Contact your Legislators TODAY -- State Arts Funding Slated for Reduction

State arts dollars are slated for reduction in a new budget bill. Time is of the essence, so use the talking points below to tell your legislators ART MATTERS: 1. The New Jersey State Council on the Arts is proposed to receive $16 million for Cultural Projects in FY12. The NJ Cultural Trust is proposed to receive $500,000. These are the minimums allowed by law and are derived entirely from a...

Stephen Colbert Discusses Artist Activist

We caught this on The Colbert Report and had to share. We frequently discuss the key roles the arts play in our economy, schools and quality of life, but it is also important to remember that artists are some of our greatest activists. As artist Theresa Bayer wrote: "Artists are the proverbial canaries in the coalmine. When we stop singing, it's a sure sign of repressive times ahead." Click HERE...

Public Service IS an Art Form

If you haven't read this, you MUST! Geraldine R. Dodge Foundation President Chris Daggett delivered the commencement speech last week to the Edward J. Bloustein School of Planning and Public Policy at Rutgers University. Considering the toxic tone of political discourse that is evident most everywhere lately, Chris talks about how the call to public service is a high calling, worthy of the best...

Thank You to our NJ Arts Advocates!

Thank you to all the arts advocates who contacted their legislators, and a special thanks to those who made the trip to Washington, D.C. with us last week. Your efforts made an impact on the continuing resolution for FY2011 funding. Though the final 2011 Budget Bill does not include the $167.5 million we requested for the National Endowment for the Arts, it is set at $155 million, which is well...

Ask your Senator to Vote Against Cuts to the NEA

Last Thursday by 8 votes the House approved a $43 million cut to the National Endowment for the Arts (NEA) FY2011 budget. This decrease will mean a decrease in NEA grants to New Jersey of $440,340. This FY 2011 appropriations package will be presented to the Senate shortly, so please take two minutes to ask your Senator to vote against cuts to the NEA budget. Send a message directly to both your...

Legacies

Yes, it's a new year. There are bills to be paid, contracts to complete, but first the brain needs to be cleared out. A new year's resolution? Perhaps! On Sunday I attended a memorial service for a colleague whom I have know for nearly 30 years--hard to believe all by itself! Berda Rittenhouse was my "roomie," which is the way I've lately described her. First at 109 West State Street when the NJ...

NJ @ World Creativity Conference

There are 14 arts reps at the World Creativity Conference being held in Oklahoma City right now through Wednesday. Creative Oklahoma is leading the way with big minds sharing thoughts (Sir Ken Robinson, Daniel Pink, Andrew Zolli, David Pogue and more! We'll be sharing the blogging goin on from our colleagues...Here's the first entry from Bob Morrison. Follow #wcf2010 on Twitter! Why Creativity...

Why Don’t More Members of Gens X and Y Join Boards?

I recently received an email about a blog post titled “Why Don’t More Members of Gens X and Y Join Boards?” through the Americans for the Arts Emerging Arts Leaders Listserv (which is great, by the way. You should join.) The topic of under-35ers on nonprofit boards is one that has risen several times in my office and amongst our Emerging Arts Leaders group. Though I think a member of Generation X...

A Look at the National Arts Index

Americans for the Arts recently released their National Arts Index. Measuring data from 1998-2008, this report measures “the health and vitality of arts in the United States by using 76 equal weighted, national-level indicators of arts activity.” A report with an index score based on these factors will be released annually moving forward. I participated in an AFTA webinar led by Randy Cohen...

ArtPride NJ Response to Star Ledger Editorial

The Star Ledger's editorial of December 13, 2009 entitled, "Starving N.J. arts: A sad consequence of our budget crisis" is a callous and ill-considered opinion piece that shamelessly panders to an angry public faced with an economic debacle that was decades in the making. Most notably, The Ledger fails to recognize that state funding for the arts comes not from income, sales or property taxes, but...