Incremental vs. Radical Change

After moderating last week’s EAP panel on “Building Community Through Technology” and live-tweeting this past Monday’s crowded “Beyond Dynamic Adaptability” conference, my brain is swimming in the blurry waters inhabited by words like audience, artists, network, and community.

James Kass (YouthSpeaks) and Robin Wu (ZeroDivide) agreed last week that the platforms for online engagement are changing so quickly that it’s unwise to invest deeply in one method or a specific tool. This message was echoed throughout Monday’s conference, particularly in the afternoon session I attended, which was hosted by social media guru Beth Kanter.

Here’s my thumbnail version of the major messages from that session’s featured speakers:

  • Anita Jackson (Moms Rising): Take an interweaved approach to engagement through “layer cake” marketing– multiple approaches and outlets with a unifying message.
  • Mark Taylor (KQED): Acknowledge and overcome fear of failure in order to innovate. Digital tools allow us to constantly reinvent; analog=finished, digital=in process.
  • Marc Vogl (BAVC): Consider carefully your audience’s expectations (especially creature comforts like ticket-buying experience and parking) and gratify them.
  • Tamara Alvarado (1st Act Silicon Valley): Make your space welcoming to people with a variety of backgrounds, and remember that existing norms might be preventing them from feeling welcome.
  • Michella Rivera-Gravage (CAAM): Integrate engagement strategies with programming process to attract audiences to the work of your organization throughout the process.
  • Annika Nonhebel (AXIS Dance): For small organizations, leverage the affordability of social media by making it a daily practice, and being smart about why you’re using it.

All great suggestions, but two questions popped into my mind:

1.) Is this glorified marketing, or is it fundamental change?
2.) Does anyone really know what they’re doing with social media?

 

Driving participation vs. driving sales

That afternoon session was framed with the question: “How can technology help enrich networks of participation?” Certainly Kanter’s proposal of a “networked nonprofit” and Nina Simon’s buzz-inducing discussion of her innovations at the Santa Cruz Museum of Art and History have both network and participation at the core of their being. Simon’s sticky-note driven community brainstorms and 72-hour program inventions prove that a new way of thinking (in this case, design thinking) can fundamentally transform and renew an institution.

But the dominant paradigm, especially for performing arts presenters, seems to swim against this tide. Conventionally, the creative artist and the show/art object are the locus of value, and delivering degrees of access creates the cost structure (think: donor dinner with the soloist). Much of the afternoon conversation proposed new answers to two old questions: how to attract customers, and how to retain them.

I might just be allergic to “tools and tips” conversations, but I was alarmed by the idea that our deepest response to social networking would be to now blast our message out in five channels instead of four. Not only do we often lack the resources to do it, it falls short of recognizing the radical transformation that Simon and others propose.

 

Keeping eyes on the mission

That said, one tidbit that caught my ear was when Simon characterized the changes at the MAH as transforming the place into a civic institution. She made it quite clear that she was “not there for the artists.” I’m sure, given the time for nuance, she’d include the artists as part of her community, but this point stung my artist/administrator heart a bit.

Certainly large institutions, especially those managing exhibition spaces, are a special situation. But since the majority of our arts non-profits do not run their own space, and are frequently run by a founding artist or a small group of artists, it may be a radical departure to posit that the organization is not centered around serving artists (or the Artistic Director) and their work.

On the other hand, Kass, Jennifer Maerz (The Bold Italic), and others stated with complete certainty that their efforts to build community online are ultimately intended to drive people to old-fashioned live performances. Going a step further, our panel posited that as an organization, knowing who you are is what allows you to embrace new tech tools, experiment with new ideas, and meanwhile never lose sight of the purpose of your work.

Recently Ken Foster (Yerba Buena Center for the Arts) came to speak to our EAP Fellows. One of the suggestions from his paper “Thriving In an Uncertain World” that seemed to strike a chord was, “Behave like an artist.” We heard the same message in different terms on Thursday’s panel, when Tanya Vlach (EyeTanya) suggested that engaging with negative or challenging comments on her blog had opened up new ideas and understandings. And again at Monday’s conference, Kanter and many others emphasized that experimentation and a willingness to fail were critical habits for innovation through incremental change.

We may not know where we’re going with our social media efforts, how precisely to measure our success, or whether creating more opportunities for participation will eventually do more than cultivate ticket purchases and donations. But if we have a deep understanding of our mission, it does allow us to embrace new possibilities, test new methods, and create new ways to connect and co-opt people into the work of fulfilling that mission. Do you want Facebook to be your “new focus group” or your theater’s back row to be full of “tweeps”? Doing a gut-check on how your leaders define your mission might make it easy to embrace those rather incremental changes, or in some cases reveal a need for changes far more radical.

