SEARCH RESULTS FOR INTERNATIONAL IN AMERICANS FOR THE ARTS ARCHIVE : 424 ITEMS FOUND

Author(s): Pearlman, Jeanne
Date of Publication: Oct 20, 2021

This reflective essay documents the context, content, and unique circumstances of go_HOME, an international artist residency intended to generate dialogue about issues of exile and displacement. The project was centered in conceptual art, operated globally as well as locally, and experimented with real and virtual dialogue. In her role as Animating Democracy's project liaison to go_HOME, Pearlman observed the project as it unfolded. She engaged with organizers and artists in joint inquiry to draw insights and deepen understanding about the work of arts-based civic dialogue along a

Author(s): Bower, Sam
Date of Publication: December 2010

From an environmental perspective, we are living in transitional times; the practices we engage in now have far-reaching implications for the survival of the earth and all its life forms. “Environmental Art” is an umbrella term for a wide range of work that helps improve our relationship with the natural world. Art provides a lens through which to explore aspects of society--from urban food production, climate policy, watershed management, and transportation infrastructure to childhood education and clothing design--from an ecological perspective. This paper provides a brief

Author(s): Coryat, Diana
Date of Publication: January 2011

Youth media is a diverse array of practices in which young people collaborate with artists and educators to express themselves creatively, communicate with peers across borders, and participate in community dialogue and problem solving. Social justice-focused youth media facilitates a root-cause analysis of “why things are the way they are,” has a vision of a more just and equitable society, and uses media to contest dominant narratives and to support systemic change. The process of creating and presenting media can be transformative for youth, educators, communities, and

Author(s): Green, Michael and Wilding, Michael
Date of Publication: Dec 31, 1969

This article is part of a series published by the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) to show how cultural policies are planned and implemented in various UNESCO member states.

Author(s): Marek, Miroslav; Hromadka, Milan; and Chroust, Josef
Date of Publication: Dec 31, 1969

This article is part of a series published by the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) to show how cultural policies are planned and implemented in various UNESCO member states.

Author(s): Mark, Charles Christopher
Date of Publication: Dec 31, 1968

The author examines the development of cultural policy in the United States. Diversity in cultural policy is one of the touchstones of the United State's position.

Author(s): Malone, Thomas F.
Date of Publication: Dec 31, 1967

The sombre and distressing news of the past few weeks and months brings a clear message that the ills that have beset the world for centuries are still with us. There is a change in the state of man that is quite possibly the most profound in either written or unrecorded history. It is of this change that I will speak with you this morning. I venture to do so because I believe that this change does present new dimensions of opportunity, that they are the consequences of human thought, and they have their origin in science and their consequences in your area of interest.

Author(s): Editors, Art in America
Date of Publication: Dec 31, 1966

Editorial: Patronage and Democracy by Nan R. Piene.
What the Federal Arts Program Really Means by Jay Jacobs.
Shall We Have a Renaissance? by Barbara Rose.
Patronage for Britain's Art by Gene Baro.
Patronage in Western Europe by Nan R. Piene.
Patronage Under Communism - Yugoslavia by Amy Goldin.
Billboards - Five Artists and an Industry.

Author(s): Frankel, Charles
Date of Publication: Dec 31, 1964

This is a study of American educational and cultural policy abroad - the neglected aspect, I believe, of relations with the rest of the world. It is neither a historical study nor an examination of administrative organization and procedures. It is a study of principles. Its purpose is to suggest how to think - or, at any rate, how one man would think - about American educational and cultural affairs, and particularly about that small but extremely significant segment of these affairs in which the federal government has a directing hand. Matters of history or administrations are discussed

Author(s): Dorian, Frederick
Date of Publication: Dec 31, 1963

The author examines art patronage in the following countries: Austria, Italy, Switzerland, France, Germany, Netherlands, Belgium, Luxembourg, and England. This book analyzes the nature and form of European art patronage, past and present.

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