Heading west only to head back east. New portrait.Ā
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@elizabethjarrett
Heading west only to head back east. New portrait.Ā

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
Free to watch ⢠No registration required ⢠HD streaming
I'm about to embark on an incredible journey with The Millennial Trains Project. I'll be on a train with 19 other young entrepreneurs, a handful of influential mentors, a chef, three journalists, five Fulbright Scholars from other countries, and a partridge in a pear tree. In each of the cities we stop in, we have the opportunity to meet with local innovators and organizations in hopes of furthering our own community project.
My project is Common Ground, a creative placemaking initiative that will turn underutilized and neglected plots in Atlanta neighborhoods into performance, arts, and culture spaces.
You can follow my journey across the US here:
elizabethjarrett.tumblr.com/commonground Ā Ā
Three new photos added to my self portrait series, Prismxiv. Check it out.Ā
elizabethjarrett.tumblr.com/prismxiv
WE DID IT! My @millennialtrain goal is reached! Thank you so much to everyone that contributed and shared my campaign. This is the start of something beautiful. #weloveatl #commonground
I'm coming for you, Atlanta! I've got 4 days left and under $2,000 left to go for my @millennialtrain project! Check put my @atlmakers interview and find out how to donate at www.atlmakers.com. #weloveatl #commonground #millennialtrain #atlanta

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
Free to watch ⢠No registration required ⢠HD streaming
#atlmakers did an interview with me last week for my Millennial Trains Project, Common Ground. There are only days left to raise the funds I need to get on board! Check out my interview at www.atlmakers.com
Repost from @atlmakers had a great time interviewing with them yesterday @thegoatfarm for my @millennialtrain project! Remember, this Sunday! EL TROPICO dance party + bike ride with @sofiaxiv @thespindleatl and @mammalgallery (at The Goat Farm Arts Center)
EL TROPICO // BIKE + DANCE: THIS SUNDAY @sofiaxiv + @thespindleatl come together to create the perfect hot #summerxiv night! It's also a fundraiser for my @millennialtrain project! 7PM // Drinks at @thespindleatl 8PM // Bike Ride Downtown 9PM // Dance at @mammalgallery DJs @mistermind + @blackboxdisco Free to drink + ride, $7 to dance #eltropico #summerxiv #atlanta #bike #dance #weloveatl
EL TROPICO // we are bringing you an entire weekend of #eltropico. SATURDAY 21st: XIV Dinner #2 with @sofiaxiv + @lottafruittaatl + Arepa Mia + @orpheusbrewing + @soapgoodscreative SUNDAY 22nd Bike ride with @thespindleatl + yours truly for my project #commonground. Then dance party with DJs @mistermind + @blackboxdisco at @mammalgallery Details coming at you later today: email [email protected] for dinner reservations and details.
Newest portrait in my PRISM project. I was playing with light and accidentally snapped this shot. The flickering light created some amazing shadows and changed as I moved, creating this ghost-like presence behind me- I plan on making a GIF out of those images later. Most of my portraits have been soft and pretty, but I like this one because itās disfigured and ugly. I call it āWorked to the Bone.āĀ

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
Free to watch ⢠No registration required ⢠HD streaming
My Millennial Trains Project deadline is coming up fast! There are only two weeks left to donate.Ā
To donate and learn more about my project, visit:Ā
http://crowdhitch.millennialtrain.co/campaign/detail/2707
The Millennial Trains Project was started by Patrick Dowd after he helped lead a similar journey in India as a Fulbright Scholar in 2010. Millennial Trains Project (MTP) is a 501(c)3 non-profit that leads crowd-funded transcontinental train journeys that empower diverse groups of creative, entrepreneurial, and civic-minded Millennials to explore Americaās new frontiers. Over the course of ten days, I will participate in on-train seminars led by a crew of carefully selected mentors, workshops with local leaders, and projects in seven different communities. MTPās mission is āto enable passengers and virtual audiences to identify, evaluate, and explore emerging opportunities and challenges in communities where their trains stop while advancing a project that benefits, serves, and inspires others.ā
I did a Q&A with bangarts about The Millennial Trains Project.Ā
Q: For those who do not know, can you briefly describe what the Millennial Trains Project is?
