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Posts Tagged ‘Americans for the Arts’

May
02

The Cultural Council of Jackson Hole currently has all 2011-2012 Arts for All grant applications available. Arts and culture organizations, as well as individual artists, are eligible.

The Cultural Council’s Alissa Davies notes that the program “distributes social service tax dollars from the Town of Jackson and Teton County for arts education, producing and presenting opportunities, and public projects by individual artists that have a strong community benefit.”  Up to $6,000 in monies can be awarded, but all grants must be matched 1:1 or more by applicants. Grants are cash.

Applications are due by June 1, 2011, and late applications will not be accepted. Any organizations receiving public funds from the Town of Jackson or Teton County are not eligible.

For full details, visit www.culturalcounciljh.org. Contact Alissa Davies at 307.690.4757 or  email culturalcounciljh@gmail.com.

On April 27, 2011, Americans for the Arts hosted complimentary access to Transitioning into the Arts Sector in this Economy, a webinar for thoseseeking jobs in the arts sector.  I believe these webinars are free to those already registered in the American for the Arts Job Bank, so check their home website for details.

Americans for the Arts notes that their webinars are  ”geared toward those who are new to the nonprofit arts field and want to learn how to make their resumes and cover letters stand out.” The non-profit says their jobs links will help job searchers “discover what executives are looking for when hiring for open positions, and what to highlight if you’re transitioning from another industry.” Question and answer sessions are offered after the webinars.

A quadruple opening this Friday night, May 6, beginning at 5:30 p.m. at the Art Association:

  • Y.A.R.D. Art Year 10 – “Works created by this year’s YARD (Young Artists Revolutionary Designs) Art students feature repurposed furniture made from recycled items in collaboration with the Habitat Restore. Their creativity knows no bounds – come see what these talented students in the YARD High School outreach program have created over the course of the schoolyear with instructors Sam Dowd, Javier Baez Armenta and Ben Carlson.”  On exhibition at the Artspace Main Gallery through May 23, 2011.
  • Y.A.R.D. Art Alumni & Instructors – celebrate a decade of Y.A.R.D. with former students & teachers–Artspace Loft Gallery, on display through May 23, 2011.
  • Figures: Eliot Goss at the Art Association – “A collection of ink wash drawings” by painter and architect Eliot GossArtspace Conference Gallery – on display through May 27, 2011.
  • On the Other Side: Teton Mudpots and Driggs Clay Group Collaborative Ceramics Exhibition – Artspace Lobby Gallery – on display through May 27, 2011
Jan
28

“There’s a special place in my heart for Jen Hoffman’s art. To me, she’s one of our valley’s most accomplished plein air painters. Hoffman works with a  limited palette; but to simply label her a Tonalist underserves her exceptional mastery of light. Hoffman’s landscapes are quiet, still heavens. Her canvasses transcend computing successful color formulae — imperative to execute but potentially static. Hoffman’s works are lyrical. One can know the definition of a word, but not its heart. Hoffman has discovered color’s heart.

Art is inquiry. Alfred Steiglitz noted that his career as a photographer was motivated by intense experience, a relentless drive to merge with the world. ‘All of me is in the centre [sic] of that thing, digging into the centre’s center,’ he wrote. Do pay attention to Hoffman’s light. There is her center, that shining mirror. Senses engaged, she translates Pennsylvania’s transcendent, pastoral light to the West.  No visible fracturing here. Hoffman’s light flows, fluid and yielding.

We react differently to Jennifer Hoffman’s art than we do to other Western landscape paintings. Pass a vibrant, brilliant plein air work under my nose, and I’m as revived as a dizzy boxer inhaling smelling salts. But Hoffman’s landscapes drift towards me, searching me out like a dream.” ~T.C., Introduction to “Passage,” 2009

“Resonance,” Jennifer Hoffman’s inaugeral show as Trio Fine Art’s new partner, opens Thursday, February 10, with an artist’s reception 5-8 pm.  The show is on exhibit at the gallery February 9-19, 2011. Gallery hours are Wed.-Sat., noon to 6pm, during the show.  www.triofineart.com    307.734.4444

By now you’ve probably read the disheartening–but not unexpected–news about Americans for the Arts national arts index statistics. What is an index? I think of them as a representative measure or comparison of …variables. An index can also be a measure of strength or weakness.

