I’m in Chicago at the moment, attending a small but intensive convening for Project Audience, an Andrew W. Mellon funded initiative seeking to improve the application of on-line technologies to engage audiences with the arts. Participants include individual arts organizations like the Seattle Opera and the Louisiana Philharmonic, discipline-specific service agencies like Theater Bay Area […]
Rethinking arts journalism…LIVE!
[UPDATE: This event has come and gone. Hope everyone enjoyed it. For more details and media archives, visit the National Summit on Arts Journalism web site.] My colleague Doug McLennan, founder and editor of ArtsJournal, has been reframing arts journalism and the public conversation on the arts since he launched this web site way back […]
The challenge (and opportunity) of nonprofit debt
The for-profit world used to complain that the nonprofit world (especially in the arts) needed to behave more like businesses. Now that nonprofits are suffering the same wrenching impacts as every other industry, the complaint is that we were behaving too much like businesses. The current such complaint relates to nonprofit use of debt. One […]
Boston Foundation retools and refocuses
News from New England’s largest public charity suggests that the winds might be changing in how much, how often, and how critically organized philanthropy distributes their money. The Boston Foundation announced a new strategy for giving that involves giving larger grants to fewer organizations, over longer periods, and with fewer strings attached. Says foundation president […]
My chat with Elizabeth Streb
As I’ve mentioned, we’ve had choreographer and creative muse Elizabeth Streb in Madison for the past several days, for a series of public and university discussions about her work and its implications for creative entrepreneurs. I’ve long admired her ability to bring reflection, creative thought, and artistic intent to every aspect of her work — […]
Elizabeth Streb’s new rules of conduct
Having great fun and deep conversations this week with Elizabeth Streb, who’s a guest speaker to my class and other public events in Madison. More thoughts to come to this blog, after I successfully get her on the plane home. In the meanwhile, I thought I’d share some of her ‘new rules of conduct’ she’s […]
Smashing assumptions about arts venues
If you happen to be in or near Madison, Wisconsin, this week, you should attend the public talk and discussion by Elizabeth Streb at Overture Center, Wednesday, September 23, 7:00 pm. I’ll be there (I’m one of the hosts, after all), and eager to hear more about her extraordinary and innovative work in rethinking the […]
Think you’re a content provider? Think again.
Programmer and essayist Paul Graham offers a thoughtful rebuttal to any current publishers who think they are content providers. Says Graham: They’re not. Almost every form of publishing has been organized as if the medium was what they were selling, and the content was irrelevant. Book publishers, for example, set prices based on the cost […]
Podcasting about teaching about art and business
For the many of you out there that have expressed interest and excitement about the new UW-Madison course ‘Arts Enterprise: Art as Business as Art,’ we’ve now posted our very first podcast related to the course. In the eight-minute conversation, co-teacher Stephanie Jutt and I discuss the origins of the course, and its various goals […]
Art as business as art
As I’ve worked and talked with arts professionals, funders, artists, and boards over the years, I’ve been continually struck by a nagging question: Why isn’t this work more fun? After all, many of these people are doing the very thing they longed to do — connecting audiences to art, creating or enabling new work, performing […]