Posts Tagged ‘National Endowment for the Arts’

Endowment for the Arts Announces Research on Informal Arts Participation in Rural and Urban Areas

Friday, March 26th, 2010

ArtDaily.org, 3/23/2010

Any serious reckoning of how Americans participate in arts and cultural activities must account for demographic and geographic diversity. Prior National Endowment for the Arts publications, including the 2008 Survey of Public Participation in the Arts, already have examined the age, race/ethnicity, gender, and education and income status of arts-goers. Another way to understand arts participation is by asking where it takes place. Come as You Are: Informal Arts Participation in Urban and Rural Communities is the NEA’s first research publication in several years to examine the “informal arts” — such as playing a musical instrument, attending an art event at a place of worship, or visiting a craft fair. This finding is part of new research from the NEA, announced today during a visit by NEA Chairman Rocco Landesman to Chelsea, Michigan, as part of the NEA’s Art Works Tour. The publication provides an analysis of arts participation in rural and urban areas.

“Art works everywhere and this new research helps us to understand the many ways and many places in which people across America experience art in their daily lives,” said NEA Chairman Rocco Landesman. “I look forward to drawing on this data as we move forward with opportunities for cities and towns to invest in the arts in their communities.”

Come as You Are: Informal Arts Participation in Urban and Rural Communities analyzes data from the 2008 Survey of Public Participation in the Arts (SPPA). Among the findings:

Traditional arts venues and institutions such as art museums, galleries, and performing arts centers and companies cluster in urban populations. Eighty-eight percent of nonprofit performing art organizations and art museums are located in urban metropolitan areas, with the top 10 metro areas home to 30 percent of the nonprofit arts institutions. As a result, a third of all urban metro dwellers attended at least one of the main performing arts events tracked by the SPPA (classical music, jazz, or Latin/salsa music performances; opera; musical or non-musical plays; or ballet or other dance). Similarly, 24 percent of urban dwellers visited an art museum or gallery in 2008.

However, an analysis of the “informal arts” offers a more comprehensive measure of arts participation. Informal arts comprise a broad range of “citizen” arts in the forms of folk arts, popular culture, and casual or hobby arts. Informal arts activities captured by the SPPA include: visiting historical parks and neighborhoods, craft fairs, and outdoor performing arts festivals; attending arts events at places of worship and schools; and personal performance and creation of art, such as playing a musical instrument, singing in a choir, or doing creative writing.

When looking at the informal arts, metro and non-metro residents enjoy most of these activities at the same rates.

• In 2008, one in four residents from each type of community — urban or rural — visited a historical park or neighborhood or attended an arts and craft fair; one in five adults from both communities went to an outdoor performing arts festival.

• Twenty percent of both urban and rural dwellers attended a music, theater, or dance performance at a place of worship.

• Urban and rural dwellers played musical instruments at the same rate — 13 percent. Nine percent of each group created paintings, drawings, or sculptures. Two percent performed dance.

• There are two notable exceptions: rural residents were more likely to sing in choirs, sew, weave, crochet, or quilt. Urban dwellers were more likely than rural dwellers to create photography, videos, or films for artistic purposes.

The 2008 Survey of Public Participation in the Arts is the nation’s largest and most representative periodic study of adult participation in arts events and activities, conducted by the NEA in partnership with the U.S. Census Bureau. Five times since 1982, the survey has asked U.S. adults 18 and older about their patterns of arts participation over a 12-month period.

National Medal of Arts Recipients Include Frank Stella and Maya Lin

Saturday, March 6th, 2010

ArtDaily.org, 3/1/2010

President Barack Obama presented the National Medal of Arts to ten recipients for their outstanding achievements and support of the arts. (Twelve medalists were announced; however two were not able to attend the ceremony. Their medals will be presented at another time.) The medals were presented by the president and Mrs. Michele Obama in an East Room ceremony at the White House. The National Medal of Arts is a White House initiative managed by the National Endowment for the Arts. Each year, the NEA organizes and oversees the National Medal of Arts nomination process and notifies the artists of their selection to receive a medal, the nation’s highest honor for artistic excellence.

“These individuals and organizations show us how many ways art works every day. They represent the breadth and depth of American architecture, design, film, music, performance, theatre, and visual art,” said NEA Chairman Rocco Landesman. “This lifetime honor recognizes their exceptional contributions, and I join the President and the country in saluting them.”

