Grantmakers in the Arts

February 8, 2012 by Steve

From Bradford K. Smith, president of the Foundation Center on the PhilanTopic blog:

Q: Exactly how much do America's foundations spend each year to benefit Hispanic and Latino populations?

A: We don't really know.

February 6, 2012 by Steve

The McKnight Foundation has a new blog for the community to follow. State of the Artist made its first post today from Laura Zimmermann. Here's a bit about the blog's focus:

Within the cultural sector, conversations about artists often derail in one of two ways: Either the discussion quickly turns to one about “the arts” rather than artists, spinning unspecific platitudes about “intrinsic value” or building wobbly arguments about the economic benefits of having a big theater next door to your restaurant.
February 6, 2012 by Steve

Wendell E. Berry, noted poet, essayist, novelist, farmer, and conservationist, will deliver the 2012 Jefferson Lecture in the Humanities. The annual lecture, sponsored by the National Endowment for the Humanities (NEH), is the most prestigious honor the federal government bestows for distinguished intellectual achievement in the humanities.

February 6, 2012 by Steve

From Seth Cohen, the Director of Network Initiatives for the Charles and Lynn Schusterman Family Foundation, for Working Wikily:

There is no question that there are many lessons to be learned from Komen’s unplanned Planned Parenthood experience. Politics aside, even while assessing all of the steps and missteps Komen has made (and, we hope, continues to learn from), the Pink Ribbon Rebellion demonstrated one thing Komen actually did right: it built a social network of activists bound together by a collective identity built on education, empowerment and interconnectedness. And this network, as we saw, doesn’t need Komen at its center—it is quite capable of taking on a life all its own.
February 6, 2012 by Janet

The role of a chief executive officer (CEO) of a nonprofit organization is challenging in very interesting ways.  We are asked to lead an organization without actually being the leadership or governing entity of the organization. We are asked to be visionaries and managers, transformational and transactional leaders at the same time.

February 6, 2012 by Abigail

Registration is still open for GIA's inaugural 2012 Web Conference, kicking off tomorrow, February 7 at 11:00 PST, 2:00 EST. Demographics, Equity, and the Arts is Manuel Pastor's reprisal of his crowd-pleasing 2011 GIA Conference keynote in San Francisco, revised and updated to include non-California-specific data.

February 6, 2012 by Steve

From Diane Ragsdale on her Jumper blog:

While it may make everyone feel better in the short term is it possible this tendency to make it appear that donor gifts (large and small) can accomplish far more than is realistic has long term negative impacts on the organization and its relationship with its donors and the community-at-large? Is it possible we avoid telling the real truth because we don’t want to confront or invite others to look to closely at the total cost of ownership of our buildings, or the real costs of running our institutions and particular programs, or how much and how little (relatively speaking) is spent on various areas of operation and resources?
February 4, 2012 by Steve

Here is a video presentation from the Future of Music Coalition's Kristin Thomson at midem 2012. It's a “first look” at FMC's survey of 5,000 US artists about where their revenues come from.