Showing posts with label creative capacity. Show all posts
Showing posts with label creative capacity. Show all posts

Bourbon Jockey Live!

Did I mention that the amateur musical ensemble with which I make joyous music will be performing at Roots Organic Brewing Company on Thursday, May 20, 2010? You are invited to join the festivities anytime from 8:00 to 11:00 or so. This won't be a "concert," so don't worry about arriving on time, staying through the whole set, or even paying much attention to what we're doing. Consider our music to be a soundtrack to drinking beer and hanging out with friends.

We'll be wailing and caterwauling through an ever-growing list of songs from the Great American Honky Tonk Song Book. In honor of flooding and oil spills, we'll be singing tunes from Nashville and New Orleans. We'll cover everything from Hank Williams to Tom Waits, from Fats Domino to Fats Waller. We might even let you sing along. All are invited to become Bourbonites by joining our fan club, The Bourbon Dynasty. It'll be fun.

I usually don cowboy boots and hat for these gigs, but I'm thinking of showing up in this getup:

In case you can't read the small print, here's the oh-so-sexy ad copy:

One easy piece.

Because one is enough, when it’s you. Show where you’re headed in the ultimate fashion climax.

Fits so tight it shows all you’ve got …you’re a walking turn-on. And treats your body as well as she does.

Easy on, easy off, quick as a flick of her tongue. Sexy cool crinkle cloth for those hot nights to come. Designed with your desires in mind …she’ll eat you alive in it.

The Big Zip in 50% polyester/50% cotton. Long-sleeved in rust, blue or black. Short-sleeved in natural, blue or camel.

Are you man enough to fill it?

$45

Yes We CAN



When Mayor Sam Adams and other elected officials unveiled ACT FOR ART: A Creative Action Plan for the Portland Metropolitan Region last spring, it signaled that the arts community might finally be ready to identify and implement a dedicated funding mechanism for arts and culture that would generate some $15 to $20 million annually. It all seemed so doable based on some polling that had been conducted a long, long time ago, in the spring of 2008 before the Second Greatest Depression struck. But how, people have been asking, do the voters feel now?

Pretty much the same, it turns out. If anything, a new poll reveals, the voters are even more aware of the need for sustainable funding of arts and culture. Makes sense given the increased attention that arts organizations have been getting in the media lately.

You can read a summary of the new poll, commissioned by the Creative Advocacy Network, here. (It's not on their website yet but I did get permission to share it with the world.) And join other arts enthusiasts for a CAN information gathering tomorrow night, Wednesday, August 5th, from 4:30 to 6:30 in the The Gerding Theater at the Armory. Their new Executive Director, Jessica Jarratt, will be on hand to answer all of your burning questions.

Arts Community: Meet Jessica

As reported by DK Row this morning, the Creative Advocacy Network has hired Jessica Jarratt to lead us all in our quest for sustainable, dedicated funding for arts and culture (among other things, of course.) Most of the press release was actually picked up here, at Broadwayworld.com, if you want to check out her credentials and be reminded of what we're trying to accomplish.

Here she is, boys.



Welcome to the arts community, Jessica.

Update: DK Row's longer piece appears in this morning's newspaper (Monday, June 15) and is available online here.

Action Plan Reactions



Being directly involved in, and entirely too close to, last night's town hall meeting to objectively observe the unveiling of a new "Creative Action Plan" for arts and culture, I decided not to rush home and blog about it. Rather, I'm sitting back and monitoring people's reactions with both personal and professional interest.

We have some early returns with DK Row's preview piece in Monday's Oregonian; Barry Johnson's reactions on Arts Watch; and Jeff Jahn's analysis at PORT. While we wait for more official blog posts, I'm also hoping to hear what Culture Shock readers have to say. Were any of you around for Arts Plan 2000? Does the highly political nature of the effort this time around scare you or excite you? Had we more time, would many more artists have asked what's in it for them?

Last Call

It's Friday --and that means it's time for our weekly round-up of can't-miss arts opportunities that won't be around by this time next week.

Portland Chamber Orchestra performs "The Four Seasons" Saturday night at 7:30, in the Kaul Auditorium of Reed College. Love the Vivaldi this time of year!

Tahni Holt will dance the last "event.space" dances TONIGHT at 7PM and 9PM, at the Ace Cleaners (403 SW 10th). Could be interesting -- a "rumination on society's voyeuristic tendencies and how they manifest in modes of architecture and technology."

Speaking of dance, the annual "Mad Hot Ballroom" gala fundraiser for Young Audiences is this Saturday, with
local celebs Connie Greenblatt, Anna Song, Ed Tonkin, Thomas Lauderdale, Paul King and Walter Jaffe among those being paired with professional ballroom dances. Tickets are steep at $250, but it is one of the "funner" fundraisers in town.

