Monday, September 21, 2009

Public Display of Invention

Stream Full Audio Coverage:








Download Audio File

Public Display of Invention
Monday, September 21, 7:30-9:30pm
WNYC's The Greene Space

seven unique visions to catalyze and sustain the cultural economy

Presented as part of The Field’s Economic Revitalization for Performing Artists program (ERPA -pronounced ur·pah) made possible by the NYC Cultural Innovation Fund of The Rockefeller Foundation.

ERPA asked “How can artists make new money for their work?” And then ERPA challenged artists to propose inventive, sustainable and replicable models to do this.

Presenters: Kahlil Almustafa, Rachel Chavkin / The T.E.A.M., Nick Brooke, Jon Stancato / Stolen Chair, Connie Hall / Conni's Avant Garde Restaurant, JoAnna Mendl Shaw / The Equus Projects, and Caroline Woolard / Our Goods.

In November 2008, 116 artists and companies applied to The Field’s grassroots search for new economic models. Seven artists with the most feasible, sustainable, innovative and replicable models were selected. Since then, the ERPA 7 as we affectionately call them, have been hard at work planning, testing, and tweaking their unique approaches to financial stability. The Field gave them each $5,000 and a variety of professional development resources to support their planning. In late August 2009 the ERPA 7 applied to The Field for up to $25,000 in implementation funds to take their projects to the next level. STAY TUNED!! We will announce the recipients of the implementation grants in late September.

What is ERPA really? In 2008 (before the economy tanked), The Field received a generous award from The Rockefeller Foundation’s inaugural Cultural Innovation Fund to tackle the debilitating financial instability that many performing artists face every day. True to The Field’s grass roots, we took this project directly to our artists and asked them “what would you do?” This query resulted in two streams of attack: dynamic public dialogues (aka Invention Sessions), and an ambitious entrepreneurial lab (the ERPA 7). Since then, our Invention Sessions have engaged more than 500 artists and cultural stakeholders in topics ranging from alternative fundraising tactics, to the romanticization of the starving artist, to a smackdown exposé on the 'new' economy. (For full audio coverage of past Invention Sessions, please visit the ERPA Blog: EconomicRevitalization.blogspot.com). The Invention Session held at Joe’s Pub was also featured on WNYC Public Radio. As the economy continues its rocky road, The Field is committed to short- and long-term solutions and micro and macro efforts. We will continue to host Invention Sessions and skill-building programs that help artists revitalize their own economy. In the spring of 2010 we are also launching Economic Revitalization services in East Harlem and the Bronx with support from State Senator José Serrano.

About the ERPA 7

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. KahlilAlmustafa.com

Rachel Chavkin/The T.E.A.M. will launch American Geographic, an initiative designed to increase national visibility, annual work-weeks for its company members, and forge a country-wide network of audiences and supporters through direct engagement with communities around the nation. With American Geographic, the T.E.A.M. will re-envision itself as a year-round employer and therefore will seek to provide an essential year-round benefit - health insurance - to its part-time employees through corporate sponsorship. The T.E.A.M. hopes to develop a model of engagement between small arts companies and large corporations that will build a mutually beneficial bond between the business and arts community and enable future arts companies to pursue essential benefits for part-time employees. TheTEAMPlays.org

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. 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. These microcommissions will be collaged on the web in an interactive installation, which will let participants converse with the artist, and see their works constantly change. NBrooke.com

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. StolenChair.org

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. AvantGardeRestaurant.com

JoAnna Mendl Shaw/The Equus Projects will develop their Regional Touring Program to include on-site coordinators in four 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. DancingWithHorses.org

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

Tuesday, September 15, 2009

City money for who? for you?

My friends at Collective Arts Think Tank (CATT) published our 2nd post about NYC funding (Department of Cultural Affairs). It's concise and question-driven. We are hoping to speak with DCA in response.

I have another question to throw into the mix though:

The current multi-year funding process could benefit from some transparency so that the arts community can strive towards best practices in their applications for funding.

If you are a lucky recipient of multi-year funding from the DCA: your 1st year multi-year funding amount is announced and "contracted" at a certain $ level. (This is super and helps arts orgs plan for the future!)

But!

What happens the 2nd year? Multi-year $ is not set in stone alas. Your contracted amount can be cut or increased according to the rise and fall of the NYC budget. Last year and this year the warning that cuts were imminent was done well in advance so that you could plan (great!)

We got a tiny decrease last year and a bigger one this year. That's hard for us but I get it. I do. I just want to understand it so we can do better next year.

I called our kind Program Officer with these questions but got no real response except "there is no peer review of multi-years. We need to fill the gaps in the budget."

So who determines the cuts/increases? If not a peer-review process then it is ________? DCA staff, City Council, lobbyists? Is it across the board everyone gets cuts 2% or 8%? Nope. Some get big cuts, some small, some get increases!

Can we get feedback so we can do better in the future?

DCA is honorably committed to transparency and I love that. I'd love to see that transparency infiltrate the multi-year funding process as well so that grantees can endeavor to hit the highest marks possible.

On another note: look at what the odd city of Sacramento is doing for their arts community. Thanks Thomas Cott! It looks like Bloomberg is in for another round and with the anniversary of Lehman's demise and the crazy bonuses at Goldman (did I misunderstand??) maybe we can create a similar effort to support non-profits in this city who are still reeling from the crisis (and next year will only be worse for most of us??)

Thursday, September 3, 2009

everyone laughing

This morning on WNYC's Marketplace the CEO of Netflix was discussing the future of movie watching (to paraphrase..."live streaming on your retina....think about a song and it starts playing in your head for 1 cent...").

When asked what his favorite way to watch movies he replied, (to paraphrase), "Live. In the theater. Especially comedies. You can hear everyone laughing together."

BRILLIANT! because even the CEO of NETFLIX knows that it's about the communal experience!!

And the communal experience is what (most) live art is about.

Thank you Mr. Netflix for reminding us to get out of our living rooms and into the larger public sphere to experience art tooooogether.