Saturday, November 15, 2008

another review for Seeing Pittsburgh!!!!!!!!!!!

"Seeing Pittsburgh" through foreign eyes

ThebookNew book helps answer one woman's questions about her adopted city

by Silvia Duarte

When you are a foreigner, it doesn’t matter where you go, you are asked common questions. Where are you from? How long have you been here? What are you doing here? Questions that people from almost anyone around the world could ask.

After I came from Guatemala to Pittsburgh the questions were the same. But one of them surprised me until now. Bus drivers, academics, waiters, my English teachers, and other foreigners often ask: “Do you like Pittsburgh?” and not just once, many times.

Oh my God, what do you answer when you have had a bad day after only living here one week? What do you answer one month after if an employee – from Pittsburgh – of a fast food restaurant shouts at you because they can’t understand your “sort of English.” I like where I live, my neighbors, Downtown streets, the bridges, the parks, but how can I really know each neighborhood? How can I speak in general about the city when it has so many particulars?

What is a city if not the neighbors’ perceptions? And can I understand those perceptions if I’m not there?

Many times I thought that it would be nice to visit different neighborhoods, share with the people, discover what they think about Pittsburgh and, just after that, give my opinion.

Voila! Two weeks ago I was handed the book “Seeing Pittsburgh” that allowed me to visually explore corners of the city that I didn’t know. It also presented me faces and people’s perceptions, contemporaries like you and me.

The book is part of the Rivers of Steel National Heritage Area exhibit called "Seeing Pittsburgh." It also includes video and archival footage.

On one hand the book is a tribute to the celebration of Pittsburgh’s 250th anniversary yet is also a walk through 11 of the city’s 90 neighborhoods. The introduction explains its mission: “armed only with cameras – digital, film, disposable and even camera phone - and the instructions to show us what defines their neighborhood, 44 Pittsburghers became the Seeing Pittsburgh Project.”

A little more than a year ago, the editors – Ron Baraff and Tiffani Emig – contacted residents of different neighborhoods through community groups. Children and adults were chosen to shoot and summarize their photos in few words. The result? Magnificent pictures of the collective imagination.

Is it a risk that the neighbors just capture only the beautiful and hide the dirty clothes? Yes, it’s a risk. But who can say that perception about your surroundings is more than one invention of your experience and your personal belonging?

With “Seeing Pittsburgh” I walked through “my city” from east to west, from north to south. I looked at scenes that could belong to all the neighborhoods – which doesn’t have beautiful trees and squirrels that eat there. And others that show big differences – such as how to escape to the historical background of the North Side.

Do you want to know about some of the images that the Pittsburghers photographed? And how they describe their image? Let’s go neighborhood by neighborhood. In alphabetical order, like they appear in the book.

In Beechview, a girl who captured her school road wrote that her neighborhood “is a great place for families.” Another photographer there described Evelia, who works in Tienda La Jimenez, as making “the best tamales in all Pittsburgh.” Also, a boy laments because the swimming pool where he used to swim, “now all it is used for is graffiti.”

In Forest Hills, the “atom smasher” (a former Westinghouse facility) stands out against cottony sky and some mothers formed an informal club while they await their children’s’ buses.

The jazz flows out of the windows of an historical building on Centre Avenue in the Hill District. And while a man waits for the bus, a woman relaxes on her porch on a typical American evening. A couple of pages after, a group of teenagers transform a swing into a human banana split. The young photographer writes, “it’s a way to show our friendship as young people.”

Book2

In Lawrenceville, a neighbor remembers the stone streets of his childhood. Another neighbor attempts to take care of an abandoned next door while the fall comes to dress up the 40th Street Bridge.

Good music plus community life plus Ukrainians and Polish traditions -mass, priests and periogies- abound in Mckees Rocks.

The Mt. Lebanon's photographers chose to capture schools -Lincoln and Herbert Clark Hoover - traffic rush-hour at Washington Road, badly parked cars and a play area that the neighbors defend from construction machines.

