Explore creative community transformation with teaching artist Jeff Mather as he shares stories of art, collaboration, and social change in education.
Jeff Mather's work as a teaching artist and public art digital storytelling alchemist underscores the vital role of art in fostering community resilience and engagement. The conversation with Bill Cleveland reveals how, despite the challenges posed by recent global events, Mather remains optimistic about the transformative potential of creative collaborations. By reflecting on his experiences in various educational and community settings, he illustrates how art can bridge divides, empower youth, and reinvigorate spaces that have been overlooked or abandoned. His dedication to involving students in the artistic process not only cultivates their creativity but also instills a sense of agency and responsibility for their environment.
The episode captures the essence of Mather's philosophy: art is not merely an aesthetic endeavor but a powerful tool for social change. Mather recounts the impactful project in West Baltimore, where he worked with local youth to design and install an environmental sculpture in a park that had long been neglected. This initiative not only beautified the area but also engaged the community in a dialogue about safety, ownership, and the importance of reclaiming shared spaces. Mather's insights into the dynamics of teaching and collaboration highlight the necessity of recognizing and valuing each participant's unique contributions, which ultimately enriches the artistic outcome.
Furthermore, the discussion delves into the challenges and rewards of community-based art practices, particularly in relation to trust-building and navigating complex social landscapes. Mather emphasizes the importance of entering communities with humility and a willingness to learn, rather than imposing external solutions. His experiences with Alternate Roots showcase the power of grassroots movements in advocating for social and economic justice through art. As the episode unfolds, it becomes evident that Mather's work embodies a vision of art as a communal endeavor—one that celebrates diversity, fosters connection, and cultivates a shared sense of purpose in navigating the challenges of our times.
00:18 The Turning Point: Reflections on Change and Future Challenges
00:35 Reflections on Creative Change Agents
13:59 Alternate ROOTS and Community Engagement
22:55 The Impact of Community Engagement in Public Art
31:14 Engaging with Community Through Art
40:03 The Impact of Art and Community
Jeff is a community-based public artist and teaching artist in Georgia, (and South Carolina and Massachusetts and Utah), for over 30 years. He is the STEAM artist-in-residence at Drew Charter School 45 days each semester/90 days each year and has presented on his partnership work there at national and international conferences. He was a delegate and presenter at the 1st International Teaching Artist Conference in Olso in 2012 and at the ITAC3 in Edinburgh and at ITAC6 in Oslo. He is an ITAC Innovator, leading Think Tank webinars. He has been on the Georgia Council for the Arts registry of visiting artists since 1992. He has a BA degree in Proxemics from Hobart College. He served as president of the Atlanta Partnership for Arts in Learning, an arts infusion non-profit that he helped to co-found in 2001. He toured a program for nine years with a choreographer - and also a storytelling program with a master storyteller. Jeff has facilitated Learning Exchanges for teaching artists for Alternate ROOTS and for the Community Built Association. Jeff is also the lead artist for the Beverley Taylor Sorenson Arts Access Program in northern Utah and runs interdisciplinary residencies there twice a year. He directed several experimental theater productions at the Center for Puppetry Arts and served as artist-in-residence for the Atlanta Symphony and the High Museum. He is best known for coaching large scale environmental sculpture projects. As a STEAM Artist-in-Residence he’s co-taught robotics, geometry, math, science, engineering, music, dance, and digital media.
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From the center for the Study of Art and Community, this is Change the Story, Change the World, a chronicle of art and community transformation.
Bill Cleveland:My name is Bill Cleveland now.
Bill Cleveland:I started working on this episode during the last week of October.
Bill Cleveland: ,: Bill Cleveland:At this point, I'm not going to dwell on what has occurred or what we need to do to weather the coming storm.
Bill Cleveland:What I am going to do is express my gratitude for the fortitude, grace and optimism that are the hallmark of the community of creative change agents represented in the stories we presented here over the past three years.
Bill Cleveland:Evoking these qualities, particularly optimism, at this moment may seem a bit out of place, but as I reflect back on the hundred plus Change the Stories stories here, I'm reminded that the hopefulness they exude is not a hollow wish or sentiment, but rather a material manifestation of purposeful hard work and intention that has produced real, positive change.
Bill Cleveland:I'm also reminded that the impetus for many of these transformational stories has been what many considered at the time a last straw, an end of the road defeat, or a catastrophic event.
Bill Cleveland:Given this, I also want to specifically thank this episode's guest, Jeff Mather, for being right here on this funky day on tape, at least in my studio with his healing stories for me to ponder and learn from.
Bill Cleveland:I hope you feel the same.
Bill Cleveland:As you'll hear, Jeff's eclectic background is typical for guests on this show.
Bill Cleveland:Put simply, he makes big things with lots of people that make it difference.
Bill Cleveland:More formally, you could describe him as a teaching artist, public art digital storytelling alchemist who works in schools and communities in Georgia and beyond.
Bill Cleveland:I should also mention another description of Jeff's work that you will come across in this episode is proxemics.
Bill Cleveland:But I'm going to go ahead and let Jeff define that for you.
Bill Cleveland:Part 1 Close enough for Comfort so why don't we begin by just your telling me and our audience where you are.
Bill Cleveland:Where are you hailing from?
Jeff Mather:I'm calling from the ancestral indigenous land of the Muscogee Creek, currently known as Decatur, Georgia.
Jeff Mather:Decatur, Georgia is a suburb of Atlanta.
Bill Cleveland:So what is your work in the world, Mr.
Bill Cleveland:Mather?
Jeff Mather:I'm a teaching artist.
Jeff Mather:I would say first and foremost I'm a community based public artist.
Jeff Mather:I'm an environmental sculptor and I work with communities all over Georgia and sometimes in Utah, directing collaborations and partnerships.
Bill Cleveland:So when you do the things you just described, what Are you doing well?
