BHB: What does BAM South mean to the BPL’s future?
Johnson, BPL: I’m really excited about BAM South! It’s an amazing opportunity because we are being handed literally 15,000 square feet in what will be the cultural center of Brooklyn. I talked about in the first part of part of our call about making sure that our libraries were doing work that supported the communities that they served but the thing that I feel—and I’ve felt this all along—that sets Brooklyn apart from any other public library in any other city is the very robust creative community. Of course, to us the writers are at the top of the list. We’re also cognizant of, and supporting, visual and performing arts. The hope is that in that library at BAM South, our plan is to develop a group for writers to work and to get people access to BAM archives and to be there as a resource for the creative community in Brooklyn.
It’s going to be a very specific library, which will not be focused on access to materials as much as it will be supporting artists and writers in their work.
If I can pull this off, first it’s a lot more than me. There’s a lot of people that are working on this and that are helping to make this possible. It’s not my legacy so much as how we can move this institution forward, because we’re definitely in one of the coolest boroughs in the country and we’ve been known to be a somewhat large institution. I’m trying to make sure that everything that’s happening on the creative side doesn’t pass us by.
I understand deeply that it only is a portion of what’s going on in Brooklyn, and the other things that people write about—artisanal cheeses and pickles and it’s all fabulous and everything. But this particular library is an opportunity for us to support what’s going on, which is really what’s putting Brooklyn on the map right now.
One of the things we did at Central is that we brought in Four and Twenty Blackbirds, which is a Brooklyn-based baker, to run the café at the Central Library. So now we’ve got really great food at the Library – no more mediocre food!
My feeling is if we support the writers—my first year in Brooklyn, I think 20 Pulitzer prizes were given and six of the 20 lived or worked in Brooklyn. That hit me like a ton of bricks. Wow, we have to do something for [them]. But not everyone in Brooklyn has a book deal, so how can we help the emerging artist?
BHB: Who’s paying for BAM South?
Johnson, BPL: It’s something we’re working on. I’m optimistic [the money will come forward]. I’m optimistic about everything. I always feel like I can do it. But I think this is such a compelling project, I really do.
BHB’s coverage of the BPL and Brooklyn Heights library branch has been funded in part via our Indiegogo crowdfunding campaign.