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Cultural events, places and people in the Little Rock area

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Category Archives: Civic Engagement

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Artspace Rocks needs to hear from YOU

Posted on October 20, 2019 by Scott

It is a Sunday!  Things are a little slower (unless you are a clergy or church musician in many faith traditions, a restaurant worker, or an NFL player).  Take a few minutes to fill out an easy survey!

Earlier in 2019, the Windgate Foundation invited Artspace, a national nonprofit leader in the field of affordable creative space development, to explore the feasibility of creating an affordable live/work community in the Little Rock metro region, a region they are calling “The Rocks.”

A series of meetings with the community and local leaders occurred in July and August, setting the stage for this next big step: A Creative Space Needs Survey of creative people, especially those interested in affordable space. Input will help the local stakeholder group and Artspace determine if there is ample need for new space, what type of space to create, what “affordable” means in the community, where to build, and if this idea should be taken to the next step.

Your input is critical to advancing plans for a new, affordable, creative space facility in the Little Rock metro area. A facility where creative people (artists, “creatives”, arts educators/administrators, people who make things, and those who keep alive cultural practices) can have affordable space in which to live and work, create, practice, connect and share with the public.

Please take the survey at https://www.artspace.org/ArtspaceRocks to have your voice heard in this process.

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Posted in Architecture, Civic Engagement, Dance, Design, Film, Food, Government, Literature, Museum, Music, Public Art, Theatre, Visual Art | Tagged Artspace, City of Little Rock, Windgate Foundation

Donald Mehlburger, Little Rock’s 62nd Mayor, born Oct. 19, 1937

Posted on October 19, 2019 by Scott

On October 19, 1937, future Little Rock Mayor Donald Lee Mehlburger was born in Little Rock.  His parents were Max A. Mehlburger and Mary Lou Covey Mehlburger who also had another son Max C. Mehlburger.

Mehlburger’s first run for the City Board of Directors was in November 1968 when there was an open seat.  At the time he was 30, the youngest one could be and be elected to the City Board.  He lost that race, but eight years later ran again.  This time Mehlburger won the race.  At his first meeting on the City Board, Mehlburger was selected as Mayor of Little Rock by his colleagues.

Prior to running for the City Board the second time, Mehlburger had been appointed to the Planning Commission.  Planning and growth were two important emphases for Mayor Mehlburger, in addition to public safety.  He stressed the importance of quality growth in the edges of the city and a push for a revitalized downtown.  Mayor Mehlburger was also an advocate for public mass transit.

Due to business interests taking up too much of his time, he resigned from the City Board a few months before his term was up.  But he remained engaged in civic affairs.  Historic preservation was important to Mehlburger.  In addition to owning historic properties, he was a founding board member of the Historic Preservation Alliance of Arkansas.  He had graduated from the University of Arkansas and was a member of Trinity Episcopal Cathedral.  He had also been active with the Junior Chamber of Commerce (Jaycees) and Rotary Club 99.

Mehlburger died on May 25, 1992 and was buried at Mount Holly Cemetery.  His grave marker features an engraved sextant which pays tribute to his career as an engineer.  It also notes that he was Mayor of Little Rock.  Mayor Mehlburger was survived by his wife Susan and his three children – Donald Lee Jr., Harry and Katherine.

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Posted in Civic Engagement, Government, History | Tagged City of Little Rock, Donald L. Mehlburger, Historic Preservation Alliance of Arkansas, Little Rock City Hall, Mount Holly Cemetery

Artober – Cultural Heritage. The QQA focuses on historic preservation in LR

Posted on October 18, 2019 by Scott

When thinking of Cultural Heritage in Little Rock, the Quapaw Quarter Association, or QQA, immediately comes to mind.

Incorporated in 1968, the QQA grew out of an effort to identify and protect significant historic structures in Little Rock during the urban renewal projects of the early 1960s. Throughout its existence, the QQA has been a driving force behind historic preservation in Greater Little Rock.

They accomplish this mission through advocacy, education, and marketing. Historic preservation is more than saving old buildings; it is a means of revitalizing neighborhoods, containing urban sprawl and returning life to historic places.

The QQA advocates at the local, state and federal level for preservation incentives that encourage adaptive reuse of historic structures.