Jeff Mather:I saw your prompt bill for a street name or handle.
Bill Cleveland:Sure.
Jeff Mather:And so, with a nod to my friend and colleague Eric Booth, I might put Agent of Artistic Experiences or something like Arts Infusion Innovator as a broader handle.
Jeff Mather:Another twist on this handle would be Disruptive Innovator.
Jeff Mather:Disruptive Innovation in schools might be hard to spot when it is happening, but I'm again going to quote a line from Eric Booth when he said, as a guest on your podcast, he said, teaching artists are this quietly radical force that is actually subversive to compliance.
Jeff Mather:Our work is inherently subversive.
Bill Cleveland:So, Jeff, let's say I'm, I don't know, 12 years old, I'm in a class that you are visiting.
Bill Cleveland:Can you give me a picture of what's about to happen?
Jeff Mather:Yes.
Jeff Mather:Well, as a visiting artist, as a teaching artist, we have a lot of latitude to do things that maybe aren't what's expected.
Jeff Mather:For me, that might mean that even though I'm there as a visual artist and not a performing artist, I might pull out juggling clubs, which I use to emphasize muscle memory.
Jeff Mather:I feel like good design can get stuck in people's heads.
Jeff Mather:They think of it as a mental exercise.
Jeff Mather:But I've worked with dancers so often that I've learned from the dancers I collaborate with that we think with our bodies and that drawing is thinking with your body.
Jeff Mather:So to try to get a design team out of their heads and to just sometimes let their bodies lead, because if we're doing environmental art, bodies understand movement in space.
Bill Cleveland:So I was one of those kids, but I was a disruptor, a disruptor in a way that wasn't particularly healthy.
Bill Cleveland:I stumbled into the idea that you could take control of your life by learning how to make something yourself.
Bill Cleveland:Talk to me about a classroom full of kids, but they're all different, and they all come at it in a different way.
Bill Cleveland:And what you know about engaging different kinds of kids in an educational environment that often regards them as just a herd.
Jeff Mather:I'm in a classroom in a public school.
Jeff Mather:I'm very aware that sitting in front of me is a cross section of the people you would meet in the general public.
Jeff Mather:All the percentages that we're told exist.
Jeff Mather:Like, for me, 5 to 8% of males are color vision deficient.
Jeff Mather:And I am.
Jeff Mather:So I know that they're also sitting right there or, you know, oh, my, are you too.
Jeff Mather:So I do think a lot about some of the terms that teachers have shared with me over the many years, like multiple points of entry is a catchphrase.
Jeff Mather:But that means, you know, when I'm doing a process, we are headed towards making some giant sculpture outside or possibly even in the building, that there are students who might seem disengaged when we are in the design process.
Jeff Mather:And then when I break out the tools and it's time to fabricate the art, they turn out to be my rock stars.
Jeff Mather:And so then I go, oh, it's not that you're not into this project.
Jeff Mather:Just we have different strengths and you're stepping up when your strength is being activated.
Bill Cleveland:Just thinking about an artist coming to town, coming to my classroom and actually moving me, and we're going to do something, building a big, gigantic, physically engaging artwork that never existed before.
Bill Cleveland:And we get our fingerprints and our ideas manifest through it.
Bill Cleveland:That's thrilling.
Bill Cleveland:Could you talk about how it affects you?
Jeff Mather:Well, I noticed coming out of the lockdown period the first time I got back outside and made a big cloud of sawdust, prepping some materials for what was going to be the next sculpture to come along.
Jeff Mather:And I got real happy.
Jeff Mather:And it was like this moment of going, oh, making a big cloud of sawdust makes me very happy.
Jeff Mather:So I understand a lot of kids don't have access to tools.
Jeff Mather:I felt like there's a time when everybody had an uncle or a granddad or a dad or aunties too, who had a peg, a peg wall with all kinds of tools.
Jeff Mather:And it was just something that every household had.
Jeff Mather:And that's not as true anymore.
Jeff Mather:We're all so specialized that when I put a power tool in a young person's hand, sometimes they even tremble with excitement that they've never held a power tool before.
Bill Cleveland:Could you say what you think is happening with a human who is thinking, designing, and creating in a classroom or out on the field where you're building some giant thing?
Jeff Mather:Yeah, I can.
Jeff Mather:Because what I'm embedded in, especially in this school, that's my primary partner school here in Atlanta.
Jeff Mather:It's called Drew Charter School.
Jeff Mather:It's a public school, and we often talk about it as being a maker school.
Jeff Mather:And it has.
Jeff Mather:There's two maker spaces that are in the buildings.
Jeff Mather:By day, they are engineering design labs, but at night and on the weekends, they are community maker spaces.
Jeff Mather:There was a time when shop was present in a lot of schools, a lot of school systems.
Jeff Mather:And then I think it was a classist decision when it was thought, well, why are we training students for these blue collar jobs?
Jeff Mather:We should be training them for the future, which means computers.
Jeff Mather:And they ripped out Shop.
Jeff Mather:And they put in computer labs, which now largely don't exist because the students are all carrying their tech.
Jeff Mather:They don't need to have a lab, but shop is sneaking back in.
Jeff Mather:They just don't call it shop anymore.
Jeff Mather:They now call it Makerspace or Tinkerlab or these other kinds of things.
Jeff Mather:But there's multiple places at the school where I do a lot of partnership work, where we have Bandsaw, drill, press, all that stuff.
Jeff Mather:So students are having a chance to become familiar with tools.
Jeff Mather:And in one case, I was doing a partnership with a Spanish teacher, and we had the students pull all the furniture out of the Spanish room and then redesign the space from the floor to the ceiling as what they considered to be a nurturing learning environment.
Jeff Mather:And so that meant they got to make all their own furniture, which they could do because the school has the stuff.
Bill Cleveland:Wow.
