Archive for January, 2010

Noted African-American Art Collector Dies in Ga.

Saturday, January 30th, 2010

Obit Art Collector
Paul R. Jones
(AP Photo/University of Alabama, Zachary Riggins)

ATLANTA January 28, 2010 (AP)

Paul R. Jones, a collector of African-American art who donated troves of works to universities in Delaware and Alabama, has died. He was 81.

Jones died in Atlanta on Tuesday after a brief illness, said University of Alabama spokeswoman Angie Estes. The university established an art collection in Jones’ name after receiving some 1,700 pieces valued at $5 million in 2008.

Despite humble beginnings in Alabama and never independently wealthy, Jones began buying pieces in the 1960s after noting African-American art was underrepresented in public galleries.

As the drawings, paintings, photographs, sculptures and other works grew into the hundreds, part of his collection was exhibited at the University of Delaware in 1993. He later made a gift of several hundred works to the school.

“My goal has been to incorporate African-American art into American art,” he told The Tuscaloosa News in 2008 when he made his donation to the University of Alabama with a plan for it to be part of the curriculum.

He embraced the school even though he was turned down by the University of Alabama Law School in 1949 after it discovered he was black.

Born in Bessemer, Ala., in the central part of the state, he was raised in the Muscoda Mining Camp of an iron and steel corporation. Jones attended historically black Alabama State University in Montgomery and finished his education at Howard University in Washington, D.C.

Described as a civil rights activist, he worked with an interracial community group in Birmingham, Ala., and held jobs with the federal government for 15 years before becoming deputy director of the Peace Corps based in Thailand.

When his collection grew into the hundreds, he decided it should be used for educational purposes.

“I knew I could sell the collection at its appreciated price, and get myself a chauffeur, a cook, a maid, and travel the world,” he was quoted on a University of Delaware Web site devoted to his collection. “But, I realized I wanted to do something with my collection that would have a lasting impact, both in my lifetime and beyond.”

Survivors include his son, P.R. Jones of California, according to the University of Alabama.

A funeral service will be held at Cascade United Methodist Church in Atlanta at a date to be determined.

Copyright 2010 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. Copyright © 2010 ABC News Internet Ventures

Dame the Dealer

Saturday, January 30th, 2010

Damon Dash<br /> Courtesy of David Shankbone” title=”DamonDash” width=”199″ height=”255″ class=”size-full wp-image-687″ /><p class=Damon Dash (photography by David Shankbone)


By Sara Costello
Published: January 29, 2010, Artinfo.com

Back in the day, it was Damon Dash helping Kanye West and Jay-Z come up in the hip-hop world. Now Dash is following in the footsteps of West and Jay by getting deeper into the art world. West, known to pal around with Japanese artist Takashi Murakami, with whom he collaborated on his video for the single “Good Morning,” also produced the video version of Vanessa Beecroft’s performance VB64.

Meanwhile, Jay-Z has continued in recent years to steadily build his own private collection, which includes work by Damien Hirst and Richard Price.

Dash took over the DD172 building in Tribeca to open Dash Gallery (bless Dame’s hip-hop heart for very likely not knowing who the late Dash Snow is, heading off at the pass any confusion right away), which houses a photo studio, rehearsal space, and art gallery. The Feb. 19 opening will feature works by artist Isaac Fortoul, Bobby Castaneda, Heather Gargon, Hector Ruiz, and Jeremy Wagner.

Celebrating African American History Through Art: The Reginald F. Lewis Museum of African American History & Culture

Wednesday, January 20th, 2010

MichelleWilkinson
Michelle Joan Wilkinson, Ph.D.

We have been hearing wonderful things about exhibitions and events at the Reginald F. Lewis Museum of Maryland African American History and Culture Maryland, based in Baltimore.

As we move into African American History Month in February, we invited
Michelle Joan Wilkinson, Ph.D. who is the Director of Collections and Exhibitions at the museum to talk more about the excitement that is brewing in the museum as it celebrates it’s 5th Anniversary this year.

Wilkinson received her Ph.D. from Emory University in Atlanta in 2001 Wilkinson served as an assistant professor at Bard College in New York from 1999-2002. She has worked on exhibitions and publications for the National Gallery of Art and the Smithsonian American Art Museum. She also worked for the Studio Museum in Harlem as an Editor and Library Coordinator. Her past curatorial projects at the Reginald F. Lewis Museum include A People’s Geography: The Spaces of African American Life
and East Side Stories: Portraits of a Baltimore Neighborhood, Then and Now

Per her request, we are referring her remarks by her first name, Michelle.

