From Claire Knowlton at Nonprofit Quarterly:
Steve's Blog
The Summit on Creativity and Aging is a report on the May 2015 convening of more than 70 experts co-presented by the National Endowment for the Arts and the National Center for Creative Aging (NCCA) that preceded the White House Conference on Aging, that was held July 2015. The report investigates three topics relevant to healthy aging: health and wellness and the arts, lifelong learning in the arts, and age-friendly community design.
From John Hopewell, writing for Variety:
Patti Hartigan of Boston magazine has a profile of the Barr Foundation:
From Andy Horowitz at The Atlantic:
James Canales, President of the Barr Foundation, posts about the foundation's next chapter:
John Killacky interviews Janis Ian for vtdigger.org:
In Democratizing Education: Democratizing Leadership?, an article from the latest issue of GIA Reader, Dallas Shelby and Gail Crider, from National Arts Strategies, look at the massive open online courses (MOOCs) and their effect on the development of leadership in the arts and culture sector.
From Sam Neace, writing for the Hazard-Herald:
The Association of Performing Arts Presenters (APAP) have named MK Wegmann with the Fan Taylor Distinguished Service Award for exemplary service to the field of professional presenting. The award was presented on January 18 at the APAP|NYC Conference. Wegmann is President & CEO of National Performance Network, a position she has held for 15 years, but announced last fall that she will retire in the summer of 2016.