The 2009 National Medal of Arts Recipients

Individuals

• Bob Dylan, Singer, Songwriter
• Clint Eastwood, Director, Actor
• Milton Glaser, Graphic Designer
• Maya Lin, Artist, Designer
• Rita Moreno, Singer, Dancer, Actress
• Jessye Norman, Soprano
• Joseph P. Riley, Jr., Arts Patron, Design Advocate
• Frank Stella, Painter, Sculptor
• Michael Tilson Thomas, Conductor
• John Williams, Composer, Conductor

Organizations

• The Oberlin Conservatory of Music, Conservatory, Oberlin, OH
• The School of American Ballet, Ballet School, New York, NY

The National Medal of Arts, established by Congress in 1984, is awarded by the President and managed by the National Endowment for the Arts. Award recipients are selected based on their contributions to the creation, growth, and support of the arts in the United States. Each year, the Arts Endowment seeks nominations from individuals and organizations across the country. The National Council on the Arts, the Arts Endowment’s presidentially-appointed and Senate-confirmed advisory body, reviews the nominations and provides recommendations to the President, who selects the recipients.

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.

A Snap Shot of Public Participation in Visual Arts

Sunday, December 20th, 2009

On Thursday, December 10, 2009, The National Endowment for the Arts released the 2008 Survey of Public Participation in the Arts, which is a periodic survey that tracks adults’ reported levels of arts engagement. On December 10, 2009, the Arts Endowment hosted a three-hour roundtable discussion about the the 2008 Survey of Public Participation in the Arts. Representatives of national arts service organizations, state and regional arts organizations and NEA’s discipline directors joined Arts Endowment Senior Deputy Chairman Joan Shigekawa in this discussion of the Survey. You can view and listen to the discussion here.

The survey’s

“core questions” ask large, nationally representative samples of the U.S. adult population about its attendance at seven types of performing arts event: jazz; classical music; opera; musicals; non-musical plays; ballet; dance “other” than ballet; and Latin, Spanish, or salsa music, a new category in 2008. American are also asked about their reading of literature and their visits to art museums or galleries, art and craft fairs, outdoor performing festivals, and parks and historic sites. Additional questions seek to know whether adults create or perform art of their own, whether they take arts classes or lessons, and whether they do a wide range of other leisure activities not necessarily involving the arts.”

Owning Art

Below are some interesting highlights of the survey results regarding owning any original pieces of art, such as paintings, drawings, sculpture, prints, or lithographs (Pg. 49 of the report).

-In 2008, 20 percent of adults (46 million Americans) reported owning original art.

-Of the 20 percent of adults who said that they owned original art in 2008, about one-third had purchased or otherwise acquired original art during the past 12 months.

-About one-third of respondents in households with income of $75,000 or more per year owned original art (10 percent had purchased art in the past 12 months).

-Owning original art is also highly correlated with years of formal education.

-People ages 45 to 64 are more likely to own original art than people of other age groups.

-People ages 25 to 34 were among the most likely to report purchasing art in the past year, but among all age groups, they formed the second-lowest percentage of owners of original art.

Art Museums and Galleries

The report also provided some interesting stats on adult attendance to art museums and galleries, especially in demographics.

-In 2008, 51 million people visited an art museum or gallery at least once.

-About 55 percent of people who went to art museums or art galleries in 2008 were women.

-Approximately 54 precent of 2008 art museum-going adults had a college or graduate degree. Adults with a high school education or less represented 18 percent of art museum visitors.

-About 26 percent of non-Hispanic whites, 15 percent of Hispanics, 12 percent of African Americans, and 23 percent of adults in other racial/ethnic categories (largely Asian American and Native Americans) visited an art museum or gallery in 2008.

-More than half (52 percent) of U.S. adults with a graduate-level degree visited an art museum or art gallery in 2008. That is, more people in this demographic group visited an art museum or gallery in 2008 than did not, a trend that is unique among benchmark arts activities.

-About one-quarter of adults ages 18 to 64 visited an art museum or gallery in 2008. The attendance rate drops sharply for adult older than 75 years.

-Residents of the Pacific region (West Coast) were among the most likely to go to art museums or galleries in 2008.

-Crossover of art museum attendance and attendance at other art activities were notably high. At least 50 percent of attenders at jazz, classical music, Latin music, opera, ballet, other dance, craft fairs, performing arts festivals, and historic sites also visited an art museum in 2008.

-Approximately 69 percent of adults who purchased original art within the last year also visited an art museum or gallery in 2008.

Interested in the survey results for other areas of the arts and how they compare with the last survey (completed in 2002)? Check out the report here.

Arts Groups Happy to Have a Friend in White House

Wednesday, December 9th, 2009

PND, December 9, 2009

As he nears the end of his first year in office, Barack Obama can count the largest infusion of cultural funding in decades as one of his signal achievements, the Associated Press reports. And though arts advocates say it is still less than what is needed, they are hopeful the president will manage to transform arts policy, funding, and education in the United States for years to come.

Since his inauguration, Obama has hosted a variety of musical performances and workshops at the White House featuring classical, jazz, Latin, and country music. At the same time, the administration has secured $100 million in new funding for the arts, including a one-time $50 million infusion from the economic stimulus package to preserve arts-related jobs around the country.

