Marty Pottenger (born March 30, 1952, in Chicago, Illinois) is an American playwright, performance artist and theatre director. Pottenger is a pioneer in the community arts and arts-based civic dialogue movement. [1] Joan Shigekawa, former Acting Chairman for the National Endowment for the Arts, named Pottenger as one of her favorite artists "...for her deep engagement with the lives of working people." [2]
Pottenger was a founding member of Heresies: A Feminist Publication on Art and Politics . [3] She was the writer, artistic director, and solo performer of City Water Tunnel #3 a multi-media, Obie-winning play [4] and community art project about the building of the largest (non-defense) public works project in the Western Hemisphere.
Pottenger is also the founder and Art At Work (originally Terra Moto Inc.), a national initiative piloted with the City of Portland Maine's departments, unions and elected officials to improve municipal government through strategic arts projects in collaboration with artists and community members. Pottenger served as a consultant with the city of Boston, MA on an Art At Work inspired project called Boston AIR. [5]
She is currently the Executive & Artistic Director of Art At Work (originally Terra Moto Inc.), a multidisciplinary arts organization. [6]
Pottenger is the Founder/Director of Art At Work (2007-2015), a national initiative piloted with the City of Portland Maine's departments, unions and elected officials to improve municipal government through strategic arts projects. [7] In response to the success of her community performance project "home land security," the City of Portland, Maine asked Pottenger to develop a citywide initiative that would use the tools of stories, art and performance to address long-standing issues of discrimination and perceived prejudice within the city government and the school system, with the objective of increasing equity. Art At Work (AAW) was created as the first US city/school/community partnership to develop ways for creativity and the arts to effectively address discrimination, inequity and a growing sense of disenfranchisement between multiple sectors of the city.
Over the next eight years, Art At Work's ideas were re-created in seven cities and two countries, training hundreds of artists for residencies in city departments, unions, and neighborhoods putting people at the center of creative placemaking. In 2013, Pottenger launched Art At Work Holyoke in Holyoke MA.
Most notable of Art At Work's fifteen projects:
A theatrical piece (currently in production) written and directed by Pottenger and commissioned by The Painted Bride Arts Center as one of three artist residencies in the project "Re-PLACE-ing Philadelphia". #PhiladelphiaSavesEarth is a community arts project that explores the impacts of climate change and the city's responses. It premieres on Earth Day 2016 April 22 to the 24th at The Painted Bride Arts Center in Philly. Funding in part from the Pew Center for Arts & Heritage. [13]
It feels almost impossible to face let alone act on behalf of the planet in light of the scale and estimated impacts of global warming. But by experiencing our collective power, we can face our fears, express our grief, locate our courage, take note of our history, and together take decisive action. Theater lives in that collective consciousness.
— Marty Pottenger
Pottenger is writer, director for this series of public dialogues and theatrical performances focused on creating civic dialogue about gentrification and homelessness in Maine's largest city, Portland, Maine. Pottenger has said she created Hearts, Minds & Homes in response to Portland's housing crisis with a 0% vacancy rate and the second-highest increase in rents in the nation. "When you use art as the basis of a civic dialogue like this, people are able to talk more directly with each other and think more flexibly, without the understandable need to be defensive. Art introduces a sense of collaborative exploration," Pottenger said. [14] Performances were followed by the launching of a city-led task force aimed at addressing and coming up with solutions to the housing crisis.
In 2015, Hearts, Minds & Homes presented a free public interactive event in downtown Portland, Maine with: an art installation, Tiny House Models, On-the-Street Listening Exchanges & Pop-up Performances in collaboration with University of Southern Maine art and social work students, University of Maine Augusta architecture students, and Waterville Maine Mid Maine Homeless Shelter. Funded by the NEA, Creative Portland, and the City of Portland. [15]
ALL THE WAY HOME VETERANS STORY EXCHANGE (2014-2015)
A participatory story exchange project throughout Southern Maine created, produced and directed by Marty Pottenger in collaboration with an advisory team including Portland Police Chief Mike Sauschuck (former Marine); Major Cliff Trott, Director of Portland Vets Center/Vermont National Guard, SSG. Heath John Bouffard, Maine National Guard.
All The Way Home engaged both veteran and active duty military personnel who have served in Iraq and/or Afghanistan and are battling PTSD. Veterans were partnered with a professional graphic novelist/comic book artist to collaborate with Pottenger to create individual comic books/graphic novels of each veteran's life story. Project partners include Maine Military Community Network, Portland Vets Center, 262nd Battalion of Maine National Guard, among others. NEA Chairman Jane Chu and Maine Congresswoman Chellie Pingree attended an All The Way Home Veterans Story Exchange in 2015. [16] All The Way Home will culminate in a series of performances incorporating stories from comic books.
