Street Road
  • Home
  • Visit
  • CURRENT
    • Becoming Succession
    • HERE: a place-based polar image bridge
    • Near Dwellers
    • Near Dwellers as Friends
    • Near Dwellers as Indwellers
  • Multi-year enquiries, ongoing
    • Near Dwellers
      • 1: Near Dwellers and the Sharing of Breath, SLQS
      • 2: Near Dwellers as Legal Beings, Fawn Daphne Plessner and Susanna Kamon
      • 3: Near Dwellers as Creative Collaborators, Julie Andreyev and Ruth K. Burke
      • 4: Near Dwellers as Urbanites, Jesse Garbe and Doug LaFortune
      • 5: Near Dwellers as Roadkill, Lou Florence
      • 6. Near Dwellers as Friends
      • 7. Near Dwellers as Indwellers
    • Clouded Title
      • Clouded Title 2018
      • Clouded Title 2019
      • Clouded Title 2020/21 - Conversations
    • A(mobile)DRIFT
    • Summer Library
      • Summer Library, Librarian 12 – Robert Good
      • Summer Library, Librarian 11 – Christianna Potter Hannum
      • Summer Library, Librarian 10 – Christopher Murray
      • Summer Library, Librarian 9 – Maya Wasileski
      • Summer Library, Librarian 8 – Logan Cryer
      • Summer Library, Librarian 7 – Rhonda Ike
      • Summer Library 2021 closing event - The Anti-Anthropocene Bonfire Bookburning
      • Summer Library, Librarian 6 – Georgie Devereux
      • Summer Library, Librarian 5 – Mary Tasillo
      • Summer Library, Librarian 4 – Maria Möller
      • Summer Library, Librarian 3 – Rachel Eng
      • Summer Library, Librarian 2 – Lou Florence
      • Summer Library, Librarian 1 – Angella Meanix
  • Outdoor works, ongoing
    • Locust Leap
    • Domestic Rewilding - Ruth K. Burke
    • Supervene Forest
  • past
    • Dennis Haggerty – Various Small Envelopes
    • Multi-year
      • The Dust: American Matter
      • Heterotopia West, Adrian Barron
      • The Post Anthropocene Compost
      • Reigning Heads, Luyi Wang
      • Homma Meridian, by Kaori Homma
      • Folly by Anthony, Dennis, and Nicholas Santella
      • Street Road Rocks
      • Street Road Reading Group
      • Kaori Homma: Meridian Stone
      • unTOLLed Stories, Emily Artinian & Felise Luchansky
        • unTOLLed Stories
        • unTOLLed stories BLOG
      • Bees - Stella Lou Farm
    • 2023
      • May the Neotropical Arise — Zulu Padilla
    • 2022
      • Un-Boxing
      • Twentysix Wawa Stores
      • Winter Library
      • The Book of Ashes
    • 2021
      • Composting Hegel
      • Street Road Rocks at 10&41
      • Chain mail for bad communicators
      • BABE 2021
    • 2020
      • Castor
      • Dutchirican
    • 2019
      • Roots of Resistance
      • Seven Million Acres: Pride of place
      • LFL Exhibitions: Libbie Sofer, Transported
      • Emily Manko | Now, Then, When
      • Julia Hardman: if they're behind you they go too fast; if they're in front of you they go too slow
      • Summer 2019 Conversations
    • 2018
      • Walking Forward – Looking Back: Carol Maurer
    • 2017
      • Ceramic Sanctuary
      • Homestead: a permaculture project, StellaLou Farm (7/6 to 9/16/2017)
      • Shared Ground: Dennis Santella, Nicholas Santella and Anthony Santella, May-June 2017
      • back, forth: Street Road at 5 years 11/2016-4/2017
        • Anchor 1: Par Exemple, Ebenthal
        • Anchor 2: Homma Meridian
        • Anchor 3: The road out of town, McMurdo Sound
        • Anchor 4: Play Under’ from ‘Underneath
        • Anchor 5: Leni Lenape arrowhead collection
        • Anchor 6 : Open Wall
        • Anchor 7: Supervene Forest