Bill Cleveland:That's incredible.
Bill Cleveland:So, Jeff, were you one of those kids?
Bill Cleveland:How did you end up being what you have become?
Jeff Mather:I spent a lot of time growing up, from third grade on, in a town near New York City called Wilton, Connecticut.
Jeff Mather:And Wilton was a very affluent town.
Jeff Mather:But we weren't affluent.
Jeff Mather:The reason that my family lived there is that my dad was clergy.
Jeff Mather:My dad was a minister, and they gave us a parsonage so we could live in this affluent town.
Jeff Mather:And there were a lot of artists there, artists who had work in New York City and Broadway and television and opera.
Jeff Mather:So I've been reckoning with the legacy of white privilege that I was raised in, especially as someone who moved south to Georgia 40 years ago, and how that upbringing in Connecticut contributed to my making this choice to be an artist and making it an easy one.
Jeff Mather:My parents played Broadway musical soundtracks and folk music albums all the time.
Jeff Mather:My mother did community theater, and the public schools in Wilton were rich in arts education.
Jeff Mather:My public high school, which was not a very big one, had five art teachers, each with their own room.
Bill Cleveland:Wow.
Jeff Mather:Of those five, the guy who taught sculpture, guy, wonderful educator named Ed Mack, he got me making large scale welded steel sculpture.
Jeff Mather:He didn't even teach clay or ceramics.
Jeff Mather:That was a different teacher in a different studio who only taught clay.
Jeff Mather:Of course, when you're a kid, you don't know that all high schools aren't like the one you go to.
Jeff Mather:Yeah, but most of my Wilton friends played music or created experimental short films.
Jeff Mather:Some high school kids might be into sports or cars or other things, but we were always making art of one kind or another.
Jeff Mather:And we felt free to blur the definitions of art disciplines, to create hybrid forms no, always.
Jeff Mather:No one told us we couldn't.
Jeff Mather:And then later in life, I've heard artist friends speak of how they had to run a gauntlet of disapproval when they chose to be art majors or to live as artists.
Jeff Mather:Disapproval from family, from friends, too.
Jeff Mather:Like that.
Jeff Mather:The line, what's your backup plan?
Jeff Mather:But choosing to go into the arts was a completely normal thing to do in Wilton.
Jeff Mather:And my parents never second guessed my choices.
Jeff Mather:They supported and encouraged me at every step.
Bill Cleveland:Aren't you a lucky guy?
Bill Cleveland:That's really wonderful.
Bill Cleveland:At some point, moving from a kid excited and interested and living in a rich cultural environment, you decided that it was going to be your life path.
Bill Cleveland:Is that a turning point or that just happened naturally?
Jeff Mather:Yeah.
Jeff Mather:So I went from Connecticut, from growing up in the Connecticut shore.
Jeff Mather:I went to a liberal arts college in the Finger Lakes in upstate New York called Hobart and William Smith.
Jeff Mather:And you were able at that school to design your own major.
Jeff Mather:And even though I was making a lot of art, filmmaking and sculpture, I was not an art major.
Jeff Mather:I was a proxemics major.
Jeff Mather:That's a branch of anthropology that studies how our perceptions of space and our use of space is culturally determined.
Jeff Mather:And this is a bit of academic jargon, of course, but it was an ideal major for a future public artist.
Jeff Mather:And it led to my moving to New York City and working for two conceptual artists from France, a married duo, Anne and Patrick Poirier.
Jeff Mather:Their work was focused on creating imaginary ruins, sometimes enormous, sometimes in miniature.
Jeff Mather:And this brush with the art commodity system was fun at first.
Jeff Mather:Even though Anne and Patrick were represented by a major soho gallery, the Sonoben Gallery, most of what they made was not for sale.
Jeff Mather:I jumped into the art commodity system with both feet when I moved to Atlanta in the 80s and briefly worked as an art consultant.
Jeff Mather:And that was not a good fit for me.
Jeff Mather:And when I met a bunch of grassroots artists who were making large group exhibits happen in empty industrial buildings in Atlanta and thumbing their noses at the gallery scene, that had a lot of appeal for me.
Jeff Mather:My pendulum swung from the art commodity system to the art making community.
Jeff Mather:And the camaraderie amongst artists from many disciplines in Atlanta was strong then.
Jeff Mather:As musicians, painters, sculptors, performance artists, dancers, we found it easy to work together and be influenced by each other.
Bill Cleveland:Part 2 Roots now there's a significant distance between the commodified art world and the one in which it appears you're most comfortable.
Bill Cleveland:That is, as a teaching artist and as a change maker, a person who contributes to an educational community or a neighborhood or institutions in the community.
Bill Cleveland:You talk a lot about partners, some of whom are artists, some of whom aren't artists.
Jeff Mather:Yes.
Bill Cleveland:How did that bridge get built?
Jeff Mather:Well, you know, at first I didn't know that being a teaching artist is a whole professional field that exists with international conferences and journals and many books on being a teaching artist.
Jeff Mather:But my girlfriend back in the 80s, she was a photo and video artist, and she was running an extended teaching artist residency for the Georgia Council for the Arts in Middle Georgia.
Jeff Mather:And when I visited her, I became interested in this way of working and being part of a community.
Jeff Mather:And I realized that I really love working with youth and multigenerational community groups.
Jeff Mather:And I found that collaborating with educators felt natural to me.
Jeff Mather:I met and married my wife, Amy, who was a fourth grade teacher during one of these Georgia Council for the Arts residencies at her school.
Jeff Mather:And that became the best collaboration of my life.
Jeff Mather:But around that time, I got swept up in the community based Art for Social justice organization in the Southeast.
Jeff Mather:Alternate Roots.
Jeff Mather:ROOTS radicalized how I saw my role as an artist and community.
Bill Cleveland:Here's how Roots describes itself.
