MPR’s Chris Roberts reports on the appearance of sidewalk poetry being created throughout the city as a public art project designed to bring more poetry into everyday life. Roberts interviews Marcus Young, the creator of the project, as well as, one of the poets and other residents, about the concrete verse penned by St. Paulites.
Marcus Young served as City Artist for the City of St. Paul to shape public spaces and foster civic engagement. This project has been nationally recognized and emulated in public art programs across the country.
Transcripts
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CHRIS ROBERTS: You can't miss the short, pithy poems etched in the fresh sidewalk on St. Paul's Dayton Avenue. They mark Ray McKenzie's regular walking route. And though he doesn't know where they came from, he thinks they're charming, including this untitled poem.
RAY MACKENZIE: She was steward of the smallest things, a pair of dead bees in the windowsill, Santa ring, cluster of elm seeds in their felted cells.
CHRIS ROBERTS: How does that hit you?
SPEAKER 2: It's nice. It's got a haiku touch, and it's very, very concrete. It gives you a set of images to look at and think about. It's very quiet and peaceful.
CHRIS ROBERTS: Concrete. No pun intended?
RAY MACKENZIE: I'd like to take credit for it, but no pun intended. Yeah.
CHRIS ROBERTS: Are these poems the work of guerrilla poets with engraving tools stalking the neighborhoods of St. Paul on the hunt for fresh cement? No, they're not. Actually, the project is being funded by Public Art St. Paul with the city's blessing.
As St. Paul's Artist-in Residence, Marcus Young is charged with improving the quality of life in the city through the arts. Young too was walking along the sidewalk, looking down, when he began to notice how construction companies stamped their work.
MARCUS YOUNG: And it'll say Knutson Construction or Standard Sidewalk. And one day I just thought, hey, that's an opportunity for art.
CHRIS ROBERTS: Why not enlarge that stamp, Young thought, and imprint the verse of local poets on new sidewalks? So he organized a citywide sidewalk poetry contest, limiting the poems to 150 characters or less. Judges selected 20 winners from more than 2,000 submissions. The poems are being stamped in neighborhoods throughout St. Paul.
City maintenance crews pour the concrete, smooth it out, and then stamp the poems under the supervision of Young and his team. For Young, the project reflects how St. Paul lights lead poetic lives. Sure, he says, we all have to go to work, pay the bills, feed the kids.
MARCUS YOUNG: But we also are dreamers, and we have high aspiration. And so I think that comes out when you ask people to write about the things that are most important to them.
NAOMI COHN: I reach for a name, a song, a tune, and memories scatter.
CHRIS ROBERTS: Naomi Cohn is looking down at the sidewalk. It contains her poem Dementia. It's dedicated to her father, who began to lose his ability to think and remember as he got older. Again, I reach for a name, a song, a tune, Cohn writes.
NAOMI COHN: And memories scatter. Minnows fleeing a toothy pike. I catch a few laggards, but know these are nothing to the 100 fish that fled.
CHRIS ROBERTS: Cohn wrote this poem a while ago in a workshop. She knows it's sad, but she's happy. It's being published in cement.
NAOMI COHN: I think it just puts it in a different place where it's free and open. You don't have to go to reading or coffee shop or a library or a space that has a certain approach to it.
CHRIS ROBERTS: There's another sidewalk poem, a few blocks away from Cohn's. It goes, "A little less war, a little more peace. A little less poor, a little more eats." 10-year-old Daijon McDonough passes over it every time he walks down his block.
DAIJON MCDONOUGH: I like it because it's true. And poor people do need to eat food and stuff.
CHRIS ROBERTS: Daijon thinks the sidewalk poems bring a lot to his neighborhood. He likes how some of them share wisdom or lay out a path to follow. He even protected one as it was drying.
DAIJON MCDONOUGH: When it was wet cement, my friend almost stepped on it. And I said, don't step on that because that's beautiful work that people worked on a lot.
CHRIS ROBERTS: That poetry stamping work will continue through October. Then there's the question of whether the poems can survive the freeze/thaw cycle of a Minnesota winter. But organizer Marcus Young says the project has already come up with a new way to look at sidewalks as blank pages.
MARCUS YOUNG: And if you accept that the sidewalk panel is a blank page, then we have this amazing book in our city that is our city.
CHRIS ROBERTS: Residents will soon get a chance to read that book. This Saturday, St. Paul Public Works and Public Art St. Paul will hold an open house at St. Stephanus Lutheran Church. The church is in a section of the Frogtown neighborhood where there's a pretty high concentration of sidewalk poems.
A hand-bound artist-made book featuring the winning poems has also been published so people can see what they look like on the printed page. Chris Roberts, Minnesota Public Radio News, St. Paul.