Concrete Dreamers - Mikal Floyd-Pruitt and Fonde Bridges - for The Spot 4 MKE. This short video highlights their vision for engaging the public in this space by creati...

'Our Vibrant Lives: Nuestra Vida de Colores' art installation

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'Sharing our love of community together'; 'Unifying as a community to create a sense of pride in our vibrant lives'; giving, caring, security - these were keynotes picked up on from a community listening session for an art installation completed over the summer with a team of 8 interns. The project was a summer residency with ArtWorks for Milwaukee, Inc., an arts-based organization that hires high school students as interns to learn job readiness skills by working with a lead artist. For this project, youth helped design and paint a mural, boulders for seating, and a story-pole garden with written statements painted by people living in the Burnham Park neighborhood. This park is a popular mixed-use park that attracts family and kids for recreation - mainly soccer and baseball, and is regularly booked for birthday parties, meetings and other gatherings in its recreational building. During the first week of programming I watched as my extremely shy interns came ...

'Forgiveness' joint mural with Plymouth Church, Pathfinders Youth Shelter and Shir Hadash

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The Forgiveness mural was a unique and beautiful project. It was my first multi-organization collaboration. Pastor Andrew Warner, of Plymouth Church ; Joseph Stanley, counselor for Pathfinders Youth Shelter , and Rabbi Tiferet Berenbaum of Shir Hadash jewish congregation are longtime friends. What makes them special is they all share a space at Plymouth Church, a beautiful stone building on Milwaukee's east side just two blocks from the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee. Pathfinders Youth Shelter has several locations each with a special focus. There is the drop-in center; the group home, and the space at Plymouth Church where youth can come use the large gym for recreation and smaller group activities. In April 2015, the three friends decided to do something they wanted to for a long time - hold a series of conversations. The topic they picked was 'Forgiveness'. They each took a turn leading one of three conversations where members from both congregations o...

Tamarack Waldorf High School inaugural mural

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The inaugural freshman class of Tamarack Waldorf High School class of 2019 The inaugural freshman class 2019 at Tamarack Waldorf High School, a group of about 25 students, collaborated on this mural together over four intensive days. On the first day students were asked three key questions: As you look back on your first year at Tamarack, what stays with you? What is something new you've discovered? What is one thing you would like to leave behind; to compost for others to discover?   We turned their reflections on these questions into a mural divided into three connected sections: the bottom representing what they want to leave behind; the middle representing what they celebrate about their experience now, and the top what they look forward to leaving as a legacy into the future for those that come behind them. Three working groups in one space was a new endeavor that worked perfectly! We used the gym as our workspace. This was new for me and I worried a...

Civil Rights Journey: Milwaukee and Beyond mural series

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This mural is was commissioned by the Elaine Schreiber Daycare at Silver Spring Neighborhood Center. It was inspired by historic and recent events in Milwaukee, WI.  It was painted with kids enrolled at the daycare ages 4 to 12 during a three week residency. I was challenged with finding a way for the little ones to contribute, so we used balled up plastic bags to dab paint on the background for a textured effect. The older kids were able to paint in the bigger areas, and I touched up the edges to make it more cohesive. JOSHUA GLOVER Joshua was an enslaved person from Missouri who escaped to Racine, WI in the 1850's. He made it to Milwaukee, WI where he was jailed at Cathedral Square Park downtown under the Fugitive Slave Act. Thousands of white people helped break him out of jail and escape to freedom in Canada, where he lived in freedom as part of an integrated community. The jail no longer exists. OPEN HOUSING and EDUCATION RIGHTS  For 200 nights in 1967...

Community Building through the Arts: Urban Alchemy with Lily Yeh and BeIntween

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In October and November of 2014 International Community Artist Lily Yeh  trained 5 Milwaukee-based artists - Gabby Tesfaye, Vedale Hill, Fonde Bridges, myself and Mikal Floyd-Pruitt - and over 20 community members in her practice of community building through the arts! With movement, music, voices and working together, in one day we transformed an area under Milwaukee's Holton Street Bridge into a splash of color, rhythm and harmony! This 20-min video describes why I am inspired by Lily's work. During Phase I we were led through a workshop of imagining, envisioning, and collaboration. We even created a group poetry and performance piece together that we performed for the whole room. The artist team helped community members paint cardboard and duct-tape it to metal poles, benches, and even created some freestanding structures. The design was to be temporary, to demonstrate and put into practice 'Urban Alchemy' through working together.   Some of...