Joy Street Studios, Union Square
This location at 86 Joy Street in Somerville has housed over five dozen artists in the Brickbottom neighborhood. It’s one major artist building in Somerville and an anchor location of Somerville Open Studios.
The problem: North River, a developer from New York purchased this and surrounding properties.
The advocacy: The #ARTSTAYSHERE Coalition will help the artists advocate to either remain in their current building as is, or to be relocated within the Brickbottom neighborhood at the same square footage footprint, at the same rent rate.
How you can help: please sign the online petition by clicking here.
“an unlikely group of artists and activists known as the Art Stays Here Coalition has emerged to help combat displacement. The small, all-volunteer group is part of a broader effort that includes policy makers, developers, advocacy groups, and others to confront a problem that by some estimates has caused more than 2 million square feet of cultural space to vanish over the years, as gentrification emptied studios and other venues across Fort Point, the South End, the Fenway, Cambridge, and beyond.” August 5, 2023
“Advocacy requires specific skills including organizing, public speaking, writing/messaging, marketing/public relations, government relations, project management, event producing and fundraising. Through our experiences, we’ve seen the strongest arts advocacy is when artists come together and join with behind-the-scenes folks to create and execute a campaign. Often, advocating for creative space might be the first time some folks have ever advocated. There’s a lot to learn, a lot of strategy involved, and it takes a village.” July/August Issue 2023
“Boston’s Chief of Arts and Culture Kara Elliot-Ortega said it was the first time her office had worked with a developer to acquire property to use for permanent arts space. “It’s a historic moment,” Elliott-Ortega said. “We’re really excited about it, and ready to move on to the public process to determine how we’re going to build out the space.”” June 16, 2023
“The City of Boston — led by Mayor Michelle Wu and the Mayor’s Office of Arts and Culture and in collaboration with the Boston Planning & Development Agency, with efforts from local groups like the #ARTSTAYSHERE coalition — has revealed plans to acquire and develop a new multi-use space at 290 North Beacon St. The building would be purchased by IQHQ and then gifted to the city in hopes of creating a secure, long-term practice facility for bands and artists in the area.” May 16, 2023
Boston Public Radio airs from 11-2PM Monday through Friday, and records live from the Boston Public Library nearly every Tuesday and Friday. June 16, 2023
“The building is HUGE. 35,000 square feet, close to the size of the old Sound Museum. So there will plenty of space for rehearsal space, right where in the neighborhood where rehearsal space should be. All that’s left is for The Boston Planning & Development Agency to put it to a vote. I’ll keep following the story and keep you up-to-date. In the meantime, check out the temporary rehearsal pace that the Art Stays Here Coalition set up for bands in the old ROCK 92.9 studio building in Dorchester right here.” May 12, 2023
“arts displacement is a symptom of an insecure cultural ecosystem — and to solve it, we must address it holistically. Each part of the ecosystem… — all stakeholders in our sector — must come together with one goal: to stop cultural displacement. We must preserve what we have, build more of what we need, and create protections for both. It’s cliche and true: it will take a village.” May/June Issue 2023
“it’s a community pool, but for music,” Pedro said. “If you want to play basketball, you go to a basketball court. If you want to play soccer, you go to a soccer field. If you want to play music, where do you go? And the idea was to kind of build a community space that people could flock to to meet like-minded folk.” March 29, 2023
““This is one important step toward ending arts/music/cultural displacement in Boston,” shares Ethan Dussault of the #ARTSTAYSHERE Coalition. “Through collaboration among artists, advocates, developers, and government, the tide is starting to change.” March 17, 2023