Alternate Roots:Alternate Roots is an organization based in the Southern USA whose mission is to support the creation and presentation of original art in all its forms, which is rooted in a particular community of place, tradition, or spirit.
Alternate Roots:As a coalition of cultural workers, we strive to be allies in the elimination of all forms of oppression.
Alternate Roots:ROOTS is committed to social and economic justice and the protection of the natural world and addresses these concerns through its programs and services.
Jeff Mather:And ROOTS also partially funded several of my public art projects and residencies.
Jeff Mather:I know that several key figures in the history of Alternate Roots have been guests of yours on this podcast in the past.
Jeff Mather:Alice Lovelace, Bob Leonard, Normando, Ismay Carlton Turner, Elise Witt, Liz Lerman and others.
Jeff Mather:So those folks have all had a big influence on me being part of roots.
Jeff Mather:At one point, I became a facilitator for the rsc, which is Alphabet soup at Roots for Resources for Social Change.
Jeff Mather:And the RSC was a subset of Roots artists who honed principles of community engagement and honed the language describing these principles and declared themselves available to work in partnership with communities in the Southeast as a team.
Jeff Mather:Of course, it's not ethical to push into a community and tell them, oh, you need us, you need artists to come heal your problems, and we just happen to be the ones who can do that.
Jeff Mather:So we needed to wait to be invited into a community.
Jeff Mather:But then it was like, how would anyone know to invite us?
Jeff Mather:It felt for a time like we were spinning our wheels, all dressed up with no place to go and twiddling our thumbs and whistling.
Jeff Mather:Sure wish someone would invite us to come do what we've been getting our act together to do.
Jeff Mather:And then some folks in West Baltimore did just that.
Jeff Mather:Ashley Milburn and Denise Johnson from Culture Works in West Baltimore explicitly said, roots, please come work with us in West Baltimore.
Bill Cleveland:Yeah.
Bill Cleveland:And that Baltimore project has had ripples way beyond just the neighborhood there in Baltimore for so many people that I've talked to that have been involved in Roots and the folks in Baltimore as well.
Bill Cleveland:Do you want to describe that?
Jeff Mather:Yeah.
Jeff Mather:Alternate Roots had funded several of my public art projects through its CAP program.
Jeff Mather:More Alphabet Soup.
Jeff Mather:That's the Community Artist Partnership program in the 90s and in the oughties.
Jeff Mather:I had coach projects in Atlanta public housing and at the Atlanta Area School for the Deaf.
Jeff Mather:And I directed a stage project in rural Georgia about accessibility for wheelchair users, but also social fabric accessibility.
Jeff Mather:But when Ashley Milburn at Culture Works in West Baltimore kidnapped me from the Baltimore Convention center where I was presenting a workshop on multi teaching artist co residencies at a NAEA convention, that's National Art Education association.
Jeff Mather:And Ashley literally just like came swung by and said, get in the car.
Jeff Mather:And he started driving me around West Fault and showing me the environmental degradation that this community was up against.
Jeff Mather:And he asked me to run a public art project there with a Roots CAP grant support.
Jeff Mather:And I was not at all sure that this was a good idea for me.
Jeff Mather:Ashley took me to a pocket park that was situated between blocks of mostly bombed out row houses.
Jeff Mather:I mean, block after block in this area there was more plywood than glass.
Jeff Mather:And the windows in these buildings and this block we walked through the middle, it was the lowest area in elevation, so it was the natural watershed.
Jeff Mather:When the traffic noise quiets down for a minute, he asks me to listen to see if I can hear anything.
Jeff Mather:And I can hear a stream flowing, but it's way underground beneath this park as the water heads towards the harbor.
Jeff Mather:So even though you can't see any sign of the stream, he told me that people around the neighborhood referred to this as Hidden Stream Park.
Jeff Mather:And he also told me it was a very rough place and that crack dealers had chased off neighborhood children long ago.
Jeff Mather:What counted as playground equipment was what was left of some large crumbling sewer pipes.
Jeff Mather:Like, there you go, kids.
Jeff Mather:Honestly, it didn't feel like I should say yes to this invitation.
Jeff Mather:I had no idea that this section of Baltimore was this devastated.
Jeff Mather:But I put it to myself.
Jeff Mather:You've Been cross training with other alternate roots artists for over a decade.
Jeff Mather:It is time to walk the talk.
Jeff Mather:Regardless of how uncertain you may be, no matter how uncomfortable you may be as a white man in this black environment, I was also concerned about not being one of those public artists who do what is sometimes referred to as parachuting in, like acting out of some sort of savior complex.
Jeff Mather:But I did say yes to Ashley.
Jeff Mather:I knew that any true collaboration requires forming relationships with people in this community, and that means building trust.
Jeff Mather:Trust can never be assumed, and doing this takes time.
Jeff Mather:Even when I've been commissioned by public art programs to direct public art projects that didn't involve a school, I've gone to schools to connect with local families because schools are hubs of connecting community.
Jeff Mather:So that's what I did in West Baltimore.
Jeff Mather:I walked in the doors of two schools that were within walking distance of Hidden Stream park, and I asked if I could form student design teams to create a new public art project in the park.
Jeff Mather:And the leadership at both schools welcomed me and allowed me to have students walk to the park so they could see for themselves how they might reclaim the space by making an environmental sculpture.
Jeff Mather:At first, they pounded dozens of large wooden garden stakes into the ground that they had painted with patterns.
Jeff Mather:We thought of this as a way of taking the temperature of the space.
Jeff Mather:It was a test, like, how long would these painted stakes remain in place?
Jeff Mather:And it turned out they remained.
Jeff Mather:I often dedicate public art projects without a title.
Jeff Mather:I think people should live with a sculpture for a while before they decide what to name it.
Jeff Mather:But in this case, we started with the title, with the prompt, what would a sculpture called Hidden Stream look like?