        • Anchor 8: Chalfant
        • Anchor 9: Soviet Apartment Bloc, Tblisi, Georgia
        • Anchor 10 : Enskyment
      • #J20 (1/20/2017)
    • 2016
      • 24 Hour Liminal: Maria Möller (August-October 2016)
      • 7000 Acres: a residents' history of Londonderry Township (May 21-July 15, 2016)
      • The Tent of Casually Observed Phenologies (July 16, 2016)
      • Julia Dooley and Dr. Zoe Courville sci-art student project (4/22-23/16)
      • Maxim D. Shrayer and Christianna Hannum Miller (4/9/2016)
      • Fadi Sultagi's The Sanctuary of Bel, Palmyra (to 4/15/16)
      • Susan Marie Brundage and David A. Parker at Street Road and at The Christiana Motel (to 4/15/16)
      • Sasha Boyle
    • 2015
      • The Road Less Traveled, Danny Aldred
      • Sailing Stones (2015)
        • Julia Dooley: Images from the Bottom of the World and CryoZen Garden
        • José Luis Avila: hOMe
        • Kaori Homma: Meridian Stone
        • Egidija Ciricate: About Stones
        • L.A.N.D.
      • Crisis Farm: Seed to Table by Maryann Worrell and Doug Mott (2015)
      • Suburban Landscapes: Brian Richmond (2015)
    • 2014
      • Enskyment, by David A. Parker
      • Arterial Motives
        • Arterial Motives Exhibition
        • Arterial Motives Blog
      • Garage and Octorara Student Exhibition
      • Maxim D. Shrayer - Leaving Russia
    • 2013
      • Proposals of Belonging
      • Lost Highway 41 Revisited Blues (2013)
    • 2012
      • Compass (2012)
      • Parallax (2012)
    • 2011
      • The Lay of the Land (2011)
  • Street Road Press
  • Blogs
    • Blog: Winter 2016/17
    • Blog 2011-2016
    • T.S.W.H.
  • Little Free Library
    • Book Club
    • Little Free Library Blog
  • Home
  • Visit
  • CURRENT
    • Becoming Succession
    • HERE: a place-based polar image bridge
    • Near Dwellers
    • Near Dwellers as Friends
    • Near Dwellers as Indwellers
  • Multi-year enquiries, ongoing
    • Near Dwellers
      • 1: Near Dwellers and the Sharing of Breath, SLQS
      • 2: Near Dwellers as Legal Beings, Fawn Daphne Plessner and Susanna Kamon
      • 3: Near Dwellers as Creative Collaborators, Julie Andreyev and Ruth K. Burke
      • 4: Near Dwellers as Urbanites, Jesse Garbe and Doug LaFortune
      • 5: Near Dwellers as Roadkill, Lou Florence
      • 6. Near Dwellers as Friends
      • 7. Near Dwellers as Indwellers
    • Clouded Title
      • Clouded Title 2018
      • Clouded Title 2019
      • Clouded Title 2020/21 - Conversations
    • A(mobile)DRIFT
    • Summer Library
      • Summer Library, Librarian 12 – Robert Good
      • Summer Library, Librarian 11 – Christianna Potter Hannum
      • Summer Library, Librarian 10 – Christopher Murray
      • Summer Library, Librarian 9 – Maya Wasileski
      • Summer Library, Librarian 8 – Logan Cryer
      • Summer Library, Librarian 7 – Rhonda Ike
      • Summer Library 2021 closing event - The Anti-Anthropocene Bonfire Bookburning
      • Summer Library, Librarian 6 – Georgie Devereux
      • Summer Library, Librarian 5 – Mary Tasillo
      • Summer Library, Librarian 4 – Maria Möller
      • Summer Library, Librarian 3 – Rachel Eng
      • Summer Library, Librarian 2 – Lou Florence
      • Summer Library, Librarian 1 – Angella Meanix
  • Outdoor works, ongoing
    • Locust Leap
    • Domestic Rewilding - Ruth K. Burke
    • Supervene Forest
  • past
    • Dennis Haggerty – Various Small Envelopes
    • Multi-year
      • The Dust: American Matter