A:Ā The Millennial Trains Project was started by Patrick Dowd after he helped lead a similar journey in India as a Fulbright Scholar in 2010. Millennial Trains Project (MTP) is a 501(c)3 non-profit that leads crowd-funded transcontinental train journeys that empower diverse groups of creative, entrepreneurial, and civic-minded Millennials to explore Americaās new frontiers. Over the course of ten days, I will participate in on-train seminars led by a crew of carefully selected mentors, workshops with local leaders, and projects in seven different communities. MTPās mission is āto enable passengers and virtual audiences to identify, evaluate, and explore emerging opportunities and challenges in communities where their trains stop while advancing a project that benefits, serves, and inspires others.ā
Q: Your goal, a project calledĀ Common Ground, is to rejuvenate unused, uncultivated outdoor lots into creative performance and community spaces for neighborhoods and artists in Atlanta. Where would these spaces be located and how would they be ātransformedā?
A:Ā My goal is to bring this project to many different neighborhoods throughout the city. So, the location of the spaces will really differentiate from one to the next. Every day, I drive by an alarming amount of completely trashed, empty āgreenā spaces. It doesnāt matter what route I take or where Iām going, every borough and every street has one. There are a lot of factors that determine which of these would be right for Common Ground. Ideally it is a space that is accessible, able to accommodate groups of people, and can be fixed up with some hard work and good, old-fashioned elbow grease. Sometimes, a space just has life. Iām looking for a space with heart. The transformation will also depend on the space itself. I donāt want to alter the natural character of the land and hope to expound upon its natural beauty. Learning what the neighborhood needs will also be influential in how the space is changed. One example would be to build a small amphitheater for concerts, readings, presentations, or theatrical performances. Maybe another community needs a flat, open area for an artist market. This is a seed of an idea and can flux and grow with the participation of said community.
Q: Can you expand on how the community would use these lots as creative performance spaces?
A:Ā Atlanta is currently a Mecca for young artists with so many wonderful ideas, but there are just not enough venues and spaces to house them. As a theatre performer/producer myself, I fully intend to use Common Ground for my own site-specific, outdoor performances, but I also want to afford the opportunity to other creators who have their own uses for such an environment. My hope is that people who might not have the resources to showcase their talents in permanent, free-standing large art facilities, would have a place to express themselves and share right in their own backyard. Itās important that everyone has the chance to shape their own community and leave a cultural footprint. This builds a stronger sense of community and culture as a whole and creates a strong relationship with their surroundings.
Q: Can you describe how these transformed spaces would ultimately be utilized by the community?
A:Ā There was a time when all forms of art served a social purpose. For centuries, patrons would go to the theatre or the ballet to eat, drink, socialize, etc. In some cases now, it seems a lot of the arts and tother cultural musings are far removed from the urban fabric. Now, Iām not saying there isnāt absolutely a need for those large, wonderful institutions. There are many amazing museums, galleries, theatres, music venues, etc. in Atlanta. However some areas do not have easy access to such institutions and some people feel intimidated by all the rules of a theater or museum. I want to create a sovereign place where the audience/visitors become the creators by co-authoring meaning. I want these to be comfortable spaces that not only better the aesthetic appearance of Atlanta, but give its artists more opportunity to experiment and grow. In my dream world, the space would be beautifully kept with flowers and perhaps an instillation or two. There would be a place to take in a show, or meet with your favorite local organization. Everyone would contribute and the artists that live in the neighborhood would regularly curate things there that represent and shine a light on their āhood and the people in it. Maybe thereās a unicorn somewhere in there⦠but in all seriousness, this is going to be shaped largely by the citizens of Atlanta. Itās all for them, so Common Ground will try to identify their needs within the model Iām creating, and then execute it using various resources.
Q: The concept known as āThird Placeā refers to a space where people congregate other than work or home. How will the Atlanta community benefit from the creation of these types of āThird Placeā environments?Ā
A:Ā Third Place is something I only heard of recently, but itās a concept I immediately identified with. In a lot of cases, a good example of an active, well known Third Place is a local coffee shop. In this coffee shop, you have some people working; people in their own personal space enjoying a book or a thought. Mostly though, you have small groups of people sharing and discussing or catching up. Thatās their coffee shop, just as much a part of them as their home or their workplace. They feel comfortable thereā¦like they contribute to it in some way by using the space and they do! Those people- that sense of community- is what makes a Third Place. There are also a few other factors: the space should be neutral, level, a place where conversation is present, accessible, have regulars, is unpretentious, and the mood is playful. When creating great community spaces, the community is the expert. Whenever we all come together as a people, it really does create change. Unfortunately, it usually takes something negative to get a community working together but it doesnāt have to be that way. By creating a space for people to start a dialogue, share opinions, experiment, and collaborate in, you also create a collective effervescence. I heard someone use that termā¦collective effervescence..thatās nice, isnāt it? Every place on Earth can benefit from that.