Chatham Village was captured in full bloom: beautiful flowers, a sweet squirrel and a nice courtyard. The neighborhood’s “oldest resident” and children celebrating Independence Day show strong community spirit.

And then comes Central Northside, Dish's neighborhood, my neighborhood. Five photographers (Dish's Frank Kownacki among them) captured this diverse, polemic, nice, tranquil and sometimes dangerous place that I like so much. Maybe I'm wrong, but the Central Northside photographers stand out from the others thanks to their honesty. They found images and used blunt words even if some people might not like their point of shoot.

There is the beautiful Tabernacle Baptist Church and the man who describes himself as "hungry, ugly and broke.” He doesn't have a home, but he has dozens of streets and an entire world in his sleeping bag. Just two pages divide a house restoration from the teenager who spits her soul and says: "We like our neighborhood because it is pretty and fun. But it’s dangerous over here, people shoot.” Together are the girl at the children’s garden and the polemic corridor – the site of the Masonic Hall and the Garden Theater. There is the modern Mattress Factory and a vacant lot on Jacksonia Street. Contrast and beauty, that is Northside.

The book’s trip leads to Point Breeze and a stained glass artwork piece on the side of the Point Brugge Cafe restaurant. One page after is the Frick Museum and, at the end, the Frick park where “it’s almost like a peek into another world”.

The cameras’ lenses shoot South Side in the morning although for me it's difficult not to imagine its streets at night. While a priest captured his congregation, another photographer shows T&T;, one of the oldest hardware stores. The beautiful mural at the Terminal Building puts a nice period on the South Side visit.

The last neighborhood is Squirrel Hill. Between the images you can see the Big Blue Slide at the playground in Frick Park, “a central role in the childhoods (or adult hoods, as the case may be) of many Pittsburghers.” A colorful vegetable store, Forbes Avenue businesses and one of the oldest houses in the neighborhood finish our Pittsburgh view.

“Seeing Pittsburgh” offers a large slice of the city and its people. And when I leave here to return home I will bring back my own images of this city - the diaspora and the reunion, the strong feeling of neighborhood, garden grills, libraries, museums, amazing architecture, icee balls, people who say hello while they enjoy summer evenings in their stoops, corner stores, parks, farmers’ markets, concerts, people helping others, season changes, Strip District and fun.

Yes, folks, I like what I have seen of Pittsburgh!

For information on purchasing the book and seeing the exhibit go here. Read their bloghere.

Journalist Silvia Duarte was born in Guatemala and currently resides one block from Dish headquarters. Read her stories here and here.

Monday, October 27, 2008

Great New Pittsburgh History Sites

New web and blog sites for Charlie McCollester and his new book - The Point of Pittsburgh

http://thepointofpittsburgh.vox.com/


Check them out - might learn a little something. 


Sunday, October 26, 2008

GOTV and bonus material

Sometimes it is important to nudge people a bit so...

GO VOTE ON THE 4th of November

I am not telling who to vote for, just that it is your right, your duty and your privilege to do so.

Now that the call of citizenship is out of the way - here is a glimpse of our regions industrial history as a reward. 

Monday, September 22, 2008

Beechview Community Paint Day

On Saturday 9/20, Beechview community members came out to help paint Beechview’s newest mural at Sip N Spin Laundromat on Broadway Avenue. It was a fun event with a great turn-out.

Thanks to Ryder Henry for all of his artistic endeavors and patience and of course to Rep. Chelsea Wagner and her staff for all of their enthusiastic backing and coordination of the mural project.


Friday, September 12, 2008

Happenings Abound!!!!!!!!!!!

Seeing Pittsburgh @ The Bost Building
Now through January 31, 2009 In celebration of Pittsburgh's 250th anniversary, Rivers of Steel worked with 44 Pittsburgher's from eleven neighborhoods to produce the Seeing Pittsburgh project. Armed with cameras and instructions to show us what defines their community, these residents photographed the good, the bad, the new, the old, the physical, the emotional...everything that defines their neighborhood.
Visit http://www.riversofsteel.com/ for hours and directions.

