Tuesday, December 23, 2008

Bailout for the Arts?? sign me up!

Dear Friends,

Split This Rock http://www.splitthisrock.org/ & The Institute for Policy Studies http://www.ips-dc.org/ are advocating for the arts to be included in the $600 billion stimulus package - we have put together a petition calling for an arts stimulus plan; similar to the WPA program from the '30's. The position paper will hit the desk of the transition team soon, so we need all the signatures we can as soon as possible!

Please take a moment to join our "event,' sign our petition, invite friends to join. This could mean jobs!! fellowships!! Act now.

http://www.ipetitions.com/petition/artsstimulus/index.html

Monday, December 15, 2008

Obama and music and CSAs?

Music plus education plus outreach plus a living wage plus healthcare = I LOVE BARACK OBAMA AND MUSICIANCORPS! Click here to read about MusicianCorps leader Kiff Gallagher's sassy idea to build the arts. Can dance and theater artists and writers get on board? Who is going to the big Inauguration? me me and me.

Also, Community Supported Agriculture is a working model that is sustainable, ethical, delicious and community-building. I love it. Maybe even more than the Park Slope Food Coop :-) One of The Field's ERPA artists, Jon Stancato, is planning a CSA for his theater company, Stolen Chair. I just heard from Bryan Moyer Suderman that he does a CSA for music in Canada.

The personal is political. You are what you eat. I yam what I yam. Happy Monday!

Tuesday, December 9, 2008

Ta Da: ERPA Artists Announced!!!

In 2008 more than 350 community stakeholders joined us for community dialogues (aka Invention Sessions) across New York City. Moving into 2009, The Field invests in seven artists who brought forth innovative ideas to generate new revenue streams from their art for their art...

Congratulations to Kahlil Almustafa, Nick Brooke, Rachel Chavkin, Connie Hall, JoAnna Mendl Shaw, Jon Stancato, and Caroline Woolard.

These seven artists will be paid $5,000 to research and develop their projects under the auspices of the ERPA entrepreneurial lab. In the fall of 2009 their ideas-in-progress will be presented and publicly adjudicated to receive up to $25,000 in additional project implementation funds.

More than 100 ERPA applications were received and adjudicated by a panel of veteran arts and business leaders, including: June Choi, Shawn Cowls, Corey Dargel, Trajel Harrel, Jaki Levy, Kristin Marting, and Heather Rees. ERPA projects were selected based on their potential vision, impact, relevance, and viability.

Kahlil Almustafa will bring performance poetry to his hometown of Jamaica, Queens. Through poetry workshops at high schools, performances at theaters, and Living Room Readings, Almustafa will promote poetry as a tool for community engagement.

Nick Brooke composes collages of pop song fragments and sound effects, and then trains live performers to sound like these recordings, while creating intricate theatrical tableaus. Though he cannot release any of his music on CD due to copyright, he wants to use ERPA to create a ‘micro-commissioning’ program, in which small fragments, songs, or vignettes of a larger work are supported by smaller commissions.

Rachel Chavkin/The T.E.A.M. proposes re-envisioning the model for corporate sponsorship in the arts with the goal of solving one of the leading problems facing small companies and individual artists: the inability to afford health insurance. Through a partnership program, business and corporations will adopt theater companies and artists to form a mutually beneficial bond between the business and arts community.

Connie Hall/Conni's Avant Garde Restaurant not only generates an abundance of comic material and great food, but also offers an alternative producing model for artist-driven theater. Through the ERPA program, the actor-run theater company will develop a sustainable business model using income generated by the sale of food and beverages to support its artistic work.

JoAnna Mendl Shaw/The Equus Projects will develop their Regional Touring Program to include on-site coordinators in seven regional hubs throughout the country, enabling each to advocate on the company's behalf and cultivate performance and workshop participation. This program will build upon The Equus Projects' strong national support base, cultivating effective leadership with a handful of key supporters.

Jon Stancato/Stolen Chair proposes a way to adapt the business plan followed by most Community Supported Agricultures (CSA). Like the CSA model, Stolen Chair hopes to build a membership community which would provide ‘seed’ money for the company’s development process and then reap a year’s worth of theatrical harvests.

Caroline Woolard proposes an online peer-to-peer network where creative people can trade objects, services, and space with each other. Check out the prototype at www.OurGoods.org. There you will find a work dress designed by Caroline waiting to be traded for your skills or artwork!

These seven artists are just one piece of ERPA. In 2009 and beyond, The Field will be adding ERPA-related seminars, classes, and discussions to our core services. With that in mind, please continue to check out the ERPA blog. Embedded in the ERPA blog are a comprehensive resource guide, podcasts of the Invention Sessions, and a spotlight on innovative ideas. These resources are meant to foster dialogue, build knowledge, and incite action, above and beyond the selected ERPA projects.

“We hope you feel inspired to participate and pull from ERPA to help jumpstart your own economic revitalization. In these economically challenging times, it is incumbent upon us to work together for real answers to hard questions. There is just so much to be learned through this dialogue and research, both at The Field and in the field at large. As they say, it takes a village.”Jennifer Wright Cook, Executive Director of The Field

Friday, December 5, 2008

rich quick?

Heard this inspiring man, Ramit Sethi, on NPR yesterday talking about $-making and $-saving strategies. He has some super simple tools and strategies to make it happen.

And a provocative contest, Save $1,000 in 30 days. He is posting a Tip a Day on how to achieve this. Check it out. I particularly like his Tip #7: A Day of No Spending!. Saves $ and leaves a smaller carbon footprint I imagine!

Monday, December 1, 2008

New York Times profiles artist entrepreneurs

The New York Times' Marci Alboher gets to know some business savvy artists who are transforming their art into lucrative career paths. Read about them here. Let's get on board and see how we can be inspired by these artists' entrepreneurial thinking!

PS: ERPA panel meets soon! Stay tuned - Selected ERPA artists will be announced December 10, 2008. REMINDER - Don't forget to check out the online ERPA google document "Resource Guide & Reading List." It is chock full of interesting ideas and information.