Jeff Mather:And of course, the proposal sketches I was getting were full of watery shapes, Swirling, spiraling, splashing, flowing forms.
Jeff Mather:And so we made a synthesis of these kinds of sketches and created a plan, a working drawing, and fabricated from those drawings.
Jeff Mather:Ashley Milburn had asked me if I would mentor a young street artist sculptor in West Baltimore named Kenny Clemens.
Jeff Mather:He told me that Kenny was a kid magnet and that that was it.
Jeff Mather:I mean, that persuaded me to hire Kenny to be my assistant director.
Jeff Mather:And it's great because Kenny went on a decade later to get his master's in the community arts program at MICA at the Maryland Institute in college.
Bill Cleveland:Oh, yeah.
Bill Cleveland:This is so critical because naturally, the most impactful programs are driven by the folks who've had the most stake in the continuation of the work and the relationships they produce.
Bill Cleveland:Not just the project or event, but the continuing presence and availability of arts Based community development as a permanent community asset.
Bill Cleveland:So Kenny's participation, I'm thinking, planted the seed and increases the potential that he'll pick up the baton and carry on.
Bill Cleveland:It's also worth, I think, mentioning that the Maryland Institute College of Art pioneered the hands on training of art students working on long term arts based community development projects, not just as a community, but as professional development for its students.
Jeff Mather:Yeah.
Jeff Mather:So anyway, this sculpture was dedicated during a Roots fest, a cultural festival that was produced by Alternate Roots that activated Hidden Stream park, but also the surrounding area.
Bill Cleveland: ots Fest in West Baltimore in: Bill Cleveland:The festival was a culmination of more than three years of grassroots organizing and arts initiatives like Hidden Stream park that not only celebrated the vitality of local culture, but also drew attention to a massive urban renewal disaster in the form of an abandoned multimillion dollar expressway project in West Baltimore that ended up displacing 19,000 African American community members.
Bill Cleveland:The festival was just one part of an ongoing community cultural development story that is documented in an online collection of essays and videos, Something to behold in West Baltimore that is referenced in our show notes.
Bill Cleveland:Here's an excerpt from that post festival performance and dialogue organized to explore lessons learned and plot next steps.
Bill Cleveland:Named the 1.4-mile expressway, the highway I.
Jeff Mather:Had organized before around crime, sanitation, infant mortality, you name it.
Jeff Mather:To organize around something that the community could create now that was fresh and new.
Jeff Mather:And we transformed this dead end highway into a beautiful piece of art.
Jeff Mather:When place matters, people matter.
Bill Cleveland:And when people matter, place matters, Culture.
Jeff Mather:Works was building a highway to somewhere.
Jeff Mather:Okay, so a year later, I'm driving up the east coast on the interstate from Atlanta to New Hampshire for the summer with my wife and my two daughters.
Jeff Mather:And I swung by Hidden Stream park to show them why I had been away from home.
Jeff Mather:And when we pulled up to the park, there were children playing in the park.
Jeff Mather:And the only children that I had ever seen in the park before this were the children that I had brought there with me.
Bill Cleveland:So a beginning, a middle, and an end.
Bill Cleveland:And so what do you think happened?
Bill Cleveland:You involved a number of people in a design process.
Bill Cleveland:You manifested a piece of art, at least at that point, when you revisited, you had changed the story of that space.
Bill Cleveland:What do you think happened?
Bill Cleveland:How?
Bill Cleveland:Why did that happen?
Jeff Mather:Well, I was told that children didn't feel safe going to this park.
Jeff Mather:But I also think that children have power that often goes unrecognized, that they can claim space they can shift the story.
Jeff Mather:They can say, no, we need a place to run around and play.
Jeff Mather:And what's with these crumbling sewer pipes?
Jeff Mather:That doesn't cut it, folks.
Jeff Mather:And so sometimes working with children is a big plus that could do things that maybe adults can't quite get away with or be heard the same way.
Jeff Mather:Yeah.
Jeff Mather:But I will say, Bill, there's kind of a story I like to tell because it had this outcome.
Jeff Mather:But that's not to say that there weren't setbacks and wrinkles along the way, because in public art, there always are.
Bill Cleveland:Yeah.
Jeff Mather:For instance, the ground in the middle of Hidden Stream park was so hard packed that when we tried to dig footings by hand, it just.
Jeff Mather:It wasn't going to happen.
Jeff Mather:At this point, Roots executive director Carlton Turner jumped in and he said, jump in my truck.
Jeff Mather:And we drove to a tool rental place and we rented a big gas powered post hole auger machine.
Jeff Mather:And then Carlton helped me run this machine until we got the footing stuck.
Jeff Mather:And I'm thinking, how many executive directors of arts organizations would roll up their sleeves and get down in the dirt like that?
Bill Cleveland:Yeah.
Jeff Mather:We also had offers of donated materials that were unexpectedly rescinded.
Jeff Mather:And that meant that what was supposed to be artist fee in our budget had to go to purchasing materials.
Jeff Mather:So the ground shifts beneath your feet.
Bill Cleveland:Yeah, it does.
Bill Cleveland:And I use the word story very specifically because, of course, there are no stories that are set in concrete.
Bill Cleveland:Like the footings.
Bill Cleveland:They're shifting, changing constantly.
Bill Cleveland:And part of the work that you do is meeting the story that you and your team of kids are manifesting with the story that exists in that space.
Bill Cleveland:And it's inevitably going to be, as you said at the beginning, disruptive in good ways and sometimes in bad.
Bill Cleveland:Did you meet resistance from the previous lords of that space?
Jeff Mather:No.
Jeff Mather:I'm grateful.
Jeff Mather:Thankful to say everyone I encountered around Hidden Stream and around that neighborhood were nothing but thrilled that changes were happening.
Jeff Mather:I think I said that the row houses were mostly bombed out.
