Posts tagged SCSU
2021 SCSU Women & Gender Studies Conference

Pursuing Peace & Justice through Design 

Women’s & Gender Studies Conference

Southern Connecticut State University

Saturday, April 24, 2021 10-11:15 am

In the spirit and style of Pecha Kucha, design practitioners, participants of the panel, all researchers and educators of design, present individual research that focuses on pursuing peace and justice through design practice and pedagogy. Each panelist will present their research across a maximum of 20-slides in under 7-minutes, with discussion to follow. For reference: https://www.pechakucha.com/

Speakers

Alex Girard, Southern Connecticut State University, Assistant Professor & Coordinator of Graphic Design

Kelly Walters, Parsons School of Design, The New School, Assistant Professor of Communication Design

Peggy Bloomer, Quinnipiac University, Adjunct Professor, Graphic Design

Jeanne Criscola, Central Connecticut State University, Associate Professor

Lorrie Gardella, Moderater

In Grace We Trust : Homage to Home

Pursuing Peace & Justice through Design 

Women’s & Gender Studies Conference

Southern Connecticut State University

April 24, 2021 

 

Good morning everyone. I want to start by thanking Alex for putting together our panel.

My presentation covers research I’ve been pursuing since 2015. It began with an urgent campaign to save a New Haven art center where I had been a curator 30 years before. And that fall, I started a design commission for the Ethnic Heritage Center’s Walk New Haven Cultural Heritage Project. And somehow simultaneously, I started a full-time teaching position.

The design project entailed creating a print and web campaign for a few neighborhood tours. The Lower Dixwell content was where I learned about Hannah Gray, a woman who had left her home for the public good. Her philanthropy modeled that of Grace Taylor Ely, the woman whose home I was leading a campaign to save. I found myself thinking about how these women’s gifts had changed New Haven.

Hannah was an African American who worked as a seamstress and laundress in the 1800s. She was involved in the abolitionist movement and supported the A.M.E. Zion Church with her modest income. Upon her death March 15, 1861, she bequeathed her home to be used as a safe haven for black women who needed shelter and care. While her will did not provide funding to support her testamentary wish, her generous spirit has inspired others to continue its mission to this day. The Home operated at 172 Dixwell Avenue into the early 1900s. It began to struggle financially in 1904 when members of New Haven’s Twentieth Century Women’s Club stepped in. The Club was a group of African American women with an interest in literature—it was essentially a book club. They ran the home until 1920 when others took it over. Financial problems developed again in 1996 at which time community came together to ensure its future. 

On the other side of New Haven proper and a century later in 1959, Grace Taylor Ely bequeathed her home at 51 Trumbull Street to be an art center. A suffragette and widowed in the early 1900s, Ely had a passion for art and giving. A year after her home was built by her architect brother, SG Taylor, her husband, Dr. John Slade Ely, died tragically. In his name, Grace left an endowment to fulfill her wish for a place where the arts could thrive. Absent the pressures of typical arts organizations to fund-raise, it blossomed into a beloved space to engage with contemporary art within its beautiful Elizabethan-detailed galleries. Around it grew an arts district for 54 years until the summer of 2015 when the Trust informed a few stakeholders that they intended to shutter the art center.

Market forces, poor, neglectful stewardship, and other factors placed Grace Ely’s gift in an uncertain predicament. The only Trustee, Wells Fargo Bank, intended to close the building, sell it, and transition the trust from operational to grant-making. At a closing party for the Center, two former curators and I hatched a plan to halt the sale. We spent a year writing letters, attending court conferences, became a 501c3, and applied for a grant from the John Slade Ely Trust to lease the building from the new owners. In the end, we had neither won nor lost. In June of 2016 the Ely Center of Contemporary Art opened as New Haven’s oldest and newest arts organization.

6 years later and called ECOCA now for short, our mission is to ensure the continuation of the historic activities presented at the John Slade Ely House Galleries and to preserve its essential identity as a synergistic charge for the expression, engagement, and germination of culture-makers and their audiences in Greater New Haven. ECOCA promotes a just and healthy center by working with a broad representation of arts organizations and cultural groups. 

My research, put on hold due to COVID, is looking at women through the lens of Ely and Gray who willed their homes to support and lift the spirit of community for the greater good. However, these extraordinary women are underrated figures with little written about them. The link between Grace and Hannah is simply the fact that they were women living at a time when it was uncommon to leave a mark. I hope to find evidence, dust off the stories, and reexamine the legacies they left here in this diverse City where they are still making an impact. They can be models for women today who want to leave new marks.

These stories need to be collected and told to new generations. Gray and Ely’s gifts helped to anchor and nourish their neighborhoods and theirs are not the only examples to be found in New Haven. In 1866, a group of women established a shelter for homeless and often pregnant young women in need of either temporary or permanent housing. Known as the “Home for the Friendless” it later changed its name to a benefactors sister’s. The Mary Wade Home in Fair Haven has another story to tell.