AV: Give us a brief description/history of the Reginald Lewis Museum

Michelle: We’re actually just coming upon our 5th Anniversary this June 2010. We opened our doors in June of 2005. Our museum is a repository and exhibiting collections of all that relate to African American history and culture especially in Maryland. We have over 10,000 square feet of exhibition gallery space. A portion of that is dedicated to special exhibitions, so in those spaces we not only highlight Maryland stories but also do stories of African American History and Culture on a more national level as well as some shows that are connected to the African Diaspora. Reginald Lewis, for those who don’t know, was a Baltimore native and entrepreneur, and a philanthropist. He was actually the first African American billionaire and the head of the TLC/Beatrice Corporation. The museum was named in his honor as a Baltimore native. He passed in 1993.

AV: Tell us about the current exhibition and upcoming Bearden exhibition

Michelle: Right now we have on view an exhibition titled Canvasing the Movement. It’s a small art exhibition and it’s really about the way that artists have been inspired by the Civil Rights Movement. The title of the exhibition and even the concept for it was generated because our museum was hosting an exhibition called 381 Days, about the Montgomery Bus Boycott. That was an exhibition that the Smithsonian organized and we were one of the traveling venues for it. And we wanted to do something here, at our museum that we would create that kind of spoke to the importance of the Montgomery Bus Boycott, the Civil Rights Movement, and really try to understand other aspects of it that [the 381 Days] exhibition didn’t cover. And we thought that one way to do it was through art.

Walking by
Image: Walking, by Charles Alston, 1958 (courtesy of the Reginald F. Lewis Museum of Maryland African American History and Culture)

One of the images that was reproduced in the 381 Days exhibition, was the painter, Charles Alston’s work “Walking.” Some of your readers probably know Charles Alston’s “Walking”; it is a painting exactly about the bus boycott in Montgomery. It is a beautiful color image—his kind of geometric abstraction, that period of the 50s work. And we thought why not get the original of this painting and have it on view in our Art’s Wall. And so that’s exactly what we did…we found out that the National Museum of African American History and Culture, that will be open on the Mall, that the Alston painting is part of their collection and they were generous enough to loan the painting to us. It’s actually their first loan to a non-Smithsonian institution, so we were really thrilled that we were able to get this original Alston from 1958. And then we really just built the exhibition around it.

So there’s the Alston painting, there are two small paintings by Alma W. Thomas – her sketches for March on Washington. And this is different work for Thomas, it’s really not like those flora and geometric patterns we’re used to seeing…it’s a bit more gesturial and it has an overtly political theme, and that’s not something we’ve seen typically represented as her work or her style. So those two sketches are in the exhibition.

We also got a Norman Lewis, from Bill Hodges Gallery in New York City. It’s really untitled, but the title that is given is Alabama II or Alabama No. 2. It’s like his work and it’s also unlike his work, you really have to come and see it. It’s a red painting, it’s just really one color and there are some of those kinds of figures that you might see in his works like Processions or Processional. It’s one of those things you have to get close, stand back, get close, stand back to really appreciate.

And then what we did is looked at contemporary artists, we asked who is out there now that is working and inspired by this movement? And the work of Charly Palmer really came to mind….because as you know, he has a whole Civil Rights theme, he does March on Washington, he does boycotts, he does so many themes that are related. So half of the exhibition is work from the period and then the second half is Charly Palmer’s work, about the period, looking back.

The title is really about the way canvas became the place for these artists to really become involved in the Civil Rights Movement by portraying what was happening on the streets on the canvas. So they are “canvasing the movement.”

AV: So you curated this exhibition.

Michelle: Yes I curated this for the Reginald Lewis Museum. [The exhibition] has been open since September and the exhibition actually closes at the end of this month, January 31st. It will be open for a couple more weeks and certainly worth coming out to see.

AV: Now there is another exhibition that is going to be opening this weekend?

Michelle: Yes, on Saturday, January 16th, we’re opening a new exhibition on Romare Bearden. Everybody loves Romare Bearden; certainly I’m one of those folks. People really know his collages, they know him as a master collagist, and he was wonderful, he was a genius in that medium. But he was also an avid printmaker and made tons and tons of prints and different types of prints. And so that is what this exhibition focuses on. The full title of the exhibition is From Process to Print: Graphic Works by Romare Bearden. And it will be on view until March 28th.

