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Project Lives: New York Public Housing Residents Photograph Their World

Hardback

Main Details

Title Project Lives: New York Public Housing Residents Photograph Their World
Authors and Contributors      By (author) George Carrano
By (author) Chelsea Davis
By (author) Jonathan Fisher
Physical Properties
Format:Hardback
Pages:138
Dimensions(mm): Height 210,Width 265
ISBN/Barcode 9781576877371
ClassificationsDewey:779.997471
Audience
General

Publishing Details

Publisher powerHouse Books,U.S.
Imprint powerHouse Books,U.S.
Publication Date 9 April 2015
Publication Country United States

Description

In Project Lives, residents of New York's notorious housing projects use participatory photography to document life in these crumbling islands of red brick. Those who live in the projects have become targets of both the tabloid press and Hollywood, and garnered an appalling public image of crime and disrepair. But Project Lives shows an entirely different side of the story, one in which courageous souls attempt to change how America sees them with the aim of preserving their homes.

Author Biography

A Bronx native,George Carranofounded the non-profit Seeing for Ourselves, which brought the Developing Lives photography program to New York's housing authority in 2010. He has also curated exhibits of war photojournalism and participatory photography thatThe New York Timestermed "poignant" and "not to be missed." Previously, Carrano raised the bar for public transit at the Metropolitan Transportation Authority, inventing passenger displays that became the industry standard; leading the agency to just-in-time logistics; and implementing MetroCard-this last a $2 billion subway token replacement whose success awed New York and has remained one of the largest public works projects in U.S. transportation history, universally judged a city milestone. A born Brooklynite with family roots in New York public housing, photographer and teacherChelsea Davishelped create and directed the Developing Lives photography program at the New York City Housing Authority. She had earlier created a participatory art class for the city's Association for Metro-Area Autistic Children (2004). Building on its success, Chelsea established the Project Picasso program three years later in the pediatric oncology ward of St. Louis Children's Hospital, providing art therapy to young children struggling with cancer. The program continues to operate. Born in Manhattan and raised in the Bronx and Queens,Jonathan Fisheradministered the Developing Lives photography program at the New York City Housing Authority, managing its extension into award-winning video. Trained in transportation science, hemade his mark at the city's transit agency by producing products likewise award-winning that delighted millions of passengers. Fisher also handled technology communications within Madison Avenue's Ogilvy & Mather, communicating best practices to 10,000 advertising practitioners in 104 countries. Meanwhile, he has produced highly regarded web, video, and collateral for Agent Orange relief.

Reviews

"Most New Yorkers know what public housing looks like from the outside, but this bracingly simple compilation takes us into the interiors of the buildings and thus into residents' startlingly ordinary lives." - The New York Times "beautiful...an unprecedented and intimate look into the lives of New York City public housing residents" - BuzzFeed "a photography book on life in public housing seen through the eyes of its inhabitants...aiming to change the negative perceptions of their living conditions and culture" - TIME "What if the housing projects were presented in such a way as to make people think they were worth preserving?" - Politico "a startlingly simple and optimistic portrait of family, friends, and neighbors. Photos show a couple cooking dinner, a beloved cat, a first date, the junk that's accumulated in an apartment over years. There's nothing really specific about the projects in Project Lives. It's just life" - New York magazine "From an image of a daughter peeping through the door while waiting for her mum to return home from a date - to young cousins describing themselves as 'brothers' - it's clear community is at 'Nychaland's' heart." - Dazed and Confused "an incredibly moving book" - Refinery 29 "Their unpretentious truth has the power to change how we see life in the projects. Perhaps, we may even become more sensitive to our own daily lives as well as to each other wherever we live." - Long Island Press As Seen In: The New York Review of Books American Photo Magazine NY1 Creative Review