By
Steve Reinbrecht
The
GoggleWorks Center for the Arts is supposed to have a big role in brightening
Reading’s future.
“By
all counts, Reading is well on its way to an historic period of revitalization
and prosperity,” says the state’s KeystoneEdge webpage about the city. “It might have begun with The GoggleWorks Center for
the Arts, a community art and cultural resource center founded in 2003 in a
former safety goggles factory.”
“The
GoggleWorks, the biggest arts center of its kind in the nation, calls Reading
home. As a renovated factory building set in the heart of Reading, it sparks
hope that the arts can jolt life into the city,” according to an article in January2013 in Curator, an online arts magazine.
“Art
is one of the best ways to redevelop the city,” retail magnate Al Boscov, who was
instrumental in creating the GoggleWorks, told Berks County Living magazine in October 2013. “Art is fueling the
rebirth of the city of Reading.”
But
is the GoggleWorks, which opened in September 2005 at the cost of $13.5
million, succeeding?
It
never has been able to cover its expenses without rich people and
philanthropies donating a huge chunk of its roughly $1.7 million annual budget,
including more than $1 million in 2012 and 2013. For example, Boscov donated $570,000 in 2012 and $300,000 in
2013. Marlin Miller, another founder, donated $550,000 in 2012 and $300,000 in
2013.
Some
artists who have had studios in the GoggleWorks since it opened are leaving. Too
few people visit their studios, some say. One says the GoggleWorks is failing
its mission to engage the neighbors: “To nurture the arts, foster creativity,
promote education and enrich the community.”
Many
city residents don’t visit or know much about the place.
The
Berks tourist-bureau website virtually ignores the GoggleWorks.
A
row of never-leased retail space right across the street is starting to look
trashy.
But
the GoggleWorks’s leader, who started in July 2012, says he has the answer to get
more money to sustain the arts center and attract young artists to live and
work here.
Art has ignited positive change in city neighborhoods across the world. Susan Golembiski, a fashion designer who left the GoggleWorks after buying Jan Rae, a business in West Reading, easily reeled off a list of communities, some urban, that have transformed themselves by embracing art: Lambertville, New Hope, Fishtown, Manayunk, South Street, Red Bank.
Local
artists and entrepreneurs made them fun places, she said, and people began to
visit from farther away.
To
spur revitalization in Reading, city leaders decided to create an arts district
centered on the GoggleWorks. In 2012, local architect Lee Olsen was paid $75,000
to create a plan for the Ricktown arts district among the blocks of mostly
poor, Spanish-speaking people.
But
Ricktown has gone nowhere.
“Although
there was a lot of discussion, nothing proceeded,” GoggleWorks spokeswoman
Lauren McNitt said.
In
March, Boscov asked for about $2.25 million in federal money that had been earmarked
for Ricktown to instead develop buildings on Penn Street.
"There's
nothing we can do in Ricktown strong enough to make any impact," Boscov said. "But this (Penn Square project) could work." he said in March.
Some
GoggleWorks artists say the number of visitors has declined and that GoggleWorks
has to do better marketing. McNitt has heard artists are disappointed that more
art is not being purchased.
Artist
Alan Cernak has had a studio in the GoggleWorks since it opened but has decided
to leave. He said the project started out wonderfully but that foot traffic has
declined.
“Now
it’s down to zero.”
Not
quite – the GoggleWorks’s electric eye counted a monthly average of 19,820
visits over the past eight months, with the highest in May -- 25,802. Before
the GoggleWorks installed counters in early October 2013, it didn’t tally
visitors, McNitt said.
Golembiski
said the number of visitors was good at first, especially during Second Sunday
events, but has dropped recently.
“People
don’t want to go into Reading,” she said. “People are afraid of Reading. I
don’t understand it. I’m not. … I feel kind of guilty leaving it.”
Cernak,
whose Japanese-style art attracts many young people, agreed that fear of crime
is a barrier.