Jeff Mather:I mean, really just gutted.
Jeff Mather:There was one young guy who worked in Washington, D.C.
Jeff Mather:and commuted every day up to Baltimore, and he had claimed one of these.
Jeff Mather:And when he.
Jeff Mather:When he saw us out in his backyard, he said, run your extension cords to my outlets.
Jeff Mather:You can have my power.
Jeff Mather:So angels appear.
Bill Cleveland:Yeah.
Bill Cleveland:Well, it's interesting.
Bill Cleveland:I'm sure you're familiar with an incredible angel named Lily.
Bill Cleveland:Yay.
Bill Cleveland:And so Lily had a very similar kind of experience in the Germantown neighborhood of Philadelphia.
Bill Cleveland:And she was the consummate outsider who came to the community with an incredible sense of purpose and a prodigious talent for stimulating creative community.
Bill Cleveland:But she was met by a whole host of angels as translators, as ambassadors, as protectors, and, of course, as creative collaborators who pitched in and eventually picked up the reins and assumed ownership of what became the legendary Village of Arts and Humanities.
Bill Cleveland:It's an incredible story, but she was always aware that some folks were going to think of her as a missionary.
Bill Cleveland:And this kind of resentment, I think, is always a possibility, as is the potential for outsiders to imagine themselves, as you mentioned, as potential saviors.
Bill Cleveland:Somebody coming in to do good in a place that is struggling.
Bill Cleveland:So what I want to ask you is what it is you have to have in your heart in order to be a person that people come to trust in that circumstance.
Bill Cleveland:Because it's not a given, Right?
Jeff Mather:Right.
Jeff Mather:Well, it's a hard thing to say about yourself, Bill.
Jeff Mather:I've been told that people read my body language, even, and say, yeah, you move like someone who's collaborative.
Jeff Mather:I don't know what that means.
Jeff Mather:I'm not trying to move in any particular kind of way.
Jeff Mather:But, yeah, I mean, I think that people's understanding of anyone as a visitor, they're picking up on all kinds of cues.
Jeff Mather:How you speak, how you don't assume that they understand your Alphabet soup.
Jeff Mather:So, yeah, I mean, I will say that entering community, there's all kinds of negotiations.
Jeff Mather:And sometimes the trust you earn is incremental, it's slow, it's stubbornly given, but you keep showing up, and that means something.
Bill Cleveland:Part three stories, digital and otherwise.
Bill Cleveland:I think there's all different kinds of people that come to art making.
Bill Cleveland:Some people are really attracted to the idea of locking yourself up in a space and just using their imagination to manifest without being bothered by anybody else.
Bill Cleveland:And there are others who can't feel complete if the fingerprints of the surrounding culture, you know, the people and their stories, are not present in the work.
Bill Cleveland:You know, monologues are often very boring, and collaborative work can be powerful and synergistic and gives off a lot of heat.
Bill Cleveland:So my experience is talking and working with people like you is that you're attracted to that heat, and it doesn't feel right if the heat is not manifest.
Bill Cleveland:It's just part of the deal.
Bill Cleveland:It's something that you want to engage.
Bill Cleveland:Does that make sense?
Jeff Mather:Absolutely.
Jeff Mather:There are different definitions when you say an artist's residency.
Jeff Mather:For me, a residency is engagement with community.
Bill Cleveland:So the other thing I would say about the way you work is that you dance with the materialized imagination.
Bill Cleveland:I mean, A writer's work.
Bill Cleveland:I mean, when I'm writing, I'm scribbling on a page or typewriting, you know, it's mostly in my head.
Bill Cleveland:Music and theater, when they're live, are temporal.
Bill Cleveland:They come and go.
Bill Cleveland:I know you do that too.
Bill Cleveland:But when you work with stuff, with materials that often have to be manipulated physically and then, so to speak, left to their own devices, and my experience, particularly with people I don't know who is that.
Bill Cleveland:If I work with them doing a physical thing and we get into physical partnership things like, you push, I pull.
Bill Cleveland:Let's pick this up together.
Bill Cleveland:I'll go get this, I'll come back.
Bill Cleveland:You do this, I'll do that.
Bill Cleveland:That is a visceral, primal language of trust making.
Jeff Mather:Yes.
Bill Cleveland:Which is.
Bill Cleveland:Well, we had a hole to dig and we dug it together.
Bill Cleveland:We both sweated, we both got dirty, we both cursed at the rocks.
Bill Cleveland:But, you know, I don't know what party this guy's in.
Bill Cleveland:All I know is that we finished the hole.
Bill Cleveland:Yeah.
Bill Cleveland:And then we had a beer afterwards.
Bill Cleveland:One of the many things that you described in your email to me was this project you did with Tom Dunn, who was a public defender and then a teacher and not an artist.
Bill Cleveland:And actually maybe now, after his interaction with you.
Bill Cleveland:Could you talk about that?
Bill Cleveland:Because it seems pretty extraordinary to me this cross sector work you did.
Jeff Mather:Right.
Jeff Mather:So at an alternate roots gathering one summer, Joe Lambert from Berkeley, who I believe is the guy who coined the term digital storytelling, he brought about five trainers and they trained a dozen of us alternate roots artists in digital storytelling.
Jeff Mather:Little did I know that would become part of my professional practice for several years.
Jeff Mather:It's less so right now, but.
Jeff Mather:So I was doing a partnership ongoing over the years with the South Atlanta School of Law and Social justice, which was a public high school model.
Jeff Mather:They have now sadly done away with that model.
Jeff Mather:But it went on for several years, and it was a primary partner for a group of us teaching artists.
Jeff Mather:And my partnerships were in digital storytelling and then working with different teachers.
Jeff Mather:I ended up working the last few years with this gentleman named Tom Dunn, who had been a public defender for 30 years before he decided to become a high school teacher.