      • Heterotopia West, Adrian Barron
      • The Post Anthropocene Compost
      • Reigning Heads, Luyi Wang
      • Homma Meridian, by Kaori Homma
      • Folly by Anthony, Dennis, and Nicholas Santella
      • Street Road Rocks
      • Street Road Reading Group
      • Kaori Homma: Meridian Stone
      • unTOLLed Stories, Emily Artinian & Felise Luchansky
        • unTOLLed Stories
        • unTOLLed stories BLOG
      • Bees - Stella Lou Farm
    • 2023
      • May the Neotropical Arise — Zulu Padilla
    • 2022
      • Un-Boxing
      • Twentysix Wawa Stores
      • Winter Library
      • The Book of Ashes
    • 2021
      • Composting Hegel
      • Street Road Rocks at 10&41
      • Chain mail for bad communicators
      • BABE 2021
    • 2020
      • Castor
      • Dutchirican
    • 2019
      • Roots of Resistance
      • Seven Million Acres: Pride of place
      • LFL Exhibitions: Libbie Sofer, Transported
      • Emily Manko | Now, Then, When
      • Julia Hardman: if they're behind you they go too fast; if they're in front of you they go too slow
      • Summer 2019 Conversations
    • 2018
      • Walking Forward – Looking Back: Carol Maurer
    • 2017
      • Ceramic Sanctuary
      • Homestead: a permaculture project, StellaLou Farm (7/6 to 9/16/2017)
      • Shared Ground: Dennis Santella, Nicholas Santella and Anthony Santella, May-June 2017
      • back, forth: Street Road at 5 years 11/2016-4/2017
        • Anchor 1: Par Exemple, Ebenthal
        • Anchor 2: Homma Meridian
        • Anchor 3: The road out of town, McMurdo Sound
        • Anchor 4: Play Under’ from ‘Underneath
        • Anchor 5: Leni Lenape arrowhead collection
        • Anchor 6 : Open Wall
        • Anchor 7: Supervene Forest
        • Anchor 8: Chalfant
        • Anchor 9: Soviet Apartment Bloc, Tblisi, Georgia
        • Anchor 10 : Enskyment
      • #J20 (1/20/2017)
    • 2016
      • 24 Hour Liminal: Maria Möller (August-October 2016)
      • 7000 Acres: a residents' history of Londonderry Township (May 21-July 15, 2016)
      • The Tent of Casually Observed Phenologies (July 16, 2016)
      • Julia Dooley and Dr. Zoe Courville sci-art student project (4/22-23/16)
      • Maxim D. Shrayer and Christianna Hannum Miller (4/9/2016)
      • Fadi Sultagi's The Sanctuary of Bel, Palmyra (to 4/15/16)
      • Susan Marie Brundage and David A. Parker at Street Road and at The Christiana Motel (to 4/15/16)
      • Sasha Boyle
    • 2015
      • The Road Less Traveled, Danny Aldred
      • Sailing Stones (2015)
        • Julia Dooley: Images from the Bottom of the World and CryoZen Garden
        • José Luis Avila: hOMe
        • Kaori Homma: Meridian Stone
        • Egidija Ciricate: About Stones
        • L.A.N.D.
      • Crisis Farm: Seed to Table by Maryann Worrell and Doug Mott (2015)
      • Suburban Landscapes: Brian Richmond (2015)
    • 2014
      • Enskyment, by David A. Parker
      • Arterial Motives
        • Arterial Motives Exhibition
        • Arterial Motives Blog
      • Garage and Octorara Student Exhibition
      • Maxim D. Shrayer - Leaving Russia
    • 2013
      • Proposals of Belonging
      • Lost Highway 41 Revisited Blues (2013)
    • 2012
      • Compass (2012)
      • Parallax (2012)
    • 2011
      • The Lay of the Land (2011)
  • Street Road Press
  • Blogs
    • Blog: Winter 2016/17
    • Blog 2011-2016
    • T.S.W.H.
  • Little Free Library
    • Book Club
    • Little Free Library Blog
[email protected]
610 869 4712
​

