Tuesday, March 14, 2006

March 14, 2006

HESSENIUS GROUP focus on involving younger people in the arts

Hello everybody.

"And the beat goes on..............."

This month the group focuses on the involvement of younger people in the arts field. The dialogue will go on all week, bookmark the site and check back for new comments from the panel, guests and the viewers. If you would like to comment on what's been said or share your own thought - scroll to the end of the CURRENT DISCUSSION (don't go too far or you will enter a comment for last month's entry - and click on "Comment" = then enter your own.

The participants include:
Sam Miller
Paul Minicucci
Shelley Cohn
Jerry Yoshitomi
Cora Mirikitani
Andrew Taylor


and we have invited the following emerging leaders in the arts to join us and represent the younger professional's point of view in this discussion:

Marialaura Leslie - Chief of Information and Outreach at the Miami-Dade County Department of Cultural Affairs, who currently serves as Chair of the Americans for the Arts Emerging Leader Council.
Shannon Daut - Senior Director of Programs - WESTAF
Jodi Beznoska - Communications Director, Walton Arts Center
Lisle Soukup - Director - Arizona Citizens for the Arts

ISSUE #1: 
How are the arts doing in terms of recruiting, training, mentoring, and involving younger people in their organizational structures? Are we developing the next generation of arts leaders? What grade would you give us in terms of our engaging those future leaders? Equipping them with the tools they will need? Including them the in the decision making processes and seating them at the tables at which we sit? Are we listening to them?

BARRY: Let me start by asking one of our guests how they perceive the issue from the point of view of one of the younger emerging leaders. Lesle Soukup, are the arts involving younger people?

Lesle Soukup:
When I look around me, I find that leadership opportunities for 20, 30 and even 40-somethings in the arts still remain largely self-created.

I have several young colleagues who, even as they exhibit exemplary entrepreneurship and innovation in starting their own galleries, theatre companies and non-profit organizations are still relegated to their cubicles--and away from the decision-making process.

BARRY:
Marialaura - what's your take on this?

Marialaura Leslie:
More and more established arts leaders are realizing that in order for the arts to continue thrive, the need to cultivate young and diverse arts leadership is crucial. Identifying leadership that can succeed them is becoming a real concern for a generation of pioneer leaders in the arts field. At the same time, we are seeing an increase in the number of younger arts professionals that are engaging in the arts dialogue locally and nationally. Young administrators in the arts are emerging as leaders in the field, consciously and deliberately stepping forward to fill the void between their generation and the current generation of cultural leaders. The challenge for us is how to connect the two and bridge the gap. The topic of succession and emerging leadership in the arts has begun to surface in discussions about the future and we have only just begun to address the challenge. Much work is still needed in this area to create awareness of the issues and find ways to connect generations of arts leaders in search of common goals. Only when established and emerging leaders work together will we create meaningful solutions to this critical problem facing the arts field.

BARRY: Shelley, what are your thoughts?

Shelley Cohn:
As I thought about this question, I reflected back to the days when I, as young and emerging leader, became executive director of the Arizona Commission on the Arts over 20 years ago and what I learned from my predecessors at the agency. The agency, even before my tenure of 30 years, has been known as a training ground for young and emerging arts administrators. A large number of alumni have become national and regional leaders.

The very wise chairman who hired me told me that it was very important to think about the future and plan for who would take my place. I took my responsibility for mentoring others seriously and was very involved in staff development. Arizona has been committed to a combination of on-the-job training and external professional development opportunities for staff. Staff professional development funds were always maintained; even in times of other dramatic budget cuts. When a staff person left, we always took the time to look at reorganization that would provide new learning opportunities for remaining staff.

In current time there is greater consciousness about opportunities and training for emerging leaders; there is a desire, initiated by these emerging leaders, for new support systems and networks. There are more organized education programs and training opportunities through universities and other sources.

I believe one of the most challenging areas is understanding and capitalizing on the different cultural values between the generations and how we older folks are able to be open and learn new ways to engage and bring in younger voices and train the next generation.

BARRY:
Jodi - what's your experience been?

Jodi Beznoska:
I have to answer these questions with reflection on two different times in my life: currently, and nearly 6 years ago, when I entered the arts administration field. And then I have to share some thoughts about one more, very crucial area.