 

 

EAP and the Foundation Center San Francisco co-hosted the Building Community Through Technology Creative Conversation on October 20, 2-4pm. The Beyond Dynamic Adaptability one-day conference took place October 24 at the Marines Memorial Theatre in San Francisco, and was co-hosted by Grants for the Arts, San Francisco Arts Commission, The San Francisco Foundation, and the Wallace Foundation, as part of the Wallace Foundation Cultural Participation Initiative.

Adam Fong is the co-founder and Director of EAP; read his bio here.

Meet the 2011-12 EAP Fellows

We’re very proud to e-introduce you to this year’s EAP Fellows. Over the course of nine months, this group of 19 arts and culture leaders will dig deep into focus areas including Media, Community Engagement, Business Development, and Information Systems, and collaborate to present the programs of EAP and their own innovative projects.

The 2011-12 EAP Fellows are:

Kathleen Brennan (Z Space), Stacy Bond (KQED, AudioLuxe), Katherin Canton (CCA Center for Art & Public Life, Rock Paper Scissors Collective), Mariko Chang (Cantor Arts Center, JFK University), Karl Cronin (composer-performer), Michael DeLong (TechSoup), Katie Fahey (Red Poppy Art House), Marcella Faustini (NOMA Gallery), Joshua Hesslein (UC Berkeley Department of Theater, Dance and Performance Studies), Sheena Johnson (Zaccho Dance Theatre), Sasha Kelley (C-Proof.org), Esther Manilla (National Radio Project), Lex Non Scripta (Million Fishes Arts Collective), Julie Potter (Liss Fain Dance), Virginia Reynolds (SF Performances), Danielle Siembieda (Zer01, You Are Theater), Alyson Sinclair (City Lights Publishers), Colleen Stockmann (Contemporary Jewish Museum).

They join the Leadership Group of Adam Fong (EAP Director; Other Minds), Chida Chaemchaeng (Communications/Marketing/PR Consultant), Bea Dominguez (Zambato Group), Lauren Frieband (Lawrence Hall of Science), and Ernesto Sopprani (THEOFFCENTER).

Read more about the Fellows here
, and please contact us to suggest future programming and project ideas!

Networking Night for Artists and Art/Cultural Workers

Get to know your fellow artists and arts nonprofit colleagues.

Get connected! Here’s an opportunity to meet your colleagues in the Bay Area artist and arts nonprofit community. Bring your organization’s
promotional materials for our display table and plenty of your business cards. There will be refreshments, networking activities, and door prizes.

Co-sponsored by Emerging Arts Professionals (EAP) and Young Nonprofit Professionals Network San Francisco Bay Area (YNPNsfba).

With support from The Foundation Center San Francisco and the Irvine Foundation 

When:

Thursday, October 13, 2011 5:00 pm – 7:00 pm
The Foundation Center-San Francisco | San Francisco, CA

REGISTER HERE.

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Where:

312 Sutter Street, 6th floor
San Francisco, CA 94108
This event is Free.

Creative Conversations: Building Community Through Technology

Thursday, October 20, 2011 2:00 pm – 4:00 pm
The Foundation Center-San Francisco | San Francisco, CA

Register Here.

Explore the ways in which technology is influencing community building in the arts.

This is a Creative Conversation hosted by the Foundation Center-San Francisco and presented in partnership with the Emerging Arts Professionals/SFBA.

Today’s technology affords us a multitude of tools to share our work and spread our messages. As a result, people of all ages are accessing arts and culture in new ways, and changing all the rules of creation, performance, participation and engagement. This panel of innovators will discuss the pros and cons of building community through technology, and explore its potential to transform the work of artists and arts organizations.

 

 

Panelists:

Space is limited. Register online below or in person. Registrants requiring ASL signers or other disability-related services are asked to contact the Foundation Center at least two weeks in advance. If you need further information, please call (415) 397-0902.

Please arrive on time or your seat may be given away to others that are waiting to attend.