The QQA offers a wide range of programs and services to help property owners and others interested in historic preservation in the Little Rock area. The QQA staff is also available to answer questions about historic preservation, historic rehabilitation tax credits, Capitol Zoning District Commission, Little Rock Historic District Commission and other relevant issues. They also sponsor Preservation Conversations which address a wide range of architectural history and preservation topics.

The Quapaw Quarter Association announced the Cheryl Griffith Nichols Historic Building Marker Program in 2015. Since then, QQA has presented over 50 markers. They display the building name and date of construction. They may be pole-mounted, or attached directly to a building.

The program’s goals are to recognize historically and architecturally significant buildings located anywhere in the city of Little Rock that have been well-maintained or have undergone exemplary rehabilitation; to bring to the attention of the general public buildings that are unique assets to the Little Rock; and to promote the QQA as Little Rock’s leading historic preservation organization.

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Posted in Architecture, Civic Engagement, Design, Government, History | Tagged Preservation Conversations, Quapaw Quarter, Quapaw Quarter Association

5th annual Celebrate! Maya tonight

Posted on October 18, 2019 by Scott

From 6-9 p.m. Oct. 18 at the Clinton Presidential Center, Celebrate! Maya marks five years of service to Arkansas communities through fun and fellowship.

Elliott Jones, Maya Angelou’s grandson and liaison to the Dr. Maya Angelou Foundation Board of Directors, will join them for a special message and share memories of his grandmother. Regine Moore, director of multicultural marketing at Walmart, will provide the keynote address. Plus, musician Rodney Block, poet Kai Coggin and dancer Natoya England-Johnson will perform.

The live auction includes amazing gifts, trips and handmade items, many of which are in honor of Angelou and our organization’s mission. Place your bid on items created by artists such as Angela Handsard, whose “Bodcaw Creek” depicts a waterway located just miles from where Angelou lived as a child in Stamps; Erin Jester Cathey, whose “Everything in the Universe has a Rhythm, Everything Dances” is in honor of Angelou; Rashawn Penister, who created “Achieve Peace Within Yourself;” and Joëlle Storet, who will create a live painting during the evening that will be auctioned. You can also bid on a guitar personally signed by folk artist Ruthie Foster in honor of Angelou, an assortment of handmade jewelry, an African dress and much more.

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Posted in Civic Engagement, Literature | Tagged Celebrate! Maya Project, Elliott Jones, Kai Coggin, Maya Angelou, Natoya England-Johnson, Regine Moore, Rodney Block

Sarah M. Broom is first OA South Words featured author

Posted on October 15, 2019 by Scott

Image may contain: 1 person, standing and outdoorThe Oxford American is excited to kick off its new South Words series tonight (October 15) with Sarah M. Broom, author of The Yellow House.

Moderating the discussion is the 2019-2020 OA Jeff Baskin Fellow, KaToya Ellis Fleming. Doors to the Ron Robinson Theater open at 6 PM, and there will be a book signing after the reading.

This special event is free and open to the public.

The Presenting Sponsor is the UCA College of Fine Arts and Communication, and the reading series is presented in partnership with the Central Arkansas Library System’s Six Bridges Book Festival. Additional season partners include the Clinton School of Public Service, Arkansas Arts Council, Division of Arkansas Heritage, and Villa Vue at SoMa.

Sarah M. Broom is a writer whose work has appeared in the New Yorker, The New York Times Magazine, The Oxford American, and O, The Oprah Magazine, among others. A native New Orleanian, she received her Masters in Journalism from the University of California, Berkeley in 2004. She was awarded a Whiting Foundation Creative Nonfiction Grant in 2016 and was a finalist for the New York Foundation for the Arts Fellowship in Creative Nonfiction in 2011. She has also been awarded fellowships at Djerassi Resident Artists Program and The MacDowell Colony. She lives in New York State. Her novel The Yellow House is a brilliant, haunting and unforgettable memoir from a remarkable new talent about the inexorable pull of home and family, set in a shotgun house in New Orleans East.

KaToya Ellis Fleming is the recipient of the 2019-2020 Oxford American Jeff Baskin Writers Fellowship. She is a Georgia native with a BA in English from Spelman College and an MFA in Narrative Nonfiction Writing from the University of Georgia. Her work focuses on race and culture in the American South.

