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arrow June 2008 bullet APInews bullet August 2008 arrow

APInews: July 2008 Archives

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July 29, 2008

ArtVenture Announces Freedom to Create Prize

ArtVenture, a philanthropic organization based in Singapore and the U.K., has announced competition for the Freedom To Create Prize, awards totaling $100,000. The international prize will recognize "artists who use their talents to promote human rights, including the freedom of expression, empathy, equality and understanding." The prize will consist of three categories: the main prize ($50,000), a youth scholarship and advocacy prize ($25,000 to an artist 18 or under) and the Imprisoned Artist Prize ($25,000), open to artists who have been imprisoned for their work. The judges will not simply assess the skill of the artists but examine how they have used their work in speaking out in defense of human rights and freedom of expression. Deadline to enter: October 31, 2008. (Thanks, Lynne Elizabeth.) [LINK] Posted by Linda Frye Burnham

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July 28, 2008

Highlander Homecoming and Apple Festival, August

highlander.jpg Highlander Research and Education Center in New Market, Tenn., will celebrate its Highlander Homecoming this year with a first-ever Apple Festival, August 30, 2008. Highlander supports the efforts of oppressed people to take collective action to shape their own destiny. It was founded by Myles Horton and ad Don Grundy in 1932 as the Highlander Folk School to educate "rural and industrial leaders for a new social order." Highlander is expanding with an 80-acre farm and apple orchard. The homecoming features apple picking and celebrations of the lives of Lewis Sinclair, Nayo Watkins, James Orange "and other supporters of justice, to remind us of the shoulders that we all rest upon." It also features the American Friends Service Committee exhibit, "One Day of the War - How Would You Spend It?" Read about on Highlander's new blog. [LINK] Posted by Linda Frye Burnham

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July 27, 2008

CalArts Calls for AOW 2009 Conference Proposals

The 4th annual Arts in the One World Conference at CalArts is themed "Motherhood and Revolution"; proposals are due October 1, 2008. The conference in Valencia, Calif., January 15-18, 2009, will examine "how women, and mothers in particular, are innovating in conflict and post-conflict circumstances, and expanding the models for ways in which one is an artist/activist in the world," says Erik Ehn, dean of CalArts' School of Theater, presenting the conference with Rwanda's Interdisciplinary Genocide Study Center. AOW is the local anchor of an artistic exchange CalArts conducts with the Rwanda center, where each summer students, faculty and professionals travel to study genocide and acts of mass violence, exploring "ways in which art may participate in the processes of renewal." Playwright Ehn was founder of the Regional Alternative Theatre (RAT) movement. Watch the Theater School's wiki for news. [LINK] Posted by Linda Frye Burnham

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July 24, 2008

Burners Without Borders Volunteering Worldwide

"Building Community Through Art and Action" is the motto of Burners Without Borders, a community-led, grassroots group that spontaneously formed after Burning Man in 2005. BWB addresses "gaping needs where existing cultural and societal systems are failing." Following Burning Man, an annual freewheeling arts festival in the Nevada desert, several participantinf artists headed into the Hurricane Katrina disaster area to help rebuild devastated communities. Over eight months, BWB volunteers gifted over $1 million dollars worth of reconstruction and debris removal to Mississippi residents. The BWB Web site is a gathering place for BWB groups across the U.S. and worldwide who are working at homebuilding, environmental cleanup, recycling, solar energy and relief for victims of floods, fires and earthquakes from Iowa to Peru. BWB is supported by donations through Burning Man's nonprofit, the Black Rock Arts Foundation. [LINK] Posted by Linda Frye Burnham

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July 23, 2008

Placemaking Seminars by Project for Public Spaces

places.jpg The Project for Public Spaces has announced three interesting fall training seminars in the skills of placemaking. "Streets as Places," September 15-16, 2008, will introduce participants to new ways of thinking about streets as public spaces and how placemaking can be used to build great streets and great communities. "How to Turn a Place Around," September 25-26, explores the principles of making places through the close examination of two contrasting neighborhoods, walking tours, presentations, case studies and a Place Game. "How to Create Successful Markets," October 17-18, is a course on public and farmers markets where participants learn about the four crucial elements to success: the right mix of vendors and products; a strong sense of place; solid economic and operational underpinnings; and a firm commitment to the surrounding community. All take place in New York City. [LINK] Posted by Linda Frye Burnham