While arts supporters had hoped for a greater financial commitment from the administration, the increases are viewed as significant and symbolic of the president’s support. At the National Endowment for the Arts, chairman Rocco Landesman, a former Broadway producer, has said he would like to resume making grants to individual artists — a practice that was ended during the culture wars of the 1990s. But with the NEA budget well below its 1992 high-water mark of $176 million, the agency is likely to hold off for the time being.

In pressing for a restoration of funding, Americans for the Arts, a leading advocacy organization, has emphasized the economic impact of the arts and culture sector, which today employs nearly six million people at a hundred thousand nonprofit art groups — up from just seven thousand half a century ago. Federal funding helped fuel that growth, said AfA president and CEO Robert Lynch, by leveraging additional public and private support for the arts. “It’s been so successful over the past fifty years,” said Lynch. “It’s good business sense for there to be a bigger investment.”

“Capital Culture: Obama Drops Cautious Arts Policy.” Associated Press 12/08/09.

Already Struggling, Artists Hit Hard by Recession, Survey Finds

Monday, November 30th, 2009

PND News, November 30, 2009

A new survey of American artists — two-thirds of whom say they earned less than $40,000 and a third less than $20,000 last year — found that slightly more than half experienced a drop in income in 2009, the New York Times reports.

Commissioned by nonprofit artist-support organization Leveraging Investments in Creativity and funded in part by the Ford Foundation and the National Endowment for the Arts, the survey found that 51 percent of the more than fifty-three hundred respondents saw their incomes fall in the past year, while 18 percent reported a drop of at least 50 percent.

The report, The Artists and the Economic Recession Survey: Selected Findings (8 pages, PDF), found that the most commonly reported impact of the recession was a decline in sales, followed by lower rates or fees. In addition, more than a third of the surveyed artists reported fewer and smaller grants, fewer grant opportunities, and fewer scheduled bookings and chances to exhibit, perform, or present their work.

The survey also provided statistical support for long-held beliefs about artists, such as they tend to work day jobs to support themselves, musicians and architects tend to do better financially than writers and painters, and more than a third of working artists lack adequate health insurance.

According to Judilee Reed, executive director of Leveraging Investments in Creativity, “A lot of the artists who were reporting were telling us, ‘I live in a recession all the time, so this downturn has really not been so different for me.’”

Kennedy, Randy. “A Survey Shows Pain of Recession for Artists.” New York Times 11/24/09.

National Endowment for the Arts Cultural Workforce Forum Held November 20th

Tuesday, November 24th, 2009

On Friday, November 20th, 2009, the NEA hosted a discussion of how art works as part of the real economy. Academics, foundation professionals, and service organization representatives came together to discuss improving the collection and reporting of statistics about arts and cultural workers, and to develop future research agendas and approaches. The program was as follows:

9:00 a.m – Opening Remarks and introductions

Joan Shigekawa, NEA Senior Deputy Chairman and Sunil Iyengar, NEA Director of Research & Analysis

9:30 – Panel One: What We Know About Artists and How We Know It

  • NEA Research on Artists in the Workforce
    Tom Bradshaw, NEA Research Officer
  • Artist Labor Markets
    Greg Wassall, associate professor, Department of Economics, Northeastern University
  • Artist Careers
    Joan Jeffri, director, Research Center for Arts and Culture, Teachers College, Columbia University
  • Artist Research: Union Perspectives
    David Cohen, executive director, Department for Professional Employees, AFL-CIO

11:00 – Panel Two: Putting the Research to Work

  • Cultural Vitality: Investing in Creativity
    Maria Rosario Jackson, senior research associate, The Urban Institute
  • Artists and the Economic Recession
    Judilee Reed, executive director, Leveraging Investments in Creativity (LINC)
  • Teaching Artists Research Project
    Nick Rabkin, Teaching Artists Research Project, National Opinion Research Center, University of Chicago
  • Strategic National Arts Alumni Project
    Steven Tepper, associate director, the Curb Center for Art, Enterprise, and Public Policy, Vanderbilt University

1:20 – Panel Three: Widening the Lens to Capture Other Cultural Workers

  • Artists in the Greater Cultural Economy
    Ann Markusen, Hubert H. Humphrey Institute of Public Affairs, University of Minnesota
  • Creative Class: Who’s in, Who’s out?
    Tom Bradshaw, NEA Research Officer
  • American Community Survey: An Emerging Data Set
    Jennifer Day, assistant division chief, Employment Characteristics of the Housing and Household Economic Statistics Division, United States Census Bureau

2:20 – Comments and questions from panel participants   

3:00 – Discussion: Summary and Recommendations for Future Research

Moderated by Sunil Iyengar and Tom Bradshaw

Lead discussants: Holly Sidford, president, Helicon Collaborative and Paul DiMaggio, professor, Department of Sociology, Princeton University

4:30 – Adjournment

N.B. There will be 15-minute breaks at 10:45 a.m. and 2:50 p.m.; and an hour break for lunch at 12:15 p.m.

