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01/12 2010

Calling All Creatives Vol. 1: “From Vacant Lots to Vineyards”

Melanie Sklarz, January 2010

What is the role of creativity? We all know the function that creativity plays in art and innovation, but what is the purpose of using creativity to build and enhance our communities? In my first column here, I’d like to look at using creativity as an agent of change and encourage you to think more creatively about your community.

I first encountered the idea of creativity for change while an undergraduate studying art history. This is where I first learned about art movements, primarily in the late 20th Century, using creativity for social change. Years later while working in museums in Washington, DC, I encountered another way that the arts affect change through my personal interactions with inner city school children. For them art was a way to escape, but not change their social situation.

Now, I’d like to explore how the ideas behind the art (aka creativity) can generate community. But I am not talking about Richard Florida’s concept of the Creative Class, which while a wonderful theory only takes into account the people that use creativity for their profession. What I’d like to see more of is everyone, not just professional creatives, using their ideas to improve the quality of their cities and neighborhoods.

To begin this quest, I looked no further than my own (figurative) backyard – the city of Cleveland. Late last year, the results of an exciting new program were announced, and it could just be the idea that transforms a depressed Rust Belt city into a sustainability success story. Fast Company even selected Cleveland as one their 13 Most Creative Cities in the World last year based on this program.

The Re-Imagining Cleveland Grant Program gives residents the power to redesign their own city. The program sought out submissions from local residents on how to reuse the plethora of vacant lots in Cleveland. Instead of relying on a development corporation, the program encourages residents to come up with their own sustainable ideas.

And did they ever come up with ideas. Out of 103 proposals 58 proposals were chosen with ideas ranging from a vineyard, market garden and even a garden tended by a group of African refugees struggling to get by on food stamps. The creativity and innovation on the part of the citizens was simply remarkable.

Later in the year, I plan to report about the successful implementation of these ideas. But in the meantime, do you know of everyday citizens who are transforming their communities through creativity or using creative thinking to solve problems like they did in Cleveland? I’d like to feature them in a later post. Please leave me a comment and let me know who they are.

Related posts:

  1. Calling All Creatives Vol. 2: Social Entrepreneurs + Social Innovation
  2. Every Monday is Tip Day! This Week: Explore a New City
  3. Everyday Creative: Let’s Begin
  4. 5 Things + Change is Gonna Come
  5. Can Creativity Change the World?

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  2. 01/13 2010

    I love the idea of using your talents–in this case creativity–as a force for good in your community. We have all been blessed with natural abilities, and harnessing them into something the benefits others is the only way that we will truly impact the world around us. Thanks for making this post! (I’ll keep my eye out for some examples of communities that are making good use of creativity.)

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  3. 01/18 2010

    Ashoka, the global social entreneur organisation, harness the creative thinking of individuals to create big changes in communities; likewise Ideo’s work in conjunction with gates foundation in developing countries is very impactful. I think the concept of everyday creativity is really important.

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  4. 02/9 2010

    [...] my last post, I explored the concept of using creativity as an agent of social change and highlighted a program [...]

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