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July 22, 2008

Art and Civic Engagement, Seattle, November

CAN writer Bill Cleveland is the keynote speaker at "Art and Civic Engagement," the Alliance of Artists Communities' 18th annual conference, November 12-15, 2008. The Seattle conference will explore "what it means as an artist-centered organization to be a full participant in civic life, engaging in the global community, supporting artists working in social justice and public or community art, and integrating support for artists, creativity and innovation into public policy." Cleveland is the author of "Art and Upheaval" and director of the Center for the Study of Art and Community. Richard Andrews, director of Henry Art Gallery at the University of Washington and director of the visual arts program at the National Endowment for the Arts, is also a keynoter. The Alliance is a membership organization for the field of artist communities and residencies, with 250 members worldwide. [LINK] Posted by Linda Frye Burnham

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July 21, 2008

2007-8 Arts Education State Policy Database Released

The Arts Education Partnership (AEP) has released the 2007-08 searchable AEP Arts Education State Policy Database with the latest on state policies and practices. John Abodeely, on the Arts Education Listserv (7/21/08) says database provides state-by-state summaries on the following eight policy topics: arts-education mandates, arts-education state standards, arts-education assessment requirements, arts requirements for high-school graduation, arts requirements for college admissions, licensure requirements for nonarts teachers, licensure requirements for arts teachers, and continuing-education requirements for arts teachers. Users can generate and print individual state profiles, customized state comparisons of specific arts-education policies, or compile 50-state reports. Also, the database provides users with links they can follow to get additional information about each state. [LINK] Posted by Linda Frye Burnham

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July 17, 2008

Training in Arts-infused Education, Detroit, August

Marygrove College’s Institute for Arts Infused Education offers a summer intensive that focuses on the methodology and pedagogy of integrating arts across the curriculum. The intensive, August 12-13, 2008, offers professional training for artists, principals and in-service and pre-service teachers and professional development for those interested in and/or working in the field. The programs includes "Comparatives, Superlatives, Pronouns, Adjectives and Gerunds Oh My! Using Creative Writing, Song Writing and Poetry," "What’s My Shape? Geometry Using Dance and Drama," "Re-imagining The Book Report—Comic Book Production," "Understanding History and Economics Through Music" and workshops on brain-based education and the multiple intelligences as well as programs by the Wolftrap Institute for Early Learning Through the Arts and Michigan Opera Theatre. Participants are eligible to earn .6 SBCEUs per day. Registration deadline for the training, in Detroit, is August 1. [LINK] Posted by Linda Frye Burnham

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AftA Calls for 2009 Convention Proposals

August 1, 2008, is the deadline for session proposals for the 2009 Americans for the Arts convention, themed "Renewable Resources: The Arts in Sustainable Communities." The convention, set for Seattle, Wash., June 17-20, will explore how creative communities grow and prosper in concert with technology, the economy and the environment. The convention is organized into nine concurrent program tracks: Arts Education, Civic Engagement, Economic Development, Leadership, Career 360, Preserving Diverse Cultures, Private Sector, Public Advocacy and Public Art. More than 75 sessions will be presented over the course of of three days during the convention. Sessions that fit in more than one track are welcome and may be presented jointly to a larger audience. Each session should respond both to the program track in which it is presented, as well as the 2009 theme of renewable resources. [LINK] Posted by Linda Frye Burnham

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July 16, 2008

Blue Lake Goes Wild 2008

dell'arte.jpg It's festival time in Blue Lake, California, home to Dell'Arte International. The 30th Annual Humboldt Folklife Festival happens in Blue Lake July 19-26, encompassing the Annie & Mary Fiddle Festival and Blue Lake Pageant, July 20, and the All Day Festival, July 26. The Pageant is described as "an-only-at-Dell'Arte spectacle as hundreds of dancers, musicians, giant puppets and masked participants take to the streets of Blue Lake in a spirit of energy and creativity that must be experienced to be believed." It's all surrounded by Dell'Arte's annual Mad River Festival, which kicked off June 20 when Tim Robbins and the Actors' Gang received the Prize of Hope, presented each year by the Danish Institute for Popular Theatre to theaters and individuals who have fought for human hope "in a daring, loving, vulgar, sincere, serious, and poetic manner." [LINK] Posted by Linda Frye Burnham

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July 14, 2008

New on CAN: Review of Cleveland's "Art and Upheaval"

