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Saturday, June 20, 2026

Announcing Public Utility Podcast.

Pleased to announce my new podcast, Public Utility. Produced by Amarii Productions Inc in part with Common Grounds Press.
                                 Spotify • Castbox

Public Utility is a new series by T.P. on public space, material culture, and the cities we’re still figuring
out how to share.

Listen to Episode 1: Public Space After Ownership on Spotify, Castbox, and Podbean today.

journeys in the northeast / 2026

                     view full sized images here.

Monday, June 15, 2026

NEW SHOW

Latest show out now, only on Signal Theory Radio.


                           Signal Theory Radio

Monday, June 8, 2026

Critical Reflections - Existential Infrastructure: Public Art, Dasein, and the Civic Imagination


Every city contains spaces that resist efficiency.

A library reading room on a rainy afternoon. A community garden maintained by volunteers who have never met outside of it. A mural that survives several cycles of redevelopment not because anyone protected it, but because tearing it down kept feeling wrong. 

These environments rarely appear in conversations about urban innovation. Municipal reports concentrate on housing, transportation, economic growth, environmental performance, and technological infrastructure. These concerns are necessary, often urgent. Cities require functioning systems. But public life is also shaped by experiences that resist quantification, and planning frameworks have never found a satisfying way to account for them.

People develop attachments to places. They remember specific corners, parks, storefronts, and public artworks long after practical details have faded: after addresses are forgotten, after the people they were with are gone. A neighborhood becomes meaningful through repetition and familiarity and the slow accumulation of encounter. Certain environments persist in memory not because they were designed to but because they became woven into the texture of daily existence.

This raises a question that urban discourse tends to circle without directly asking: what conditions allow people to feel genuinely present within the worlds they inhabit?

The question has become more pressing as cities accelerate through technological, economic, and environmental change. Public space is now routinely discussed through metrics of performance and optimization. Digital infrastructures mediate communication, navigation, and social interaction in ways that are largely invisible and difficult to contest. Urban environments are mapped, monitored, and measured with extraordinary precision. And yet many people describe a persistent sense of disconnection from the places where they live...a feeling of moving through environments that are legible but somehow unreal.

The contradiction is hard to dismiss. Cities have never been more connected, documented, or accessible. Experiences of belonging have rarely felt more fragile.


Philosophy offers a framework for taking this seriously.

Heidegger's concept of 'Dasein' is often obscured by the density of his prose, but the underlying concern is more direct than its academic reputation suggests. Dasein names human existence as it is lived rather than abstractly theorized: the condition of always already finding oneself embedded within relationships, histories, environments, and possibilities that precede any deliberate choice. Human beings are not detached observers positioned outside the world. They are thrown into it, shaped by it, constituted through participation in it.

The city is one of the most visible expressions of this condition.

Urban life emerges through dense interactions between people, institutions, materials, infrastructures, memories, and built environments that have been modified by generations of prior use. A city is experienced through movement and habit and sound and weather and architecture and the accumulated residue of encounter. Public space becomes one of the primary sites where individuals negotiate (mostly without knowing they are doing so) their relationship to collective life.

Contemporary urban development discourse rarely engages this dimension. Planning language emphasizes movement, access, circulation, and productivity. These concerns matter. They do not, however, address the experiential conditions of civic life. Questions of attention, memory, reflection, and belonging remain structurally difficult to incorporate into planning frameworks, despite their profound influence on how cities are actually inhabited.

Artists have long worked in this gap - not as a supplement to urban planning, but as practitioners of a different kind of spatial knowledge.

Public art occupies a genuinely strange position within urban environments. Unlike transportation systems or utility networks, its purpose cannot be reduced to a singular function. Public artworks operate through ambiguity. They invite observation without prescribing outcomes. Their presence alters the atmosphere of a place while remaining resistant to straightforward measurement, which makes them simultaneously difficult to justify within institutional frameworks and difficult to remove without something being lost.

Consider how memorials function within civic life. A memorial does not solve a practical problem. It introduces a space for collective reflection that would not otherwise exist: a site where people gather, leave objects, tell stories, and maintain relationships with histories that might otherwise dissolve from public consciousness. The site becomes part of a city's ongoing, largely unofficial conversation with itself.

The same process plays out differently in murals, sculptures, sound installations, temporary interventions. Public art creates points of orientation within urban memory. Residents navigate by artworks. Communities attach local narratives to specific images. Over time, the artwork becomes inseparable from the social life surrounding it, less a discrete object than a kind of condensation point for collective meaning.

