12.29.2007
Managing the creative class or the modern day working class "Da Vincis"
12.26.2007
China's New Creative Class
China is not content to serve as factory to the globe. Call it economic foresight, or cultural pride, but despite the stratospheric growth of its economy–10.7% last year–China knows that cheap labor alone can’t sustain the boom. While a flurry of activity (and, yes, a government five-year plan) has stressed scientific and technological innovation, look a little closer and you’ll see that creativity in art and industry–in design, fashion, media, and the like–is fast becoming a driving national mission.
The article has plenty of awful puns about ‘cultural revolutions’ but also some fascinating examples of Chinese creatives doing amazing work in architecture, fashion, design, music etc. Apart from the intrinsic interest of the subject, it’s a good antidote against the lazy assumption that the West will enjoy an indefinite ‘creative advantage’ over the BRIC nations (not to mention the rest of the world).
12.25.2007
Southern US cities lure artists to boost economy
"The fact is, cities are realizing you don't get a lot of bang for your buck for large investments in conference centers." In contrast, he says, promoting arts is a bargain.
Public art installations, dance curricula in low-income city schools, and public investments in performance space have dramatically changed the fortunes of Greenville, S.C., which has doubled its workforce in the last 10 years.
12.23.2007
12.20.2007
Creativity Makes an Urban Area Click
She recited annoyances fairly similar to grumblings sometimes heard from Toledo’s own recent college graduates: The restaurants close too early. Not enough street-level culture. Officials seem unmindful to the interests of the city’s young people.
“Future generations want open communities and vibrant neighborhoods, not just downtown malls and new sports facilities,” she wrote, evoking the city planning philosophy of her admired Jane Jacobs as well as Richard Florida, her mentor and former professor whose Rise of the Creative Class became the decade’s influential public policy and planning manifesto.
12.18.2007
Breaking News: from Americans for the Arts
Last night, the U.S. House gave preliminary approval to an "Omnibus" appropriations bill for FY 2008 providing funding for about $474 billion in domestic spending programs. The Senate began considering this legislation today.
With the President's expected signature later this week, the bill will provide about $145 million for the National Endowment for the Arts - a $20 million increase over last year's funding. Arts education and public broadcasting programs are slated to receive modest increases over last year's levels and the federal museum office will see a slight decrease in funding.
Through this legislation, the National Endowment for the Arts is expected to receive a 16% increase - the largest given to the agency in the past 24 years.
The effort to achieve this funding increase has been built over the course of several years. Advocates like yourself have been attending the annual Arts Advocacy Day or actively contacting their Members of Congress calling on them to restore the NEA to the strength it once had in the
mid-‘90's.
Our cause on Capitol Hill, led by Congressional Arts Caucus co-chairs Louise Slaughter (D-NY) and Chris Shays (R-CT), was championed earlier this year by House Interior Appropriations Subcommittee Chairman Norm Dicks (D-WA) as he held, on Arts Advocacy Day, the first hearing on arts funding in twelve years. Americans for the Arts was called on by Chairman Dicks to organize the hearing and present a panel of witnesses that included Americans for the Arts President and CEO Robert Lynch, jazz musician Wynton Marsalis and a number of other arts leaders. The hearing focused on the role of creativity and innovation in the arts and highlighted research outlining the tremendous impact that federal investment in the arts can have. In June, Congresswoman Slaughter led the U.S. House to reject three amendments specifically designed to cut funding for the NEA, and instead approve a giant leap forward in NEA funding. During the floor consideration, Americans for the Arts advocates from 50 states sent over 26,000 messages to their Members calling on them to support an increase for the NEA!
Through negotiations with the Senate and the White House, the $145 million will provide for more direct grants to arts organizations around the country and increase the reach of the agency's national initiatives.
National Endowment for the Humanities The National Endowment for the Humanities is set to receive $145 million, an increase of about $4 million.
Arts Education Funding for arts education at the U.S. Department of Education will receive a slight increase to about $38 million, from $35.3 million. The bulk of this increase is intended to provide funding for administering the first national survey since 1999 on the status and condition of arts education - a key element of our advocacy agenda!
