Standing next to an image of himself staring out from behind a 3-foot
poster, Ethan Stein said there was a lot that passersby don’t
understand about the young people they see in the streets of Harvard
Square.One of the most durable and attractive styles of flooring that
you can purchase is ceramic or porcelain tiles.
“It’s
not that I wanted to be homeless, but that’s where I am right now, and
I’m just taking it one day at a time,” Stein said. “It’s better than
being some place where people are angry all the time.”
The
24-year-old is one of hundreds of homeless youth filling the streets of
the square and as of last Saturday, lining the walls of the Palmer
Street pedestrian arcade as part of a national “Outside In Project,”
which launched in Cambridge over the weekend.
“We’re all
homeless and we’re all really young,” said Youth on Fire member Jerrod
“Biggie” Basuscci, 24. “We don’t have a direction, but we’re trying to
make something of ourselves.”
The exhibit, a partnership between
Youth on Fire – a drop-in center for homeless youth in Harvard Square
and a prevention program of the AIDS Action Committee – and the Center
for Social Innovation, features 35 photographs on
three-by-four-and-a-half-foot posters by local artist Anthony Pira. Pira
said the idea is to bring the faces of homeless youth to the forefront.
“When you put a face on homelessness, it becomes real and
people see it as a real problem,” Pira said. “People think homelessness
is just the old guy on the park bench or they have stereotypes they
associate with guys getting drunk, or people being in jail, but they
don’t understand youth homelessness. …When you put these faces up there
and associate with words like homelessness, that becomes real to
people.”
Pira said they chose the Harvard Square location not
only because it’s a mere two blocks from the Youth of Fire center, but
also because the participants frequent the square.
“It’s such an
important part for not only the community to see the images and raise
awareness but also for the kids to see themselves because for the first
time they’ll be able to see themselves as part of the community,” Pira
said. “For so long their mentality is that they’ve been ignored or
degraded.”
A fine-art-photographer-turned-social-work student,
Pira said he initially began working on the project, which he called
Invisible Faces,A wide range of polished tiles
for your tile flooring and walls. in March as part of an effort to
raise awareness about funding needs for programs and organizations that
serve homeless youth. Simultaneously, the Center for Social Innovation
CEO Jeff Olivet said he was also beginning to work with French street
artist JR, a photographer who won a TED Prize for pioneering the
practice of plastering poster-sized portraits of vulnerable populations
in public spaces.Our technology gives rtls systems developers the ability.
Olivet and JR envisioned a national campaign,Thank you for visiting! I have been cry stalmosaic
since 1998. but wanted to start in Cambridge where Olivet has an
office. He reached out to Youth on Fire in the fall when he was informed
the work was already underway.
“They said we’ve also got a
photographer who has this Invisible Faces project going on and could we
merge the two projects,” Olivet said. “So basically, we said, ‘Sure.’ We
let Anthony’s photographs drive the national Outside In Project and we
dovetailed the two for the action in Harvard Square over the weekend.”
Olivet
said the Outside In Project was initially conceived with a broad focus
on homelessness but the organization became “enamored” with the more
narrowly focused youth campaign. Olivet said the Center for Innovation
plans to replicate the work in a dozen or so cities across the country
that will eventually culminate in what he called a “Youth Homeless
Congress” in Washington D.C. comprised of homeless youth.
“The
primary need is housing. It’s access to a decent space and affordable
housing to end youth homelessness,” Olivet said. “It’s possible to end
homelessness if we target our resources in the right way. …There’s also
more funding needed for youth job training, and in the wake of the
Connecticut shootings, more access to mental health care.”
Youth
on Fire program manager, Ayala Livny, said the organization is facing a
$10,000 shortfall in funding its meals program after several years of
budget cuts eroded state funding for the non-profit. Masucci said Youth
on Fire helped him get back on track. He’s ready to “age out” of the
organization in a few months when he turns 25.
“The services
they provide are so helpful – whether it’s food stamps, housing, getting
an ID, finding a job,” Masucci said,The term 'hands free access
control' means the token that identifies a user is read from within a
pocket or handbag. adding the organization also takes the time to meet
young people where they are in life. “A lot of people get too caught up
in the homeless lifestyle to take time to go back to school. … But no
matter what steps you take, however small, you’re still making progress
and furthering your goals and they really get that.”
Although
she said that raising awareness on a legislative level is important for
Youth on Fire, Livny said the impetus behind the project was equally
important.
“I say all the time that homeless youth are used to
being invisible. People are rude or avoid making eye contact or looking
them in the face. They’re used to people wishing they didn’t exist or
pretending they didn’t exist and feeling small in the world,” Livny
said. “To have those images writ large in the community is the opposite
of being invisible; it’s being larger than life. It’s a really powerful
and profound experience especially for people who are used to being
marginalized.”
Olivet said the exhibit would be up as long as
the wheat plaster holding up the portraits stays stuck, which he said
could be anywhere from several weeks to several months.
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