This reveals something important about how meaning actually accumulates within public space. It is not imposed from above. It emerges through repeated encounters between people and environments over time. Public artworks participate in this process by creating occasions for attention - by interrupting habitual movement, encouraging lingering, drawing the relationship between memory and place into visibility. Such moments appear minor within the scale of urban systems. They are not minor in the scale of how a city becomes livable.

Heidegger's writing on art suggests that artworks disclose aspects of the world that remain hidden within ordinary routine: that art does not provide information so much as create encounters, making visible conditions that habitually pass unnoticed. This is a harder claim than it initially sounds. It is not simply that art is affecting or thought-provoking. It is that art functions epistemologically: it reveals the world differently than other modes of attention allow.

This becomes particularly relevant within contemporary cities, where daily experience is increasingly structured by interfaces, notifications, advertisements, and continuous streams of information competing for the same attention simultaneously. Public consciousness is fragmented across multiple systems at once. Environments become familiar through repetition while remaining strangely unseen: passed through rather than inhabited.

Art introduces a different temporal rhythm into this condition.

A sculpture in a plaza may be absorbed into a commuter's daily routine without fully revealing itself. Years later, the memory of that object remains attached to an entire period of life in ways that are difficult to account for. A mural serves as backdrop for countless personal experiences while simultaneously contributing to a neighborhood's identity across generations. Public art operates through duration rather than immediacy. Its effects accumulate slowly, sediment into place, and become identifiable mostly in retrospect when something is removed and the absence feels wrong in ways that are hard to explain.

Infrastructure is conventionally understood as the physical systems that support urban life: roads, bridges, water systems, electrical grids, transit networks. The importance of these systems is not in question. But cities also depend upon what might be called existential infrastructure - the cultural and spatial environments that support experiences of presence, orientation, and participation within public life. Libraries, parks, community gardens, cultural institutions, memorials, and public art collectively constitute a kind of substrate for civic meaning: environments where individuals can locate themselves within networks of significance that extend beyond immediate economic or technological function.

This framing becomes especially useful when thinking about ecological challenges, which tend to be discussed almost exclusively in technological terms - renewable energy, environmental performance metrics, carbon reduction targets. These interventions are essential. They are also insufficient on their own, because ecological stewardship depends upon relationships that are cultural and affective as well as technical. People tend to advocate for environments they feel connected to. They maintain relationships with places that have become meaningful through use and attachment and personal history. Ecological responsibility does not emerge only through information. It emerges through care, and care requires prior relationship.

Public art frequently contributes to these relationships in ways that more didactic forms of environmental communication cannot. Many artists working today engage directly with ecological histories, local materials, watersheds, and community knowledge of specific environments. Their work cultivates forms of attention that connect urban residents to processes that daily life typically renders invisible. Public space becomes a site where ecological awareness is experienced rather than communicated at: a meaningful distinction.

A successful public artwork does not stand apart from its environment. It enters into dialogue with the materials, memories, and social conditions already present. It becomes one participant within a larger civic ecology rather than an object placed within it.

Contemporary urban discourse tends to gravitate toward visions of efficiency, automation, and technological integration. These developments will shape future cities in ways that are already partially legible. The question that remains, and that receives comparatively little serious attention, concerns how these systems intersect with human experience at the scale of everyday life. A city may become increasingly optimized while offering fewer occasions for genuine reflection. It may become more connected while weakening the specific, local attachments that make connection feel like something other than information exchange.

Public art cannot resolve these tensions. It would be a mistake to burden it with that expectation.

Its contribution lies elsewhere: in creating occasions for attention within environments organized around speed, in gathering memory around physical locations, in encouraging encounters between people and places that might otherwise remain unnoticed. These are not secondary concerns within civic life. They are constitutive of it.

The most enduring cities are rarely remembered for their infrastructure or their technological achievements, though both may have been extraordinary. They are remembered through atmospheres, landmarks, stories, rituals, and shared experiences that accumulated around specific places over time. The Situationists understood this. So did Jane Jacobs, writing about the sidewalk ballet of Hudson Street not as urban poetry but as a precise description of how public safety actually functions. The experiential and the structural are not separate registers. They are entangled in ways that planning frameworks have historically struggled to hold together.

Public art works within that entanglement. Not outside civic life, and not merely decorating it, but embedded within the ongoing construction of what a city means to the people who live in it, what it asks of them, what it gives back, what it makes possible to feel.

That is where its significance ultimately resides: not in individual works, however powerful, but in the accumulated texture of attention and memory and encounter that public art, at its best, helps a city sustain.

