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Hyperallergic: Artists and Activists Propose a âPeopleâs Cultural Planâ for New York City
Artist Alicia GrullĂłn speaking at a CreateNYC cultural plan meeting (image courtesy Hester Street Collaborative)
Since October, New York Cityâs Department of Cultural Affairs (DCLA) has conducted more than 100 interviews, held dozens of focus groups and dozens more tabling events, and surveyed 10,000 residents. The focus of these inquiries has been the cityâs first-ever cultural plan, dubbed CreateNYC. When itâs released in July, the plan will become a blueprint for funding and supporting arts and culture throughout New York City, and the DCLA has been soliciting public input.
âNew Yorkers value arts and culture â and they want more of it,â states âWhat We Heard,â a document compiling the findings from this recently completed phase of the planning process. The DCLA â which, itâs worth noting, is the largest cultural funding agency in the US â released the overview on Monday, an 18-pager filled with infographics and stats outlining what arts and cultureârelated issues New Yorkers care about most. The document identifies eight key areas, from âEquityâ and âSocial & Economic Impactâ to âArts, Culture & Science Educationâ and âNeighborhood Character.â It takes readers through each one, offering lists and sublists of goals within each area. Some, like âConsider Community Land Trusts, fractional ownership, rent to own, deed restrictions, cross subsidization, and mobile studios,â are refreshingly forward-thinking and specific; others, like âPartner with City agencies and community stakeholders to support cultural preservation in neighborhoods across all five boroughs,â sound admirable but uselessly broad.
Graphic from CreateNYCâs âWhat We Heardâ (image via createnyc.org)
The DCLA has made a point of stressing the amount of outreach itâs done and the number of diverse voices itâs solicited â but the cultural plan is not without its critics. In January, three local artists and activists, Jenny Dubnau, Alicia GrullĂłn, and Shellyne Rodriguez, told Hyperallergic of their misgivings about the way the plan is being created. This week, as part of a larger coalition of roughly two dozen artists, activists, and cultural workers, they responded to the official process by releasing their own blueprint for the city, the âPeopleâs Cultural Planâ (PCP).
âArtists, cultural workers, and cultural access in the city are in a huge crisis,â said Dubnau. âIf youâre going to have a plan in our time, we felt it had to be a powerful, strongly worded, tough, courageous plan. If youâre not going to talk about actual policy thatâs making artists leave the city, displacing communities of color, where the funding is so lopsided in terms of equity â if youâre not going to radically approach those issues, itâs not going to be a relevant enough plan.â
Dubnauâs comments echo the three core issues of the PCP: âEquitable Housing, Land, & Development Politics,â âLabor Equity,â and âPublic Funding Equity.â None of those headers would look out of place in the DCLAâs âWhat We Heardâ document, but the tone and scope of the PCP are vastly different, beginning with its opening paragraph:
Inequity in arts and culture is a persistent problem in New York City. The worsening climate of fear, intolerance, and fascism, especially affecting immigrants, all people of color, and LGBTQ individuals, must be countered with more than lip service in support of âdiversityâ: Only by implementing true equity in all city policies will the most vulnerable be protected from the multiple crises facing our communities. As a sanctuary city, any cultural plan for New York must be supportive of the lives and contributions of All People of Color, including tribally-enrolled indigenous people, Black, Asian, Latinx, and Arab peoples, and the LGBTQ, disabled, and elder members of our communities.
The 17-page plan goes on to make a host of detailed policy recommendations, from, in the housing section, calling for a citywide rent freeze on stabilized apartments and the overturning of the Urstadt Law; to, in the labor section, demanding mandatory artist compensation, salary caps or maximum ratios within institutions, and the passage of the state-level New York Health Act; and, in the funding section, the implementation of language access plans and mandating that DCLA budget increases âgo first to neighborhoods, districts, organizations and artists that currently receive the lowest allocations, and first to organizations led by and serving communities of color.â Itâs a wide-ranging but deeply researched document that seeks to redress structural inequities.
