Archives for July 2010

A Cultural Center Without Walls in CT?

Even though I’ve been in San Francisco for nearly two years, you’d be surprised how many people still ask me what it’s like to be here and be running a cultural center as someone from “out of town.” And not just out of town, Connecticut. People who live in San Francisco have the same impression of Connecticut that I did when I was growing up in the midwest: Martha Stewart, old Yankees, rich New York suburbanites. San Franciscans are proud, and rightly so, of the diversity and empowerment here. But we (and I mean we San Franciscans—myself included) have so much going on that it can be hard to think beyond the city limits and imagine, let alone appreciate, what is happening in the community arts elsewhere in the country.

There have been many times when I have wished I could take the artists and collaborators who inspire me here and show them what is going on in the Connecticut I know. New London, Hartford, New Haven, Middletown—the little cities that shaped my dreams of what is possible when people embrace the arts as a way to build strong and healthy communities. I am fortunate to see the transformative power of the arts at SOMArts, an organization that enjoys city support that is almost unprecedented elsewhere in the country. Because Connecticut cultural organizations do not have the same funding resources, and because I have always rooted for the underdog, what happens with the arts in Connecticut still evokes deep admiration in me, as well as pride for what the people living there have achieved and keep striving for.

Two projects in Connecticut caught my eye this week. The Green Street Arts Center, where I was the assistant director for several years, has created not one but two murals over the past two years. The most recent one, created by Marela Zacarias in collaboration with the after school program and a local soup kitchen, recognizes the city’s homeless population.

Further north, Hartford City Councilman Luis Cotto has begun a Kickstarter campaign to fund a cultural center without walls. We San Franciscans need only look to the city-supported virtual cultural centers to know how powerful this can be. The first project of the center was a collaboration between Cotto and Oakland-based artist and activist Favianna Rodriguez, whose work I have admired but who I have not had the pleasure of meeting personally.

Although I’ve had no hand in this project whatsoever, I am excited to see that someone from the Bay Area is playing a part, and to see another example of how the marriage of great minds can help accessible art continue to thrive in Hartford. Cotto’s right-hand-man at City Hall, Brendan Mahoney, is a longtime friend of my fiance‘s and will be officiating our wedding in September, and we will be hosting a gathering of many friends from around the country at SOMArts. So, while I can’t bring all my West Coast friends east, at least I will be able to share with my friends and family around the country the creative home that inspires me in the present, and look forward to future insurrection, connection and community through the arts.

In Memory: Janice Albert

Today I learned that Janice Albert, formerly of Oakland and later Middletown, Connecticut, passed away. She contacted me in February to let me know that she had been diagnosed with stage 4 lung cancer, and we corresponded while she began her treatment.

Janice and I met through the Green Street Arts Center. She was one of the first volunteers I began working with who was not a friend, or a friend-of-a-friend. She was just someone new to town who was looking for a way to connect with the community. And she was a true inspiration. A writer and photographer, she played a huge role in starting some of Green Street’s community-based programs. She had tremendous talent, and despite the physical limitations brought on by aging, she was always in good spirits and found many ways to be a true helpful presence.

One of my many memories of Janice is when we started the North End Grid Project, a photography project that asked photographers to explore a much-maligned, under appreciated and often misunderstood neighborhood of Middletown. Janice was determined to get a certain photograph that involved wading into mud and she got stuck! She got her shot, though.

Janice also wrote an amazing short story about visiting a graveyard with her siblings. I wish I had a copy. I recorded her reading it and will have to see if I can locate the audio file.

I have been fortunate in my life not to have too many people close to me pass away, or perhaps it is the unfortunate result of moving so often and not having a wide circle of truly intimate friends and family. Janice was loved by many, and I feel very lucky to have met and known her through the arts.

RIP Janice, you are deeply missed.

Inspiration: Race for the Arts

One of the resources of San Francisco is the beautiful weather and the fact that there is some kind of race almost every weekend. So I was completely inspired by Sara Seinberg’s Run for Radar Productions. I want to do this. I want ten people I know to do this. I don’t really care if it’s for SOMArts or some other organization (okay that’s a lie). But really, I want this idea to catch on. Because Seinberg just did this on her own and look at all the good that comes of it:

-people talk about it, hear about her and discover her work
-RADAR gets $5k to continute building community through literary arts
-fabulous health benefits

Every now and then I get emails from my arts friends who are running a 5 or 10k for a cause—usually health related—and I always think, why not run for art? Training for a run is social, it’s healthy, and it is something that can raise money on a shoestring. These health people have their fundraising DOWN. Why do the arts organizations throw big expensive parties and auctions when if we do our jobs right, every single event we have is a chance to meet artists, be social, learn about and enjoy art, and it’s usually free?

Having big galas for small, grassroots organizations usually feels status-y and weird. The people you are selling tickets to are usually about 90% different from the people who use your services on a day-to-day basis, and because of both the similarities and the differences it is hard to create an effective fundraising event that like a true celebration of the work. Few organizations get it right, and the ones that feel right in SF are usually called fundraisers but described behind the scenes by staff as “more friend-raiser than fund-raiser.” (Aside: what is with this trend of calling every concert and performance a fundraiser? I don’t understand the long-term benefit of giving people a false impression that what they are paying is above and beyond the cost of doing the work).

Of course, I hurt my foot and I’m getting married in a mont so my own Run for the Arts may have to wait a little bit. But my lame excuses only serve to make Seinberg’s success seem all the more awe-inspiring.

Photo credit: 5k, woohoo!

SFAQ Release Party ]

Free local bands AND a panel about artists starting out in SF? I’m there.

Know Better, Learn Faster

And I need you to be better than me
And you need me to do better than you.
—Know Better, Learn Faster by Thao With The Get Down Stay Down

Over a week has passed since the 50th Anniversary Summit of Americans for the Arts, and what a whirlwind week it was. Back at SOMArts Cultural Center we closed out an amazing turnaround year. We more than doubled our gallery attendance, revived our intern and volunteer programming, launched a website, renovated our lobby and office spaces, invested in long-overdue equipment upgrades, fought to protect our city funding, and lived to tell about it.  And yet, in many ways we are just catching up. There’s so much to do and it feels like the more we succeed, the more people we connect to who have urgent needs and high expectations.  Such is the life of a thriving nonprofit.

At the AftA convention, I connected with peers who had similar stories. We’re all exhausted. So we sat in the audience and listened to panels talk about new models, veering between skepticism and hope.

I came to convention still stubbornly hanging on to the idea that a “new model” was a structure I could study and apply to my organization—that magical combination of for-profit innovation, technology application and nonprofit altruism.

I left convention having reached the conclusion that we need to stop treating “new model” like a noun, in panels or anywhere else, when what we’re talking about is changing the system. We’re asking how we can achieve dramatic organizational change necessitated by the factors mentioned above, but succeeding via thoughtful communication and a process of enrolling (vs. influencing) stakeholders in one’s vision.

CONTINUE READING ]

Portrait of an Artist: Amanda Lopez ]

Nice piece about an artist finding her way, via The Citrus Report.