professional membership
2008 Featured Members
Americans for the Arts members are truly diverse – from large arts organizations to small ones; from funders to presenters; from urban centers to rural outposts. Despite their differences, they share the common goal of advancing and promoting the arts in their communities. Featured Member Projects highlights some of the many interesting and innovative means our members are using to strengthen their communities through the arts.Are you an Americans for the Arts member who would like to see your organization and project featured on this page? If so, share your story with us.
Cliff Garten generates site integrated public art projects which collaborate with urban design, architecture, landscape architecture and engineering to challenge the assumptions of how public places are built and used. Through a diversity of materials, methods and scale, the studio is committed to the expressing the potential of public spaces and public infrastructure in varied urban and natural contexts. Hear from Garten, artists presenter at the recent Public Art Master Planning Knowledge Exchange, December 5-6, 2008, Arlington and Reston, VA.
Mitch Menchaca from Arizona Commission on the Arts
Regional Arts & Culture Council, Portland, OR
The Regional Arts & Culture Council (RACC) has received $310,000 in new grants to support Arts Partners, a collaboration among artists, arts organizations, school districts, governments, businesses, and donors working to integrate arts education experiences into the standard curriculum across the region’s school districts. With the help of several new community partners, K–8 students throughout the region will begin having more equitable access to arts education in the spring. RACC is the managing partner of this effort and is pleased to announce this new round of funding, which includes $50,000 each year for the 2008–2009, 2009–2010, and 2010–2011 school years from the Collins Foundation; the same amount from the James F. & Marion L. Miller Foundation; and $10,000 from the Bank of America Foundation for the 2008–2009 school year. Read more »Arts Council of Fairfax County
The Arts Council of Fairfax County will host children from China, Finland, Ghana, and Jordan as featured performers at the 38th annual International Children’s Festival. First conceived and produced in 1971 as International Children's Day, the International Children's Festival provides an opportunity for children throughout the world to share their cultures through the language of the arts. This is especially important since Fairfax County is one of the most diverse counties in the Washington metropolitan area. One of the originators of the festival was Catherine Filene Shouse, founder of Wolf Trap National Park for the Performing Arts, the nation's only national park devoted solely to the performing arts. Read more »The Maryland State Arts Council (MSAC), an agency of the Maryland Department of Business & Economic Development, recently announced Imagine Maryland: 2008–2013, a statewide community collaboration and cultural planning initiative to identify opportunities and ideas that will enhance the roles of the arts in Maryland in order to stimulate economic development, enhance quality of life, attract visitors, and nurture artists and arts organizations.
Read more »Massachusetts Department of Business Development
Bowling Green State University Public Art Committee
The Public Art Committee of Bowling Green State University wanted to create a class that would give upper-level undergraduate students the professional experience of competing for and producing a piece of commissioned public art from start to finish. Although administrators were told repeatedly that students would not be able to pull it off, they proceeded. Sculpture instructor Greg Mueller spearheaded the idea, offering with “The Poe Road Improvement Project” public art course in the fall of 2005.
Read more »St. Louis Regional Arts Commission
At the same time that arts organizations across the country are building gleaming, new performing arts centers like the Carnival Center for the Performing Arts in Miami, FL, and the Orange County Performing Artscenter in Costa Mesa, CA, many others are not so lucky. Nonprofit arts groups in the same communities still clamor for performance space, rehearsal locations, and meeting places. With its growing wealth in recent years, Washington, DC, has had the good fortune of building nine new, soaring performing arts palaces in as many years. So when the Shakespeare Theatre Company set out to build its second home, the impressive Sidney Harman Hall, and transform the company into a national destination, they didn't lose sight of their fellow arts groups. The new Harman Hall joins the Company's original Lansburgh Theatre to create the Harman Center for the Arts. The company has made both the Lansburgh Theatre and Harman Hall available as affordable, downtown arts venues for other arts organizations.
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