Today, I find myself in an incredibly supportive and forward-thinking organization. Seriously, it feels as if I somehow escaped the narrow and restrictive world of young arts managers and have landed on a different planet here in Fayetteville, Arkansas. My organization gets an A in my book for its commitment to embracing young managers. Indeed, the company just went through a reorganization that created a middle tier management group specifically formed to bring the gaps between strategy and tactics. My recruitment process was far more sophisticated that I'd ever imagined it would be, I have received every opportunity for professional development, have an incredibly supportive manager and senior staff, and feel, every day, that my ideas are listened to, respected, and considered thoughtfully.

However, when I entered the field in 2000, my experience was vastly different. I was offered a job while dressed in blacks, readying the backstage for a theater performance, had little or no time (and no financial support) for professional growth, and, even with a wonderful mentor, quickly realized I had nowhere to go. At the top sat the artistic and managing directors, and at the bottom, the rest of us. I very specifically remember sitting at a party one night, full to bursting with ideas and thoughts, but knowing that I couldn't speak up, that my ideas wouldn't be considered valid, because I was too young, too inexperienced. That night, I decided to go to graduate school. And then, I entered a world of incredible support and resources that has opened many doors.

So as a field, how are we doing? We're getting better. The field is beginning to recognize the importance of young leaders. There are graduate programs, emerging leader conferences and networks that young managers can use. But, as my job search told me, there are still few organizations where younger managers are not just present, but embraced, valued, and expected to contribute.

I am lucky - I have a great education and a tremendous support network. While I value my education and my role as an arts administrator tremendously, I harbor some fear that the artists among us are being persuaded away from becoming emerging leaders in the true sense of the word; leaders who are able to give time and energy to this fascinating mix of art AND business. I believe strongly that artists are done a disservice if they aren't given a chance to learn, along with their craft, the art of living in the business world. They don't have to love it, but they have to be ready for it. And honestly, why shouldn't our most creative and innovative people take an active role in managing the business of our field? We will be better for it.

BARRY: Jerry, you've given this topic considerable thought. Can you put it in context for us?

Jerry Yoshitomi:
THE VALUE OF LISTENING TO PEOPLE YOUNGER THAN ME

This is an excerpt from an article published in the Fall 2005 Grantmakers in the Arts Reader Is Knowledge in the Right Places? A Reflection on Assumptions. (If you'd like a copy of the footnotes/citations for this excerpt, please request a copy from meaningmatters@gmail.com.)

Knowing and Un-Knowing (from recent articles/publications)

* Information in most fields increases at the rate of two percent per month. When compounded, this means that information in most fields doubles every three years. Four times as much information is available now than was available six years ago.

* Too much knowledge can result in "a closed and entrenched perspective, resulting in a person's not moving beyond the way in which he or she has seen problems in the past."

* The decision-makers in the system don't see things that fall outside the pattern of their expectation, and they continue not to see them until finally the system breaks and they find themselves in chaos.

* The value of organizational forgetting.

* People will be most creative when they feel motivated primarily by the interest, enjoyment, satisfaction, and challenge of the work itself....and not by external pressures or inducements.

* Creative ideas are novel and valuable, but often rejected because the creative innovator stands up to vested interests and defies the crowd.

* Breakthrough creativity occurs at the intersection of previously unconnected planes of thought.

Acquiring New Knowledge

One of the skills of mature thinking is to be able to quickly assess the "domain relevance" of new knowledge. Think of sorting through your junk postal mail or email inbox. It takes less than a minute to sort through piles of material. The downside is that an envelope that looks like all others OR an email message from an unknown voice OR the commentary from a younger staff member OR a practice that's outside our current understanding is quickly rejected. By not inviting younger or unfamiliar voices to be included in our forums, blogs among them, we're hurting ourselves by keeping valuable perspectives out of the conversation.

A recent report on the innovative uses of technology, Power to the Edges - Trends and Opportunities in Online Civic Engagement, "people who are hired to implement technological solutions are hired by people who do not understand the problem; they're neither able to hire the right people nor able to evaluate their work."

To learn new knowledge, we need to unlearn old knowledge that no longer serves us. "Intentional forgetting can benefit an organization by helping to rid it of knowledge that has been producing dysfunctional outcomes" For example, contemporary marketing theory espouses precision marketing, where the correct message is delivered at the right time, e.g. reminding me to have my oil changed or have my annual physical. Receiving a reminder several months in advance becomes noise that I discard, but timely reminders are valued and appreciated. Some arts presenters are beginning to think that large omnibus season brochures become too much noise for the person who's primarily interested in just world music and dance and are moving to create electronic brochures that can be specifically tailored to the needs of specific audiences. They recognize the need to unlearn some old methods to learn new ones. I wonder what other things we need to unlearn?