Q: What do you hope to accomplish or learn if you were to succeed in your goal and take part in The Millennial Trains Project?
A:Ā The opportunity to take this train ride is once in a lifetime. Iām in a transitional place as an artist and a human. The Millennial Trains Project will give me the rare opportunity to travel (in style) while working with driven, wonderful people my age from all around the country. Itās always been a dream of mine to travel by train, and if I make my goal for this trip, I can also do something to better my community. The mentors and people I meet in other cities will teach me a great deal about representing and speaking for myself and my cause and help me lay the groundwork for a sustainable project. I can ask questions and learn from people who have actually done similar projects and made notable changes in their own cities and the lives of others. Iām a big proponent of learning through action. The best way to take in knowledge is through experience, and The Millennial Trains Project will give create completely new experiences and challenges for me that Iām unlikely to face elsewhere. Iām excited for what awaits me on the rails!
Q: What is your biggest obstacle as of this moment in accomplishing your goal?
A:Ā The biggest obstacle Iām facing at this moment is formulating and executing a large idea all by myself. I am a collaborative artist and have accomplished many things in the past, but when it comes to things like fundraising, Iām finding it more difficult to do as a solo entity because Iām having to put myself in a very vulnerable place. There is no company or team of artists for me to hide behind and the stakes arenāt as high when the only person youāre going to let down by not making your goal is yourself. This project comes right from my heart and I have to open myself up so it can flourish. I have a lot of great connections and am slowly putting together an āA-Teamā of sorts to help Common Ground thrive when I come back from this trip, but getting on that train is my number one goal right now. I have supported the Atlanta arts scene for years now, as both a patron and a contributor, so now I have to trust that the city will repay my devotion and support me when I need it. Asking for help is a difficult thing, but I canāt do this without a lot of it.
Q: How do you purpose you will prolong the integrity of your project so that these spaces do not return to the unused, uncultivated outdoor lots they once were?
A:Ā Eventually, I hope that Common Ground will become a non-profit devoted to the care and management of each of its spaces but thatās a long-term goal. One of the challenges Iāll face is working with landlords or the city, depending on who owns the property. I plan to start small with pop-up events, but plan to leave the space better than when I found it. In an ideal world, everyone would want to work together to keep such a wonderful place alive and beautiful, but I know thatās not realistic. I am inspired by the work that Dashboard Co-Op has done to revitalize run-down buildings throughout the city. Almost every building they have exhibited in was purchased and restored shortly after their presence. Edgewood Avenue would not be the destination it is today without the work Dashboard did there a few years ago. I donāt think most people want those neglected, rough areas where they live. Itās a dirty job, but someone has to be the one to take the first step towards change and Iām willing to go there.Ā
Newest image in my self portrait project, PRISM. Materials: Cell Phone and a traffic cone.Ā
For the premier episode of The Cylinder, we talk with Elizabeth Jarrett, a producer at Trick3D and resident of the Goat Farm Arts Center.
I was interviewed for the very first episode of The Goat Farm Podcast, The Cylinder. In it, I discuss my journey to The Goat Farm, my work in the theater, and my current project with The Millennial Trains Project.Ā
My deadline is approaching! To learn more about Common Ground or to donate, visit:Ā
http://crowdhitch.millennialtrain.co/campaign/detail/2707
Throw Back. An animation I did for The Collective Project's production of The Devil Tree.Ā
VoiceOver: Matt Bartholomew
Cello: Deisha Oliver-Millar

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
Free to watch ⢠No registration required ⢠HD streaming
The Millennial Trains Project lead crowd-funded transcontinental train journeys that empower diverse groups of creative, entrepreneurial, and civic-minded Millennials to explore Americaās new frontiers. I was accepted and now must raise $5,000 by June 1st to take a journey to 7 cities where I will gain the resources to make my project a reality in my community.Ā
My submission is a project calledĀ Common Ground. It is the first step in a much larger project to transform the way people experience and create art and culture in their community. Atlanta is experiencing a revolution centered around local pride and rejuvenation. Although we have come a very long way, there is still a lot of work to be done. My project serves to use my experience in creative space-making to transform neglected and unwanted outdoor plots in various Atlanta neighborhoods into usable performance and gathering space curated by the residents who live there.
To donate to the project or read more about Common Ground and The Millennial Trains Project, click here:
Ā http://crowdhitch.millennialtrain.co/campaign/detail/2707
I've started a self portrait project entitled "Prism." Check out the page.Ā