Monday night is Mayor Adams' follow-up Town Hall on arts and culture, and he will be joined on the stage by other electeds and art leaders like Jose Gonzales and Thomas Lauderdale. 5-7 PM at PCS ("The Bob"). Look for DK Row's story on Monday morning, and come get your copy of the region's new Creative Action Plan -- hot off the presses. It helps explain why I've been working so hard the past two weeks! (Past two years, actually.)

Hey, good blogging and commenting this week, people. Thank you all!

Well Now You've Done It

Sounds like the House has just approved the state's $855 million budget "rebalancing" proposal, complete with those stolen funds from the Oregon Cultural Trust. An excellent new distillation and analysis has been posted at Art Scatter.

Also Jeff Mapes just posted a short but amazing piece at Oregonlive, about how Republicans are lining up with the arts community in protest. Strange bedfellows indeed. Follow the link the see the GOP's tongue-in-cheek new license plate suggestion this fine First Thursday.

Now we wait for someone, anyone, to tell us what to do next. My colleague Helen suggests storming the downtown DMV, license plates in hand, demanding a refund. But as I mentioned the other day, there may be enough legislators nervous about the imminent uprising to restructure the theft into a loan, repayable to the Trust with interest in a few years time. Stay tuned.

In the meantime, the Creative Advocacy Network is set to launch this afternoon with an effort to drive 100 or more people to the City of Portland's Council Chambers on March 12 for the annual State of Arts presentation. This will be the first step in showing solidarity among the arts community -- that we give a damn -- to help ensure that local arts funding doesn't suffer the same fate as state arts funding has.

I dig the Creative Advocacy Network's new mantra, courtesy of the branding firm North (who also designed the brand for The Right Brain Initiative).







Mea Culpa


I need to apologize to our readers, to artists and to all who support the inclusion of arts funding in the economic stimulus package. Like you, I’ve been reading about how the “batshit crazy” rightwing anti-culturalists have been maligning arts funding as non-stimulative pork. I was just as disappointed as you to learn that Senators Wyden and Merkley voted for a stimulus bill that included this egregious amendment from Senator Coburn:

None of the amounts appropriated or otherwise made available by this Act may be used for any casino or other gambling establishment, aquarium, zoo, golf course, swimming pool, stadium, community park, museum, theater, arts center, or highway beautification project, including renovation, remodeling, construction, salaries, furniture, zero-gravity chairs, big screen televisions, beautification, rotating pastel lights, and dry heat saunas.

I was dismayed to learn that a recent editorial in the National Review sarcastically opined that increased funding for the NEA would mean that "the unemployed can fill their days attending abstract-film festivals and sitar concerts."

Then it all started to sound vaguely familiar. I got a sinking feeling that I may have inadvertently contributed to the problem. A quick scan of my files brought the memory back and verified my complicity: Just last year I wrote a grant proposal to the NEA on behalf of a regional arts organization. (Professional ethics and common decency bar me from revealing the client's name). The proposal must have been leaked to the Republicans by a disgruntled grant panelist! Since the project is unlikely to be funded, I will share a synopsis of the proposal:

Describe the Project: [NAME REDACTED], Oregon’s leading collective of multidisciplinary dance, theater and abstract film artists, seeks NEA funding for a project through which it will engage the community in dialogue that will inform a co-creative process of examining, exploring and explicating the multidimensional intersections and interstices between consumer culture, Wall Street fraud and organized religion. The site-specific, time-based performative project will draw upon influences as diverse as Andres Serrano, Karen Finley and Robert Mapplethorpe. Seminal materials will be used. We mean urine.

The project’s artistic collaborators will construct a temporary public art installation on the eighteenth hole of the Bandon Springs Golf Resort. This site was selected to provide opportunities for broad-based cultural access to underserved rural communities. The installation will consist of two vitrines to be fabricated, in situ, by 48 glass artists using recycled wine bottles melted in massive anagama kilns. Each vitrine will measure 20’ x 20’ x 20’ (8,000 cubic feet) and will be filled with liquid.

The first vitrine will represent the primeval ocean from which all life evolved. It will be filled with sweat collected from 800 dance artists commissioned to perform an extended choreographic masterwork in a giant dry heat sauna to be constructed in the abandoned warehouses of Laika Studios. At risk youth from inner-city neighborhoods will be employed to scrape the sweat from the dancer’s bodies over the course of the 18-month dance performance.

Once the vitrine is filled with the salty fluid, hundreds of chinook salmon will be released into it. Their futile attempts to migrate and spawn will be accompanied by a techno-industrial score performed by a 32 piece sitar orchestra and four dozen unemployed construction workers with jackhammers. The salmon will then be slaughtered by marauding sea lions in a bloody orgy of classist oppression.

A live video feed will be sent by fiber optic cable to a state-of-the art Imax theater to be constructed at a remodeled Oregon Aquarium (Newport). Simultaneous video feeds will be sent to Spirit Mountain Casino (Grand Ronde) and Chinook Winds Casino (Lincoln City), where spectators will view the salmon slaughter on big screen televisions while placing bets on which fish will be the last to survive. To highlight the interconnectedness between the project sites, Highway 101 (Newport to Lincoln City) and Highway 18 (Lincoln City to Grand Ronde) will be beautified by a nighttime display of rotating pastel lights as well as abstract film.

