How urban spaces can preserve history and build community Walter Hood

How can landscapes imbue memory?

When we think about
this notion “e pluribus unum” –

“out of many, one,”

it’s a pretty strange concept, right?

I mean, with all different races
and cultures of people,

how do you boil it down to one thing?

I want to share with you today
this idea of “e pluribus unum”

and how our landscape might imbue
those memories of diverse perspectives,

as well as force us to stop
trying to narrow things down

to a single, clean set of identities.

As an educator, designer,

I’d like to share with you
five simple concepts

that I’ve developed through my work.

And I’d like to share
with you five projects

where we can begin to see
how the memory around us,

where things have happened,

can actually force us to look
at one another in a different way.

And lastly: this is not just
an American motto anymore.

I think e pluribus unum is global.

We’re in this thing together.

First, great things happen
when we exist in each other’s world –

like today, right?

The world of community gardens –

most of you have probably
seen a community garden.

They’re all about subsistence
and food. Right?

I’ll tell you a little story,

what happened in New York
more than a decade ago.

They tried to sell
all of their community gardens,

and Bette Midler developed a nonprofit,
the New York Restoration Project.

They literally brought all the gardens

and decided to save them.

And then they had another novel idea:

let’s bring in world-class designers

and let them go out into communities
and make these beautiful gardens,

and maybe they might not
just be about food.

And so they called me,

and I designed one in Jamaica, Queens.

And on the way to designing this garden,

I went to the New York
Restoration Project Office,

and I noticed a familiar name
on the door downstairs.

I go upstairs, and I said,

“Do you guys know who is downstairs?”

And they said, “Gunit.”

And I said, “Gunit?

You mean G-Unit?

Curtis ‘50 Cent’ Jackson?”

(Laughter)

And they said, “Yeah?”

And I said, “Yes.”

And so we went downstairs,
and before you knew it,

Curtis, Bette and the rest of them
formed this collaboration,

and they built this garden
in Jamaica, Queens.

And it turned out Curtis, 50 Cent,
grew up in Jamaica.

And so again, when you start
bringing these worlds together –

me, Curtis, Bette –

you get something more incredible.

You get a garden

that last year was voted one of the top 10
secret gardens in New York.

Right?

(Applause)

It’s for young and old,

but more importantly, it’s a place –

there was a story in the Times
about six months ago

where this young woman
found solace in going to the garden.

It had nothing to do with me.
It had more to do with 50, I’m sure,

but it has inspired people
to think about gardens

and sharing each other’s worlds
in a different way.

This next concept, “two-ness” –

it’s not as simple as I thought
it would be to explain,

but as I left to go to college,
my father looked at me,

and said, “Junior, you’re going to have
to be both black and white

when you go out there.”

And if you go back to the early
parts of the 20th century,

W.E.B. Du Bois, the famous activist,

said it’s this peculiar sensation

that the Negro has to walk around

being viewed through the lens
of other people,

and this two-ness,
this double consciousness.

And I want to argue that more
than a hundred years later,

that two-ness has made us
strong and resilient,

and I would say for brown people, women –

all of us who have had to navigate
the world through the eyes of others –

we should now share that strength
to the rest of those

who have had the privilege to be singular.

I’d like to share with you a project,

because I do think this two-ness
can find itself in the world around us.

And it’s beginning to happen where
we’re beginning to share these stories.

At the University of Virginia,

the academical village
by Thomas Jefferson,

it’s a place that we’re beginning
to notice now was built by African hands.

So we have to begin to say,

“OK, how do we talk about that?”

As the University
was expanding to the south,

they found a site
that was the house of Kitty Foster,

free African American woman.

And she was there,

and her descendants,

they all lived there,

and she cleaned for the boys of UVA.

But as they found the archaeology,

they asked me if I would do
a commemorative piece.

So the two-ness of this landscape,
both black and white …

I decided to do a piece
based on shadows and light.

And through that, we were able
to develop a shadow-catcher

that would talk about this two-ness
in a different way.

So when the light came down,

there would be this ride to heaven.

When there’s no light, it’s silent.

And in the landscape of Thomas Jefferson,

it’s a strange thing.

It’s not made of brick.

It’s a strange thing,

and it allows these two things
to be unresolved.

And we don’t have to resolve these things.

I want to live in a world

where the resolution –

there’s an ambiguity between things,

because that ambiguity
allows us to have a conversation.

When things are clear and defined,

we forget.

The next example? Empathy.

And I’ve heard that a couple of times
in this conference,

this notion of caring.

Twenty-five years ago,
when I was a young pup,

very optimistic,

we wanted to design a park
in downtown Oakland, California

for the homeless people.

And we said, homeless people
can be in the same space

as people who wear suits.

And everyone was like,
“That’s never going to work.

People are not going to eat lunch
with the homeless people.”

We built the park.

It cost 1.1 million dollars.

We wanted a bathroom.

We wanted horseshoes,
barbecue pits, smokers,

picnic tables, shelter and all of that.