“They
hear we’re going to move to West Reading, and everybody’s mother goes, “Oh
good.’ “
Artist
Suzanne Fellows, also a board member, said it’s unlikely the center will see
again the crowds it attracted in its first years.
Many
people like to disparage GoggleWorks, she said, but things are going well. “Things
aren’t in the ditch.”
At
times, the GoggleWorks café has closed for lack of business, though now it is
run by Reading’s Mi Casa Su Casa restaurant.
The
GoggleWorks has a high turnover of artists, said artist Ed Terrell, who ran the
African Coalition of Reading gallery in the GoggleWorks from its opening in
2005 until he left in March.
Studio
space is in demand because many artists are lured by the prestige and promise
of being part of an arts organization, Terrell said.
“After
some months, they’re sitting in their studios, realizing no one’s coming by,”
Terrell said. “So many amazing artists who came there to do stuff leave.”
Every
spring for years, Terrell has held an art show and contest in the GoggleWorks for
Reading School District students, giving awards and displaying art work from
every grade and every school. His award ceremonies packed the floor with adults
and children from the city.
He
says the center is not following its mission because it does not reach out to
the local community
“It’s
a very quiet place,” he said. “A lot more could be going on there to represent
the community. … They don’t target the surrounding community.”
The
last outdoor community event was in the summer of 2011 in the parking lot,
McNitt said. But she said holding a farmer’s market inside the GoggleWorks’s
cafeteria every Friday is a great way to attract new visitors from the neighborhood
and nearby high rises, filled mostly with old people. She distributed 400 bilingual
fliers about the market to residents and students in nearby Lauer’s Park
Elementary School.
After
finding a flier in her child’s school bag and seeing sidewalk signs, Mariel
Tineo visited the GoggleWorks for the first time June 13 with her young children
to see the farmer’s market, which debuted that day. She said her children
enjoyed the market, and she bought honey and bread.
To
other residents, the GoggleWorks remains a mystery. Pablo Reyes-Polanco had
noticed the colored flashing lights on the exterior. “I never knew that was the
GoggleWorks, and I’ve been here for five years.” He was surprised to hear what
it was. “I like art.”
Residents
Yesenia Montanez and Heisy Berroa Nuñez also had noticed the lights but didn’t
know it was the GoggleWorks or an arts center.
Friends
Marcell and Miguel like to hang out in the cool, comfortable third-floor lounge
after discovering the GoggleWorks during a Reading High School field trip. They
also like looking at the art.
“Many
people don’t know about this place,” Miguel said.
Beside
the new market, the GoggleWorks serves the community with free after-school art
classes, McNitt said. In 2013, the GoggleWorks served almost 1,100 students
with 197 arts classes, including 518 children in 60 free after-school classes.
“I’d
like to know how to reach more people in the community,” she said.
The
Reading Eagle, Albright College radio WXAC and Berks Community Television (BCTV)
have helped spread the word about the GoggleWorks and its events, McNitt said.
But
the Greater Reading Convention and Visitors Bureau website is not much help.
The top of its “arts and culture” page in its “What to do section” mentions the
Amish, but not the GoggleWorks.
The
top of the “attractions” section mentions the Pagoda, but not the GoggleWorks. The
website lists dozens of attractions alphabetically, so you see the Biedler
House and Cornwall Iron Furnace, remarkable as those sites might be, long
before you get a clue, while you’re planning a trip to Reading, that there’s a
place called the GoggleWorks.
The
GoggleWorks, spreading out over 145,000 square feet in a five-story former
factory, is full of galleries, artist studios, beauty and whimsy. It is free to
enter, and you may wander on three floors where much beautiful, intriguing and
provocative art, by local and visiting artists, is always on display.
It has a wondrous wood shop and a cozy movie theater. Though now
operating at full blast, the center has had to close it exceptional glassmaking
studio, with its giant furnaces, because of the high energy costs. Winter
heating costs in the old building are killer.