Jeff Mather:He was trying to keep young African American men from becoming embroiled in the justice system to begin with.
Jeff Mather:So he was teaching justice and he was my partner for a residency when I had a small extra grant that allowed me to bring in other artists, and I brought in other alternate roots artists one at a time to show how digital storytelling doesn't have to Be a standalone art form that it could involve movement and dance, it could involve theater.
Jeff Mather:Know how?
Jeff Mather:It could involve music that they create, not just download a, you know, something for a soundtrack.
Jeff Mather:So just to give you one quick example, I brought in Paula Lark, Mama Paula, as she's called it, alternate roots, who is a drummer and a bass player and a storyteller and a remarkable performer.
Jeff Mather:So she came into this classroom and she plugged in an amp and a very long cord on her bass that allowed her to walk all the way down, up and down the length of the classroom.
Jeff Mather:And she just started to wander through the classroom and play a really slinky bass groove.
Jeff Mather:And the students were preparing their narratives that they would then record their voices telling their stories.
Jeff Mather:The prompt being, tell a story only you can tell.
Jeff Mather:And sometimes there's additional prompts, but it begins there.
Jeff Mather:And she's asking them as she's playing bass, show me what you're working on.
Jeff Mather:Show me your first paragraph.
Jeff Mather:And they're being very reticent.
Jeff Mather:They're being very shy.
Jeff Mather:No, not gonna.
Jeff Mather:So she finally persuaded one young man to turn his notebook around so it was facing her.
Jeff Mather:And she zeroed in on certain phrases in his opening sentences and started to work with those phrases with her baseline.
Jeff Mather:And he lit up.
Jeff Mather:And as soon as she had like done his phrases, now everybody in the class is turning their notebooks to face her and saying, me next.
Jeff Mather:And so when she left that day, Tom Dunn, the teacher, said to me, I have never worked with artists before, but you guys are getting through to kids in this building that nobody else gets through to.
Jeff Mather:How can I keep working with artists?
Jeff Mather:And I said, we're going to figure that out.
Jeff Mather:So the following year, we did an art for social justice program that ran on two of his classes year long that was built on five back to back visiting artist residencies.
Jeff Mather:So there was a photography residency, and then there was a music residency, and then there was a theater residency, and there was a dance residency.
Jeff Mather:And then I batted cleanup in the spring with a digital storytelling residency where they could take their portfolios from working with all these other artists and combine them into a culminating work as a digital storytelling project.
Bill Cleveland:Well, I have to tell you, I want to sign up.
Bill Cleveland:I want to be a part of that class.
Bill Cleveland:I could see exactly where you took them.
Bill Cleveland:So as you probably are aware, Joe was a guest here.
Bill Cleveland:Yes, and I had the privilege of getting trained as well.
Bill Cleveland:And I think it's one of the wonderful things that a teaching artist often does is take something that seems foreign and inaccessible, complicated, hard to understand, and cuts to the chase and connects it to the thing that everybody has, which is an imagination.
Bill Cleveland:And particularly for young people, gives them permission to make something profound with a little support and some structure in ways that, as I'm sure happened in your digital storytelling class.
Bill Cleveland:Kids just take off and I'm wondering, what is it that you think you're tapping into when that happens?
Jeff Mather:Well, it is amazing.
Jeff Mather:That simple prompt.
Jeff Mather:Tell a story only you can tell.
Jeff Mather:And these stories are largely 2 minutes, 3 minutes, and you think, well, how much can you really get down to in that short of a time?
Jeff Mather:It is amazing how poignant these short pieces can be.
Jeff Mather:I have coached digital storytelling where I'm asking Mr.
Jeff Mather:Mather, would you please read my narrative before I record it?
Jeff Mather:Just see if there's anything that's confusing about it.
Jeff Mather:You honor their.
Jeff Mather:The way they speak.
Jeff Mather:You don't change something grammatically because it looks wrong, because that's the way they talk.
Jeff Mather:You're not trying to mess with that.
Jeff Mather:But I'm reading this young woman's script one time and I just have to stop and say, let's talk about the difference between making art and doing art therapy.
Jeff Mather:And she looks at me all wide eyed like, what do you mean, Mr.
Jeff Mather:Mather?
Jeff Mather:I'm like, well, I just want to be clear that when you make art, you might be making it for a general audience and you don't necessarily control who's going to come sit in the screening room and watch your piece.
Jeff Mather:But if you're doing art therapy, you might be making something that is really just to show your therapist or maybe a family member, that's a different thing.
Bill Cleveland:So I'm assuming that she felt unconstrained to the degree that maybe she crossed that line.
Bill Cleveland:And you gave her an opportunity to consider that before she shared it with the world.
Jeff Mather:So, yeah, I mean, it's amazing how deep, how quick some people go when allowed to With Digital Storytelling.
Bill Cleveland:Part 4, what's Sparking so, Jeff, what's happening these days that's really exciting?
Bill Cleveland:You?
Jeff Mather:One is a project that I'm developing that addresses the climate crisis on the Georgia seacoast.
Jeff Mather:So I was visiting the only school on Tybee island on the Georgia Sea coast.
Jeff Mather:It was a STEAM research trip that I was part of right before COVID lockdown happened.
Jeff Mather:And talking with some of the teachers there, I heard them say that there are days when they can't go to work.
Jeff Mather:They can't get to work because the only road to the bridge onto the island is underwater or days when they can't get home after work because the only road to the only bridge is underwater.
Jeff Mather:They told me that millions of dollars have been spent on raising the road bed recently.
Jeff Mather:And yet there are still days when the road is underwater at times.
Jeff Mather:The next day.
Jeff Mather:After I was at this school, I met some professors at the Savannah campus of Georgia Tech who are strapping tiny microcomputers onto piers and docks up and down the seacoast to monitor sea level rise.