AV: What should visitors expect to walk away with as a result of viewing these exhibitions?

Michelle: For me, it really would be two things, and I would maybe say as a curator and also as a viewer, the first is color. The first thing when you walk in before you can read any label, or even get up close to understand the interpretation of a piece of work, you see it from a far. And the color in Bearden’s work is magnificent; the color in Alston’s-magnificent, Charly Palmer’s the same thing. So these are very vibrant, very colorful, very bold exhibitions.

Then when you think about what the content is, with Canvasing the Movement I said a little bit already, these are beautiful pictures many of them, but they are also pictures about things that happened, about our history. One of the Charly Palmer paintings is called The Dream, and it’s actually a kind of montage with Martin Luther King, Jr. and Barack Obama. So, even though he’s looking back on King, he’s also looking at the very present. It’s a 2009 painting, with Obama’s election already being decided at that time. So, there’s a very kind of contemporary feel to our history as well. It’s like you’re reliving by looking at these works, what we have experienced as a people and what we are currently experiencing now, those of us who are here for these historic moments like the election of the first African American president.

With someone like Bearden, a word that comes up a lot is “ritual.” He documents the rituals of African American life. Some these rituals are rural, some of them are urban. He is really a mastermind of conveying really the soul of the Black experience in America. The colors kind of grab you, but then when you start looking what he’s depicting, it’s family life. Baptisms, scenes from the block, the piano lesson, things that happen in the interiors of homes, that we know, but maybe the rest of America doesn’t. I think what you come away with is an appreciation of who we are as a people, and for our traditions. I think Bearden’s show really, whether it is printmaking or collage, is in the end the same. And that is—what his commitment was, as he said—is the telling our story through our own images, making sense of them, kind of giving them their due as universal stories but not shying away from representing the beauty that is that type of blackness.

AV I was pleasantly surprised to learn how much Bearden’s work influenced the work of the renown African American playwright, the late August Wilson.

Michelle: I’m glad that you mentioned August Wilson, because we have some quotes that we use in the gallery. Some of them are Bearden’s, talking about his own process, but we have a quote by August Wilson. And it is saying that when he was introduced to Bearden’s work, he was like “finally THIS is my world.” He was able to understand the world where he came from and to begin creating through his own art form, those worlds for the stage.

AV: What is your perspective of the museum’s key role in society and the community should be?

Michelle: In general, I see museums as sites for public engagement. I think for me that’s what they always have been. Having a career in museums has been most exciting for me. For me, there’s something about maybe a more informal way of learning or a kind of “you-choose-how-you want to learn” in a museum. Information is presented, you can read as much or as little as you like. You can listen to as much or as little as you like. You can go back many, many times. There are public programs you can go to, if you want to have more in depth understanding. There are catalogues you can buy if you want to study the subject matter. But there is a way in which museums provide the space, the venue and enough information, I think, to spark interest, but different from a classroom. There’s a kind of mode of learning that happens differently in museums.

For African American museums, it’s really the same thing. I think we just have to really do more education outside of the museum as to what a museum is, what it does and how it can serve our publics. I think inside the museums a lot of us know, you know, how much we have to offer. I don’t think we are always doing a good enough job of sharing. And sometimes you can’t share until you get people to come in, but to get people to come in, you have to go where they are, you have to kind of build that relationship of trust. And in some of the previous exhibitions that I have done here, it has been a challenge. But when that trust is built and developed, you see the successes.

I see all museums as having the opportunity to be more open and engaging and to do more outreach.

AV: How can people find out more about the museum, programs, activities, the exhibitions, and membership?

Michelle: More information www.africanamericanculture.org Basic membership is only $35, which is very affordable.

Thank you Michelle, for this interview. And we encourage everyone to come up to Baltimore to learn more about the museum. It is located at 830 E. Pratt Street, Baltimore, MD 21202.

Earthquake in Haiti: Help CARE Aid the Aftermath

Thursday, January 14th, 2010

Many of you know, Authentic Contemporary Art has been a big supporter of CARE’s “I Am Powerful Campaign” for the last two years. As we face the current disaster in Haiti, we encourage you to give what you can to help aid the situation. CARE’s long history in providing international assistance and support to those in need is commendable. We encourage you to donate to CARE or some trusted organization that will help those who desperately need our assistance at this time.

Below is a message from Helene Gayle, President and CEO of CARE.