Saturday, June 6, 2026

Saturday night grooves.

If you're grown and looking for a deep, penetrating groove on this sexiest of Saturdays, check out a deep & soulful house mix from this past October by yours truly. Only on Signal Theory Radio.

Thursday, May 28, 2026

Street Paper, coming June 2026.

Pleased to announce my next book and first poetry chapbook "Street Paper", coming June 2026.

"Street Paper is a premiere contemporary poetry chapbook by artist and writer T.P. After a 10 year hiatus from spoken word poetry on stage and print, Street Paper is the thinking individual's ode to the mundane, a love letter to the Midwestern experience, and choice words to onlookers, passersby, and those that sneer at radical zen"



Available June 2026 at commongpress.etsy.com

Monday, May 25, 2026

The City as Documentary Apparatus

Experimental Film, Urban Consciousness, and the Instability of Public Life


Walking through a city with a camera produces a specific and repeatable discomfort. The moment you raise the viewfinder, something shifts not only in perception, but in the space itself. People adjust. The street becomes self-conscious. This isn't a photographer's idiosyncrasy. It's a structural condition of contemporary urban life, where documentation and public experience have become so thoroughly entangled that separating them is no longer a meaningful project.

Cities now exist within overlapping systems of observation. Cameras hang above intersections. Transit infrastructure tracks movement predictively, before decisions about destination have been made. Phones document public life continuously - through photographs, livestreams, surveillance footage - feeding algorithmic systems that process experience faster than experience can be felt. The result is a paradox that should trouble anyone working in documentary traditions: we have more images of urban life than at any point in history, and the city has become harder, not easier, to actually perceive. Representation has begun to crowd out the thing it was meant to capture.

Experimental documentary cinema has been living inside that contradiction for decades, and its strategies remain among the most rigorous tools available for thinking through it.

What separates this tradition from conventional documentary practice is a foundational refusal to stabilize what isn't stable. Traditional documentary so often reaches for coherence: the clean narrative arc, the authoritative observational stance, the implicit claim that a camera can simply witness something without transforming it. Experimental documentary rejects this epistemologically. It foregrounds the instability of representation itself, acknowledging that the act of filming alters the environment being filmed. Observation becomes participation. The documentary apparatus and its subject enter into a relationship that neither controls.

'Symbiopsychotaxiplasm: Take One' makes this structure explicit in ways that feel increasingly prescient. Greaves constructs a film that continuously collapses inward - the camera records not only the scripted scene, but the confusion the scene generates, the crew's skepticism, the genuine uncertainty about what the film is or could be. It stops functioning as a documentary about something and becomes, instead, a documentary "environment": a feedback loop the viewer is drawn into rather than positioned outside. This formal strategy is not merely reflexive play. It names something true about how contemporary urban life actually operates.

The contemporary city runs on feedback loops structurally similar to the one Greaves assembles. Public behavior shifts under surveillance. Architecture is increasingly designed around visibility and the management of circulation. Social identity becomes performative not in some loosely cultural sense, but through digital infrastructures that materially reward self-documentation and public spectacle. The city functions, with growing literalness, like a cinematic apparatus recording, categorizing, transmitting, and reproducing public experience in something approaching real time. Documentary filmmakers working in urban environments are no longer the only ones holding cameras. They are working inside a space that is already, continuously, documenting itself.

This is the condition that makes certain films feel less like historical artifacts than like ongoing theoretical statements.

News from Home, Akerman's long, static New York images laid beneath detached narration drawn from her mother's letters, produces an account of urban alienation that explanatory cinema cannot access. The structural distance between image and voice is the subject; the film makes alienation into a formal property rather than a theme to be argued. Sans Soleil performs something similar at a global scale, fragmenting memory and geography until historical continuity reveals itself as a construction: something assembled rather than given. 'Man with a Movie Camera' turns Vertov's city into an almost biological system, rhythmic and assembled through editing, labor, transit, and collective movement. None of these films are simply depicting urban environments. They are investigating the conditions under which urban reality is constructed and perceived: a fundamentally different and more difficult project.

That distinction has become more urgent as those conditions have intensified.

When social media aestheticizes everyday movement, when surveillance infrastructure monitors civic behavior continuously, when digital mapping reduces spatial experience to navigational abstraction, public life stops being something one simply participates in and becomes something performed within a system already engaged in interpreting it. The city is not merely observed. It is produced through observation. Documentary practice working in this environment cannot proceed as though the apparatus is neutral, or as though the relationship between camera and city is one of transparent capture.