Street Road
725 Street Road Cochranville, PA 19330 

The Little Free Library
1016B Gap Newport Pike 
Cochranville, PA 19330
Picture
​Part 4 of the Near Dwellers series
​
Near Dwellers as
Urbanites
​

Jesse Garbe and
​Doug LaFortune


May 3 – Dec 14, 2024
Extended through
​January 31, 2025
By appointment.


RECEPTION
​September 7, 2024, 3-6pm
  • Join virtually on Zoom, where Fawn Daphne Plessner will host: 
    https://us02web.zoom.us/j/86338581192
  • Take the Street Road Art Bus from Philly, September 7, 2024 @ ​2-7pm, free, Email us to sign up for the wait list.

ZOOM PANEL WITH THE ARTISTS and Peter S. Alagona, author of The Accidental Ecosystem: People and Wildlife in American Cities
October 2024

​Please email us with any enquiries, for purchasing information, and to visit by appointment, including virtual visits.
Artists Doug LaFortune and Jesse Garbe focus our attention on the visual representation of animals, and what this tells us about the legacy of differing cultural attitudes to the more-than-human world, including animal encounters within urban environments.

Doug LaFortunes’ artwork draws together the visual iconography and cultural traditions of Coast Salish art with a deeply personal vision. His artworks often reference animals, not simply as symbols, but as means for communicating his daily feelings and experiences, such as in an ongoing series of drawings, titled Wexes, that he shares on social media every morning. LaFortune’s approach to the animal world opens up opportunities for us to witness how animals are understood as integral to an understanding of place, rather than treated as objects to be looked at and objectified. Instead, LaFortune’s imagery evokes a deep sense of respect and love for the many critters that he treats as continuous with his own life experiences and emotions.

​Jesse Garbe’s artwork interrogates ‘nature painting’ through a critique of the Natural History Museum, and its systems of display, such as the diorama, that, he argues, have shaped the pictorial conventions of Western European and early North American painting. His paintings reference Western painting, and popular, consumer culture, such as the cartoon figures of Wile E. Coyote and the Roadrunner, and by using the tools of humour, metaphor and irony, he sets out to denature the very construct of “natural history” within Western imaginaries. His work demonstrates how social and cultural assumptions mold and shape understandings of “what nature looks like,” and in turn, his work helps us to think through how representations of animals in particular, “contain meanings that assist in the maintenance and reproduction of a political and ideological positioning.”

​Doug LaFortune is an esteemed Coast Salish artist, Elder, and member of the W̱SÁNEĆ First Nation. He lives on the reserve lands of Tsawout First Nation (one of 5 village sites of the W̱SÁNEĆ Peoples), located on the Southern tip of what is currently called Vancouver Island, BC, Canada. LaFortune studied art in Victoria, BC, and more formatively, he studied carving with the world-renowned Coast Salish carver, Simon Charlie. LaFortune’s accomplishments span several decades and artistic mediums, such as screen printing and drawing, and numerous carvings (poles) have been installed at public sites across Canada and the United States, Japan and Europe.

Jesse Garbe is a resident of Super, Natural British Columbia. His work surveys natural history and its relationship to the traditions, conventions and limitations of painting. A self-proclaimed “nature” painter, he is also a lecturer at Emily Carr University and avid birder.

​Exhibition guide

Picture
click to view exhibition guide

​​Near Dwellers as Urbanites
Peter S. Alagona in conversation with artists Jesse Garbe and Doug LaFortune

PicturePeter S. Alagona
Saturday, October 19th, 2024 

The Near Dwellers series includes online discussion sessions in connection with each of its parts.

For Part 4, Near Dwellers as Urbanites, guest speaker Peter S. Alagona, author of The Accidental Ecosystem: People and Wildlife in American Cities joined artists Doug LaFortune and Jesse Garbe to discuss the role that art plays in representing the complexity of urban encounters with wild animals.
​
Peter S. Alagona is a professor of history, geography, and environmental studies at the University of California, Santa Barbara. He has published widely on the history of human encounters with wild animals.


Podcasts

A series of podcasts based on the Near Dwellers online discussions are currently in development and will be available to the public soon. This project is funded in part by the SSHRC Institutional Grant.