Dear Friend,

CARE is deploying additional emergency team members to the devastated city of Port-au-Prince in Haiti, where the worst earthquake in 200 years destroyed houses and left thousands homeless. While the exact death toll from yesterday’s 7.0-magnitude quake is not yet known, it is expected to be catastrophic.

Please help us rush lifesaving aid to Haiti by making a gift to CARE now.

Early reports from the media and CARE staff report that the capital city is in ruins. Most of the buildings have collapsed, including hospitals, homes and schools.

“We’re particularly worried about the children, because so many schools seem to have collapsed,” said Sophia Perez, CARE’s country director in Haiti. “In Haiti, children go to school in the afternoon. Children were still in school when the earthquake hit, so there are many children trapped. It’s horrifying.”

Your gift to CARE today will help us support survivors of this deadly disaster.

Haiti is already one of the poorest countries in the world, and this earthquake will make things worse for impoverished men, women and children there.

Please give now to help CARE deliver lifesaving aid to the people of Haiti as soon as possible.

Thank you for your generosity at this critical time.

Sincerely,
Helene D. Gayle, MD, MP
President and CEO, CARE

NBC Universal Presents Bravo Reality Series “Work of Art: The Next Great Artist”

Thursday, January 14th, 2010

Bravo
Series host China Chow (L) and series mentor Simon de Pury (R) REUTERS/Phil McCarten

Artdaily.org
January 11, 2010

Bravo’s latest stroke on the reality canvas brings Golden Globe and Emmy Award winner Sarah Jessica Parker and her production company, Pretty Matches, together with the Emmy-nominated Magical Elves (”Top Chef,” “Project Runway”) and Eli Holzman, to produce “Work of Art: The Next Great Artist,” an hour-long creative competition series among contemporary artists. “Work of Art: The Next Great Artist” will bring together 14 aspiring artists to compete for a solo show at a nationally recognized museum and a generous cash prize.

Hosting this colorful new series is art enthusiast China Chow, alongside world-renowned art auctioneer, Simon de Pury. Joining them on the judging panel are experts Bill Powers, a New York Gallery owner and literary art contributor, Jerry Saltz, current art critic for New York Magazine, and Jeanne Greenberg Rohatyn, esteemed curator and owner of Salon94 gallery.

In each episode, contestants are faced with the challenge of creating unique pieces in a variety of media such as painting, sculpture, photography, collage and industrial design. The weekly assignments are exciting, original and will challenge the artists to push the limits of their technical skills and creative boundaries. Completed works of art will be appraised by the panel of top art world figures alongside a new celebrated guest judge every week. Through a gallery showing at the end of each challenge, the industry luminaries dictate which artists have successfully mastered the subject matter and creation of their piece, as well as whose concept leaves the greatest impact.

“Work of Art: The Next Great Artist” is produced by Pretty Matches and Magical Elves for Bravo. Dan Cutforth, Jane Lipsitz, Sarah Jessica Parker, Alison Benson and Eli Holzman serve as executive producers.

China Chow
Host, “Work of Art: The Next Great Artist”
From the time since China Chow was a little girl, she lived and breathed art. Her father, restaurateur Michael Chow, first introduced her to the creative world through his imaginative and highly successful restaurants.

Born in London, Chow moved to New York at age 5 and grew up through the eyes of her father’s restaurant, Mr. Chow, as it became a mecca to the art world that ruled Manhattan in the 1980s. Chow’s mother, Tina Chow, was an internationally renowned model and a fashion icon. Together, her parents were a power couple whose presence was a staple among the Big Apple’s elite artist community — including Andy Warhol, Keith Haring, Julian Schnabel and Henry Geldzahler.

The influence was compelling as Chow recalls learning to draw with their family friend, celebrated American artist Jean-Michel Basquiat, or spending her Saturdays at museums with her father and his accomplished friends. Such events colored Chow’s future as an avid art enthusiast. “Art is one of the most authentic ways for a person to express themselves,” said Chow. “Clothing has to be functional, food has to taste good – but art is the purest form of expression, existing without set boundaries.”

As the host of Bravo’s new creative competition series, “Work of Art: The Next Great Artist,” Chow will serve as the perfect tour guide through the often foreign-looking art world. Her irrepressible passion for art and tremendous appreciation for beauty is contagious as she works to access the talents of aspiring artist throughout the course of the series.