âWhy can we not reimagine more for ourselves? Why not begin with the arts?â asked GrullĂłn, who went on to cite a host of academics and âcreative thinkersâ whose work the group had drawn on in making its plan (some of which are cited within the document). âWeâre not reinventing the wheel; weâre trying to fix the vehicle that is on the wheel.â
Graphic by: @fatitaj #WEcreateNYC is a platform to enrich the cultural life and legacy of NYC by centralizing the lived experiences of African-, Arab-, Asian-, Caribbean-, Chicanx-, Latinx-, Native-, and Pacific Islander-American descended people. We celebrate the vitality and vibrancy of these communities with a living cultural plan using their stories past, present, and future. We understand that culture- foods, music, art, and language- hold our desires, stories, and endeavoring to be a people that are braver than the histories that bring us shame. Our living cultural plan prioritizes a multigenerational approach to building a just, inclusive, equitable city â a new ecological system that is not only imagined, but reached. Join the conversation using the #CulturalEquityNYC ! #poc #CulturalEquityNYC #WEcreateNYC #harlem #statenisland #manhattan #brooklyn #queens #bronx #createequity #nyc #forusbyus
A post shared by WEcreateNYC2017 (@wecreatenyc2017) on Dec 6, 2016 at 5:43pm PST
In its introduction, the PCP specifically calls out the contracting of two companies to work on the cultural plan: James Lima Planning + Development, which is focused âon the economics of placemaking,â and BJH Advisors LLC, âa real estate development and advisory firm.â As noted previously by Seph Rodney for Hyperallergic, the activists âargue that these organizations ⌠are already involved in projects (they cite the MIH/ZQA rezonings and the BQX trolley car schemes) that will result in the displacement of long-time residents, mostly through raising the average cost of rent.â When asked about the objection to these firms, a spokesperson for the DCLA noted that CreateNYCâs lead contractor, Hester Street Collaborative, had enlisted them, and told me that both âbring an understanding of planning and development in New York â something thatâs incredibly important when the cost of real estate is central to many of the issues and concerns weâve heard through CreateNYC.â
But to Dubnau and GrullĂłn, the hiring of the firms represents a larger, more problematic ethos embedded in the project: looking at culture in New York City through corporate-colored glasses â that is, as a question of economics. âIt just highlights the motivation behind the city, where economics ⌠becomes a much more urgent matter for them rather than the current state that folks are living in,â said GrullĂłn. âTheir reasons will be: Arts and culture and creativity are tied to economic vitality. They create new jobs. But new jobs for who? Especially when we bring in questions of the âcreative class.â Thereâs no investment made in the small businesses that are already there. Thereâs no thinking of how to revitalize economic development in a way thatâs sustainable for the future but radically changes our connection to place and still keeps people there. Their initiative is to bring in more tourism. Their view of economic growth and vitality does not have foresight. It is outdated. We can see repeatedly that it only benefits the very few.â
âThe cityâs plan is making nods towards cultural equity, but in terms of the real estate angle, it becomes a question of, what is culture?â Dubnau added. âIs it this creative tech, real estateâdriven appearance of culture, where the rents are skyrocketing and the real culture makers and communities canât afford to remain in place? Or is it a vital city where immigrants get to stay, working artists get to remain?â
Graphic from CreateNYCâs âWhat We Heardâ (image via createnyc.org)
Members of the PCP group have spoken with representatives of the DCLA, and both sides remarked upon the discussions positively. Since the official cultural plan is still in formation â public polling is happening now, online â the ball is, as the saying goes, in the DCLAâs court.
âI would like to see DCLA implement what we recommend in our plan that they do have direct control over, which is funding,â Dubnau said, acknowledging that a number of proposals in the PCP are out of the departmentâs control and tied to measures overseen by the city council, mayor, or even the state government. They group also believes the DCLA could start working to guarantee âall artists and workers âŚÂ a basic wage, benefits, job security.â But most importantly, Dubnau said, âwe would love to have the DCLA make concrete policy recommendations. I donât see why â other than politics and caution â a document like the NYC cultural plan cannot make concrete policy recommendations that go outside the purview of the Department of Cultural Affairs.â
âWeâve seen the Peopleâs Cultural Plan and weâre glad to have this thorough set of proposals in hand, along with the feedback from the more than 185,000 New Yorkers weâve heard from since last fall,â the DCLA spokesperson commented. âThe planning process is still underway, and we will absolutely consider these ideas as we work toward releasing the CreateNYC cultural plan this summer.â
Aerial view of the architectâs rendering of the Shed structure at night (image via Wikipedia)
If itâs hard to believe that a government agency would go out on a limb and adopt something as radical as the PCP, it might make sense to hope for the creation of something that falls in between: A plan that accounts for at least some of the cityâs blind spots (such as the DCLA âgiving nearly 60% of its funding to Manhattan alone out of the five boroughs, and almost 80% of its funding to only 33 of the 1,000+ organizations funded,â according to the PCP). A plan that balances an awareness of cultureâs economic value with an understanding that the impact of the arts is, ultimately, immeasurable. A plan that considers community groups as vital to the future of the city as a high-end Shed.
âWhen we fund, we have to think of funding for justice,â GrullĂłn said. âWe have to start thinking about how that is the driving force behind culture.â
The post Artists and Activists Propose a âPeopleâs Cultural Planâ for New York City appeared first on Hyperallergic.
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