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Neighborhood Conversations at The Lowry Cafe – April 30

I Want Neighborhood BadgeA community gathering you are not going to want to miss is coming in April and June. Mark your calendars for either April 30th 6-8:30pm or June 25th 6-8:30pm. The Cleveland Neighborhood Association will be hosting Neighborhood Conversations at The Lowry Cafe for all residents in the Cleveland Neighborhood. We’ll enjoy a delicious meal together and spend an evening talking with our neighbors about what the future of the Cleveland Neighborhood could be. Conversations will center around the theme “I Want _____ In My Neighborhood.” The conversations will be hosted by renowned facilitators Dave Ellis and Barbara Epps.

And if you can’t make it in April (and even if you can), join us in June!

This event is funded through a grant from inCommons.
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Featured Northside News

The Traveling Chalkboard Workshop

K58-8.Bus Stop.low resWhat do you think are the important questions that need to be asked that are essential in order to have the infrastructure of the city reflect the need and wants of the people in the city? What are your answers to those questions?

Join us for a Traveling Chalkboard Workshop on April 23rd, 6-7:30pm at the Cleveland Neighborhood office to get involved in this project were we ask the above questions of our neighbors and community.

Photographer Wing Young Huie and theatre engagement artist Ashley Hansen are using a chalkboard to find out, with a process adapted from Wing’s successful public art project (2010), “The University Avenue Project” in St. Paul where he photographed hundreds of people in various circumstances holding chalkboards on which revealing statements are hand-written.

Chalk BoardWith the Creative CityMaking Project, Wing and Ashley will give chalkboards to community organizations and individual citizens to find out what are the important questions and answers. Participants will then photograph themselves with their questions and answers and upload them to our website: http://www.createplace.org/

Participants will then pass on the chalkboard to a neighbor to do the same thing, thus winding its way throughout the community.

RSVP by email cna@clevelandneighborhood.org or RSVP on Facebook

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Featured Northside News

What’s Happening?

NorthFirst Spring 2013
Click above to see more photos from the North First event

What’s Happening? is a regular blog update that will feature snippets of the many opportunities, notices, events, and activities happening in the Cleveland Neighborhood and the greater Northside community. If you have something you’d like featured on the blog or in this post please send it to cna@clevelandneighborhood.org

  • Known anyone looking to buy a home in the Cleveland Neighborhood? There’s Down Payment Assistance available for those buying in the neighborhood. Learn more.
  • Town Hall with the Commissioners from Human Rights and Revenue is happening tonight.
  • You should be getting a flyer from the Parks this week in your mailbox. It includes some great coupons for upcoming Park events.
  • Interested in a rain garden? Attend a workshop at North Regional in June and call the office to learn more about our Landscape Grants.
  • North First Summer 2013 is coming up on June 11th. Register today.
  • Interested in volunteering to help senior citizens in our community with some spring cleaning? Volunteer today.

Have anything you’d like to add? Leave it in the comments!

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Events Featured

A Wonderful Evening of Neighbors at North First

NorthFirst_Spring2013_025The first of a series of quarterly community gatherings for Northside residents, neighborhood organization boards, and staff kicked off quite successfully this past Tuesday at the Capri Theater. The evening was full of socializing, networking, information sharing, delicious food and non-alcoholic beverages for happy hour, as well as some great presentations and prizes. Take a look at some of the great photos from the evening on Facebook.

The Cleveland Neighborhood was well represented with residents, board members and staff in attendance. The event was also hosted by the Northside Neighborhood Council, a collaboration of north Minneapolis neighborhood organizations of which the Cleveland Neighborhood Association is a part.

If you missed this event, be sure to mark your calendar for the next one June 11th, 6-8pm. We’ll serve some delicious food again and feature some wonderful speakers again, which could be you!*

NorthFirst_Spring2013_008

 

*Details on submitting a presentation for an upcoming event will be posted at NorthFirst.org in the coming weeks.

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Committees Featured

Mural at Penn and Lowry Avenue – A Community Engagement Project

Terri Hoy I Want LOTDDuring the summer of 2012, the Cleveland Neighborhood Association staff and board began to utilize some of the great tools provided by an organization called Civic Center to engage residents in conversations about their community. We hosted a community gathering in the Cleveland Neighborhood with the theme, “I Want _____ in my neighborhood.” We continued using the stickers and asking the question at our Live on the Drive summer concerts and while out in the community during National Night Out, door knocking, Cleveland Park parties and more.

IMG_0763
Our amazing Mural installers!

Then, last fall, we had the opportunity to collaborate with a couple students from the U of M design department and some northside residents to try another community engagement project originating from Civic Center. A large mural that provides chalk and asks residents about their hopes and dreams with the prompt: “Before I die I want to ____.” These murals have been successfully done all over the world, including in the Whittier neighborhood in south Minneapolis and with youth at Kulture Klub. We felt it was a great opportunity to turn a vacant lot into an interactive space for residents who often don’t have voice in the community to share with one another their hopes and dreams in a public space.

We received a permit from Hennepin County to install the mural on the empty lot at the North West corner of Penn and Lowry Avenue. We also received support from the Minneapolis Arts Commission, who gave the following reasons:

“The mural strongly engages the community and generates hopeful responses.
Candy Chang and this project are internationally recognized.
The Whittier neighborhood has had a positive experience with the same project.”

We asked several residents about the choice of wording before deciding to keep the identical language to the international project, recognizing that it had some chance for controversy, but that the provocative nature of the question is part of what made it a successful project.

Our goal with this project was to engage the diverse residents that we serve in our community. We feel we’re accomplishing that, but did not realize it would also offend many others. Our ongoing commitment is to engage the residents of the Cleveland Neighborhood and the northside. We are willing to take risks and try innovative ways of doing that, but we realize we’re making mistakes along the way and learning as we go. We believe we will continue to learn from this experience and hope we can do far better in the future.

