At Home in Chinatown: Community-Based Art Activism and Cultural Placemaking for Neighborhood Stabilization
Abstract
1. Introduction
2. Learning from Boston’s Chinatown
3. Case Study Design and Overview
4. ResLab: Partners, Program, and Procedures
4.1. Partner Organizations
4.2. ResLab Program
4.3. Procedures
4.4. ResLab Projects: Four Case Examples
4.4.1. 2019 Oasis: A House Shaped Dream
4.4.2. 2020 Portal: Slow Down for Chinatown
4.4.3. 2021 Collective Care: Abundance Among Us
4.4.4. 2022 Radical Inclusion: Welcome Home
4.5. Participant Perspectives on ResLab
When I go there, every time they invite a guest and then the guest will give us inspiration and teach us how to think, the pathway, and how to create. Before I didn’t know I could create. Now after that, I have some artist mind, too. I can think too like an artist. I used to think I wasn’t an artistic person. I have so much fun.
When I say sense of community, I don’t just mean Chinese people or Asian people. It’s a community on my hall, and it’s a melting pot, just like the rest of the city of Boston. In the beginning I may see them as outsiders, but then the more I see them, it’s like, they’re part of my community. They’re not outsiders anymore.
It turns out that there are still many people who will pay attention to this place, not just focus on development of the land. It turns out that there are people who still pay attention to the problems existing in Chinatown and listen to what the residents here want. If we promote Chinatown through literary and artistic exchanges, works of art, dance, and Cantonese music concerts, it would receive good reviews. Our project has promoted more people to pay attention to Chinatown.
I think it’s so important to have initiatives like ResLab that’s getting power back to people who actually live there and work there and have lived there for a long time and have built it into the community. It is giving them the power to say this is what we want and this is what we want to see and this is what we want back.
I’m more critical of what public art is…I think one part is empowerment for the people participating in it…that they believe they can change what their neighborhood looks like…giving them a feeling of responsibility and agency that they can also show up to make change.
It was very transformative… totally shifted the direction of my art practice…It really helped me understand and see the potential and what art can do…It changed what I thought I could do or be within an art practice. There’s so much possibility in collaboration and like different forms of collaboration…It was the first time I was really introduced to ideas like co-design or participatory art-making. Ideas of [placekeeping] were really impactful for me. I didn’t know that there was a way to think about art and how it can work together with other sorts of community advocacy efforts.
I really loved the experience. It pushed me beyond boundaries that I didn’t consider myself a community artist or a public artist. It pushed me to think of myself in that way and take on that role…It really solidified the ways that art and imagination work can have on policy, land ownership, and a feeling of belonging within the community.
So many artists that had been part of ResLab before are still so involved with the Chinatown community. It was especially cool to see them come back and help us find our way as new artists to the program, to like find our way through and to see what has been done before.
5. Concluding Discussion
Author Contributions
Funding
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
1 | The population count is based on Chinatown Neighborhood Council boundaries and US Census figures for the American Community Survey. |
2 | The first wave of Chinese migration, from the late 19th century until World War II, was dominated by male laborers from Guangdong province. The second wave, which followed in the postwar era and exponentially expanded with immigration reform in 1965, largely came through Hong Kong. The end of the US wars in Southeast Asia triggered a third migration wave of Southeast Asians from the 1970s. As China loosened emigration restrictions, a fourth wave of migrant workers came from Fujian province from the 1980s, speaking Mandarin and Fuzhounese, in contrast to the Taishanese and Cantonese of earlier waves. Boston’s higher education and knowledge-based sectors also drew international students, scientists, and high-skill workers from China and other parts of Asia, many of whom settled in the suburbs and became routine visitors to Chinatown. |
3 | While the total population has increased by nearly 50% in the last decade, the white population has increased by more than 4 times the rate of the Asian population’s increase. There is a large and growing gap between the median household income for Asian residents (about $18k) and White residents (about $120k) in Chinatown. About 60% percent of households in Chinatown earn less than $35,000 a year. In addition, fewer families and children are living in the neighborhood (Northeastern-CCLT Capstone Project Report 2025). |
4 | CPA collaborators included Wen-ti Tsen, Chu Huang, Catalina Tang, Jennifer Lin-Weinheimer, Keith Francis, Pampi Thirdeyefell, Loreto P. Ansaldo, Maryann Colella, Andrea Zampitella, and Monica Mitchell. |
5 | The overall research question was: How can artists and residents work together on socially-engaged practices and art in a way that is truly co-created and collaborative? Data analysis applied the framework approach to identify themes and develop codes, and use charting and mapping to discern thematic patterns and relationships (Pope et al. 2000). |
6 | The BCNC is a social service agency with deep commitments to advancing cultural agency and self determination for individuals, families, and communities. |
7 | Additional benefits for residents included the chance to shape public art and culture in Chinatown, as well as to gain support from ACDC staff to further connect with the Chinatown community. Artists also benefited from access to shared collaborative meeting space at the Pao Arts Center and the ACDC during open hours, advisory hours with ACDC and Pao Arts Center staff, collaborative feedback sessions and workshopping clinics, and ACDC staff support to engage Chinatown residents and families and further connect with the Chinatown community and exhibit work in the Pao Arts Center after the residency. |
8 | Collaborators for Films at the Gate included Chinatown residents, film curator Jean Lukitsh, and Street Lab, as well as A-VOYCE youth, who eventually assumed a leading role in organizing Films at the Gate. |
9 | The 1965 South Cove Urban Renewal Plan harnessed the power of eminent domain to displace residents and facilitate university and hospital expansion from the late 1960s, fomenting considerable community protest and resistance (Liu 2020). |
10 | These include the Hudson Street Stoop, the Immigrant History Trail, and the R-1 Project Review Committee for the City of Boston. |
11 | The projects are (1) Phillips Square redesign, (2) Chinatown Streets—redesigning Kneeland Street, Washington Street, Essex Street, and Surface Road, and (3) Reconnecting Chinatown—feasibility study for reconnecting Chinatown across the open-cut Massachusetts Turnpike (I-90). |
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Song, L.; Rubin, H.L. At Home in Chinatown: Community-Based Art Activism and Cultural Placemaking for Neighborhood Stabilization. Arts 2025, 14, 95. https://doi.org/10.3390/arts14040095
Song L, Rubin HL. At Home in Chinatown: Community-Based Art Activism and Cultural Placemaking for Neighborhood Stabilization. Arts. 2025; 14(4):95. https://doi.org/10.3390/arts14040095
Chicago/Turabian StyleSong, Lily, and Heang Leung Rubin. 2025. "At Home in Chinatown: Community-Based Art Activism and Cultural Placemaking for Neighborhood Stabilization" Arts 14, no. 4: 95. https://doi.org/10.3390/arts14040095
APA StyleSong, L., & Rubin, H. L. (2025). At Home in Chinatown: Community-Based Art Activism and Cultural Placemaking for Neighborhood Stabilization. Arts, 14(4), 95. https://doi.org/10.3390/arts14040095