GoggleWorks’s
executive director, Phil Walz, who started in October 2012, said he has a plan to find the revenue to allow the arts center pay its own way – and it involves attracting people from
around the world, not just the neighborhoods.
In
May, glass artists from across America came to Reading for an intensive
two-week class. More art students will come to learn how to form glass in
kilns, jewelry and metalsmithing, ceramics and fine woodworking. The two-week workshops
range from $475-$660. The classes feature renowned regional and national
faculty and target emerging and professional artists.
The
revenue stream will “absolutely” plug the GoggleWorks’ budget gap, Walz said.
But the math is daunting – to raise $1 million, the center would have to
collect $660 from more than 1,500 art students.
The
plan uses the center’s advantages – its physical capacity, year-round
operation, location, low-cost public transit, low cost of living and
competitive course prices, Walz wrote.
It will also help develop the city, Walz said. It could help create a place
where young artists could rent cheap space, use equipment they could never
afford on their own, find cheap housing and walk to work. Similar elite arts
centers are generally in remote spots and operate only 2-3 months a year.
“We
believe that our comparatively low cost of living, ease of access to major
metropolitan East Coast centers, the cost, availability, and high quality
rental studios available, and the availability of large teaching studios for
rent, combined with a vital creative community, will make Reading a destination
for serious artists wanting to begin a career.”
Artists
also complained GoggleWorks administrators were closed to their ideas.
Cernak
had pushed the idea of a convention for lovers of anime – a Japanese art style –
that would have included visits to the Pagoda, but said it didn’t get anywhere.
Golembiski
wanted to teach fashion and design classes to young people so they could learn
her vanishing trade.
“They
just couldn’t make it happen.”
Terrell
and others made a plan called GoggleScapes with awnings, benches, lights,
planters, sculptures and a banner across the street to make the center look
more exciting.
“This
was all shut down.”
Administrators
also shot down the idea for a mural at the entrance, Terrell said.
McNitt
said the GoggleWorks suffers from a lack of resources, not good ideas. Walz
gets such suggestions every day, McNitt said.
Referring
to GoggleScapes, she said: “Where is the money going to come from for something
like that? GoggleWorks is being asked to be self-sufficient. What are we going
to cut?”
Similar
sites do not have much exterior art, and once installed it’s hard to have
removed, McNitt wrote.
“Permanent
art such as what Mr. Terrell was proposing would also be a reflection of the
organization's aesthetic, cultural and institutional values. Walz believes that
anyone should be able to come here and develop their own.”
Is
the arts center a symbol of the disconnection between the people who plan what
to build and promote to improve the city – and the people who live there? Do
development plans depend too much on attracting outside people to bring their
money into Reading instead of organically improving the city from the inside
out?
On
cold days last winter, apparently homeless people gathered in a seating area in
the arts center, Golembiski said.
“It
put people off.”
Terrell
wants to focus on the neighborhood, no matter how scruffy it is.
“It
has to be a living, breathing place,” Terrell said of the arts center.
Decisions
now are based on paranoia, he said.
“With
art, you can’t have paranoia,” he said.
yeah, makes a lot of sense to have an indoor farmer's market right next to art work...not! it makes no sense whatsoever -- imagine someone accidentally bumping into a painting? and they are there at the gallery opening nights? ridiculous.
ReplyDeletethey should bring more art into the city different kinds like dancing singing acting studios so the communitty can dream and get inspired in the city
ReplyDeleteGoggleworks doomed itself to failure out of the gate by not building a venue for performing arts (like a smaller version of the Miller Center). It also doesn't help that the main entrance is in the rear of the building. And if you do manage to find the parking lot, the urban blight that you'll have to drive past to get to the lot will make you reconsider parking. And let's not talk about what a nightmare it is to get in and out of the Goggleworks building if you're disabled or elderly.
ReplyDelete