In addition to the above presenters, the NEA Cultural Workforce Forum included the following respondents:

  • Randy Cohen, vice president of local arts advancement, Americans for the Arts
  • Deirdre Gaquin, consultant
  • Angela Han, director of research, National Assembly of State Arts Agencies
  • Ruby Lerner, president, Creative Capital Foundation
  • Judilee Reed, executive director, Leveraging Investments in Creativity (LINC)
  • Carrie Sandahl, associate professor, Department of Disability and Human Development, University of Illinois at Chicago
  • Mary Jo Waits, director, Social, Economic & Workforce Programs Division, National Governors Association

An archive of the event will be available on www.arts.gov during the week of November 23rd.

Fotoweek-In-Anacostia Highlights Over 40 Photographers

Thursday, November 5th, 2009

FotoweekPoster2009

Five different exhibitions premier in November, throughout the Historic Sector of Anacostia, East of the River. All the exhibits open Saturday November 7th at 7pm and are in walking distance of each other.

Honfleur Gallery
1241 Good Hope Road SE WDC 20020
Women Photojournalists of Washington : Launch

WPOW’s mission is to connect and educate the public of the work of women photographers.  The photographers featured in the juried exhibit are Astrid Riecken, Allison Shelley, Abby Greenawalt, Ashely Twiggs, Algerina Perna, Amanda Lucidon, Andrea Bruce, Carol Guzy, Gabriela Bulisova, Jamie Rose, Katie Falkenberg, Laura Elizabeth Pohl, Melina Mara, Sarah L. Voisin  and Yanina Manolova. Launch is generously sponsored by Camera Bits.  Learn more about WPOW at http://womenphotojournalists.org/

A Contact Sheet : Honfleur’s represented artists + local favorites

This survey of photography includes works in various techniques by Darren Smith, Renee Woodward, John K. Lawson, Antoine Sanfuentes, Joshua Yospyn, Jean-Francois Bauret, Jean Francois Rauzier, Jean Noel L’Harmeroult, Cyril Anguelidis, Andrea Hope, Jared Ragland, Sharon J. Burton, Sherry Ways and Deborah Terry.

Alternative Arts Space 2200
2200 MLK Ave SE, WDC 20020
BK Adams + Steven M. Cummings : I AM ART

Steven Cummings, DC based photographer, collaborates with BK Adams, Anacostia based sculptor and painter presenting an experimental installation with interactive components.

The Gallery at Vivid Solutions
2208 MLK Ave SE WDC 20020
Owen Franken : A Photography Retrospective

Owen has traveled to over 100 countries and covered everything from the fall of the Berlin Wall to the culture of food and wine in his home  city of Paris. *Special event: ARCH Art Auction and Fundraiser, and exhibition preview on Friday, November 6th with the photographer’s brother Senator Al Franken and Franni Franken. Please call 202-365-8392 for further information and tickets.

ARCH Training Center
1231 Good Hope Road SE WDC 20020                                                                Student Photography Exhibit : Eco-Action-Reaction

Student photography show focusing on the importance of renewable energy resources, such as solar power, and exploring the environmental juxtaposition between man and nature. This exhibition is funded in part, by the National Endowment for the Arts.

For further inquiries, please ca;; 202-536-8994 or arts@archdc.org.
For more information about FOTOWEEK DC, see www.fotoweekdc.org.

U.S. Congress Approves Budget Increases for Arts and Humanities Endowments

Thursday, November 5th, 2009

The New York Times, 10/30/09

“The House and Senate on [October 29] passed a budget increase for the National Endowment for the Arts [NEA] and for the National Endowment for the Humanities. The Interior Appropriations Bill for FY 2010 sets budgets for each agency at $167.5 million; up $12.5 million from last year…The funding comes as Rocco Landesman, the new chairman of the NEA, prepares to start a nationwide Art Works tour next week. ‘It’s never enough,’ Mr. Landesman said. ‘But we’re looking for progress at a time when every dollar is precious. For us to get a notable increase is extremely heartening.’ The NEA is currently funded at $155 million, and the White House had requested an increase to $161 million. The agency received an additional $50 million through the stimulus bill. This summer, the House approved $170 million for the arts endowment, while the Senate proposed $161.3 million. The final budget was decided in conference [last] week and passed by a vote of 247–178 in the House and 72–28 in the Senate. ‘This important budget increase recognizes the essential role the arts play in our lives, schools, and communities,’ said Robert L. Lynch, president and CEO of Americans for the Arts.”

Read more here.

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