Chow’s acting debut came alongside Mark Walberg in the 1998 action-comedy feature film “The Big Hit.” She has since starred in the 2001 film “Head Over Heels,” as well as on such hit television series as “Burn Notice” and “That ‘70s Show.”

After earning a psychology degree from Scripps College, Chow spent several years successfully working as a model for Shiseido cosmetics, Tommy Hilfiger and Calvin Klein and was named one of Harper’s Bazaar’s “It Girls” in 1996. She also appeared in the December 1996 edition of Vogue magazine’s “The Next Best-Dressed List.”

Chow currently resides in Los Angeles.

Bill Powers
Judge, “Work of Art: The Next Great Artist”
Bill Powers, a self-proclaimed “art fan, ” is the co-owner of Half Gallery in New York and the editor-at-large for Purple Fashion magazine.

Powers’ colorful path in contemporary art first manifested itself in 1997 when he became the editor-in chief of Blackbook magazine. Until 2005, Powers remained with Blackbook, while writing about art and culture for other prominent titles including the New York Times, W, Paper, Vanity Fair and Details, to name a few. Through his extensive editorial work, Powers has interviewed some of today’s preeminent contemporary artists from around the world, including Damien Hirst, Jeff Koons, Kara Walker, Ed Ruscha and John Currin.

Powers’ written work extends beyond his contributions to press. His foray into the field of publishing led him to issue art books for the promising German multi-media artist, Jonathan Meese, as well as for American painter Rachel Feinstein. Powers published his own first novel, “Tall Island,” in July 2004. The satire following the entangled lives of three downtown New Yorkers was called a “must read” by Harper’s Bazaar, and a “clever comedic romp” by the Los Angeles Times.

In addition, Powers is an ardent art collector, with an impressive collection of works by Richard Prince, Elizabeth Peyton, Tom Sachs, Irving Penn and Dana Schutz, among others. The first piece of art that he ever bought was a photograph of ToeJam the Clown by Terry Richardson in 1998.

Powers is currently on the board of the non-profit RxArt, an organization that places contemporary art in hospitals and healing environments.

Powers currently resides in New York with his wife, fashion designer Cynthia Rowley, and their two daughters.

Simon De Pury
Mentor, “Work of Art: The Next Great Artist”
Simon de Pury is one of the art world’s leading figures, renowned for his legendary performance on the auction podium and for his deep and longstanding knowledge of the global marketplace.

De Pury is Chairman and Chief Auctioneer of Phillips de Pury & Company, the leading global auction house for Contemporary Art, Design and Photography, and still owns a significant share in the business after selling the majority in October 2008 to the Mercury Group, Russia’s largest luxury retail company.

De Pury joined Phillips in 2001 when his art advisory firm – the Geneva-based de Pury & Luxembourg Art, which he had started in 1997 with Daniella Luxembourg – merged with them.

A spirited and highly successful career at Sotheby’s preceded this chapter. de Pury was appointed Chairman of Sotheby’s Switzerland in 1986 and later became Chairman of Sotheby’s Europe. This function, which he performed with his inimitable zeal and enthusiasm — coupled with sharp business acumen — saw him conduct important sales all over the world. These included the Thurn und Taxis sales in Geneva and Regensburg, the Margrave of Baden sales in Baden-Baden, the Palazzo Corsini sales in Florence, part of the Jacqueline Onassis Kennedy sales in New York, and all major Impressionist and Modern Art evening sales in both New York and London since 1994. He was also the initiator and auctioneer for the historical and first international auction to be held in 1988 by Sotheby’s in Moscow.

From 1979-86, de Pury was curator of the Thyssen-Bornemisza Collection and organized numerous exhibitions not only in the Villa Favorita in Lugano, Switzerland, but also in major museums around the world. He was also responsible for the coordination of four key exchanges between Baron H.H. Thyssen-Bornemisza – then the most important collector of his time – and the State Hermitage, the Pushkin Museum, the Russian Museum, the Tretyakov Gallery and the Kremlin Museum in Russia. Prior to this, de Pury had started his career at Sotheby’s in 1974 and was active in their London and Monte Carlo offices before opening the Sotheby’s office and auction venue in Geneva.

De Pury studied the Japanese painting techniques of “Sumie” and “Nihonga” at the Tokyo Academy of Arts. He was born in Basel, Switzerland, and is the father of four grown-up children. He lives between London and New York

PBS Chief to Put Arts Front and Center

Thursday, January 14th, 2010

PaulaKreguer

By Tom Jacobs, January 12, 2010
miller-mccune.com

Big Bird meets big bands: PBS President Paula Kerger is renewing the network’s commitment to arts programming and arts education.