MEETING PLACE(2012 – 2013) [17]
Art At Work's citywide assessment in 2012 confirmed that none of Portland's 14 neighborhood associations reflected the diversity of the residents Pottenger created Meeting Place in Portland, Maine. It was a year-long project with 4 key neighborhoods to increase the odds that Portland's neighborhood associations might reflect the diversity of their neighborhoods. Meeting Place was selected by the National Endowment of the Arts as one of five nationally featured creative place-making Our Town grant projects. [18]
FOREST CITY TIMES: RADIO CALLS & THE WEEPING CITY (2010)
An original performance by five police officers and performed at each of Portland, Maine's 3 high schools, as well as for the public. [19] [20] Written, produced, and directed by Pottenger, Radio Calls was initiated by Portland's Police Chief (James Craig) in response to escalating incidents of youth throwing rocks and bottles at police officers after a police shooting. Before accepting the invitation, Pottenger negotiated Chief's permission to work with police officers 'more likely to cross a line' as part of the Radio Calls ride-alongs and workshops–in order to insure that the work's transformative power was directed at both the police force and the youth.
WHO WE ARE (2008)
Pottenger wrote and directed this performance about the lives and work of 8 members of Local 200, Service Employees International Union at Syracuse University. It was performed by the members themselves. Custodians, food service and maintenance workers, working in collaboration with Pottenger, developed and performed in a live piece about their lives and work. The original performance is now a part of First Year Student Orientation Week at SU. After viewing excerpts of the performance at a Labor & Arts Symposium, Chancellor Nancy Cantor reversed a long-standing policy of hiring nonunion construction companies, a policy the union had been fighting to win for years.
home land security (2005 – 2006)
After an unprecedented Border Patrol raid targeting the immigrant community of Portland Maine, the Center for Cultural Exchange (Portland Maine) commissioned Pottenger to create an arts project in collaboration with people affected by the raid. home land security was a two-year community performance project, by Pottenger, focused on the city after 9/11. It was written from story circles and interviews. The Portland Phoenix wrote, "Though this show wasn't just about anxiety (many monologues stressed the comfort of Portland's community and the beauty of Maine land. Lucien, among others, provided big-hearted comic relief), it certainly didn't shrink from its participants' fears and outrage, or from providing a truly balanced survey of community. [21] "
ABUNDANCE (2000 – 2004)
Abundance was a national community performance project written and 5-actor play directed by Pottenger about money and America. "Elegant and troubling ... one of 2003's Ten Best Plays," wrote the Seattle Post Intelligencer. [22] [23] The Abundance Project included four years of in depth interviews with 30 multi-millionaires and 30 minimum wage-earners throughout the United States, and a monthly NYC dialogue that included undocumented workers, millionaires and the people in between. The play, co-directed by Steve Bailey, was written in part with text from these interviews and dialogues. It toured to Seattle, Houston, Burlington, Washington DC, Providence, Philadelphia and NYC. [24]
WINNING THE PEACE (1999)
Pottenger created this play from over 400 collected emails from the people in Kosova and Serbia during the war. It was co-produced with The Working Theatre and Cornell University Labor College and debuted at St. Peter's Church in New York City. It was read by 35 New York leading citizens from theater, dance, religion, the military, unions, legal professions, publishing, education and business and had music by Terry Dame.
CITY WATER TUNNEL #3 (1996 – 1999)
See above for description.
CONSTRUCTION STORIES (1991 - 1994)
Pottenger produced a series of stories about the construction trade, told while completing construction on stage, which debuted at the Dance Theater Workshop in New York NY in 1991. Construction Stories was work created by Pottenger, a construction worker herself for 20 years, to respond to the daily beauty and brutality of physical labor.
In addition to the Dance Theater Workshop, Pottenger performed the work at SUSHI Neo-Fest San Diego CA; Highways Los Angeles CA 1992; ICA London England 1993; Green Room Manchester England 1993; Theater Rhinoceros San Francisco CA 1994. Excerpts from construction Stories aired on NPR, KPFA, Canadian Broadcasting Corporation, & Voice of America.
