SEARCH RESULTS FOR IN CENTER FOR ART AND CULTURE: 11 ITEMS FOUND

Author(s): Center for Arts and Culture
Date of Publication: May 25, 2005

The Center for Arts & Culture, in partnership with the Arts Council of Fairfax County and George Mason University’s College of Visual and Performing Arts, sponsored a summit on Wednesday, May 25, 2005 at GMU’s Mason Hall. The summit, “Fairfax County Cultural Policy: A Challenge to Our Community,” attracted over 70 attendees. Participants represented a broad cross-section of the county’s arts & cultural, political and business community. What follows is a two page summary and recommendations document.

Author(s): Center for Arts and Culture
Date of Publication: Nov 12, 2003

Notes summarizing the seminar proceeding Leadership, Advocacy, and Communication Cultural Policy at the Grassroots: Policy Issues Facing the Los Angeles Cultural Community held Wednesday, November 12, 2003.

Author(s): Adelstein, Jonathan S.
Date of Publication: May 20, 2003

This paper reflect the remarks made by FCC Commissioner Jonathan S. Adelstein Before The Media Institute on May 20, 2003.

Author(s): Tepper, Steven
Date of Publication: Oct 01, 2002

There has been an increase in the notion that changes in the economy have pushed creative assets to the core of economic life. The author suggests that instead of spending time and money on measuring the economic impact of the arts and culture, one should focus on understanding how creative work and institutions are changing and how to create a more vital, diverse cultural life.

Author(s): Arthurs, Alberta
Date of Publication: Jul 01, 2002

Within the last decade, there has been a surge of scholarship, media commentary and experimentation on what is rather loosely referred to as the “new economy.” In the opening essay of this issue of the Journal of Arts Management, Law, and Society, Kieran Healy describes the major attributes of the “new economy” as the term is being used by philosophers, pundits, and practitioners. He suggests that three defining assumptions drive the “new economy.”

Author(s): Healy, Kieran
Date of Publication: Jul 01, 2002

In this article I review and evaluate recent work that argues for the rising importance of the cultural sector, and creativity in general, in the context of the new economy.

Author(s): Cobb, Nina Kressner
Date of Publication: Jul 01, 2002

In this article I look at these new dimensions in charitable giving over the last decade—especially the rise of venture philanthropy—from the vantage point of arts and culture. Venture philanthropy has by passed the arts, but its rhetoric, principles, and priorities present challenges for arts and cultural institutions. Although venture philanthropy is neither as innovative nor as revolutionary as its proponents have claimed, some influential funders now look at philanthropic giving through a different lens and with a changed set of priorities. At the very least, arts and

Author(s): Williams, Caroline and Sharamitaro, Lisa
Date of Publication: Jul 01, 2002

In this article we take the position that, current trends aside, the investment strategies that emerged over the last ten years can inform the cultural sector in exciting and innovative ways. We explore three specific financial investment strategies for their potential applicability in the cultural sector.

Author(s): Schussman, Aland and Healy, Kieran
Date of Publication: Jun 27, 2002

This annotated bibliography focuses on broader issues about the new economy and how to understand it.

Author(s): Galligan, Ann M.
Date of Publication: Jan 01, 2002

The Center for Arts and Culture has published a year-long series of issue papers entitled Art, Culture, and the National Agenda to demonstrate how public policy decisions affect our nation's cultural life. This paper, the fifth in the series, looks at the relationship of education, creativity, and the 21st-century workforce.

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