$1 Million Donation to the National Public Housing Museum Will Help Illuminate Public Housing’s Formative Role in the American Experience
Examples of personal items that will be part of the Joseph and Bessie Feinberg Foundation: Everyday Objects from Public Housing exhibit at the National Public Housing Museum include from left: Cruiserweight Boxing Title belt; Robert Taylor Homes Drawing and Raiders Motorcycle Club member jacket. PRNEWSFOTO/NATIONAL PUBLIC HOUSING MUSEUM
on their lives.
and the importance of home to all human beings, concepts that resonated with Feinberg Foundation President Janice Feinberg. “I’m
drawn to the NPHM’s fundamental objectives: Dispelling racialized stereotypes surrounding public housing, which has sustained residents of all races, creeds and ethnic groups, and promoting the right of all people to have a place to call home,” Feinberg, a longtime social justice
advocate and social impact investor, said.
daily lives of people living in public housing are often overlooked in our society, which tends to either sensationalize misfortune or celebrate
exceptional and extraordinary achievement. This exhibit celebrates everyday people and everyday experiences, helping to ensure that never again will a single story be told as if it is the only one,” NPHM Executive Director Lisa Yun Lee, Ph.D., explained.
children were displaced. But most significantly, the public doesn’t have an accurate portrayal or a meaningful historical record of who these people were and how public housing improved their lives,” Feinberg pointed out. “They were longtime Americans and immigrants from all walks of life. They worked in a myriad of professions, raised families and like most of us, led productive, meaningful lives. Public housing gave them a place to call home and thrive.”
residents aren’t erased twice—both in terms of their concrete, physical communities, and their individual and shared histories,” Feinberg said.
Harnessing the Power of Storytelling to Elevate Everyday People.
construction is complete in 2023: “Joseph and Bessie Feinberg Foundation: Everyday Objects from Public Housing.” It will feature 20 to 24 objects collected from public housing residents in Chicago, New York, Houston, Los Angeles and in a rural community yet to be determined.
Every 18 months, new objects from new places representing different residents and offering new perspectives will be rotated into the exhibition.
rather than curators or academics—explaining the items’ significance in their own words. Labels will be drafted by residents in workshops under
the guidance of experienced, award-winning writers. The first workshops will be held with New York City Housing Authority residents in a
workshop led by award-winning writer Audrey Petty. Object collection and writing workshops are funded by a grant the NPHM was awarded
by the National Writing Project as part of a National Endowment for the Humanities award.
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