Public Broadcasting The Corporation for Public Broadcasting (CPB), the federal agency that provides support to our national public broadcasting network saw their annual budget increased from $400 million to $420 million for FY 2010. CPB is typically provided funding in advance due to the long range planning they must do.
Museum Programs The Office of Museum Services within the Institute for Museum & Library Services (IMLS) is slated to receive about $31.2 million, which is about a $556,000 decrease from what it received in FY 2007 funding.
What's Next: Passage of the Omnibus legislation will bring to an end the FY 2008 appropriations cycle. Due to the numerous veto threats made on most of the 13 appropriations bills, it took longer than expected for Congress to finish their work. At the end of this week, the House and Senate will recess until mid-January. The President is scheduled to give the State of the Union on January 28, 2008 and the FY 2009 budget will be announced in early February.
Americans for the Arts will provide full details on the FY09 budget when released.
Learn MORE
How To Turn Your Public Library Into Amazon.com
Imagine someone has just recommended a book that you simply must read. What is your natural reaction? You probably head down to the bookstore down the road. Or go to Amazon.com and order your book, don't you?
Well, maybe you can go online to your public library, and make the order.
You'll be surprised at how happy a librarian would be, to take that order! MORE
12.08.2007
The Need for Big Ideas In Fort Collins' Arts & Culture
That said, we continue to find inspiration for future programming and areas of focus from all over the world. Innovation in the arts and culture inspire us to propel this vision for Fort Collins beyond our stated intent and find opportunities to engage and excite participants with the goal of keeping visitors coming back to Old Town for future generations.
Check out Innovation Odyssey: Sustaining the Tradition of Innovation in Boston's Arts & Culture The mix of arts & culture, research and development, technology, health care, etc. is not unlike the mix of opportunities found here. In many ways, I see more risk-taking, visionary and collaborative ventures than found in many of our country's largest cities. The only thing that sets us apart is scale.
What are your big ideas for arts and culture in Fort Collins?
12.06.2007
Bring your children to Old Town to bask in the arts
Included in the cost of your First Night admission, Beet Street is pleased to present a special performance of The Bella Luna Cirque in the Lincoln Center Performance Hall located at 417 West Magnolia Street
Bella Luna Cirque features cirque-style jugglers, dancers, aerialists, clowns, acrobats, gymnasts, living statues, magicians, balloon twisters, mimes, stilts walkers, comedians, body artists.
While our scale is different, these considerations should be top-of-mind
CEOs for Cities released their report on City Kids today. I think the report offers some interesting insights:
For 50 years, having that first child usually meant heading out of the city in search of a more “family-friendly” lifestyle. But now that young adults are 33 percent more likely than other Americans to live in close-in neighborhoods, progressive urban leaders are asking if they can break the traditional pattern of family migration to the suburbs.City Kids
To get answers, we turned to the Institute of Design. We asked teams of designers there to help us develop a deep understanding of the market and how they might be moved to alter their behavior.
Their approach was to study pioneering urban parents. Rather than ask people what they might do in hypothetical situations, they studied what people choosing to raise their children in cities are actually doing. They also interviewed urban and suburban “discontents” -- parents not completely satisfied with their current situations.
What they found is that the top concerns of parents about city living are safety, space and schools. But they found that satisfied urban parents had ways to address each of these concerns. The very nature of the city alleviated their safety concerns with its density and “eyes on the street.” They supplemented their lack of private space by using the city’s public spaces, such as parks and sidewalks. And they augmented their children’s education with the city’s diversity and cultural and other assets.
For pioneering city parents — and we found many of them — cities are the perfect place to raise children.
12.04.2007
8 important consumer trends for 2008
No doubt 2008 will be as trend-heavy; to get you going, here are eight trends to watch and capitalize on in the new year. Oh, and may we be among the first to wish you an innovative, prosperous, trendy 2008!
Want to get your hands on all the trends that are on our radar for 2008? Then please check out our 2008 Trend Report
12.02.2007
Have we suspected this all along?
The Rise of Family-Friendly Cities It's lifestyle, not
lattés, that our most productive workers want. http://www.opinionjournal.com/editorial/feature.html?id=110010911
"Such a shift in emphasis could mark a new beginning for many long-neglected urban neighborhoods across the country. It's time to recognize that today, as has been the case for millennia, families provide the most reliable foundation for successful economies."