SPAR has a busy agenda
by Monica Chamness
Staff writer
As a new year
approaches, Springfield Preservation and Restoration has a full
agenda, including the Trash Busters program, an 88-yard long
mural, a new museum and the continuation of several programs it
started this year.
Thanks to a $15,000 grant from
Neighborhoods Matching Grants, SPAR has funded Trash Busters, a
program to get neighborhood children involved in cleaning up their
neighborhood.
“Trash Busters is starting in Springfield, but
hopefully can leap forward to other neighborhoods that have blight
to help clean up the neighborhood,” said Ryan Rummel, a
participant in the project and co-owner of the Czigan & Rummel
Gallery, which recently moved to Springfield. Rummel is also
putting together an activity/comic book, which will be distributed
to Springfield children to get them interested in the program.
Other facets of Trash Busters include field trips and a mural
88 yards long, which will include creative input from established
artists and Springfield children.
“The big issue is that a lot
of these kids are living in squalor,” said Rita Reagan, a
Springfield resident and at-large director of SPAR. “This is not a
thing to get them out on the streets and pick up trash. This is to
change attitudes about how visual blight affects our lives and
affects the increase in crime. We are trying to show how they can
take charge of their lives.”
January will mark the first
official invitation for area children to join the project. A
public service announcement is being produced with the help of
Laurence Walden, a visual and performing artist, and the children
of Springfield.
Premier Foods at 7th and Main streets will be
the site of the mural. Walden will guide the six-month project,
dividing it into 20 different six-by-eight panels. The removable
panels will be painted on the back of the building and reflect
themes of music, history, dance, patriotism, family, education,
history, sports and art deco. Several artists are being recruited
to participate.
“If this goes over well it will be one of the
biggest art projects in the entire city,” said Rummel.
Cleaning the streets isn’t the only item on SPAR’s agenda.
Thanks to additional $15,000 in grant money from the Jacksonville
Community Foundation, the organization is putting together a
museum of local interest.
Encompassing 700 square feet on the
ground floor of the SPAR headquarters off Main Street, the
Springfield Heritage Museum aims to reflect the history of not
only Springfield, but all of Jacksonville. Because of limited
space, exhibits representing events from Springfield’s early days
to the present will be rotated quarterly.
Shadow boxes
encapsulating the four main time frames in Jacksonville’s
chronology will be on permanent display in the windows with
detailed displays inside.
“There’s so much interesting history
from the late 1800s to the Great Fire of 1901, the roaring 1920s,
the LaVilla era with the jazz bands and the Ritz Theatre, all the
way up to when Springfield became a blighted area,” said Pam
Dampier, arts committee chair for SPAR.
A transplanted beach
dweller, Dampier claims the former home of the prominent Wolfson
family as her current residence. Her involvement in the program
extends from a desire to better her surroundings.
“Now we [the
Springfield community] are in a big resurgence, which has been
going on for at least 15 years,” she said. “These kind of things
[revitalization] take time for the city to become interested in.”
Events such as performances staged simultaneously with the
ongoing exhibits are being considered. Admission will be free andto the public.
SPAR hopes tothe museum in January
or February.
“We will have people here in a character
portrayal to talk to people as they’re looking at that particular
era, and maybe do skits regarding things that happened of
significance,” said Dampier.
Running out of subject matter is
not a concern for Dampier.
“There’s such a rich history in
Jacksonville for this that we feel we’ll be able to do this for
quite some time,” she said.
Standard museum fare such as
photographs and artifacts, most of which were obtained through
donations, will be presented along with written materials
explaining the exhibit. Although not yet finalized, Dampier
expects the initial exhibit to showcase the earlier years of
Jacksonville history.
Depending on the success of the museum,
the organization may expand to larger quarters in the future.
“If it takes off and people are interested in it, especially
as the revitalization matures, then I feel there will be room for
us to move to a larger area on Main Street,” said Dampier.
Cooperation between SPAR and other art-friendly venues such as
Theatre Jacksonville are in the works, too. Regardless, Dampier
plans to seek out additional funds for their endeavors.
Trash
Busters and the museum are just two of the initiatives to promote
Springfield. SPAR has hosted a number of events, including Movies
on Main Street, Spoken Word Night, Supperclub Series and a
Halloween ghost dance.
Most popular was the Movies on Main
Street, a showing of classic and cult films on Friday evening,
which was run by Subterranean Cinema. Another series of movies,
coupled with another Supperclub Series, is planned for the spring.
Spoken Word Night, featuring poetry and prose at the Karpeles
Manuscript Library Museum, did not enjoy phenomenal attendance,
but that’s not detouring Dampier.
“The fact that people did
come is neat because this is Springfield. Look around. Ten years
ago you’d have to force somebody to come here,” she said. “We feel
if we continue to offer things and get the word out and prove to
people what a fabulous place this area is, we can have a
formidable art area for the people of Jacksonville. We hope that
maybe through art and museums and all we can draw everybody’s
attention to make sure this area is preserved.”
Back To Home
Page
E-mail this
page to a Friend