Where:

312 Sutter Street, 2nd floor
San Francisco, CA 94108
This event is Free.

Panelist Bios:

James Kass is an award-winning writer, educator, producer and media maker. He is the Founder & Executive Director of Youth Speaks Inc., and is widely credited with helping to launch the youth spoken word movement. Creator and Co-Executive Producer of the 7-part HBO series Brave New Voices and the Peabody-nominated HBO’s Brave New Voices 2010, James also created the concept and served as the Artistic Director of the PBSseries Poetic License, created the Brave New Voices International Youth Poetry Slam Festival, serves as Executive Editor of First Word Press, and was a founding member of the San Francisco Poet Laureate Selection Committee. James has received several awards for his writing, his work in the nonprofit sector, and his work as an educator, and was named a Future Aesthetic Artist by the Ford Foundation. Widely published, James recently curated the poetry for the first ever White House Poetry Jam, performing in front of the First Family, and was invited to be one of the first 35 people to meet the administration’s arts action team. He has served on committees, boards and panels for numerous local and national organizations, launched 63 spoken word programs across the country through the Brave New Voices Network, and has spoken on numerous panels including TEDx Silicon Valley, The New Progressive Coalition, the Commonwealth Club of San Francisco, the Social Venture Network, Changemakers, Hip Hop Activism, the Open Society Institute, and Grantmakers in the Arts.
youthspeaks.org

Jennifer Maerz (Producer, The Bold Italic) worked as SF Weekly’s music editor for four years before she joined the Bold Italic team. Before that she covered San Francisco pop culture for various publications: as an editor at Speak and Soma magazines, and as a freelance writer whose work has appeared in Spin, Rolling Stone, New York Times, Vice, and Salon, among other outlets. She’s worked at media outlets in other cities — as the editor of Dr. Drew’s now defunct website, and as the music editor of the alt weekly The Stranger in Seattle — but prefers living and covering her favorite city, San Francisco.
thebolditalic.com

The same day Hurricane Katrina hit, Tanya Vlach was driving on the other side of the country in Northern California on her way to one of the largest arts festivals in the world. At dusk she was found unconscious from a traumatic accident. Tanya barely came out alive, losing her left eye in the tumble, among other injuries. Becoming this intimate with death, Tanya is driven by the consciousness of the fragile nature of life and her work is imbued with this sense of urgency. 5th generation San Franciscan, Tanya considers herself a trans-disciplinary artist, having an extensive background in dance, theater, visual, and literary arts. Founder of COLIBRITA Production Company, she has produced and curated several multidisciplinary events throughout the Bay Area.
tanyavlach.com

Robin Wu is a Community Investment Officer at ZeroDivide, a social investor helping underserved communities realize the transformative power of technology to achieve social progress and economic opportunity. Prior to joining ZeroDivide, Robin worked as a Projects Director in Program Services at CompassPoint Nonprofit Services. At CompassPoint, she oversaw the management of a three-year statewide initiative designed to build capacity in HIV prevention organizations throughout California serving people of color. She also managed various aspects of the consulting practice comprised of thirty-plus consultants who worked with over 300 Bay Area nonprofit organizations each year out of offices in San Francisco and San Jose. Prior to working at CompassPoint, Robin oversaw minority access programs at the State Bar of California and provided staff direction to the Ethnic Minority Relations Committee, Committee on Women in the Law, Committee on Sexual Orientation Discrimination, and Committee on Legal Professionals with Disabilities. Previous to that, she carried out civil rights advocacy work at Chinese for Affirmative Action in San Francisco. Robin received her BA in East Asian Studies from Stanford University and anMBA from UCLA with a concentration in arts management and marketing. She serves on several nonprofit boards and is a recent empty-nester.
zerodivide.org

 

2011-12 Fellowship Program

The applications for the Emerging Arts Professionals 2011-2012 Fellowship are now closed. Thank you for your interest in EAP and the Fellowship! We encourage you to sign up on the mailing list and check the website regularly for updates about our upcoming events, mixers and networking opportunities! If you have any questions or would like to be put on a list for next year’s Fellowship applications, please contact chidac@gmail.com.

Emergence – A special commencement event and reception

Emerging Arts Professionals/SFBA celebrates the culmination of it’s first year Fellowship program with Emergence, a special commencement event and reception highlighting the extraordinary accomplishments of the inaugural class of Fellows. Read more

Smell – Friday First Series


Join Emerging Arts Professionals for Smell, the final event in the Friday First Mixer Series. EAP wraps up the series with Smell, a lively scavenger hunt in search for aromatics and edibles around Hayes Valley Farm.
Use your nose and pass the “scent test” of different herbs around the farm; use your findings to fire a pizza on Hayes Valley Farm’s own wood oven. Afterwards, wind down and socialize at the Orbit Room, a neighborhood bar known for artisan cocktails and a lively atmosphere. Join us June 10 and don’t miss the last mixer of the series.