To honor Grace Ely, ECOCA initiated a yearly exhibition in conjunction with Women’s History month in March under the title “In Grace We Trust.” Curation and programming are designed to ignite dialogues that address ideas of tradition and change — a nod to the past as we confront current societal challenges and rise together to create new narratives. In 2019, we took inspiration from Our Bodies Ourselves, the pivotal book first published in 1970 in Boston, on the cusp of the 2nd wave of feminism. In 2020, while closed due to COVID, we launched calls for artists and debuted “Digital Grace”, a virtual exhibition space that pays homage to Ely’s interest in emerging contemporary practices. Collecting women’s stories of home and finding ways to provoke its meaning is just one of the ways we can meet this goal.

https://elycenter.org
https://walknewhaven.org
http://hannahgrayhome.org

 

Clockwise: Lorrie Gardella, Kelly Walters, Alex Girard, Jeanne Criscola, and Peggy Bloomer

UCDA Design Education Summit


Common Ground : Walk New Haven

East Tennessee State University

 
 
 
 

Common Ground : Walk New Haven

Good morning everyone, and thank you for coming to listen to my talk about Walk New Haven, a project that engages community with itself. I’m Jeanne Criscola, Assistant Professor at Central Connecticut State University teaching in the Design Department. It is a small one — about 150 students — and I teach Typography, Fundamentals of Graphic Design, and the History of Design.

The talk I am about to give focuses on a project my studio was commissioned to design and produce in 2015 that coincided with my hire as a full-time faculty member.

Community is a concept that needs grounding, literally. And it takes an entire community to tell its story, especially one that is rich, layered, and insightful about its past and about its future. One such community arose from the association of five ethnic societies as the Ethnic Historical Archives Center in 1988 in New Haven. They envisioned a place where the community would come to learn about the experiences and the ethnic histories of New Haven’s Jewish, Italian, Irish, African-American, and Ukrainian populations. They found common ground where they now house their archives, acquire donated artifacts, conduct research, and share their histories whenever the opportunity presents itself. 

First, some background about New Haven and the Center:

History buffs will know that the New Haven Colony was established in 1638 by Englishmen, Theophilus Eaton and the Reverend John Davenport. The two men set sail with their congregation to New Haven and laid out their town in a Nine Square Plan between two creeks as a garden in the wilderness. Bounded by hills and mountains, pierced by waterways, and having a harbor to the south, New Haven — in its form and landscape — fit the Biblical description of the Garden of Eden, the Israelite encampment in Exodus, the holy cities in Canaan, and John’s vision of the New Jerusalem from Revelations. 

Other events and agreements had direct impact on New Haven none more important than when the two judges who ordered the execution of King Charles I, fled England for New England in 1661. Colonel Edward Whalley and Colonel William Goffe were secretly sheltered in the “Judges Cave” on West Rock. A third judge, named Colonel Dixwell later joined Whalley and Goffe.

The five member-organized societies are known as the Ethnic Heritage Center today and include the Jewish Historical Society of Greater New Haven, founded in 1976; the Italian-American Historical Society of Connecticut, founded in 1979; the Connecticut Ukrainian-American Historical Society, founded in 1983; the Connecticut Irish-American Historical Society, founded in 1988; and finally the Greater New Haven African-American Historical Society, founded in 2003. 

By 1999, the Ethnic Heritage Center had been located on Southern Connecticut State University’s campus for about 7 years when several representatives from Southern were selected by then President Michael Adanti to travel to San Antonio, Texas with EHC Board members to visit the Institute of Texan Culture where the Institute plays a role in the University of Texas at San Antonio’s community engagement initiatives to develop quality, accessible resources for educators and lifelong learners on topics of cultural heritage. The collaboration struck everyone as an approach they could learn from and perhaps use as a model for something similar in Connecticut. President Adanti was very supportive of the EHC and made arrangements with the University and Institute for tours and discussions with their administration and staff. For EHC, the Institute offered a lesson in diversity and inclusion showcasing the uniqueness and beauty of the many cultures that call Texas home and would serve as an example of the ways to celebrate the many populations who have defined New Haven’s character, traditions, and ways of life. 

Around 2013, Rhoda Zahler, a member of the Jewish Historical Society, became interested in a heritage tourism product she had seen while on vacation called “The Museum in the Streets.” It’s a site-specific program that offers municipalities a way to showcase their local history through a system of outdoor information panels laid out as a walking tour. EHC had the content and the historic knowledge needed for such a collaborative project. Their collections include a wide range of pictures, books, phone books, city directories, magazines, newspapers, and video. They archive the personal papers of individuals and families, audio of oral histories and interviews, as well as many artifacts, some rare and unique, but most ordinary and local. 