[button link=”http://beforeidie.cc/site/northminneapolis/”] View ongoing updates with Photos and Video of the mural here[/button]

Clarifications about the Mural

Whose mural is it?
The Cleveland Neighborhood Association owns the mural. It was put up with support from some students and staff at the University of Minnesota. The concept for the mural is a part of an international series of Before I Die murals that originated with artist Candy Chang.

How often is there profanity?
There have been 13 instances of inappropriate language on the mural that the CNA staff is aware of, out of well over 200 total statements written. The most notable of those instances are ones that a resident took a picture of on December 22nd and has circulated widely on Facebook. Those statements were written sometime in the evening before and removed within 2 hours of the first facebook posting. While the circulation of this single image has given the impression that the board is frequently filled with vulgar language and profanity that has not been the case.

Does anyone monitor it?
Staff at the Cleveland Neighborhood Association monitors the mural multiple times a day. The chalk is removed when the spaces fill up or no one is able to monitor it in a 24 hour period. We recognize this is a public space and though the question elicits a variety of responses, we remove those that are unreadable or inappropriate for the space. We are not able to monitor the board 24/7 and do encourage residents to remove inappropriate language if they deem it necessary, but please do let us know so we can keep accurate and transparent documentation of the project overall.

What was with that hole in the mural?
On Sunday, January 20th, the panels of the mural came off during a windy day. We recognize this incident was due to a mistake in installation materials. We removed the panels from the sidewalk and left the frame standing as we discussed reinstalling the mural. We reinstalled the majority of the mural on January 29th. The mural had recently been featured in the February North News and we felt it was important to have it up as soon as possible. However, when reinstalling we realized one of the panels broken edge needed to be glued together to be properly replaced. That step took longer than expected and we replaced the missing panel section on February 13th. We recognize that many found the missing panel unsightly and we apologize for not fixing it sooner.

Isn’t the word “Die” inappropriate for our community?
We are aware of the unique implications the use of the word “die” has within our community were youth violence has caused tragedies in our families and communities. We recognize that this public display has appeared insensitive to some whose family has been personally affected by this violence in our community and for that we are sorry. Other young people and residents we’ve talked to have seen the choice of language as powerful for the same reason. We also recognize others see it as willingness to not skirt around language in an attempt at better community PR and still others disagree with that point. We are learning from all of this, we’ve made mistakes along the way, and we know that when this project is over we’ll look back and recognize how we could do it better.

Is this temporary?
Yes, this is a temporary installation. The permit we were given goes till June, but we hadn’t intended on keeping it up that long. It was never intended to be a permanent installation. Our plan has been to move, disassemble or repurpose the piece sometime in the next few weeks. That decision will be decided by the Cleveland Neighborhood Board. CNA has been actively involved in the possible future development of this corner for some time and we continue to support the eventual development of the Lowry-Penn intersection.

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Committees Featured

Chaun Webster – Local Artist Spotlight

chaun websterWhat is your art?

I am a Poet/Graphic Designer/Publisher.  Particularly in poetry my work now deals in the concrete poetry tradition more popularly know as Visual Poetics (Vizpo).  This tradition is less about strict “meaning making” and works from an understanding that our phonetic symbols are graphic units or a visual art form themselves, and furthermore that they communicate something.  Meaning is important to my work, how meaning is constructed, valued or dismissed.  My work as a graphic designer lends itself in many important ways to what I do as a poet working in the concrete poetry tradition.  I draw my influences from graffiti and jazz from artists like Jean Michel Basquiat, Glenn Ligon, Thelonius Monk and Wilfredo Lam.

What do you appreciate about your Community?

I love the people, the nuanced sounds of Lowry Avenue, the stunning art created by our young people at Broadway and Emerson, the fall colors along Theodore Wirth Park, and the wisdom of our community elders.

 

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Committees Featured

Before I Die I Want To…

You might have noticed an interesting billboard at the corner of Lowry and Penn Avenue recently. This public art and engagement project is an opportunity to share your personal hopes and dreams with your community. 

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Events Featured

Holiday on 44th this Friday!

This community celebration is meant to foster understanding between people of different cultures, improve residents’ quality of life, support local artists, and promote neighborhood pride. This Friday evening from 6-9pm all along 44th Avenue in north Minneapolis. The Cleveland Neighborhood Association is proud to be a continuing sponsor of Holiday on 44th.

Now in its 15th year, Holiday on 44th is a large and highly anticipated event. Most of the indoor festivities will take place in the Patrick Henry High School and Loring Elementary gyms. There will be activities all along 44th Avenue North, including horsedrawn haywagon rides, ice sculpting, carolers, crafters, musicians, and performances by the Workhouse Theater Company.

Your not going to want to miss it!

RSVP on Facebook

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Committees Featured

Declare Your 15

Support your Cleveland Neighborhood by committing to volunteer, share and donate to the organization and your neighborhood. Declare Your 15 is a campaign to encourage neighbors to engage in their neighborhood in meaningful ways. Commit to joining one of our exciting committees, volunteer with one of our neighborhood events, contribute some funds for programs like Live on the Drive, and share with your friends!

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Featured

A Look at Our Annual Report

If you weren’t at the annual meeting, well, you really missed out! We’ll do our best to recreate the evening for you, though you’ll have to pick-up your own bowl of Color Me Chili, since we ate it all!

Here’s a brief video we put together so you had a chance to hear from our board members

And here is our Annual Report
2012 Annual Report

Lastly, we elected new board members. Congratulations to Kimberly Caprini, Shannon Jones, Stephanie Gasca, Dan Hansen and Stephanie Sakes! Updates on all our board members will be coming soon.