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Archive for the 'museum' Category

New Bay Area books about community, culture, and social change

Under the Dragon Book Cover

In recent months, nonprofit presses in Berkeley have released new books that highlight diverse Bay Area neighborhoods and unexpected ways communities come together.

In September, Heyday Books, publishers of books about California history, arts, and culture, released “Under the Dragon - California’s New Culture.” The book is also the subject of a new Oakland Museum exhibit called “Trading Traditions” beginning in January 2008. Written by locals Lonny Shavelson and Fred Setterberg, Under the Dragon follows the lives of a diversity of Bay Area communities while capturing the poignancy of individual struggle in a way that goes beyond the personal. The stories are raw and authentic, and the photographs are stunning.

Another nonprofit Berkeley-based publisher, New Village Press, is celebrating revered community activists at a launch party on December 9, 2007 for “Building Commons and Community” by the late Karl Linn and “Undoing the Silence: Six Tools for Social Change Writing” by Louise Dunlap. The event will be held from 3:00 to 6:00 pm at the Berkeley Fellowship of Unitarian Universalists (BFUU) Hall at Cedar and Bonita Streets, and is co-sponsored by the BFUU Social Justice Committee and the NorCal Chapter of Architects/ Designers/ Planners for Social Responsibility. Speakers will include Louise Dunlap and Karl Linn’s longtime friend and colleague, Carl Anthony.

For over 40 years, Linn devoted himself to bringing people together in the spirit of reclaiming what he called “neighborhood commons,” creating urban oases, combined park-playground projects from vacant and blighted plots of land.

Linn, who grew up on a farm in Germany before his family was forced to flee Nazi persecution, worked as a child therapist and later established a distinguished landscape architecture practice in New York. By the late 1950s, he had decided to devote his career to social justice, teaching, and creating these neighborhood commons.

In the late 1980s, when Linn retired to Berkeley, he helped found the Architects/Designers/Planners for Social Responsibility and the Urban Habitat Program at Earth Island Institute. In 1993, Linn’s wife Nicole Milner, environmental justice activist Carl Anthony, and others banded together to convince Berkeley officials to name a city-owned community garden after Linn.

Soon thereafter, Linn teamed up with a UC Berkeley professor, her students, local craftspeople, and neighbors to rejuvenate the dilapidated garden, located in Berkeley’s Westbrae neighborhood. The Karl Linn Community Garden’s transformation inspired the creation of the nearby Peralta and Northside community gardens, the demonstration home known as the Berkeley EcoHouse, and a natural and human history project along the adjacent Ohlone greenway.

A Web site on Linn’s life and work can be found at www.karllinn.org.

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Native plants for the new California Academy of Sciences living roof

In my last post, “Green roofs on the rise,” I wrote about the new 2.5-acre undulating rooftop of the California Academy of Sciences in Golden Gate Park in San Francisco. By the time the museum reopens, the roof will be covered with native California plants, including beach strawberry, sea pink, self heal, and stone crop.

Native plant installation on the new Cal Academy living roof, photo courtesy of Stephanie Stone, Cal Academy

Beach strawberry on the new Cal Academy living roof, photo courtesy of Stephanie Stone, Cal Academy

Sea pink, photo courtesy of Stephanie Stone

Self heal, photo courtesy of Stephanie Stone

Stone crop, photo courtesy of Stephanie Stone

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Storytelling is the key to engaging people

Black Gold - the movie - banner

How do you engage people in your organization’s mission?
Tell an engaging story. And tell that story many times, in many places, and to many people.

Your story - or idea - must be “concrete, credible, and emotional,” says Chip Heath, a professor of organizational behavior at the Stanford Graduate School of Business and presenter of “What Makes Ideas Stick” on The Conversations Network.

One “concrete, credible, and emotional” story, a documentary film about the global coffee industry, might make you think differently about your next latte.

This Wednesday, March 7th, the Oakland Museum of California is hosting a free screening and panel discussion about BLACK GOLD - a documentary film about the global coffee industry, an $80 billion dollar industry, which makes “coffee the most valuable trading commodity in the world after oil,” according to the filmmakers. Last month I viewed it at the Museum of the African Diaspora (MoAD) in San Francisco, and I have not forgotten about it.

Wednesday | March 7th | 2007
6:00 pm Reception | 6:30 pm Screening
Oakland Museum of California
10th and Oak Streets / One block from
Lake Merritt Bart Station Oakland, California 94607
Panel Discussion Following the Film
Flyer

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