Bring a copy of this email when you visit the exhibit in September and receive 10% off the Seeing Pittsburgh book.

Pittsburgh Project REMIX
@ The Pump House
One weekend only! Thursday, September 18 - Saturday, September 20 @ 7:30 pm
Sunday, September 21 @ 3:00 pm A performance by award-winning director and playwright Megan Carney. Join us to hear stories about civic identity, changing neighborhoods, and the promise of the future in a new play performed by a ensemble of professional Pittsburgh actors. Each performance includes a community conversation with special guests and a chance to add your own story to the project.
For more information, visit http://www.mcarneyprojects.com/Pittsburgh_Project_REMIX.html.


Wheeling Through History @ Heinz History Center
Saturday, September 20 @ 9:00 am - Noon As part of the Young Preservationists Association's Pittsburgh Regional Youth Heritage Festival, Wheeling Through History Bike Tours feature Pittsburgh neighborhoods, history, and the progressive sport of cycling. Join Rivers of Steel National Heritage Area and Venture Outdoors for a bike tour of Pittsburgh's rich industrial history through the South Side and Four Mile Run.
Visit http://www.youngpreservationists.org/youth-heritage-festival for more information.


Pittsburgh Neighborhood Narratives Screening
@ The Pump House
Friday, October 3 @ 7:30 pm Greetings from Pittsburgh: Neighborhood Narratives is a series of nine short films produced as part of the Pittsburgh 250 celebration. Each of the films takes place in a different neighborhood, offering a unique portrait of the culture, history and character of their setting.
For more information about the Narratives, please visit http://www.pghneighborhoodnarratives.com/.

Wednesday, September 3, 2008

Another review

From the Pitt News:

Neighborhoods shown in Homestead exhibit

Giles Howard

Contributing Editor

Published: Wednesday, August 27, 2008

Updated: Wednesday, August 27, 2008

Located on Homestead’s Eighth Avenue is a national historic landmark operated by the Rivers of Steel National Heritage Area. Known as the Bost building, it was built as a hotel in the late 19th century and served as the headquarters of striking steelworkers during the Homestead Strike in 1892.

But today, it is home to a regional museum that recently opened a new exhibit entitled, “Seeing Pittsburgh.”

Since it opened to the public on July 9, Seeing Pittsburgh has featured photographs, artwork and audio recordings from 11 different Pittsburgh neighborhoods.

“This actually evolved over a number of years of really observing those small and very interesting and often topographically defined neighborhoods in the city,” said Ron Baraff, director of museum collections and archives at Rivers of Steel.

Baraff, along with co-organizer Tiffani Emig, said they thought about including Oakland in the exhibit, but it just didn’t work out.

“We picked certain types of communities that we really wanted, and once we were able to get into those communities, we had to follow that path,” he said.

They wanted to profile post-industrial and industrial neighborhoods, white-collar suburbs and blue-collar suburbs as well as neighborhoods that had remained “fairly constant” throughout the years, he said.

Once they decided on the 11 types of neighborhoods they wanted to profile, Baraff and Emig approached community groups in each neighborhood to find photographers.

“We didn’t want to pick the photographers, what we wanted to do was to have the community decide who should be involved,” said Baraff.

Stephen Grebinski, a Pitt senior living in Squirrel Hill, was one of the 44 photographers who contributed to the project.

Grebinski said he learned of Rivers of Steel in an architectural preservation class he was taking and started work on the project in February or March.

It took about three weeks of going through old photos and taking new ones for him to finish his part of the project.

“I just submitted some stuff., I wasn’t sure what they were looking for,” said Grebinski.

Grebinski, like the other photographers, had to fill out a log explaining his entries. This included what the photo was of and how it represented the photographer’s neighborhood.

