Baltimore Sun

For vulnerable families, a chance for shelter

City places homeless people in renovated public housing

- By Yvonne Wenger

Baltimore’s latest effort to get the most vulnerable families into permanent housing and off the streets, out of shelters and no longer couch surfing involves an obvious solution: pairing them up with vacant apartments in the city’s public housing complexes that have sat empty amid a shortage of federal dollars to fix them up.

The Housing Authority of Baltimore launched a new program with the Mayor’s Office of Human Services and Health Care for the Homeless to place up to 50 chronicall­y homeless families into the units that have been in need of repair. To start, a dozen families will be selected to move into newly refurbishe­d apartments by pooling $500,000 between the agencies.

“The Housing Plus Pilot program is designed to make an immediate impact on the huge issue of homelessne­ss in our city,” said Janet Abrahams, executive director of Baltimore’s Housing Authority. “These homes represent our contributi­on to joining with the city in collective­ly addressing the crisis.”

year) are spread between two Baltimore galleries, Maryland Art Place and Area 405. The letters are organized into eight themes: family, poetic expression­s of love, romantic love, letters written to deceased loved ones, self-love, letters about the barriers to love, letters to folks struggling with addiction and a miscellane­ous category. The exhibits are free and Bruun also has organized a no-cost, public event tied to each theme.

“For many years I have been using art as a community building tool and as a way of bringing people together around issues and ideas,” said the 55-year-old artist, who divides his time between Baltimore and Maine. “Ultimately, this project is about healing.”

Bruun is founder of the Baltimore-based NewDayCamp­aign, which mounts public art projects that tackle the stigmas surroundin­g mental illness and substance abuse, but this show is unrelated to that organizati­on.

“I do believe, my dear man,” one letter reads, “if you were a country, I would display your flag high and sing your anthem with pride!”

The artworks are quirky, idiosyncra­tic, surprising. There’s a letter from a sexual assault victim to the long-dead grandfathe­r who abused her. There are love letters to social service organizati­ons, to spiritual entities and even to branches of government.

“I have two letters to drug courts,” Bruun said, “because the courts provided a structure that allowed the writers to get out of their bad way of thinking.”

There are letters from children (“thank you for getting me shoes and hats”) and his research produced previously published letters from such famous folks as first lady Abigail Adams, anthropolo­gist Margaret Mead and the artist Frida Kahlo, who wrote: “The hollow of your armpits is my shelter.”

Amy Cavanaugh, executive director of Maryland Art Place, said she didn’t have to think twice when she was approached about becoming the lead host venue for Bruun’s project.

Immersing herself in the artworks was for her like walking into a shaft of sunlight in a dark room. Cavanaugh, the mother of an 8-year-old son, is going through a divorce after 18 years of marriage. She said the letters and drawings perfectly captured the mix of emotions she’s been experienci­ng.

“I thought about how many other women are in their 40s and are the parents of young children and are dealing with divorce and still feeling love for their exes,” she said. “Everyone has had a personal experience that will resonate with this show.”

Though many letters refer to tragedies, nearly all are honeycombe­d with tenderness. Viewers may come away feeling calmer and more peaceful. That’s no accident; the exhibit represents the artist’s attempt to heal himself after the death of his eldest daughter, who died at age 24 from an overdose of heroin and cocaine. The show contain three letters written to Elisif Bruun by her father, including one composed during a period when he was temporaril­y caring for the pet she named “Ludacat.”

“I love your cat,” Bruun wrote, “silent, mysterious, furtive, loving, vulnerable, dangerous.”

As her father describes her, the beautiful Maine Coon’s personalit­y was similar to his owner’s.

“Elisif was magnetic,” Peter Bruun said. “She didn’t care what anyone thought. Her hair was always changing color. She’d wear caution tape from constructi­on sites.”

The phone call that Bruun received in 2014 telling him that Elisif had died flung the artist into the emotional equivalent of outer space.

“When something like that happens, the old rules no longer apply,” Bruun said. “You give yourself permission to do things you never would have done before. My relation- ships transforme­d and became somewhat unconventi­onal.”

For example, he became chastely obsessed with a young prostitute who reminded him of Elisif, and allowed her to live temporaril­y in his home.

That period was exhilarati­ng, Bruun said, but also bewilderin­g.

“I found myself three years later needing a ballast in this confusing ride,” he said. “I literally woke up one morning and thought, ‘I’m going to create a thousand drawings inspired by love letters.’ With this project, I could explore all the different ways that love manifests itself. I could use it to almost normalize my experience.”

He began soliciting love letters in 2017, first from friends and family members and then from participan­ts in art workshops he conducted for youth developmen­t and drug programs. Bruun put out an online call for submission­s through the Bruun Studios newsletter he founded, and Maryland Art Place also made an appeal on Twitter.

Most of the letter writers live in Maryland, but Bruun said he has received notes or emails from as far away as California, Arizona and Canada.

It’s probably a good sign, he thinks, that he’s starting to look forward to finishing his thousandth drawing and wrapping up the project. It’s an indication that “Beyond Beautiful” has served its purpose and that he’s ready to move on.

 ?? KIM HAIRSTON/BALTIMORE SUN ?? In December, Diamond Christy moved into her newly renovated home in East Baltimore’s Douglass Homes with her infant son and 7-year-old daughter.
KIM HAIRSTON/BALTIMORE SUN In December, Diamond Christy moved into her newly renovated home in East Baltimore’s Douglass Homes with her infant son and 7-year-old daughter.
 ?? AMY DAVIS/BALTIMORE SUN ?? Detail of art by Peter Bruun at Maryland Art Place, inspired by the theme “Forever Family,” a look at family ties, from “Beyond Beautiful: One Thousand Love Letters.” The exhibition is on view at Maryland Art Place and Area 405.
AMY DAVIS/BALTIMORE SUN Detail of art by Peter Bruun at Maryland Art Place, inspired by the theme “Forever Family,” a look at family ties, from “Beyond Beautiful: One Thousand Love Letters.” The exhibition is on view at Maryland Art Place and Area 405.

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