Researchers and our general audience are encouraged to contact us by email should you have interest in viewing the archived full sessions.
Picture

The Near Dwellers project, to date:

Part 1
Near Dwellers and the Sharing of Breath
Sarah Le Quang Sang with Spirit of Saigon

August 4 – September 30, 2023

Part 2
Near Dwellers as ​Legal Beings
Fawn Daphne Plessner
Susanna Kamon

October 13 – December 30, 2023

Part 3
Near Dwellers as Creative Collaborators
Julie Andreyev
Ruth K. Burke

February 2 – April 13, 2024
Part 4
Near Dwellers as Urbanites
Jesse Garbe

Doug La Fortune
May 3, 2024 – extended to January 31, 2025

Part 5
Near Dwellers as Roadkill
Lou Florence
Februay 15 – May 31, 2025

​Part 6
Near Dwellers as Friends
At Bothkinds Project Space
Vancouver, British Columbia 
October 1 - December 31, 2025

Part 7
Near Dwellers as Indwellers
At Bothkinds Project Space
Vancouver, British Columbia 

​October 1 - December 31, 2025

Bluesky

    Join our email list:

Subscribe
VISITING
Please check our website or social media before visiting as our hours are subject to change.
We can accommodate most times by appointment, given a little advance notice. 
Email us or phone to set up a visit.
And, stop by if you see a car outside!

HOURS — Street Road 
​

February 15 – May 31, 2025
Fridays, 5-8pm
Saturdays, 11-3pm
and by appointment, in person or virtually. 

HOURS — Little Free Library 19330 (our 2nd site a few miles north)
Wednesdays 6-9pm
Thursdays 12-4pm
Fridays 10am-2pm
Saturdays 10am-2pm
and by appointment.

NOTE: The LFL19330 will be closed on July 4th & 5th.

Our Little Free Library outdoor boxes at both sites are open 24/7 and are regularly restocked.

Please call 610-869-4712 or email to set up visits outside our regularly scheduled hours. 
​
We are currently seeking volunteers for both locations: email us to enquire. We look forward to hearing from you!

DIRECTIONS
to Street Road
 here.
to The Little Free Library here.