Grebinski’s photo of a gate in a chain-link fence made it into the Squirrel Hill portion of the exhibit. He said the photo represents how people have such small yards in Squirrel Hill that they feel the need to put up a fence and cherish it.

“I wish it was deeper than that, but it’s not,” said Grebinski.

He said he’s participated in photo exhibitions before, but never in this way.

“I haven’t really collaborated with some giant group organization [before], and I kind of liked it.”

Admission to the Bost building is free to the public, and the Seeing Pittsburgh exhibit will remain there until Jan.31, but the Bost building is not its final stop. Baraff wants to take the exhibit around to different neighborhoods in Pittsburgh.

“What we hope is that this becomes much more of an open-ended project and that other communities want to be involved,” said Baraff.

A book is being released to coincide with the exhibit, and Rivers of Steel is also involved in creating a series of cellphone tours for neighborhoods in the Pittsburgh area.

“We want [Pittsburghers] to understand themselves a little better, to understand their neighbors a little better,” said Baraff.

Monday, September 1, 2008

Pittsburgh Sights


City Steps in 4-Mile Run


Entrance to Panther Hollow Trail


Barge on the Mon

Monday, August 25, 2008

Now for a bit of shameless promotion

Exhibit shows neighborhoods through neighbors' eyes

By Kurt Shaw
TRIBUNE-REVIEW ART CRITIC
Sunday, August 24, 2008


"Seeing Pittsburgh" is a photography exhibit like none before. It focuses on Pittsburgh and its neighborhoods, but from the perspective of everyday inhabitants -- in essence, making a few neighbors among many photojournalists for a day. story continues below


Forty-four in all were assigned the project of capturing the unique qualities of each specific locale. Some of the results among the nearly 100 images on display are historically significant, some cultural and others simply a slice of life. "We made a real attempt to find different types of Pittsburghers to participate -- children and senior citizens, those who have been in the community for their entire lives and those who have recently arrived," says Ron Baraff, director of Museum Collections and Archives. "The focus wasn't on who could take the best picture, but on how average residents view their neighborhood and their city." Case in point, Christine Bethea's grainy photographs of her Hill District neighborhood, eight in all, are nowhere near the high-quality prints one would expect to find in an art exhibit. But that's because they were all taken with her cell phone. Beautifully arranged, one atop the other in almost film-like fashion, they allow the eye to move from various vignettes captured in and around Bethea's neighborhood as if watching a documentary video: three boys on bicycles, a pit bull sleeping on a porch, a chained up security door. Although it was impossible to include all 90 Pittsburgh neighborhoods in the bordering suburban communities, the goal was to present a diverse sampling of the types of neighborhoods found in the region. Post-industrial neighborhoods like Lawrenceville and the South Side are represented in kitsch-like fashion. Lawrenceville is seen through candy-colored images, such as an interior shot of a shop selling tchochkes by Elise Deluca or a group of passionate priests, taken by fellow Father Don Ware. South Side is seen via vibrant snapshots of equally vibrant stops along Carson Street, taken by Joyce Baronett and Cyril Esser. Point Breeze is representative of the early "suburb within the city" for which it was known. Its identity is further emphasized with a fall shot of Frick Park by Julina Golze. Forest Hills, once a very working-class suburb, is set in a historical light via Sam Lee's foreboding photograph of the atom smasher at the former Westinghouse facility. Looking at the exhibit from a holistic perspective, some threads of consistency seem to rise above others. Some are basic, like the Belgium block streets that run through many Pittsburgh neighborhoods, presented here in images of both Lawrenceville and Beechview captured by Langston MacDiarmid and Max Hurwitz, respectively. Some are more complex, such as the inner workings of a successful community as seen in Sandy Saban's "Fire Truck Blessing," taken at a McKees Rocks firehouse. Here, a priest with piercing eyes makes for a compelling focal point among a few proud fire chiefs. A real standout among all the images on display are Terrence Murphy's photographs of the hard living and the semi-homeless life of a few folks on the North Side, mainly because they represent a different perspective of life on Pittsburgh's streets. In one, a young homeless man named "Dano" holds a cardboard sign on which he wrote "Hungry, Ugly, Broke. Anything Helps," offering both poignant commentary and a bit of wry wit. The exhibit itself is further enhanced by displays created by Ashley Hodder and Michelle Gregio that represent each of the neighborhoods presented. For example, photographs of McKees Rocks are surrounded by railroad tracks. Images of Squirrel Hill -- among which is a shot of a fruit stand by Melanie Groves -- are dispersed among a makeshift fruit stand made with fake fruit. All of the Beechview shots are tastefully arranged on a mock trolley, smaller than a real one, but rather sizable nonetheless. Interspersed among these various displays are supplemental video clips of interviews with the photographers. The interviews allow visitors to hear more about the photographers' ideas about Pittsburgh and their individual neighborhoods. "It's more of a sociological story than an art exhibit," says Tiffani Emig, curator of collections at Rivers of Steel. She, along with Baraff, put together a remarkable catalog for this exhibition that features nearly every photograph in the exhibition along with quotes by each of the amateur photographers. Their portraits and short bios are included. Available for $15.95 at the Bost Building or online, it's almost as good as this must-see exhibit, which will remain on view well past the holidays. Kurt Shaw can be reached at kshaw@tribweb.com.