"The work itself tells a story ... wry and poignant." — Wall Street Journal
"Regales you with intimate and ironic portraits of people and things in her life, even as she comments on the social contexts that control and shape those interactions. A virtuouso story-teller, uncanny in her use of detail and her warm humanity." — LA WEEKLY
HOUSE BUILDING TIME (1989)
Conceived, choreographed, directed and produced by Pottenger to celebrate the 1st National Tradeswomen Conference, in Chicago Illinois in 1989. House Building Time was a 15-minute choreographed construction of a small house, including framing out the walls, windows and door, wiring an overhead light, plumbing water, and setting a roof of rafter trusses. It featured a team of working women, real carpenters, plumbers, electricians and laborers, all in yellow slickers.
High Performance wrote: "Pottenger transformed the attendees notion of 'artwork' by creating a performance piece that included real laborers, and she introduced others to the possibility of their own creativity."
WHAT IT'S LIKE TO BE A MAN (1987)
Pottenger was playwright, director and solo performer in this 1987 piece. She combined music, stories, and dance to examine the condition of the lives of men. What It's Like to be a Man was performed at avant-garde New York City art space Franklin Furnace (1987, 1988) where it received a "Jerome Award." Pottenger also performed it at Pyramid Art Space, Rochester NY; Diverseworks, Houston TX with PS 122 Field Trips A census-taking, standup tragic comedy show that at times resembles an action-adventure magazine. A vast hys/torical survey of men's lives as men as told by the men themselves. The stories drawn from over 60 interviews include "Harry Belafonte, Genghis Khan, Kermit & Me," "Real Penis Stories," "Most-Best-Time-With-My-Dad" and "Slowly I Turn ..."
Since 1995, Pottenger has been invited by Theater, Dance, History and English Departments to lecture and teach workshops on Community Performance Theory & Practice including: Williams College, Emerson College, Virginia Tech, Dartmouth, University of Texas at Austin, University of Massachusetts Amherst, Jacob's Pillow, SFSU, San Francisco Art Institute, Mount Holyoke, Roanoke College, University of Kansas, School for Visual Arts, Dickinson College, George Mason University, Mills College and SUNY Albany, and SUNY Purchase. In 2002, the University of Roma, Sapienza held a Symposium on Pottenger's work, which included performance workshops, lectures by professors, and a performance of City Water Tunnel #3.
Pottenger was the founder of TheaterWorks! with The Working Theater in 2002, an initiative where union members develop performances about their experiences as workers, deepen connections, define issues and offer solutions. Participating organizations included Local 371 of social workers, Communication Workers of America (Local 1180), Garment Workers (UNITE), and Amalgamated Life Insurance workers. At the final performance of each class, labor leaders and politicians come making the imaginative reach of performance increasingly significant in the lives of working people.
The National Endowment for the Arts (NEA) is an independent agency of the United States federal government that offers support and funding for projects exhibiting artistic excellence. It was created in 1965 as an independent agency of the federal government by an act of the U.S. Congress, signed by President Lyndon B. Johnson on September 29, 1965. It is a sub-agency of the National Foundation on the Arts and the Humanities, along with the National Endowment for the Humanities, the Federal Council on the Arts and the Humanities, and the Institute of Museum and Library Services.
The Pearl District is an area of Portland, Oregon, formerly occupied by warehouses, light industry and railroad classification yards and now noted for its art galleries, upscale businesses and residences. The area has been undergoing significant urban renewal since the mid-1980s when it was reclassified as mixed use from industrial, including the arrival of artists, the removal of a viaduct and construction of the Portland Streetcar. It now consists of industrial building conversion to offices, high-rise condominiums and warehouse-to-loft conversions.
Krzysztof Wodiczko is a Polish artist known for his large-scale slide and video projections on architectural facades and monuments. He has realized more than 80 such public projections in Australia, Austria, Canada, England, Germany, Holland, Ireland, Israel, Italy, Japan, Mexico, Poland, Spain, Switzerland, and the United States.
William Pope.L, also known as Pope.L, was an accomplished American visual artist recognized for his contributions to performance art and interventionist public art. He also created pieces in painting, photography, and theater. He was featured in the 2002 Whitney Biennial and was the recipient of the Creative Capital Visual Arts Award, as well as a Guggenheim Fellow. Notably, Pope.L was also highlighted in the 2017 Whitney Biennial for his work.
Suzanne Lacy is an American artist, educator, writer, and professor at the USC Roski School of Art and Design. She has worked in a variety of media, including installation, video, performance, public art, photography, and art books, in which she focuses on "social themes and urban issues." She served in the education cabinet of Jerry Brown, then mayor of Oakland, California, and as arts commissioner for the city. She designed multiple educational programs beginning with her role as performance faculty at the Feminist Studio Workshop at the Woman's Building in Los Angeles.
The Vermont Arts Exchange (VAE) is a non-profit community arts organization based at North Bennington in the US state of Vermont. The mission of the VAE is to strengthen communities and neighborhoods through the arts.