There are many articles on the National Arts Index results, but the L.A. Times’ January 24, 2011 article summed the situation up well. The index measures arts across the board. Here’s an excerpt from that article:

“The index for 2009 is 97.7, the lowest in the 12 years of data on which the index is calculated. Based on 81 separate measures of how Americans spend and donate their money and time, and how artists (broadly defined) fare as workers, the index seeks to reflect the health not just of the so-called “high” arts dominated by nonprofit organizations but also the commercial arts — movies, pop music and concerts, books and the market for visual art.

The highest index score, 103.9, was achieved in the economic boom years of 1999 and 2007. The index uses 2003 as its baseline year, with a score of 100.”

Indexes measuring strength or weakness don’t take ingenuity into account. Jackson’s arts ingenuity index is strong, displaying great potential for growth in the coming years.

Speaking of ingenuity, have you heard about Miami Beach’s hot public space? It’s a garage. I wish I could show you a photo. Can’t, because it’s expensive.  But I was able to post a link to the New York Times story on my Linkedin page. This architectually dynamic, space-age garage is utilized as much for public gatherings as it is for parking.

Not a winter option for Jackson’s public garage. But summer?  Oooh……revenue.

C.I.A.O. Gallery’s 4th Annual Naturally Nude exhibition is open to all artists using any medium. Submission deadline for this show is January 28, 2011.  The show opens at the gallery on Valentine’s Day. For more information log onto www.ciaogallery.com.

Mar
16

Americans for the Arts post these numbers relating to the important role arts play in our lives, our livelihoods:

5.7 million — jobs

100,000 — nonprofit arts organizations

612,000 — arts-centric businesses

4.3 percent — of all American businesses

$29.6 billion — in tax revenue

$166.2 billion — total economic impact

The Art of Finding Funds: Utah Arts Organizations Retool for Leaner Times,a Salt Lake Tribune article on how that state’s art organizations are coping, provides some interesting perspective.  Here’s an excerpt:

“And in trying economic times, many in the nonprofit world have rallied around the time-honored advice of nonprofit arts guru Michael M. Kaiser. Maintain the strongest programming possible, advises Kaiser, president of the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts in Washington, D.C., and look to diversify funding sources….For Utah arts organizations, that means considering offerings with a fresh set of eyes, looking to staff for more talent and resources, and, yes, scaling back fundraising events while searching for additional funds with renewed determination.”

Feb
12

“Senate Passes “Mob Museum” Prohibition in Stimulus” is the Wall Street Journal headline I found while perusing the day’s arts headlines. Republican Senator  Coburn’s anti-arts amendment, tagged February 9 in the Jackson Hole Art Blog, wants to specifically bar spending on a proposed history-of-organized-crime museum.

For those of us who don’t get a chance to read the WSJ every day, here’s the story behind the Coburn amendment:

*

An Americans for the Arts blogger posted thoughts on the recently penned  Coburn Amendment, which dictates that arts-related industries not receive any part of a new economic stimulus package.

As she read the proposed amendment, blogger Merryl Goldberg recalled her family’s experiences with discrimination.   The February 10th post, “Discriminatory Arts,” is posted on Americans for the Arts website.  

Feb
08

February 6, last Friday afternoon, the U.S. Senate approved by a vote of 73-24 an amendment put forth as part of the economic recovery bill by Sen. Tom Coburn (R-OK). The amendment included this text: “None of the amounts appropriated or otherwise made available by this Act may be used for any casino or other gambling establishment, aquarium, zoo, golf course, swimming pool, stadium, community park, museum, theater, art center, and highway beautification project.”

According to Americans for the Arts, this amendment would preclude many arts groups from receiving any stimulus funding.

My own gripe is that the arts have been lumped in with casinos, golf courses, and stadiums.  The amendment’s wording is underhanded; arts stimulus packages should be considered separately from such entities.   That the arts will suffer is a given, at least in the short term.   But equating the arts with institutions created specifically to relieve people of their hard-earned dollars is not acceptable.  Casinos employ untold numbers of people; the arts do, too.  Their raisons d’etre, though, could not be more polarized.

To read the full article describing the amendment and proposing action you may want to take to protest this amendment, click here.

End.