The second vitrine will be filled with urine. Members of Portland’s burgeoning creative class will be invited to a three-day outdoor concert at which free PBR and Stumptown coffee will be served. Participants will then urinate into special holding tanks. (Many participants may choose to kiss each other while doing so). They will also be encouraged to ride bicycles to the concert site.

Once this vitrine is filled, a figure of Jesus Christ suspended in a zero-gravity chair will be smeared with dung and chocolate and submerged. The vitrine will be lit by more rotating pastel lights (or perhaps primary colors this time). The artistic co-creators will initiate intra-, extra- and inter-community dialoguing sessions to find, create and shape meaning.

The proposed project budget of $2.75 million will leverage an estimated $18.7 million in direct spending in the region, as well as an additional bunch of fiscal stimulus through the economic multiplier effect we’re always talking about. The project will create at least 1,500 family-wage jobs for artists, as well as employing construction workers and teenagers who would just as soon cut you. The long-term infrastructural improvements to roads, fiber optic networks, casinos and art centers (did we mention art centers?) are incalculable, but are sure to be sustainable. Letters of support from the big screen television, rotating light and zero-gravity chair industries are attached.

He Said / She Said

At last night's Creative Capacity gathering, a panel of local elected officials responded to arts recommendations from the audience. Suffice to say that a couple of them (OK, maybe just Chair Wheeler) said some controversial things, and several people attending last night remarked that a few of our elected officials still don't get it.

The trick, of course, is to elect people into office who do "get it." With that in mind, RACC has posted questionnaire responses from several candidates for local elected office, including the race that nobody seems to be paying much attention to: Amanda Fritz vs. Charles Lewis. I'd suggest taking a good look at how these people answer the funding question. Anyone who balks at the notion that government has an essential role to play in not just "supporting" but FUNDING our arts and culture activities -- I'd balk at giving them my vote.

http://www.racc.org/advocacy/_Nov08ElectionRunoffs.php

As mentioned on this blog a few days ago, a separate group, Oregon Art PAC, has endorsed Amanda Fritz for City Council and Mike Delman for the Multnomah County Board of Commissioners.

So who will you be voting for, and why?

Cultural Planning: It's All the Rage

As more and more cities recognize the economic, educational and social benefits of arts and culture, cultural plans are on the upswing. Portland had its own cultural plan in the '90s, and many of you will recall the laborious but productive effort that was "Arts Plan 2000." There hasn't been much comprehensive planning since, except for occasional check-ins on Arts Plan 2000, and check-offs of the strategies as they were accomplished. Work for Art, RACC's workplace giving program, was one of the last remaining items in the plan and we checked that one off in 2003. The other big thing that never DID happen: dedicated funding for arts and culture.

From time to time, RACC has tried to have that conversation -- how do we secure dedicated, reliable, and increased funding for arts and culture in the region -- but the timing has never been right. When I first started working on this issue in 2002-03, our school system was in crisis (you remember the Doonsbury cartoons) and there was no way people were going to fund the arts... we definitely needed to tend to our education system first. There was also no leadership from elected officials until -- you guessed it -- Sam Adams came along.

Over the past 16 months, Sam has led community leaders -- business owners, arts administrators, elected officials and other civic leaders throughout the region -- in a comprehensive planning process to uncover not only what our arts and culture organizations need, but what our entire community needs to do maintain (and improve) this strong, vibrant and unique place where innovation and creativity thrive in our schools and our businesses. The timing finally feels right, with people everywhere understanding that part of the reason our schools are not as good as they used to be is because we have stripped arts education out of them. Also, Portland has clearly attracted lots of creative talent over the past five years, and there is a keen awareness that the city will reap benefits if we can keep them here. And we keep talking about how our companies must innovate to succeed in the new economy; certainly arts and culture and right-brain thinking play a huge role in stimulating the power of imagination.

So with leadership from the top and a new mindset percolating in our communities, a bold new plan is in the works. It's dubbed "Creative Capacity," and you can see what's taking shape in the phase one report that was released earlier this week. The report highlights how public opinion polling has demonstrated more support for investing in arts and culture than some people might have expected. A few recommendations are starting to take shape.

In the weeks and months ahead, there will be many more town hall meetings, online surveys, and other ways for artists and arts-lovers to lend their voice to the direction we are headed. I definitely encourage folks to get involved now before the plan is cemented in December. Citizens can generally stay attuned to this effort -- and lend input -- through the project website, www.creativecapacity.org.

And oh, by the way, Portland's not alone in conducting this kind of assessment. The City of Austin did some nice cultural planning recently, and four cities released some kind of cultural plan in the last week: Greensboro, NC; Ft. Collins, CO; Denver; and Concord, NH. No doubt many more cities' plans are in the works!