But as negotiations with City Hall became more complicated and the cost to install signage too expensive, EHC decided to pursue another direction that would not require buy-in and approvals from others. So, in late 2015, they sent out a Request for Proposal for graphic design and production services for three brochures that included text, maps, pictures, and QR codes for walking tours of the Downtown, Wooster Square, and Lower Dixwell neighborhoods. During an introductory design meeting, while listening to the projects’ parameters, it became apparent that, as envisioned, its scope would fall far short of the project’s objectives. With 13 in attendance, we began discovery with Design Thinking by first defining the purpose, challenges, and people we were creating the tours for. We asked about the impetus for the project—where had the idea germinated, what models had been researched, what would the best outcome be? Could the “Museum in the Streets” product be adapted and would it work without the signage component? 

Each society had already spent years compiling, researching, and assembling evidence of the influences, intersections, and cross-overs their ethnic group had made in each of the three neighborhoods. They had long texts, multiple images of sites, and go-to people to reference about the sites they chose for the walks. People in the community who had contributed to the project were eager to be see their stories told. Significant editing would be needed in order to format the information and media into a brochure like the examples the EHC had supplied with the proposal. After an assessment of the work that had already been done by EHC to get the project started, it was unanimously agreed upon to enlarge the project to include books and a website in addition to the brochures. This way, the website would include all the text and media they had collected from numerous people and families, then edited for the books, and then further editing for the brochures. 

And so with the project parameters in place, design thinking entered its next phase of design research, ideation, and prototyping. A decision was made to implement the design process with Lower Dixwell which was the smaller and most complete compilation of the tours. At this point, brainstorming a name for the project began and soon ended with “Walk New Haven.” The “Cultural Heritage Tours” subtitle was added later. Students in my CCSU Spring 16 design classes at Central got to weigh in on the logo development and branding acting as critics and curators.

Next, we worked out a tight and ambitious design and production schedule for the expanded project. We had many animated discussions viewing and comparing pictures of the sites, the buildings, streets, and neighborhoods spanning decades from various angles and elevations. They revealed the myriad changes the cityscape has undergone and how great or poor our memories are today. When questions would arise about the provenance, importance, or factors of a person or site, strides were made to tell as complete and inclusive a story as possible about the neighborhoods, founders, stakeholders, industrialists, factories, workers, immigrants, developers, and businesses to illustrate how the City’s culture and diversity was deeply intertwined and to provide a framework for understanding its current landscape and identity. Each time a sensitive topic arose—and there were quite a few—insight and empathy emerged adding new layers to the depth of the project.

Walk New Haven: Cultural Heritage Tours is the now expanded project that continues with New Haven’s High School students learning the history of their neighborhoods, leading tours, and exploring and sharing stories of their and others heritage. Frequently, we hear them say they had no idea that the buildings they pass by everyday have historical significance and connect to a vibrant past.

Regardless of where we live, we are all well served by people serving organizations with missions such as the Ethnic Heritage Center who work tirelessly, volunteer their time, share their knowledge and archives in order to pass on the City’s extraordinary history to a new generation. Common Ground is a blueprint for creative research, direction, and design-thinking in service to community-organized projects to ensure they achieve their full and vital potential. 

Collaborations are like gardening. You plant a seed, water it, weed it, and tending to it becomes a rewarding experience as it grows into what you imagined it could be and what it would look like at scale.

Collaborating with non-profit organizations can be the most rewarding project work for a designer or design team. It has been for the entirety of my career. Collaborations can yield—especially when the designer immerses themselves—possibilities that grow out of the knowledge the organization imparts. It becomes a synergistic undertaking as the designer feeds back their newly acquired knowledge through the lens of creative research. Committing to a project ensures its long-term success. Facilitating the collaboration is key.

The New Haven High School students who were trained to lead “walkabout” tours of the four historic neighborhoods that the Ethnic Heritage Center initiated with “Walk New Haven: Cultural Heritage Tours” have found a new appreciation of the rich history of their City and want others to share this knowledge and sense of pride in their richly diverse community. They have been inside the former Goffe Street Special School for Colored Children, designed by Henry Austin and funded by local philanthropists and abolitionists in the 1860’s. They have seen African American History on Lower Dixwell Avenue, with sites of the Underground Railroad, and early churches for African Americans who did not want to be segregated in the back of white churches. They have learned of local heroes, such as Hannah Gray, a laundress who worked for Yale, who left her home in her will to provide a refuge for indigent African American women. They have also learned of the immigrant experiences of the Irish, Italians, Jews, and Ukrainians who came to New Haven to escape starvation and persecution. They find this information very relevant to New Haven today and want to talk about it.

The role of higher public education in Connecticut and elsewhere must be to partner with communities and their constituents to foster culture, understanding, and tolerance. The creative process can catalyze engagements with community and when design thinking is employed, strategies for creating new products and services can be innovated and maximized. This process can begin with the leadership and creative direction of design educators learned in the creative process and practice-based in the world of business to activate collaborative approaches and pathways focused on the narratives of our past to build new identities with potential for opportunities and possibilities.

Please visit walknewhaven.org for more information about the people who made it possible and criscoladesign.com to see my studio’s portfolio.