Very Cool Post Gazette op-ed

What I learned in college
Absence makes the heart grow fonder for Pittsburgh
Saturday, August 23, 2008

Monday, August 18, 2008

Sunday, July 27, 2008

Morningside

Not a native of Pittsburgh, I always imagined a city void of trees, grass, or green of any type. This, however, could not be further from the truth. Within the small neighborhood of Morningside, where I have been living for the past several months, every house has a garden with flowers, trees, and even produce. Many of the residents, including the large Italian population, have sacrificed the little lawn space allotted to maintain the tradition of growing their own vegetables and herbs. It is a charming aspect of the neighborhood; and one that, as I become more familiar with the city, I realize is not isolated to this small community. The gardens and green spaces make this city unique.


Beth



Greenfield and the Big Snow of 1950

Excerpts from a memoir by Karen Cain

Greenfield Avenue starts on the edge of town at Second Avenue and goes up hill for a mile and a half ending at Calvary Cemetery (as do many Greenfielders). My life in Pittsburgh, all eighteen years of it, was spent living on or near an assortment of points on the avenue. On Deely Street, we played games in the middle of the street. In the summer, the local fire department came by and opened the fire hydrant where we cooled off playing in the gushing water. We stayed outside until the streetlights came on. We moved a few doors down to Delevan Street, where we experienced the "Big Snow" of 1950 (pix below). Winter in Pittsburgh offers plenty of snow but nothing like 1950, five feet as we tell it but it was probably more like three feet, a record for the city and the only time I remember them closing schools. My father had to abandon his car on the Homestead Bridge trying to get home from work. It wouldn't move another inch even with heavy chains. My dad mentally noted its location for retrieval another day and walked the rest of the way home. People hunkered down inside their warm homes, ate comfort food, watched the world turn whiter. When the snow finally stopped, all of the neighbors on our street came out with shovels and began to dig out. My twin brothers made igloos and snow tunnels in the alley that ran along the side of the house. My dad playfully threw them off of the porch and they disappeared where they fell under the snow, hooting with laughter. We took our sleds up to Deely Street and started at the top of Delevan and rode our sleds straight down Delevan Street. We were pretty good at stopping before we got to Greenfield Avenue but if we overshot, we had to tolerate the honking and window opened screaming from the driver that had to break suddenly. Traffic was light enough and the few drivers that ventured out knew to look out for us clueless kids.


The Big Snow of 1950





Thursday, July 17, 2008

The Book is Here!