Theater for the New City, founded in 1971 and known familiarly as "TNC", is one of New York City's leading off-off-Broadway theaters, known for radical political plays and community commitment. Productions at TNC have won 43 Obie Awards and the Pulitzer Prize for Drama. TNC currently exists as a 4-theater complex in a 30,000-square-foot (2,800 m2) space at 155 First Avenue, in the East Village of Manhattan.
Dan Kwong is an American performance artist, writer, teacher and visual artist. He has been presenting his solo performances since 1989, often drawing upon his own life experiences to explore personal, historical, and social issues.
Sara Pearson and Patrik Widrig's PearsonWidrig DanceTheater was formed in 1987 in New York City. Their work has been produced by the city's major dance venues including Lincoln Center, the Joyce Theater, the City Center Fall for Dance Festival, DTW, the Kitchen, Central Park SummerStage, P.S. 122, The 92nd Street Y Harkness Dance Project, and Dancing in the Streets. They have received foundation support from the NEA, NYSCA, and NPN, and the Rockefeller, Altria, Harkness, Jerome, Joyce Mertz-Gilmore, Puffin, Swiss Center and Sequoia foundations, as well as the Asian Cultural Council and Arts International. Video specials featuring their work have appeared on the national television networks of India, South Korea, Mexico and Greece.
The Asian American Arts Centre (AAAC) is a non-profit organization located in the Chinatown neighborhood of Manhattan in New York City. Founded in 1974, it's one of the earliest Asian American community organizations in the United States. The Arts Centre presents the ongoing developments between contemporary Asian & Asian American art forms and Western art forms through the presentation of performance, exhibitions, and public education. AAAC's permanent collection, which it has accumulated since 1989, contains hundreds of contemporary Asian American art works and traditional/folk art pieces. The organization also has an Artists Archive which documents, preserves, and promotes the presence of Asian American visual culture in the United States since 1945. This includes the East Coast, especially the greater New York area; the West Coast; and some artists in Canada, Hawaii, and overseas. The artists include Asian Americans producing art, Asian artists who are active in the United States, and other Americans who are significantly influenced by Asia. Pan-Asian in outlook, the Arts Centre's understanding of 'Asia' encompasses traditions and influences with sources ranging from Afghanistan to Hawaii.
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The Hill Arts or St. Lawrence Arts Center is a performing arts center and community space at 76 Congress Street in the Munjoy Hill district of Portland, Maine. It is located in the former parish hall of the former St. Lawrence Church, a historic Romanesque church that was built in 1897. In 2008, due to severe deterioration, the sanctuary of the former church was razed and the organization began planning to create a performance arts space where the sanctuary stood. The church property was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1979.
The Arts District is a section of downtown Portland, Maine’s designated in 1995 as to promote the cultural community and creative economy of the city. It covers a large part of upper Congress Street towards the West End and spans Congress Street toward the East ending at Portland City Hall and its Merrill Auditorium concert hall.
Inversion: Plus Minus is a pair of outdoor sculptures designed by artists and architects Annie Han and Daniel Mihalyo, located in southeast Portland, Oregon. The sculptures, constructed from weathered steel angle iron, are sited near the Morrison Bridge and Hawthorne Bridge along Southeast Grand Avenue and represent "ghosts" of former buildings. The installation on Belmont Street emphasizes "negative space" while the sculpture on Hawthorne Street appears as a more solid matrix of metal. According to the artists, the works are reminiscent of industrial buildings that existed on the project sites historically. Inversion was funded by the two percent for art ordinance as part of the expansion of the Eastside Portland Streetcar line and is managed by the Regional Arts & Culture Council.
Mayo Street Arts is a community arts and performance venue in the East Bayside neighborhood of Portland, Maine. It was founded in 2010 by Blainor McGough after leasing the building which was formerly St. Ansgar Church. Mayo Street Arts' second executive director, Ian Bannon, succeeded McGough in May 2020 following McGough's resignation. Located next to Kennedy Park, a public housing development and close to many other public housing areas, Mayo Street Arts serves as a theater, concert venue, art gallery, and meeting space and offers affordable artist studios, rehearsal space, and a teaching platform for visual and performing artists of multicultural backgrounds. Programming is varied, but with a particular focus on puppetry, folk music, and dance.
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Rebuild Foundation is a non-profit organization dedicated to transforming buildings and neighborhoods in South Side Chicago, sustaining cultural development as well as celebrating art. The Rebuild Foundation was founded in 2009 by Theaster Gates, a social practice installation artist. The Foundation is currently composed of seven projects.
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