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Posted in Civic Engagement, Lecture, Literature | Tagged Arkansas Arts Council, CALS, Central Arkansas Library System, Clinton School of Public Service, Department of Parks Heritage and Tourism, KaToya Ellis Fleming, Oxford American, Ron Robinson Theater, Sarah M. Broom, Six Bridges Book Festival, South Words

A Place Called H____ is Architecture and Design Network topic this evening

Posted on October 15, 2019 by Scott

Image may contain: textThe Architecture and Design Network (ADN) continues its 2019/2020 June Freeman lecture series with a lecture entitled “A Place Called H___: Community Dialogues on Aging and Homelessness” a panel presentation moderated with Jill Floyd.

It will begin at 6pm tonight following a 5:30pm reception. The reception and conversation will take place at the Windgate Center for Art+Design on the UA Little Rock campus.

Jill serves as a project manager and director of community outreach for CDI Contractors in Little Rock, where she manages commercial construction and leads initiatives to develop young women’s interests in science, technology, engineering and math. In partnership with AARP and the Nomad Design Challenge , Jill will present findings from her research on co-housing and lead a panel discussion on designing inclusive communities. The panel will discuss issues surrounding living and community conditions for both ageing and homeless citizens.

Jill is currently a Presidential Leadership Scholar pursuing research focused on creating affordable co-housing communities for senior citizens of modest means. Nine years ago, her mother died. Then nine months later, her father had a stroke. Floyd said she moved from Detroit back to Little Rock to live with her father. It was obvious her father’s home couldn’t accommodate a wheelchair or walker as there were stairs and narrow hallways. “I would literally have to gut the whole house,” she said. Jill said her father’s income put him out of range for financial assistance, as many blue-collar workers find themselves in a position where they don’t qualify for assistance but they can’t afford the medical care they need.

Floyd says her project as a Presidential Leadership Scholar involved research into a type of housing that has been implemented for the elderly in Europe. Tenants have their own bedrooms, but they share other space, such as a living room, with other residents. They have to interact with others, which keeps them from being lonely. “What if we could create a place for seniors to go, not to die, but to live?” Floyd said. “The issue is funding and making it sustainable.”

Much of Jill’s 15 year career has been split between the Construction and Manufacturing Industries in roles such as Project Management, Procurement and Quality. She also served a stint as the Executive Director of a non-profit she founded aimed at teaching financial literacy skills. Jill holds a BS Chemical Engineering from the University of Oklahoma and a MS/MBA in Operations Management from Penn State University.

ADN lectures are free and open to the public. No reservations are required. Supporters of ADN include the Fay Jones School of Architecture and Design, the University of Arkansas Little Rock Windgate Center of Art + Design, the Central Section of the Arkansas Chapter of the American Institute of Architects, the Arkansas Art Center and friends in the community. For additional information contact ArchDesignNetwork@gmail.com.

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Posted in Architecture, Civic Engagement, Design, Lecture | Tagged Architecture and Design Network, CDI Contractors, Central Arkansas Section of American Institute of Architects, Jill Floyd

3 more weeks for LR creatives to take Artspace Rocks Arts Market Survey!

Posted on October 14, 2019 by Scott

Image may contain: textEarlier in 2019, the Windgate Foundation invited Artspace, a national nonprofit leader in the field of affordable creative space development, to explore the feasibility of creating an affordable live/work community in the Little Rock metro region, a region they are calling “The Rocks.”

A series of meetings with the community and local leaders occurred in July and August, setting the stage for this next big step: A Creative Space Needs Survey of creative people, especially those interested in affordable space. Input will help the local stakeholder group and Artspace determine if there is ample need for new space, what type of space to create, what “affordable” means in the community, where to build, and if this idea should be taken to the next step.

Your input is critical to advancing plans for a new, affordable, creative space facility in the Little Rock metro area. A facility where creative people (artists, “creatives”, arts educators/administrators, people who make things, and those who keep alive cultural practices) can have affordable space in which to live and work, create, practice, connect and share with the public.

Please take the survey at https://www.artspace.org/ArtspaceRocks to have your voice heard in this process.

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Posted in Architecture, Civic Engagement, Dance, Design, Film, Food, Government, Literature, Music, Public Art, Theatre, Visual Art | Tagged Artspace, City of Little Rock, Windgate Foundation

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