Melissa Martin

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  • Building Narratives
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© 2011 - 2012
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Building Narratives

Role: Co-professor
Level: Graduate elective / GELCT-620-02 Interdisciplinary Studio
Term: Spring 2012
California College of the Arts

Course Description

What role, beyond aesthetic applications, can artists and designers serve in the resurrection of rural abandoned spaces and the long forgotten narratives embedded within them? What value do these narratives add to the revitalization of a space? What mediums, materials and tactics can designers and artists deploy to engage a community in conversation about the possibilities for the space and ways it might serve their current and future goals? These and other questions will be explored as we partner with architect Maria McVarish and the New Season Community Development Corporation in Esparto, CA to design a series of installations in and around the historic Esparto Train Station.

The station was part of the Vaca Valley and Clear Lake railroad and transported passengers, as well as agricultural goods. The line connected towns throughout the Valley until 1957 when the last train left the Esparto station. Today, the building stands in disrepair, its history and role within the community faded into the background. The elongated windows are boarded up but inside remain some remnants of the activity that once took place; a large, cast iron floor scale and a small, bright apartment where the station agent lived. Remnants of train tracks scatter the landscape. In 2011, the building was purchased by Maria McVarish and is scheduled for redevelopment in 2012.

By reintroducing latent narratives, we may illuminate various frames in which to view the space and reconnect to the building and its site. As a starting point, students will conduct a series of ethnographic type interviews with Esparto residents, representatives of the Capay Valley farming community and other community stakeholders to gain understanding of their relationship with the station and their visions for its revitalization. Aggregating their research, students will design and implement a considered, site-specific installation in order to, as a class, provide a series of moves on-site that will begin a conversation towards larger community awareness for the train station’s planned future.

Open to all graduate majors.

Visit http://mnemictrain.com/ to learn more about the Esparto Train Station and follow redevelopment plans, student work and community events.

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