Arts consultant Alan Brown suggests that the most important new innovations in arts marketing will be peer-to-peer strategies - invite a friend, "viral" forwarding, etc. However many of us have difficulty moving from increasingly costly print advertising (which we understand and can manage) to virtual and viral strategies.

One of the advantages of the younger generation is that they don't need to unlearn some things. Innovative visual arts jury processes are using digital systems developed by WESTAF to select artists, while others are feverishly attempting to maintain slide projection methods, even though Kodak stopped making slide projectors and replacement parts in 2004. Heterarchical (vs. hierarchical) processes suggest that those with the most knowledge take leadership roles - so X-gens lead X-gen marketing task forces, Asian Americans develop marketing plans to reach Asian Americans, etc.

Young people - anyone ten or more years younger than my 58 years - have knowledge and strength that is invigorating. However, their strengths are almost archetypal, threatening the status quo as senior leaders try to hold on to past values, positions, and ways of operating. To use a metaphor from Joseph Campbell - might we be seeing young knights (male and female) challenging seasoned veterans and elders?

How do we bridge old and new - world views, knowledge, and leadership?

* What practices should we unlearn?

* Who should we listen to less?

* Who should we listen to more?

* How do we improve our listening skills?

* How do we create prototypes for new ways of doing our work?

* How do we learn together from all this and implement substantive changes?

Complexity theory suggests the value of not holding on intractably to old methods but rather to progress from what's known (how we did business in the past) to what's knowable (research, systems thinking), and, then beyond the knowable, to a complexity where we can begin to develop methods that are effective in complex new work environments.

BARRY:
That's a lot to chew on. Who wants to start?

Sam Miller:
I'm not sure that we as "the field" have the knowledge or capacity to recruit, train, and mentor the next generation of leaders- where are we recruiting them from, what are we recruiting them to? Did we ever acquire the tools needed to do our jobs and, if so, are they still the right tools requisite to the task at hand? Plus, much of our work is at conferences and meetings where scale and economics inhibit our ability to involve our younger colleagues.

In conclusion, I'm not sure that our intuitive, ad hoc, pre-web, post-modern management methods are the stuff that effective mentorship is or will be made of.

But I could be wrong.

BARRY:
Shannon - what's your reaction?

Shannon Daut:
I think that the fact that this question needs to be asked verifies that, as a field, we are not where we can be with regard to developing the next generation of arts leaders. Much has been accomplished in the past few years, thanks to the efforts of Americans for the Arts and other organizations who have made this issue a priority. In the past couple of years I have seen a noticeable increase in young faces at state, regional and national convenings. So now, rather than witnessing "seasoned" leaders wringing their hands about how to deal with the lack of young leaders to take over their organizations, there are actually young people participating in those discussions! I think that the biggest danger facing this impending transition is the tendency to select a particular group of emerging leaders, say those in their late 20's to early 30's, to receive focused leadership opportunities at the expense of those who are even younger or don't fit "the profile." As a next generation arts leader myself, I see the continuous cycle of leadership development as the key to this issue - if we are facing the same situation when I am about to retire, I'll know I haven't done my job.

Secondly, I think we all should be conscious of the fact that sequestering emerging leaders or emerging leadership issues from the larger arts field will not help us reach our desired outcome of creating strong leadership for the future. Emerging leaders should be integrated into the programming, staff and leadership of organizations in a meaningful way. Further, I don't think this issue is about emerging leadership for emerging leadership's sake. Of course the field needs to address this issue, if only because many executive directors are nearing retirement. But I think it goes deeper than that. The next generation of arts professionals has a lot to offer in many respects: innovative approaches to perennial issues; technology savvy; a connection with the next generation of arts audiences; proficiency at multi-tasking; a strong desire to continually learn and grow both professionally and personally.

Finally, I wonder how other sectors are dealing with this phenomenon. Certainly we are not alone in facing the upcoming wave of baby boomer retirement. And younger professionals today may not stay in the nonprofit or corporate sector their entire lives, as was often the case for previous generations. What is being done in other sectors and what might we learn from them? How are other young professionals being prepared for leadership, and how might we work together?

BARRY:
Paul Minicucci, what do you think?

Paul Minicucci:
We all know that there is a graying of arts administrators that is exacerbated by the fact that most of us (in our late forties, fifties and early sixties) came up the ranks together more or less at the same time as public funding for the arts flourished in the seventies and eighties. I am afraid however that it is not an issue at all for many leaders and policy makers much less a priority.

I have a few observations that I think will come from a different perspective than my colleagues on the Hessenius Group some of whom have thought about this issue a great deal and in some cases have begun serious recruitment.