SMELL: EAP Friday First Mixer
Please RSVP here: http://www.eventbrite.com/event/1756478675

Friday, June 10, 2011
5:30pm @ Hayes Valley Farm 7:30 @ Orbit Room

Hayes Valley Farm @ 5:30pm
http://www.hayesvalleyfarm.com/
450 Laguna St. (at Fell)
San Francisco, CA 94102
Neighborhood: Hayes Valley

Orbit Room @ 7:30pm
1900 Market Street
San Francisco, CA 94102

Questions? contact nextgenerationsf@gmail.com
Other things to note: Please RSVP and arrive on time to take part in the pizza making. We will provide a limited amount of pizza dough, so please be prepared to share.

 

Taste – Friday Firsts Mixer

TASTE – Friday Firsts Mixer
May 27, 2011 5pm @ Straw in Hayes Valley
http://strawsf.com/
203 Octavia Blvd
(between Page St & Lily St)
San Francisco, CA 94102

RSVP Here

Emerging Arts Professionals invites you toTaste, the fourth event in the Friday Firsts series. Inspired by Brooklyn’s FEAST, Taste will amuse your taste buds and generate funding for a creative project through a community style dinner and art competition at Straw, a carnival themed restaurant.  Join us for some carnival fare as we share food and opinions; enjoy Straw’s tasty menu, vote for your favorite local artist and support emerging arts! **

Mark your calendars! There is only one more mixer left in the series.  Join us for Smell @ Hayes Valley Farm next June

Stay tuned for upcoming Friday Firsts, a truly unique networking experience incorporating Smell and Taste. Friday Firsts is a networking series designed for arts and culture workers in the Bay Area. Emerging Arts Professionals/SFBA is a network focused on empowerment, leadership, and growth of next generation arts and culture workers in the San Francisco Bay Area through knowledge sharing, learning opportunities, and partnerships. By supporting today’s emerging models and mindsets, we hope to generate a path for individuals’ meaningful and sustainable work and to stimulate a vibrant, integrated, and evolving arts and culture sector. www.emergingsf.org

*We have 24 spots reserved, please RSVP and arrive on time. Late comers will not be seated regardless of RSVP.
**As a part of its nonprofit donation program, Straw will generously grant the winning artist $300 to fund their work.

Questions? Contact: nextgenerationsf@gmail.com
To RSVP please visit the eventbrite invite page.

TECH & ART: HOW TO

TECH & ART: HOW TO
May 25, 2011 6 – 8:30 pm @ Intersection for the Arts
Please RSVP here

Emerging Arts Professionals presents Tech & Art, a workshop part of the EAP 2011 Spring Series. Join us May 25, 2011 at Intersection for the Arts and hear from leading arts organizations in the San Francisco Bay Area about creative ways in which they are applying tech tools in their organizations to make heads turn and leverage better results.  Speakers will present their case studies, and lead small seminar-style workshops on the tools themselves. Attendants will go home inspired and equipped to use technology to empower their own organizations.

Speakers include:

Rachel Allen, Online Community Manager, National Alliance for Media Art and Culture (NAMAC): Rachel will discuss NAMAC’s use of virtual discussion and collaboration tools including CoveritLive, the live blogging platform used in their Open Dialogue series, and All Our Ideas, a social data collection platform developed by Princeton that allows groups to collect and prioritize ideas.

Victoria Gannon, Copy Chief, ArtPractical: Victoria will describe how an article travels from draft to a finished product on the Art Practical website, revealing how a content-focused editorial team can successfully interface with a simple content management system (CMS).

Ian Smith-Heisters, Artist, Developer & EAP Fellow: Ian will present his collaboration with Camille Utterback on the Aurora Organ, an interactive light sculpture that also tracks audience engagement patterns. Ian will show how the data provided by this installation can form the basis for drawing complex conclusions about the piece’s achievement of artistic goals and its impact on its environment.

Tim Svenonius, Producer of Interactive Technologies, SF Museum of Modern Art (SFMOMA):
Tim will reveal the critical questions his team considers when producing contextual media such as artist interviews, knowing that the results will be published to web, mobile devices, podcasts, educational centers, and other outlets. He’ll discuss the key production and editorial questions that arise when publishing to multiple channels, with special consideration of the constraints and benefits of mobile.

Moderator: Dan Wolf, Artist, Program Manager of The Hub at the JCCSF & EAP Fellow

Questions? Contact: nextgenerationsf@gmail.com
To RSVP please visit the eventbrite invite page.

