Studio Organization

cluttered workspace First Weekend Project: Studio Organization

Moving into a new house and working on multiple concurrent projects has left my studio in disastrous  disarray. First order of business is organizing left-over material and scraps from various jobs into opportunities for new uses. And clearing away enough workspace for the next weekend project.

Here are a few tips for getting organized for the New Year:

1) Group like objects together. Instead of pushing things from pile to pile, group like objects together as much as possible. Through this simple process, I discovered that I have over 20 Sharpie markers. Yet I never seem to be able to find one when I need it. Now I know where to find them all.

2) Simplify, reduce and recycle. Keep only what you need. Craigslist and Ebay provide good opportunities to find new homes for extra tools and odd items. It can also provide some extra cash.

3) Re-purpose. Try to avoid sending anything unnecessarily into our landfills. Is there another unexpected use for something?

4) Focus. Make sure you budget enough time for set-up and break down after each job. It’s all too easy to move into the next project before everything finds its way back to its proper place. And that’s makes finding it the next time you need it all the more difficult and consumes additional valuable time.

5) Put things where you look for them. If you think a Phillips screw driver might be in a particular drawer and it isn’t, maybe that should be where you keep it in future.

6) Prioritize. Put the most time into those organizational projects that will have the most impact.  Sorting nails and screws might be satisfying but won’t necessarily result in the best improvement to your workflow.

New Year, Starting Over Again…

Rolling in the New Year is as good an opportunity as any to try something over again. One of my biggest challenges has always been organization, so here’s an easy resolution: be better organized. First order of business: revamping and updating the blog. I’m introducing a new focus and subtitle to my blog this year: Weekend Project. Is it possible to save the world through one weekend project at a time? Probably not. But it is an easy way for me to organize my projects.

Artist Collectives

Art this way...

Art Detour Weekend in Phoenix

Are you interested in starting an artist collective?

Are you part of an artist collective?

Join us for a lively conversation about artists working together on March 25, 2010 at 7PM at SMoCA.

The free event is part of SMoCA’s “Artists on Artists” program and is presented by artists Greg Esser and Brian Boner.

In addition to presenting existing collectives including eyelounge (www.eyelounge.com) and Post-Commodity (www.postcommodity.com), we will look at the opportunities and obstacles facing collectives. We will discuss several case studies of new collectives just beginning to launch in Phoenix.

What are you interested in knowing about artist collectives?

Email me at gregesser@cox.net.

titles vs work: which comes first?

Change

“Time may change me, but I can’t change time.” – David Bowie

Change is nothing new.  In fact, the only constant is change.

At the beginning of September, 2008, the traditional start of the Fall arts season here, downtown Phoenix is criss-crossed with change and lack of change.  Many ideas that have existed only on paper are beginning to come to fruition.  Still numerous other promises have completely evaporated in the aftermath of the first ripple of economic recession.

Approved high-rise plans have vanished completely, mere mirages over the vast checkerboard of blighted vacant dirt lots throughout the city’s core.  Financing woes are exemplified by the tragic story of Mortgages Ltd.  A restriction of development capital has reopened doors for adaptive reuse and other low-cost strategies for revitalization that echo the surge of grassroots vitality that erupted here in the early years of this decade.

Now is the time, while there is blood in the streets, to dig in and get something done.

Life is short, the days are long…

In some respects, change in downtown Phoenix seems glacial. In other respects, it’s happening at light speed. About fifty percent of the building mass in this photograph is new since 2001, the benchmark year when eye lounge first opened it’s doors.

The arts have been a key catalyst for revitalization in downtown Phoenix. There is also a tremendous synergy from multiple independent efforts to adaptively re-use the 100-year-old building stock in the neighborhoods of downtown Phoenix as gallery, studio and performance spaces. The collective efforts seemed to reach a critical mass around 2003, around the time the City of Phoenix began efforts to place a major sports venue on top of an emerging, grassroots arts district for the third time.

I’ve been in the trenches in this urban evolution for over a decade. My hat is off to others who have been here even longer than that (Dana Johnson, Kim Moody, Beatrice Moore, Tony Zahn, Helen Hestenes, David Therrien and others). Many others have come and gone over the years.

There are multiple words for this struggle (and it is a struggle) we undertake everyday to maintain vitality and foster opportunities for cultural expression: revitalization, redevelopment, development, gentrification. The words chosen to describe this activity and change often betray the sentiments of the person using them. Revitalization has a far more positive connotation than gentrification. Gentrification tends to imply wealthy developers, investors and young urban professionals displacing working class families. Many of the artists living and working in downtown are low to moderate income. The myth of the starving artist is not always a myth.

Several years ago, Roosevelt Row was established as a 501(c)3 non-profit community to help foster the role of the arts in the revitalization of downtown Phoenix, to enhance economic development and job growth through the establishment of new small locally-owned independent businesses, to encourage affordable and mixed-income housing and to increase connectivity through pedestrian-friendly streets

Benefits to the City

In 2001, people were afraid to get out of their cars in this neighborhood after dark. When 20 people attended the first eye lounge opening on First Friday, January 4, 2002, we thought it was an overwhelming success. When 515 Arts was established later in 2002, it took many months before people would walk the unlit distance of one block from eye lounge and Modified Arts during evening opening receptions. There were active and on-going open air drug sales and prostitution (male transvestites, primarily). Assault and muggings were not uncommon. A serial murderer was active in the Garfield neighborhood and arson occurred regularly.

There was more than a fifty percent drop in reported crime along the Roosevelt Row corridor from 2002 to 2005 while crime increased overall 14 percent citywide in Phoenix. The actual reduction in crime was more significant due to the large number of unreported crimes.

The city also benefited from increased property tax (both due to property values increasing, and an increase in number of occupied properties), increased sales and privilege tax, and new development that was attracted to the area including the Artisan Village project at 7th Street and East Roosevelt.

According to a survey conducted by the Phoenix Office of Arts and Culture and Americans for the Arts in October 2006, the audience of roughly 20,000 people that attend the free monthly First Friday artwalk are educated and have disposable income. 67% of attendees have 4 or more years of college education and 23% have annual household incomes of $100,000 or more.

The Evans Churchill Community Association supports high-density mixed-use infill development while the Garfield and Roosevelt neighborhoods seek to preserve the historic single-family homes that characterize their communities.  While developing a plan for the Evans Churchill area, city staff recommended naming the neighborhood “North of Copper Square”.  I suggested the acronym for that name would end up being NoCops.  That helped persuade the city to accept the neighborhood’s preference to use the name based on the area’s two original historic subdivisions: Evans Addition and Churchill Addition.