We had the design,
we went to the then-mayor

and said, “Mr. Mayor, it’s only
going to cost you 1.1 million dollars.”

And he looked at me.

“For homeless people?”

And he didn’t give us the money.

So we walked out, unfettered,
and we raised the money.

Clorox gave us money.

The National Park Service
built the bathroom.

So we were able to go ahead

because we had empathy.

Now, 25 years later,

we have an even larger
homeless problem in the Bay Area.

But the park is still there,

and the people are still there.

So for me, that’s a success.

And when people see that,

hopefully, they’ll have empathy
for the people under freeways and tents,

and why can’t our public spaces

house them and force us to be empathetic?

The image on the left
is Lafayette Square Park today.

The image on the right is 1906,
Golden Gate Park after the earthquake.

Why do we have to have cataclysmic events

to be empathetic?

Our fellow men are out there starving,

women sleeping on the street,
and we don’t see them.

Put them in those spaces,
and they’ll be visible.

(Applause)

And to show you that there are still
people out there with empathy,

the Oakland Raiders' Bruce Irvin

fries fish every Friday afternoon

for anyone who wants it.

And by going to that park,
that park became the vehicle for him.

The traditional belongs to all of us,

and this is a simple one.

You go into some neighborhoods –
beautiful architecture, beautiful parks –

but if people look a different way,

it’s not traditional.

It’s not until they leave
and then new people come in

where the traditional gets valued.

A little quick story here:

1888 opera house,

the oldest in San Francisco,

sits in Bayview–Hunters Point.

Over its history,

it’s provided theater,

places for businesses,
places for community gatherings, etc.

It’s also a place where Ruth Williams
taught many black actors.

Think: Danny Glover –

came from this place.

But over time, with our
1980s federal practices,

a lot of these community institutions
fell into disrepair.

With the San Francisco Arts Council,
we were able to raise money

and to actually refurbish the place.

And we were able to have
a community meeting.

And within the community meeting,
people got up and said,

“This place feels like a plantation.
Why are we locked in?

Why can’t we learn theater?”

Over the years, people had started
putting in chicken coops, hay bales,

community gardens and all of these things,

and they could not see
that traditional thing behind them.

But we said, we’re bringing
the community back.

American Disability Act – we were able
to get five million dollars.

And now, the tradition belongs
to these brown and black people,

and they use it.

And they learn theater,

after-school programs.

There’s no more chickens.

But there is art.

And lastly, I want to share with you
a project that we’re currently working on,

and I think it will force us all
to remember in a really different way.

There are lots of things
in the landscape around us,

and most of the time we don’t know
what’s below the ground.

Here in Charleston, South Carolina,

a verdant piece of grass.

Most people just pass by it daily.

But underneath it,

it’s where they discovered
Gadsden’s Wharf.

We think more than 40 percent
of the African diaspora landed here.

How could you forget that?

How could you forget?

So we dug, dug, and we found the wharf.

And so in 2020,

Harry Cobb and myself and others

are building the International
African American Museum.

And it will celebrate –

(Applause)

this place where we know,
beneath the ground,

thousands died, perished,

the food chain of the bay changed.

Sharks came closer to the bay.

It’s where slaves were stored.

Imagine this hallowed ground.

So in this new design,
the ground will erupt,

and it will talk about
this tension that sits below.

The columns and the ground
is made of tabby shales

scooped up from the Atlantic,

a reminder of that awful crossing.

And as you make your way through
on the other side,

you are forced to walk through
the remains of the warehouse,

where slaves were stored

on hot, sultry days, for days,

and perished.

And you’ll have to come face-to-face

with the Negro,

who worked in the marshes,

who was able to,
with the sickle-cell trait,

able to stand in high waters
for long, long days.

And at night, it’ll be open 24/7,

for everybody to experience.

But we’ll also talk about
those other beautiful things

that my African ancestors
brought with them:

a love of landscape,

a respect for the spirits
that live in trees and rocks and water,

the ethnobotanical aspects,

the plants that we use
for medicinal purposes.

But more importantly,

we want to remind people
in Charleston, South Carolina,

of the black bodies,

because when you go to Charleston today,

the Confederacy is celebrated,

probably more than any other city,

and you don’t have a sense
of blackness at all.

The Brookes map,

which was an image
that helped abolitionists see

and be merciful for that
condition of the crossing,

is something that we want to repeat.

And I was taken by the conceptuality

of this kind of digital print that sits
in a museum in Charleston.

So we decided to bring the water
up on top of the surface,

seven feet above tide,

and then cast the figures
full length, six feet,

multiply them across the surface,

in tabby,

and then allow people
to walk across that divide.

And hopefully, as people come,

the water will drain out,

fill up,

drain out and fill up.

And you’ll be forced to come to terms
with that memory of place,

that memory of that crossing,

that at times seems very lucid and clear,

but at other times, forces us
again to reconcile the scale.

And hopefully, as people move
through this landscape every day,

unreconciled, they’ll remember,

and hopefully when we remember,

e pluribus unum.

Thank you.

(Applause)