Relevance & Reform: a Remixed Response to Randolph Belle

By Eboni Senai Hawkins

“In a capitalist system, culture is a system of control.” – Todd Lester – Founder, www.freedimensional.org

It’s 3am.

I just got off the phone with a friend of mine – a talented visual artist – who is threatening to become a Republican and abandon her practice. She says that the American public has voted with their dollars and that she cannot continue to make a living in a society that doesn’t see art as relevant. Especially now that she’s a mother.

Our conversation started at 1am.

Throughout it all I had to draw upon the immense spirit of collective action present at the Emerging Program Institute, an intensive offered by the Alliance for Artists Communities for culture workers interested in creating or strengthening residencies for artists.  Todd Lester’s quote struck me to my core.  Upon hearing about Quan’s plan to cut arts funding, my first response was, “F— Oakland! We can do it on our own, we MUST do it on our own.” The personal is political, right? As a single woman, I would never wait around for a man who had courted me and left me dry to one day wake up and recognize my value. I would go out and seek other options, secure in my self-worth.

It is now all about options.

Lester’s organization, Free Dimensional, works with an international network of individuals who are interested in providing safe space for artists who have been persecuted for their work. They do not accept money from government agencies, depending on foundation and individual support.  I am ready for Oakland to do the same. To turn away from the City, turn to our neighbors, engage them as cultural stewards, and say, “Hey, I’m doing this really beautiful/amazing/RELEVANT work. Why don’t you come to a rehearsal, check out my studio? How would you like to support a show?”

I appreciate Randolph Belle’s wisdom and continued enthusiasm after years of working around Oakland arts and culture. I trust his proposal that “reforms to the permitting, planning and zoning processes to expedite housing, venues, and special event projects would generate significant impact.” It is a broader way of approaching recent roadblocks.  I want to temper the heat of my disbelief, the sting of budget rejection. I want to believe that Oakland will value its artists. But I know we have to value ourselves first. We have to take inventory – what we have, who we know – and leverage that to a sustainable future.  It is time for Plan B, C, and D.

My friend is not going to become a Republican. Of that I’m certain.  I can’t say that she’ll continue her practice. I know that she’ll forever be a mother. Faced with the economic realities of raising a child, my passionate words on policy meant very little. So I spoke about relationships.

I spoke about a neighborhood where a child might see an artist doing their art. Where that child, coming home from school one day might ask the artist a question, “What are you doing?” and follow up with a “Why?”  I spoke about the subtle shift that occurs when a child, a family, a neighborhood, a COMMUNITY maintains consistent contact with creative thinking. How creative thinking would seep into every day life. To the point that, hopefully, when it’s time to vote again, that art isn’t some thing on a pedestal. Art is your neighbor.

 

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Eboni Senai Hawkins is the Producing Artistic Director of see. think. dance.

After valuable experiences in arts administration (Jacob’s Pillow Dance, Yerba Buena Center for the Arts,Alonzo King’s LINES Ballet), she took a leap of faith and started working directly with the art and artists she loved.

Inspired by the opportunity to present intimate performance in a low-pressure environment, Eboni curated a short program for the June 2007 Mission Arts Performance Project (MAPP) hosted by the Red Poppy Art House, featuring dancers Antoine Hunter and Rashad Pridgen.

 

The response from the primarily visual arts/music audience was overwhelming and in collaboration with Todd Brown and the Red Poppy’s Street-Level Curating Program, Eboni established see. think. dance. to produceTruth + Beauty (November 2007), Word. Warrior. Music. Movement. (March 2008), and Urban Art Sessions(May 2008).

May 2008 also marked the formation of and the first performative installment by The Intimacy Project, an ongoing collaboration between artists/educators who draw creative inspiration from their connection to the African continent and are deeply invested in social change through the re-integration of the mind and the body.  Losing a dancer at the last moment and concerned with the flow of the evening’s program, Eboni overcame her fear of the stage to perform a duet with actor Kwesi Hutchful, a movement composition incorporating media installation, tempest tossed by lauren woods and layered with a recorded version of Intro to Kemetic Science by David Boyce.

In 2010, heavily influenced by the REVIVE workshop, Eboni created the annual REflect film series as part of the Black Choreographers’ Festival: Here and Now. Subtitled “The Black Dancing Body on Film”, REflect mines the rich visual history of Black dancers and choreographers on film through a dynamic selection of documentaries, feature films, and shorts.

Don’t miss Reframing the Arts : Advocating for the Public Culture at Oakland Museum of California (OMCA)on Saturday, April 16! Register here.