Boston Contemporary Writers was a literary competition and poetry and prose siting that ran from 1986 to 1987 and was launched to provide a written component to balance the visual emphasis of the permanent art of Arts in Transit. UrbanArts held a state-wide competition that solicited works of either poetry or prose that would eventually be permanently inscribed on granite in each of the nine stations. To achieve this, they built a community advisory board to conduct outreach and formed a separate selection panel that would conduct a blind review of submitted manuscripts. Two works were chosen for each station, for a total of eighteen pieces of writing. Some authors had never had work published before, others, such as
Gish Jen, were relatively well-known and well-regarded writers with popular publications to their name. While some of these works are within stations, others are within surrounding parkland or adjacent to station entrances. Poet
Sam Cornish directed the project for UrbanArts.
Along the El photography project Along the El (sometimes also
The Artist’s Lens: A Focus on Relocation) was a documentary photography project completed between 1985 and 1987, proposed to
UrbanArts by Linda Swartz. Boston’s elevated Orange Line, which ran from
Chinatown to
Forest Hills Station in Jamaica Plain, was built in 1901. By the 1980s the line was showing its age and abutting neighborhoods were suffering from lack of sunlight, noise from rusted brakes, and grime. The MBTA and Department of Transportation planned to dismantle the old elevated line and relocate it along the Southwest Corridor. The project paired five professional photographers with seven high school students from Hubert H. Humphrey Occupational Resource Center in Roxbury to document the architecture, the people, and the general feeling of the “El” before it was demolished. The five photographers were Linda Swartz, project director,
David Akiba,
Lou Jones,
Jack Lueders-Booth, and
Melissa Shook. Images from the project were donated to the
Boston Public Library and were digitized for wider availability through the Digital Commonwealth initiative. ==
Sources of Strength oral history project ==