the changing landscape
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The Painted Desert Project: An exciting new street art initiative unfolding in the Southwest during 2012

The Painted Desert Project: An exciting new street art initiative unfolding in the Southwest during 2012

Participatory floating graffiti project by Boa Mistura, a Spanish art collective, in Vila Brasilandia, one of Sao Paulo’s favelas.  

Participatory floating graffiti project by Boa Mistura, a Spanish art collective, in Vila Brasilandia, one of Sao Paulo’s favelas.  


If Walls Could Talk - A Public Art Project with Incarcerated Mothers and their Children

Occuprint: Posters from the #Occupy Movement

Occuprint: Posters from the #Occupy Movement

Artist as Activist - A Robert Rauschenberg Foundation Project

Artist as Activist - A Robert Rauschenberg Foundation Project

Help-Portrait

Find someone in need. Take their portrait. Print their portrait. And deliver it to them.

Jane Golden of the Philadelphia Mural Arts Program talks at TEDxLaf


Empowering Youth Toward Community Leadership
Throughout the first half of the Animating Democracy Blog Salon, several have spoken to the powerful potential of creative placemaking for igniting engagement and change at the local level.
By capitalizing on community assets, placemaking can aid in elevating the potential of a neighborhood’s space, reinvigorating both the physical and the psyche of the local environment.
This past summer, I had the opportunity to wander through Las Parcelas, one of the six community gardens operated by the Norris Square Neighborhood Project (NSNP) in Philadelphia.
Consisting of over three dozen plots and coming alive through the vibrant colors found within bird houses, benches, garden ornaments, murals, and a rural Puerto Rican casita, the garden has breathed life back into a community historically plagued by low-income levels, high drop-out rates, and a deadly drug culture. Continue reading →

Empowering Youth Toward Community Leadership

Throughout the first half of the Animating Democracy Blog Salon, several have spoken to the powerful potential of creative placemaking for igniting engagement and change at the local level.

By capitalizing on community assets, placemaking can aid in elevating the potential of a neighborhood’s space, reinvigorating both the physical and the psyche of the local environment.

This past summer, I had the opportunity to wander through Las Parcelas, one of the six community gardens operated by the Norris Square Neighborhood Project (NSNP) in Philadelphia.

Consisting of over three dozen plots and coming alive through the vibrant colors found within bird houses, benches, garden ornaments, murals, and a rural Puerto Rican casita, the garden has breathed life back into a community historically plagued by low-income levels, high drop-out rates, and a deadly drug culture. Continue reading