Today CAN brings you a review of Bill Cleveland's new book, "Art and Upheaval: Artists on the World's Frontlines," from New Village Press. The book is a collection of narratives about artists working with communities during conflict and war -- in Northern Ireland, Cambodia, South Africa, the United States, Australia and the former Yugoslavia. Craig Zelizer, who teaches in the M.A. in Conflict Resolution program in the Department of Government at Georgetown University and wrote for CAN about art and peacebuilding, describes the new book as "an inspiring collection of powerful narratives about the work of community-based artists resisting oppressive regimes, building community in divided societies, challenging economic and racial discrimination, and rescuing culture on the verge of extinction." Calling it "an ideal text for use by students, professors, community arts practitioners, donors and policymakers," he says one of the book’s greatest strengths is "the clarity with which Cleveland presents the experiences and voices of the artists," but he laments the absence of a concluding chapter. Zelizer then takes the initiative to draw from Cleveland's narratives some lessons about community arts in conflicted societies. [LINK] Posted by Linda Frye Burnham

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July 10, 2008

At Tufts: A Memorial to Books

mindy.jpg Two hundred discarded books are lined up on the walls of Tufts University Art Gallery this summer in a "memorial to books" by Mindy Nierenberg, says Ilovelibraries.org. The American Library Association's Web site says “Bibliotheca Publicus: An Endangered Species” calls attention to public library budget cuts and the importance of the public library to a democratic society. The installation includes library memorabilia, and above the books (which are placed on fake grass) hang two wall pieces, 13'x15', composed of recycled cards from old Medford (Mass.) Public Library card catalogs displaying quotations about the importance of public libraries in our society and quotations from newspapers about library funding cuts. Each piece is individually hand stamped, letter by letter. Nierenberg teaches “Art, Activism, and Community: Visual Art for Social Change” at Tufts. [LINK] Posted by Linda Frye Burnham

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At Wake Forest: Hybridity, the New Interdisciplinarity

Wake Forest University has launched a new Program for Creativity and Innovation, foregrounding hybrid thinking and entrepreneurship. Developed by the Winston-Salem, N.C., university's Office of Entrepreneurship and Liberal Arts, the new program wants to bring "creativity to the liberal arts campus as a program ... for student citizens envisioning the future and faculty transforming research through new creative pathways." So far, the program features ten courses that combine disciplines to "focus on creativity as object of inquiry, as process and as product or outcome," investigating "new creative ideas and hybrid practices that impact on the world." A national symposium, “Creativity: Worlds in the Making,” March 18-20, 2009, aims to "revalue creativity in the radically changing global environment." There's a call for papers, due October 1. Program director is Lynn Book, who teaches in the Department of Theatre and Dance. [LINK] Posted by Linda Frye Burnham

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July 08, 2008

Strains of Hope from Venezuelan Prisons

venez.jpg Some of the Venezuela’s most hardened prisoners are playing in orchestras, says Simon Romero in the N.Y.Times (6/23/08). "In a project extending Venezuela’s renowned system of youth orchestras to some of the country’s most hardened prisons, [hundreds of] prisoners are learning a repertory that includes Beethoven’s Ninth Symphony and folk songs from the Venezuelan plains," says Romero. Writing about inmates in the National Institute of Feminine Orientation, a prison on the outskirts of Caracas, he says, "The budding musicians include murderers, kidnappers, thieves and, here at the women’s prison, dozens of narcomulas, or drug mules, as small-scale drug smugglers are called. The project, which began a year ago, is expanding this year to five prisons from three." (Thanks, Cultural Policy Listserv.) [LINK] Posted by Linda Frye Burnham

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Culture & Conflict Studies Online

pow.jpg "People from all over the globe rely on the power of art and culture to preserve, heal, reconcile and peace-build," says a new online study. "Culture and Conflict" investigates how art is helping in times of war, conflict and violence. The project features studies on music and stereotypes among the Roma community, billboards and social inequality in South Africa, cartoons and political upheaval in Lebanon, mixed media and intracultural collaboration in Sri Lanka, and ceramics and cultural identity among vulnerable populations in Columbia. “When people are forced to repeal their own culture, the result is a hopeless person forced to be opportunist and violent, with no moral limits and bounds," says Art for Refugees Director Sara Green. The project was edited by Amanda Fortier for the Power of Culture, a Netherlands site about culture and development. (Thanks, Craig Zelizer.) [LINK] Posted by Linda Frye Burnham