Experimental technique is often more epistemologically honest about this than polished realism. Audio distortion, layered conversations, dead time, feedback, visual interruption are not purely aesthetic decisions. They approximate something structurally accurate about urban experience: not a stable narrative with a clear throughline, but a continuous collision between architecture, memory, labor, transit, advertising, environmental sound, and technological systems operating simultaneously. The fragmented, durational, sensorially accumulated approach of experimental urban documentary doesn't aestheticize this condition, it takes it seriously as a formal problem.

Sound is where this becomes particularly precise. Urban environments possess acoustic identities that most documentary practice simply buries beneath narration and score. Transit brakes, ventilation systems, construction rhythms, electrical hum are'nt just ambient noises to be cleaned in post-production: they are structural, encoding information about power, infrastructure, and the material organization of urban life beneath its visible surface. The strongest experimental urban documentary maintains a genuine kinship with musique concrète and field recording traditions in this sense, treating environmental residue as compositional material rather than background. The city ceases to function as setting and becomes an active participant - something the work is in conversation with rather than simply representing.

Public space, viewed through this framework, transforms as well. Streets, transit systems, vacant lots, and plazas aren't scenery or social context but unstable stages where observation, participation, and collective presence become structurally entangled. This matters at a moment when public space is under genuine and accelerating pressure. Many contemporary urban environments are optimized for circulation, commercial activity, and surveillance in ways that actively foreclose the kind of sustained, non-transactional civic presence that public space is theoretically meant to enable. What's being lost is not simply access to space but the forms of collective life that space made possible.

Experimental documentary resists this through duration and attention. The films function, in this sense, as something close to civic archives: preserving not buildings or events but atmospheres, rhythms, gestures, and forms of collective presence that dissolve beneath dominant narratives of development and progress. They document what doesn't make the official record... Lthe emotional and material texture of public life before it's been processed into legibility.

This may account for why experimental urban documentaries so often feel simultaneously historical and immediately relevant. They are not capturing cities as fixed objects but as unstable processes shaped by memory, infrastructure, spectatorship, and the continuous negotiation of who is watching and who is being watched. The films resist resolution because the conditions they document resist resolution.

The contemporary city exists at an unresolved threshold between material space and mediated image. Experimental documentary cinema works precisely at that threshold, not to resolve it, but to render its contradictions with enough clarity that they can be thought through rather than absorbed unconsciously. Visibility alongside alienation. Connectivity alongside isolation. Documentation alongside disappearance.

The documentary becomes inseparable from the city it attempts to observe.

And the city, increasingly, becomes inseparable from the systems that will not stop documenting it.

Monday, May 11, 2026

Critical Reflections - Public Space After Ownership

Public Space After Ownership:
On Stewardship, Shared Ground, and the City We Build Together


Public space has not disappeared. It has been reclassified. The question now is whether it can be
reclaimed — not through ownership, but through stewardship.

Cities are governed by ownership. Land is held, developed, and monetized. Public space exists within this system as a residual category — what remains after the market has finished. Parks are funded when budgets allow. Libraries are maintained until they aren't. Community gardens occupy lots that haven't yet attracted a buyer. The civic is permitted, not protected.

Harvard Design Magazine's 49th issue "Publics" returns to these conditions with a central problem: public space is increasingly subject to the logics that have always threatened it. Privatization. Surveillance. Managed consumption masquerading as civic life. The question the issue raises, and largely leaves open, is what a genuine alternative might look like — not as nostalgia for the democratic plaza, but as a structural proposition for cities under pressure.

The Commons Is Not a Political Position
The word "commons" carries ideological freight it doesn't entirely deserve. It sounds, to certain ears, like a collectivist project — a redistribution of ownership by other means. But commons theory, as developed most rigorously by political economist Elinor Ostrom, is not an argument about who should own resources. It is an empirical account of how communities actually govern them.

Ostrom studied fisheries, irrigation systems, alpine meadows, and forests. What she found, consistently, was that communities develop governance structures for shared resources that are more durable and more ecologically sound than either privatization or central administration. These structures are not utopian. They require defined boundaries, graduated accountability, and mechanisms for conflict resolution. They survive because the people who depend on a resource develop specific, local knowledge of how to sustain it — knowledge that no market price or municipal contract can replicate.

| Stewardship is not an ownership alternative. It is a different relationship to use — one built on
obligation rather than right, and on duration rather than transaction.

