REDLINING

PAST, PRESENT, FUTURE

A Multi-Experiential Exhibit

September 21 - November 17 2018

 

 

600 SPRING GARDEN ST. PHILADELPHIA

ARTS + CRAFTS HOLDINGS HQ (FORMER HOME OF THE NORTHERN SAVING FUND BANK)

THIS IMMERSIVE EXPERIENCE FEATURES:

ART INSTALLATION

DOCUMENTARY

TOUCH TECHNOLOGY

REFLECTION BOOTH

SEPT 21 - NOV 17, 2018

Wednesday & Thursday
12pm to 7pm
Friday & Saturday
1pm to 8pm
Sunday
1pm to 5pm
The space is still undergoing construction and therefore not ADA accessible in time for the exhibit.

A Dream Deferred uses art, technology and media to tell the story of how race and policy shape the landscape of Philadelphia and the lives of its residents. The project, named for a poem by Harlem Renaissance writer Langston Hughes, will explore what happens when people and cities are restricted from reaching their true potential.

What is Redlining?

The redlining practice got its name because of the actual red lines that were drawn on maps by bank lenders, insurers, and government agencies to identify and differentiate neighborhoods during city planning. Redlined neighborhoods are areas where housing prices are manipulated, lenders refuse to offer loans to residents, or sometimes make loans on unfavorable terms in what’s called "predatory lending".

People of color are often targets of redlining. This discriminatory practice creates devastating cycles of poverty that can last within families for generations, and are difficult to escape.

Redlining in Philadelphia

Though federal law made redlining illegal in 1968, similar practices still exist today and have tremendous impact in Philadelphia.

Today, almost a third of the city’s residents – including approximately 135,000 children – live under the federal poverty line, which for a family of four, means finding ways to stretch just $24,000 in annual household income.

Living in areas with lower wages and fewer job opportunities overall, those who live in poverty often live in areas with higher crime rates and have poorer health outcomes. In many ways, where people live determines their quality of life, especially when it comes to education, employment and well-being.

Funded by the Knight Foundation and created by Little Giant Creative, this experience-based multidisciplinary project explores how historic systemic policies and practices play out in the nation’s poorest large city, with rates of poverty concentrated in majority non-white areas.

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