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July 07, 2008

New on CAN: Community Arts Perspectives #2

Issue Two of Community Arts Perspectives: A Publication of the Community Arts Convening and Research Project is now available on CAN. The issue includes essays by Celina Aquilar and Kate McLeod on power dynamics in community collaborations at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago; Ron Bechet, Willie Birch and Helen Regis on the history of the Porch Cultural Center in the Seventh Ward of New Orleans; Sheila Fox on reflection and personal development as inherent components of the art-making process; Nicole Garneau and Phyllis Johnson on the difficult partner relationship that built Columbia College Chicago's community arts graduate program; Sonia BasSheva Mañjon on whether campus-community partnerships are "supporting or destroying" the field of community arts; Linda Melamed and Isabel Nazario on the challenges to conventional academic culture presented by Rutgers' Transcultural New Jersey Public Service Arts Program; Mindy Nierenberg on how collaboration between liberal arts and visual arts can make opportunities for student learning and community benefit; Melanie Ohm on refining the term "best practices"; and John Peacock on the trials and tribulations of building a 2,000-mile bridge between MICA and the Dakota Nation. [LINK] Posted by Linda Frye Burnham

 
 


 


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APInews Archive

"Home: Composing the Rooted Local in the Rapid Global Environment," 5th annual Arts in the One World Conference, by Brown University's Theatre Arts and Performance Studies Department and the Interdisciplinary Genocide Study Center, Providence, R.I., March 17-21, 2010.
"FUTURESCAPE 2010 - creating better quality neighbourhoods, buildings and public spaces," symposium by Architecture Centre Network, London, March 19, 2010.
"Joker Training Weekend," by Cardboard Citizens, London, England, March 20-21, 2010.
"The Art of Social Justice," conference by Durban University of Technology, Durban, KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa, March 21-24, 2010.
"Rainbow of Desire Training Week," by Cardboard Citizens, London, England, March 22-24, 2010
"Why Culture is The Secret of Survival (and Why We Keep Missing the Point)," lecture by Arlene Goldbard, presented by Columbia University Teacher's College, New York, N.Y., March 23, 2010.
"The Culture Congress 2010: How Do We Come Together?," by Harbourfront Centre in partnership with The Theatre Centre, Toronto, Ont., Canada, March 24-28, 2010.
"Art and Sustainability," panel discussion by Pulitzer Foundation for the Arts, St. Louis, Mo., March 24, 2010
"CommonGround 2010," annual conference by New York State Alliance for Arts Education, Albany, N.Y., March 24-26, 2010.
"At the Crossroads: A Community Arts and Development Convening," by Community Arts Training Institute at St. Louis Regional Arts Commission, St. Louis, Mo., March 25-27, 2010.
"Arts Activated, Arts and Disability Conference," by Accessible Arts NSW, Sydney, NSW Australia, March 25-26, 2010.
"Connecting to the Urban Environment: Creating embodied and relational approaches to environmental awareness," second annual symposium by iLand (interdisciplinary Laboratory for Art, Nature and Dance), New Yokr, N.Y., March 26-27, 2010.
"Planetary Dance Leaders Workshop," by Anna Halprin, San Francisco Bay Area, Calif., March 26-28, 2010.
"Structures for Inclusion 10," by Design Corps and Howard University, Washington, D.C., March 27-28, 2010.
"SWAN Day event," Support Women Artists Now panel discussion on federal arts support, by WomenArts, et al., March 27, 2010.
"The Chicago Public Art Group: Transforming the City through Community Based Public Art," panel discussion during Mosaic Bottega, by Columbia College Chicago, Chicago, Ill., March 30, 2010
"New Approaches to Research and Practice in Communication for Development and Social Change," by Ohio University Communication and Development Studies Program, Athens, Ohio, April 2-3, 2010.
"Civic Dilemmas: Religion, Migration, and Belonging," online workshop by Facing History and Ourselves, April 7-14, 2010.
"Creative Cities Summit," Lexington, Ky., April 7-9, 2010.
"Arts Integration Schools: What, Why, and How," national conference of John F. Kennedy Center for Performing Arts, Washington, D.C., April 7-10, 2010.
"Creativity Matters: Civic Engagement and Gardening Symposium," by National Center for Creative Aging and MetLife Foundation, Washington, D.C., April 12-14, 2010.
"National Arts Advocacy Day," by Americans for the Arts, Washington, D.C., April 12-13, 2010.

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