A word about 'here':
We acknowledge that we are on the ancestral lands of the Lenape, original people of the mid-Atlantic area, forced west by British and US governments. Most Delaware Indian tribe descendants are now located in Oklahoma, Wisconsin, and Ontario. Lenni Lenapes in Pennsylvania are not officially recognized as tribes by the United States, though an estimated 5000 Lenape Nation descendants live in the Delaware River area. We pay respects to the Lenape people both past and present. Please consider the many legacies of violence, displacement and settlement that form part of our collective histories. While increased public recognition of these legacies and processes of redress such as Canada's Truth and Reconciliation Commission are positive steps, concrete focus on return of land and land rights remains a distant horizon.
​
  • Home
  • Visit
  • CURRENT
    • Becoming Succession
    • HERE: a place-based polar image bridge
    • Near Dwellers
    • Near Dwellers as Friends
    • Near Dwellers as Indwellers
  • Multi-year enquiries, ongoing
    • Near Dwellers
      • 1: Near Dwellers and the Sharing of Breath, SLQS
      • 2: Near Dwellers as Legal Beings, Fawn Daphne Plessner and Susanna Kamon
      • 3: Near Dwellers as Creative Collaborators, Julie Andreyev and Ruth K. Burke
      • 4: Near Dwellers as Urbanites, Jesse Garbe and Doug LaFortune
      • 5: Near Dwellers as Roadkill, Lou Florence
      • 6. Near Dwellers as Friends
      • 7. Near Dwellers as Indwellers
    • Clouded Title
      • Clouded Title 2018
      • Clouded Title 2019
      • Clouded Title 2020/21 - Conversations
    • A(mobile)DRIFT
    • Summer Library
      • Summer Library, Librarian 12 – Robert Good
      • Summer Library, Librarian 11 – Christianna Potter Hannum
      • Summer Library, Librarian 10 – Christopher Murray
      • Summer Library, Librarian 9 – Maya Wasileski
      • Summer Library, Librarian 8 – Logan Cryer
      • Summer Library, Librarian 7 – Rhonda Ike
      • Summer Library 2021 closing event - The Anti-Anthropocene Bonfire Bookburning
      • Summer Library, Librarian 6 – Georgie Devereux
      • Summer Library, Librarian 5 – Mary Tasillo
      • Summer Library, Librarian 4 – Maria Möller
      • Summer Library, Librarian 3 – Rachel Eng
      • Summer Library, Librarian 2 – Lou Florence
      • Summer Library, Librarian 1 – Angella Meanix
  • Outdoor works, ongoing
    • Locust Leap
    • Domestic Rewilding - Ruth K. Burke
    • Supervene Forest
  • past
    • Dennis Haggerty – Various Small Envelopes
    • Multi-year
      • The Dust: American Matter
      • Heterotopia West, Adrian Barron
      • The Post Anthropocene Compost
      • Reigning Heads, Luyi Wang
      • Homma Meridian, by Kaori Homma
      • Folly by Anthony, Dennis, and Nicholas Santella
      • Street Road Rocks
      • Street Road Reading Group
      • Kaori Homma: Meridian Stone
      • unTOLLed Stories, Emily Artinian & Felise Luchansky
        • unTOLLed Stories
        • unTOLLed stories BLOG
      • Bees - Stella Lou Farm
    • 2023
      • May the Neotropical Arise — Zulu Padilla
    • 2022
      • Un-Boxing
      • Twentysix Wawa Stores
      • Winter Library
      • The Book of Ashes
    • 2021
      • Composting Hegel
      • Street Road Rocks at 10&41
      • Chain mail for bad communicators
      • BABE 2021
    • 2020
      • Castor
      • Dutchirican
    • 2019
      • Roots of Resistance
      • Seven Million Acres: Pride of place
      • LFL Exhibitions: Libbie Sofer, Transported
      • Emily Manko | Now, Then, When
      • Julia Hardman: if they're behind you they go too fast; if they're in front of you they go too slow
      • Summer 2019 Conversations
    • 2018
      • Walking Forward – Looking Back: Carol Maurer
    • 2017
      • Ceramic Sanctuary
      • Homestead: a permaculture project, StellaLou Farm (7/6 to 9/16/2017)
      • Shared Ground: Dennis Santella, Nicholas Santella and Anthony Santella, May-June 2017
      • back, forth: Street Road at 5 years 11/2016-4/2017
        • Anchor 1: Par Exemple, Ebenthal
        • Anchor 2: Homma Meridian
        • Anchor 3: The road out of town, McMurdo Sound
        • Anchor 4: Play Under’ from ‘Underneath
        • Anchor 5: Leni Lenape arrowhead collection
        • Anchor 6 : Open Wall
        • Anchor 7: Supervene Forest
        • Anchor 8: Chalfant
        • Anchor 9: Soviet Apartment Bloc, Tblisi, Georgia
        • Anchor 10 : Enskyment
      • #J20 (1/20/2017)
    • 2016
      • 24 Hour Liminal: Maria Möller (August-October 2016)
      • 7000 Acres: a residents' history of Londonderry Township (May 21-July 15, 2016)
      • The Tent of Casually Observed Phenologies (July 16, 2016)
      • Julia Dooley and Dr. Zoe Courville sci-art student project (4/22-23/16)
      • Maxim D. Shrayer and Christianna Hannum Miller (4/9/2016)
      • Fadi Sultagi's The Sanctuary of Bel, Palmyra (to 4/15/16)
      • Susan Marie Brundage and David A. Parker at Street Road and at The Christiana Motel (to 4/15/16)
      • Sasha Boyle
    • 2015
      • The Road Less Traveled, Danny Aldred
      • Sailing Stones (2015)
        • Julia Dooley: Images from the Bottom of the World and CryoZen Garden
        • José Luis Avila: hOMe
        • Kaori Homma: Meridian Stone
        • Egidija Ciricate: About Stones
        • L.A.N.D.
      • Crisis Farm: Seed to Table by Maryann Worrell and Doug Mott (2015)
      • Suburban Landscapes: Brian Richmond (2015)
    • 2014
      • Enskyment, by David A. Parker
      • Arterial Motives
        • Arterial Motives Exhibition
        • Arterial Motives Blog
      • Garage and Octorara Student Exhibition
      • Maxim D. Shrayer - Leaving Russia
    • 2013
      • Proposals of Belonging
      • Lost Highway 41 Revisited Blues (2013)
    • 2012
      • Compass (2012)
      • Parallax (2012)
    • 2011
      • The Lay of the Land (2011)
  • Street Road Press
  • Blogs
    • Blog: Winter 2016/17
    • Blog 2011-2016
    • T.S.W.H.
  • Little Free Library
    • Book Club
    • Little Free Library Blog