For me and my emphasis of late on digital arts, the issue stems not just from a different perspective about arts administration but from generational issues of what art is and in what sector it belongs. For many young people the distinctions we know and observe between non-profit art (fine and performing art) and commercial art is blurred.

For a lot of young people making art is a collaborative effort and includes artists and some people who may not fit the traditional definition of artist. I think it may have to do with a post-modern idea that everything that came before can be "borrowed" esthetically and materially to make new art. Hip-hop of course began as a melding of musical forms including prerecorded sampling, break dancing and street poetry. New video often includes the use of bits and pieces of other work from across many genres. The use of digital sound and pictures is a basic staple for many "new" art forms and artists. The tools for making this art may seem strange to us. For some of us the products may not be considered art at all.

So I will gently contest the notion that support structures and recruitment are not in place that includes significant numbers of young people. I think they are, and our observation to the contrary may be because we don't recognize the art forms or because the new art is more than likely drifting into commercial art forms such as design, advertising, internet exchange, including blogs, as well as new pathways such as satellite or non-terrestrial radio and web-casting. I think that disciplines like visual art and music that include heavily digitized arts are thriving when more traditional performing art may not be. I know I have been amazed to find a whole subculture of young people who shift their job duties from one project to the next, now a videographer, now a composer, now a producer, now a promotional person. Do they consider themselves arts administrators? Maybe. Maybe not.

I will try and buttress my perspective using data from different places this week including participation studies. Neither do I want to belittle the very real age gap that most of do observe. There is no question that for the art forms that we have served for the past thirty years that there is a paucity of young people filling the ranks. I do hope we have the courage to actually go out and ask young people to tell their story the way they see it. I will leave it there for now.

BARRY:
Cora, help us narrow this discussion.

Cora Mirikitani:
I'd like to focus on just two aspects concerning the next generation of arts leaders: Training and mentorship, and leadership succession in arts organizations.

On the first issue of training and mentorship, I actually think we're doing a pretty good job creating opportunities and nurturing talent across many sectors of the arts field. There are formalized programs in the academy for arts administrators, and a number of excellent field-based programs being offered by Americans for the Arts, Arts Presenters, and others.

I think of programs like the Getty Internships, too, that provide both a selection process and salary support to help create meaningful experiences for young people as cultural workers in arts organizations. So on the intake side of the equation, I think it looks promising.

Which brings me to the second issue of leadership succession in arts organizations - the "there, there" for many next generation arts leaders who have talent and commitment and training, but not necessarily a place to go. On this side of the equation I think we get very low marks. It really saddens me that even in small, mid-sized, culturally-specific and community-based arts organizations, there's so much reluctance to give next generation leadership a chance. There are some exceptions, of course.
But a lot of boards (of directors) are afraid to take a chance on up-and-coming leadership, even when those very organizations were founded by young leaders themselves. And there aren't many funders who are supporting long-range or inter-generational leadership succession either, which would be a powerful tool and send a positive signal to the field that this is a good thing to do.

BARRY:
Andrew, where are we at then?

Andrew Taylor:
From my various perspectives on this question -- as the director of an MBA degree in Arts Administration, as an attendee of many roundtables and conferences that involve leadership and succession discussions, and as an avid reader of studies and initiatives on "emerging leaders" -- I'd say we're getting a mixed report card.

Almost every event I attend among established arts professionals includes a griping session on how we don't have a next generation of leaders in the pipeline. And almost every conversation I hear among younger professionals includes a complaint that they're not taken seriously, or given space to grow.

There's a fundamental disconnect at work, it seems, and not just a generational one. We are swimming in competent, creative, and innovative younger prospects, but we walk around as if we're parched.

It may be our persistent metaphors about "professionalizing" our organizations by modeling the hierarchy and command and control of the corporate world (which, ironically, the corporate world is abandoning). It may be our lack of integrated and responsive human resource knowledge. But I continue to get the feeling that the nonprofit arts industry is systematically squandering it's greatest resource by losing the hearts and minds and commitments of younger staff.

What I've come to believe is this: the conversation complaining about a lack of next-generation leadership is really bemoaning a lack of next-generation leadership that "looks like us". The next generation of leader, and the next generation of arts organization, is going to look quite different than the versions of the past three decades.

They'll have a different life/work balance. They'll have a different approach to engaging audiences, boards, volunteers, and citizens. If they don't, we're all in trouble.