Jeff Mather:I received a small planning grant from itac, the International Teaching Artist Collaborative.
Jeff Mather:Just a bit of seed money to return to Tybee island and begin developing a STEAM partnership.
Jeff Mather:And by steam, I mean a school that is science, technology, engineering, art, and math.
Jeff Mather:And this partnership would result in potentially a floating sculpture based on the architecture of navigational buoys that would also display innovative data visualization about sea level rise.
Jeff Mather:The Georgia Tech people will train the students at the public school to program the microcomputers, but more importantly, to learn how to gather the data and experiment with new forms of data visualization.
Jeff Mather:And because the sculpture is a floating sculpture, it can be seen all the way around the island or shared all the way around the island.
Jeff Mather:So now I'm on the hunt for a big art and science grant that will enable me to actually go down there long enough to coach this as a community partnership.
Bill Cleveland:And you've mentioned Utah as one of the places you have an ongoing teaching artist relationship.
Bill Cleveland:That environment is so different from your southern home base.
Bill Cleveland:What's going on there?
Jeff Mather:Yeah.
Jeff Mather:And it's interesting to hear you talk around.
Jeff Mather:What are these qualities that do elicit trust out in Utah with a textile artist?
Jeff Mather:We have done seven co residencies which we, sort of, tongue in cheek, refer to these as skin and bones.
Jeff Mather:Because she works with the community and develops the textiles.
Jeff Mather:My team does the structures, the bones, and then we suspend these textiles in the negative spaces of these bones that are giant suspended sculptures.
Jeff Mather:And her name is Marquetta Johnson.
Jeff Mather:And Marquetta is an African American elder.
Jeff Mather:And she's paraplegic.
Jeff Mather:She's a wheelchair user.
Jeff Mather:Gun violence.
Jeff Mather:She got a bullet in her spine.
Jeff Mather:I'm gonna drive by shooting.
Jeff Mather:A few years after that, her firstborn son was killed when someone stole his car.
Jeff Mather:So her family life has been impacted, you know, twice.
Jeff Mather:So unfair.
Jeff Mather:By gun violence.
Jeff Mather:If she was a bitter person, you wouldn't blame her.
Jeff Mather:But she is the least bitter person.
Jeff Mather:When I have gone into multiple settings with her.
Jeff Mather:I've never seen anyone win over a room full of people faster than Marquetta.
Jeff Mather:She has this radiance, this magnetic personality, and people just cotton to her, like, so quick.
Bill Cleveland:Here's Marquetta talking about her life as an artist from a documentary on her produced by the High Museum in Atlanta.
Marquetta Johnson:My name is Marquetta Johnson, and I define my practice as artists.
Marquetta Johnson:I'm sharing through lines, shapes and colors and textures and forms.
Marquetta Johnson:I've taken on the career of being a teaching artist, giving my students the opportunity to be able to learn and experience the joy of what I do.
Marquetta Johnson:I learned to quilt from my grandmother.
Marquetta Johnson:My grandmother was an avid quilter.
Marquetta Johnson:And I think my influences, my early influences, from my mother and my father, my grandmother, my teacher, contributed to me wanting to share in a meaningful way in my community because I believe that art is not only healing, but that art is uplifting.
Marquetta Johnson:And this is what art has done for me.
Marquetta Johnson:I wasn't born in a wheelchair.
Marquetta Johnson:I needed a way to channel my creativity in such a way that was meaningful to me and meaningful to my community.
Jeff Mather:And then sometimes she has flown back to Atlanta while I stay an extra week and, you know, finish up things.
Jeff Mather:And when I show up to a school where it was both of us and now it's just me, they say, well, but, but, but where's Marquetta and I, oh, she had to go back to Atlanta, and they start to cry, and I'm like, well, I think you guys like me, but I don't think anybody's going to cry when I go home.
Bill Cleveland:Oh, Jeff, I'm sure there'll be a few tears shed.
Bill Cleveland:So before we sign off, do you have a few books to recommend to the audience?
Jeff Mather:There's a book called Teaching Artists Companion by Daniel Levy, and that would be one especially for people that are like, what is this teaching artist field?
Jeff Mather:And what does it take to do?
Jeff Mather:I have the stuff to do it.
Jeff Mather:A really great introduction to the field, and most recently I've got it as an audiobook is Music and Mind by Renee Fleming and other writers.
Jeff Mather:But she wrote the opening chapter, and it's a stunner.
Jeff Mather:I was just wowed by what Renee Fleming had to say in the opening of Music In Mind.
Bill Cleveland:Thanks, Jeff, for those suggestions and all those great stories.
Bill Cleveland:And I think some people imagine that 2 and 3D art making do not translate that well in the community arts realm.
Bill Cleveland:But it's so obvious from the imaginative breadth of your projects and the variety of communities you've partnered with that the opposite is true.
Bill Cleveland:So, again, thank you so much for giving us a glimpse of your creative ecosystem.
Jeff Mather:Yes.
Bill Cleveland:And to you folks out there.
Bill Cleveland:Thanks for listening and thanks for passing this on.
Bill Cleveland:If you are so inspired, please also be aware that links to the resources mentioned in this episode are available in our show notes and as always, you can refer to the transcript of this episode for a double dose of our conversation.
Bill Cleveland:Also, if you have some comments, questions or ideas about people you think we should be talking to, drop us a line at CSAC.
Bill Cleveland:Artandcommunity.com Art and community is all one word and all spelled out.
Bill Cleveland:Change the Story, Change the World is a production of the center for for the Study of Art and Community.
Bill Cleveland:Our theme and soundscape spring forth from the head, heart and hands of the Maestro Judy Munson.
Bill Cleveland:Our text editing is by Andre Nebbe, our effects come from freesound.org and our inspiration comes from the ever present spirit of UK235.
Bill Cleveland:So until next time, stay well, do good and spread the good word.