I first visited Tonkawa,
accompanied by Art McSweeney from Mid-America Arts Alliance (MAAA), this
past January. We were on the road doing site visits to communities that
had been selected as finalists for the MAAA Mural Project in Oklahoma,
and Tonkawa was our first stop. Pulling up to Tonkawa's lone stoplight
at the corner of Main and Grand, I recognized features common to many
small towns in the Midwest - the two block downtown with as many vacant
storefronts as those doing business, the water tower emblazoned with the
high school football team's recent state championship, and at the heart
of downtown, standing taller and sturdier than any building around
despite the fading paint on its surface, the co-op grain elevator.
For
someone like me who grew up in a big city, towns like Tonkawa often
elicit a hard to pin down emotion of a sort of quaint sentimentality
mixed with concerned sadness. I love the look of these places, the
unrefurbished beauty of bricks and boards that have been worn and
colored by time, but am also aware that these weathered surfaces may be
signs of the precarious economic position they are in. How uplifting it
was then to meet residents of Tonkawa who, while not blind to their
town's challenges, emanated a genuine sense of possibility and
community pride that I hadn't expected. Driving back to Kansas after
visiting the last of the finalist communities in Oklahoma, it was the
people of Tonkawa that stuck with me. More than other places we visited,
I could envision their community coming together around the mural
project.
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