It may be because I’m reading the new book on Resilience by Andrew Zolli and Ann Marie Healy. It may be because I taught two courses this past fall, one on each end of the scope and scale spectrum in the arts (one on cultural organizations, one on scrappy, start-up arts enterprises). Or it may […]
Are you the puppet or the puppeteer?
A reasonably long while ago, one of my master’s students (thanks Syrah Gunning!) was writing her thesis on professional development, and she discovered and shared a theory on human cognitive development that keeps coming back to haunt me. While the name of the theory sounds clinical and detached, the concepts of Constructive-Developmental Theory are rather […]
The Curse of the Generic Topic
You may have noticed (or may not have, which is cool) that I’ve been away from blogging for a rather long while. And when I WAS blogging, the posts were few and far between. Part of that gap, I’ve come to recognize, was because my brain is still moving. My body and my business location […]
Off for the holidays
I know I haven’t been “on” as much this fall, during my first semester on the faculty at American University. But I’m off again for a holiday break. I’ll be back to blogging as best I can in January. Until then, may you and yours have a joyous holiday season filled with observable community impact […]
Don’t trust maps (with your life)
There’s an arts management metaphor buried somewhere within the recent story about Australian authorities and Apple’s mobile map system. In brief, the computer company’s new (and much maligned) iOS mapping program was leading hapless Australian motorists into a dangerous wilderness, instead of to the town they were looking for. The frequent error led Australian authorities […]
You and me and the L3C
On November 16, I moderated a panel discussion in New York on the Low-Profit Limited Liability Company (L3C), and its potential for the arts. The panelists included two of the leading national experts on the business entity (Marc J. Lane and Rick Zwetch), alongside two masters from the theater world (Gregory Moser, Victoria Bailey), and […]
Going to scale
This week, I’m part of an Americans for the Arts blog salon on the question of ‘scaling up,’ essentially about making programs in the arts available to more people in more places through project models that can accommodate such growth. Getting ‘to scale’ is an essential element in the venture capital world, where you invest […]
The Arts and the L3C, Friday, 11/16, 2-6pm Eastern
I’m in New York, prepping for Friday’s symposium at Columbia University on the L3C and the Arts (2:00 – 6:00 pm Eastern Time). The in-person event is filled to capacity, but you can watch it live online, or follow along (and submit questions to the panel) on Twitter (@l3c_arts, thanks to Alli Houseworth). [The event will […]
The convergence of ‘independent’ and ‘differently dependent’
I’m attending the Future of Music Summit today, hearing panel after panel of experts, artists, and advocates interested in a healthy ecosystem for independent musicians. And it’s striking me how the worlds of ‘indie music’ efforts and nonprofit arts organizations are finding their way into the same world (or at least longing toward it).
Indoor (and in-brain) GPS
Most of us are now used to our electronic devices telling us where we are, where we’re going, and what turns to make along the way. So, it stands to reason that we’d look to those same devices in more and more circumstances. An obvious geographic extension of GPS and ‘turn by turn’ directions is […]