Applied to urban space, this reframes the question. The issue is not who owns the park. It is who tends it, who decides what it becomes, and who is accountable when it fails. Governance without ownership. Use with obligation. These are not socialist propositions. They are design problems.

Green Infrastructure as Civic Commons
Climate change has made the stakes material. Urban heat islands, stormwater flooding, air quality degradation — these are not abstractions in densely populated neighborhoods with minimal tree canopy and maximum impervious surface. Green infrastructure is no longer an amenity category. It is load-bearing.

The failure is not primarily technological. Responsive environmental systems exist. Biomaterials that absorb pollution, regulate temperature, and integrate into ecological cycles are not speculative. The failure is governance. Green infrastructure maintained by municipal contracts erodes with budget cycles. Green infrastructure maintained by the communities that depend on it — with genuine decision-making authority, not just volunteer labor — develops a different relationship to duration.

Ostrom's framework is useful here because it does not assume altruism. It assumes that people with genuine stakes in a shared resource, given appropriate governance structures, will act to protect it. The design questions are precise: How is the community of stewards defined? How are decisions made? How are failures addressed without collapsing the whole system? These are not rhetorical. They are the working problems of every community land trust and urban agriculture cooperative that has outlasted its founding conditions.

Public Art as Material Argument
Art in public space is often discussed as beautification — a supplementary condition added to otherwise functional civic infrastructure. That framing misreads what art actually does in shared environments. Public art makes arguments. It encodes histories that official signage omits. It renders legible the populations who have used a space, shaped it, and been displaced from it. The mural and the monument are both claims about
belonging.

When public space is understood as a site of stewardship rather than consumption, art's function shifts accordingly. It becomes part of the memory-work that makes stewardship possible — the ongoing construction of shared meaning without which collective governance has no content. A community that cannot read its own history in its built environment cannot sustain the relationships that governance requires.

This is not an argument for instrumentalizing art. It is an observation about what art does when it is genuinely embedded in civic life rather than installed within it. The distinction matters. Installation implies a before and after. Embeddedness implies continuity — the kind that sustains a space over time rather than marking it at a moment.

The Fabrication Lab as Civic Infrastructure
One concrete form the commons takes in contemporary urbanism is the community fabrication space — the workshop, the press, the darkroom, the kiln — open, collectively governed, and oriented toward production rather than consumption. Not the corporate innovation hub. The neighborhood repair shop extended into cultural practice.

The library has always been the nearest civic analog: a publicly held knowledge commons with genuine access conditions. What the fabrication lab adds is materiality. Knowledge produced there is not only read — it is built, printed, repaired, made. The competence stays local. The tools remain accessible. The skills transfer between people rather than accumulating in specialized institutions.
This model does not require new technology. It requires governance. Who decides what equipment is held? Who maintains it? Who is accountable when access fails? These are the same questions that govern the park, the garden, the library. The answers are not given by the tools themselves. They are produced through the relationships that form around shared use over time.

| The future city will not be built by ownership. It will be maintained by stewardship — or it will not be
maintained at all.

Civic Participation, Not Passive Consumption
The tendency in contemporary urban design is to optimize public space for experience. The plaza becomes a destination. The park becomes programmed. The library becomes a community hub with coffee service. These are not failures of intention. They are failures of structure. Experience without governance is consumption. A public
that experiences civic space but does not govern it remains a public of users, not stewards.

Cooperative urbanism, as a genuine proposition rather than a branding strategy, requires governance structures — not aesthetics or intentions alone. It means communities that hold recognized stewardship rights over land, infrastructure, and cultural assets, with accountability mechanisms that do not depend on political goodwill or budget continuity. The form varies: land trusts, cooperative housing, collectively managed cultural spaces. The
principle is consistent. Use carries obligation. Duration requires accountability. Care is not incidental — it is structural.

The cities that prove most resilient in the coming decades will likely not be those with the most sophisticated infrastructure. They will be those where the relationship between a community and its environment is durable enough to survive the conditions that will test it. That durability is not engineered. It is cultivated — through stewardship, through art, through the slow accumulation of shared knowledge about how to tend what you hold in common.

— · —
Critical Reflections
"Public Space After Ownership: On Stewardship, Shared Ground, and the City We Build Together" by Taj Pollard © 
May 2026

image: Pinterest

Sunday, May 10, 2026

Film Rec: The Blancheville Monster (1963)

Awesome classic Italian gothic horror film that's taken lots of inspiration from Hammer Films and Edgar Allen Poe's "The Fall of the House of Usher's.



(watch it for free on Tubi)

Saturday, May 9, 2026