Rivers of Steel is happy to announce that the Seeing Pittsburgh book is done and currently on sale at the Bost Building Gift Shop (623 E. 8th Avenue, Homestead, PA) and on-line at www.riversofsteel.com.

Please come and see the exhibit and peruse the book

Exhibit hours are M-F: 10-4 and Sat: 11-3

rb

Really nice feedback

For those of you who missed this comment, I decided to post it here. Wow, good stuff:

Blogger Jim said...

Hello,

My complements to the curators of the "Seeing Pittsburgh" exhibit on a job very well done!

I was a guest of one of your exhibited photographers last evening. The exhibit was not only well done, it was also a fascinating look at how amateur and neophyte photographers (and non-photographers) view not just their neighborhoods, but how they see photographically. I found it to be a unique examination of the aesthetics of both the knowledgeable and the untrained photographer alike--very intriguing and enlightening!

I will definitely be back to view the exhibit in less crowded circumstances.

You may be interested to know that I have an entry concerning the exhibit on my blog. That post is here.

Some of what I wrote includes: "...That's what I found so interesting about the photographs in the exhibit. Although they were all exposed by amateur photographers (and some of them were given disposable cameras in order to participate!), there was a visual quality about the images that one does not often see: many of these images captured the essence of the scene or subject. That's why they were not merely snapshots by neophytes, some of whom do not even own a camera...it is my opinion that the exhibit is interesting and its photographs are captivating as well as intriguing; thus, it is a success and well worth your time to visit if you live anywhere near the southwestern Pennsylvania region. The curators did an excellent job not only selecting the images that would be exhibitied, and preparing and mounting the photographs for presentation, but also in designing, constructing, and arranging the displays in the exhibit space that complemented the visual interest of the photographs themselves..."

Jim Moore
Elizabeth, PA

July 10, 2008 5:03 PM

Wednesday, July 9, 2008

Whew!!!!!!!

The Seeing Pittsburgh opening has just ended and it went really well. Thanks to all of the wonderful photographers and community folks who helped to make this project so successful.

Huge thanks to Sharon, Michelle, Ashley, Kate, and of course our interns Beth and Ashley and the ROS staff. All of you guys were terrific and truly clutch.

Thanks to all of the folks who came to the event - we really appreciate your support.

The book will be in early next week


Remember, we want you to add your own thoughts and comments, or even better send images of your neighborhood (with commentary) to me so that I can post them - rbaraff@riversofsteel.com or rbaraff.riversofsteel@blogger.com

Tuesday, July 8, 2008

Almost There!

The Seeing Pittsburgh exhibit opens and the book will be released, on Wednesday July 9th. Exciting times indeed - hope you can make it to the exhibit and purchase the book for all of your friends, family, enemies or casual acquaintances.

In case you missed it, the Post-Gazette ran a really nice article about the project (front page of the A section, no less). Thanks Diana and Andy!

Here are the links to the article and the multimedia piece they are running on their website.
http://www.postgazette.com/pg/08189/895275-53.stm
http://www.postgazette.com/multimedia/?videoid=100735

Remember, we want you to add your own thoughts and comments, or even better send images of your neighborhood (with commentary) to me so that I can post them - rbaraff@riversofsteel.com or rbaraff.riversofsteel@blogger.com



rb

Thursday, June 5, 2008

My Neighborhood - Beechview

My neighborhood of Beechview is located just south of the Liberty Tubes. There is a lot going on in my neighborhood right now. A number of really good folks are working hard to clean things up and build for the future. The neighborhood has incredibly good bones and the residents have a huge heart.

We also have what is reputed to to be the steepest paved residential slope in the world. At a grade of 37%, Canton Avenue is certainly the steepest in the city. It is a challenge to walk, frightening to drive and an all-out yang experience to bicycle.

rb

see also: http://cleanupbeechview.blogspot.com/

(image courtesy of: http://walkingpittsburgh.wordpress.com/
- a great website for discovering the real Pittsburgh)