Over the decades, the Public Broadcasting Service has distinguished itself as American television’s showcase of the arts. Culture-centric cable channels have come and gone, but PBS has “kept the flame alive,” in the words of Paula Kerger, the network’s president and chief executive officer.

But that flame has dimmed noticeably in recent years, as PBS’s cultural programming — which is expensive to produce and doesn’t necessarily draw the largest viewership — has gradually become marginalized. Arts programs can still be found on public television, but they aren’t as numerous as they once were, and — again to quote Kerger — they tend to be “strewn about” on station schedules.

That situation is set to change in a big way.

Speaking before Town Hall Los Angeles on Tuesday, Kerger recommitted PBS to arts programming, both on television and online. She described an ambitious arts initiative with three components:

• An online arts portal will be inaugurated on PBS.org in April.

• Plans are underway to shift the television schedule so one night of prime time programming per week will be devoted exclusively to the arts. Depending on the success of fundraising efforts, this will likely occur either this fall or next winter.

• New material is being developed for the PBS Teachers website to help instructors — especially those working in school districts where arts educators have been laid off — to incorporate the arts into the curriculum.

“We plan to significantly expand the presence of the arts in our prime time lineup,” Kerger told an audience of civic leaders and students. “This is critically important. Television remains the most popular form of mass media, even in the age of the Internet.

“To be candid, over the last years, we haven’t done as good a job (with cultural programming) as we could,” she said. “I think we can do more. We’re looking to increase the investment we’re making in the arts. The budget (for such programs) has been flat or slightly down. I want to ramp it up.”

Utilizing broadband video, the new online arts portal “will function as a 24-hour virtual performing arts venue,” she said.

“You’ll be able to drop in whenever you like and experience art of all kinds, including ballet, opera, theater and more.

“It’ll also be interactive, allowing you to interact with both established and emerging artists, as well as other arts enthusiasts around the world. You’ll be able to come to the showcase and create your own art, be it documentaries, virtual theater projects or something else.

“I want more arts programs, put in places where people can find them and archived online,” Kerger concluded. “If we can put those pieces together, it’ll have more impact and, hopefully, create an audience for more.”

Kerger, who became PBS’s sixth president and CEO in 2006, said she considers arts programming fundamental to the network’s central goal, “to help citizens of all ages to be more informed, more creative, more curious.”

“As federal and state support for the arts declines, I think it is up to PBS and its member stations to keep Americans connected to the arts,” she said. Referring to the Los Angeles Philharmonic’s charismatic new music director, she added: “If young Americans don’t learn about Debussy, Degas and Dudamel in the classroom, let’s make it possible for them to come to PBS and experience their work.”

Rocco Landesman Interview on PBS NewsHour on January 6, 2010

Thursday, January 14th, 2010

On January 6, 2010 , PBS NewsHour aired an interview of National Endowment for the Arts Chairman Rocco Landesman. In the interview, Chairman Landesman discusses his background as a theatrical producer and addresses important questions about his role as Chairman.

Click here to see the video and transcript: http://www.pbs.org/newshour/bb/entertainment/jan-june10/landesman_01-06.html.

Maryland: Arts Organizations Face Another Difficult Budget Year

Thursday, January 14th, 2010

Gazette.net, 1/6/10

“Lawmakers return to the State House on January 13, and one of the top items on their to-do lists will be to pore over Gov. Martin O’Malley’s budget proposal. Current projections show spending exceeding tax revenue by $2 billion. By law, Maryland budgets must balance. ‘We don’t want to see our arts programs deteriorate because of lack of funding,’ said Sen. Rona E. Kramer (D-Olney). ‘It’s going to be very difficult for the governor to put together a budget that tries to maintain everyone. That’s going to be impossible,’ Kramer said. The Maryland State Arts Council, a part of the Department of Business and Economic Development, provided about $13.5 million in grants to arts organizations around the state in the current fiscal year, which ends June 30…[Maryland State Arts Council Executive Director Theresa] Colvin and O’Malley spokesman Shaun Adamec noted that in three rounds of midyear budget cuts in 2009, the arts were spared. Arts jobs are as important to the governor as any other jobs in the state, Adamec said.”

Read more here.

FacebookTwitter