To me, the answer to the perceived leadership crisis is to open our eyes...to new ways of working, to meaningful opportunities for meaningful work, to healthier and more focused institutions that don't eat the lives of their laborers.

Some will complain that we don't have the money or the time to rethink how we support and retain younger managers, and grow them into leadership roles. I would suggest that, as in most other things, it's not the money that makes this work. It's the meaningful and powerful connections we have available to us, and the excitement of working for an organization that's always learning, always striving, and always searching for a better way to connect.

I'm eager to hear what others have to say...

Shelley:
I think Andrew makes some very good points about how the next generation of arts leaders will look different than us; this is something that we old folks should celebrate. However, I fear that we don't really know how to understand and use those differences. One of my younger staff gave me a book to read about the different cultures of the boomers and gen-xers. It was very eye-opening to me and gave me a much needed perspective. Issues included differences in the generations in long-term commitment to an institution and loyalty; length of attention span; balance of home and work. When I reflected on my own biases and an understanding of different motivations of younger staff, I was much happier as a supervisor and mentor and did a much better job.

Jerry:
I think that the point made by Sam Miller about conferences and face to face convening is an important one. As organizations have grown, budgets still often provide for only one person to attend a conference, leaving several professionals back home without the opportunity to participate. It's my opinion that our professional associations need to rethink the ways in which we convene, and not always at the cost of an airline ticket.

Jodi:
Isn't it interesting that so many of us seem to agree that the field knows the importance of embracing young leaders, yet we all can tell so many stories of organizations and leaders that simply do not? It's the difference between the forest and the trees - recognizing a systemic need but then finding the levers at the ground level to act on it. What if we flipped this question on it's head and asked - how are we equipping the "established" (not the best word, but I can't think of another one) leaders to groom their
successors?

Jerry:
Could you give us the title of the book and some key points that you remember?

Jodi:
Possibly one of the items to be added to the job descriptions of senior leaders is training/developing the next generation of leaders. I also believe that succession planning is crucial. Although some great work on this was done by the Illinois Arts Alliance, it seems that few organizations have read their handbook and even fewer have implemented anything.

BARRY:
The last public comment raises the issue of "pay", and points out that it is difficult to attract the "best and the brightest" (or anyone) given that compensation in the arts isn't market competitive, most arts organizations don't provide any kind of retirement plan (and an alarming number don't even provide heath coverage). While compensation has been rising at the larger cultural institutions, most arts organizations are still "mom and pop" sized. I suppose people enter a field for a variety of reasons - money, the chance to use and hone their skills and accomplish something, the relationships with co-workers, fun and job satisfaction, and, perhaps most importantly, the sense of doing something that matters. But if the money isn't very good, if the demands of 'fund raising' take more and more time, which, coupled with inadequate available funding, mean less ability to use one's skills and do what one is good at, and the stress obviates against the "fun" factor, will the feeling of doing important work be enough to attract good people? As Sam pointed out and Jerry echoed, we can't even afford to send younger leaders to our conferences. What can we do about the issue of leadereship and succession funding, given that the programs demand all the funds raised?

Cora:
Barry, I think that the issue of low wages combined with the mounting pressure on arts organizations to raise operating funds are important ones, but I'd like to go back to an earlier thread (or two) concerning why we aren't seeing more emerging talent taking on leadership positions, and what we can do about it.

It seems pretty clear that there is younger talent out there, but that there's something broken in the system that is preventing their succession into leadership positions. Perhaps what Andrew said is true - that current leaders aren't finding younger versions of themselves and, by extension, aren't willing to consider a "new breed" of younger leaders. I hope this isn't true! But I think I agree most with Jodi's line of thinking - that we know there's a problem in the field, but haven't figured out which levers to use on the ground, in organizations, to force the entire system to grapple with succession issues.

So how do we get everyone's attention in our system? We could require direct accountability on succession issues as part of the grantmaking process. We could shine a light on best practices for having succession plans, as Jodi suggests, as part of executive job descriptions or as part of executive professional development efforts. We also need to have adequate study and documentation of the "new" skill-set and qualifications of arts leaders in a post-Enron world so that board members who do the hiring can understand that younger, well-qualified arts administrators can bring as much or more to the job as going outside to hire a non-arts leader.

Most of all, the field has to stick with the issue - it's not going to get solved overnight!

Jodi:
I think the issue at hand here is not that we don't have money for conferences and professional development, it's that we don't have organizational structures that give young managers opportunities to do their jobs with proper resources, and established managers channels to train and embrace those managers. I've always struggled with the issue that arts/culture and many other non-profit orgs just "can't" or "won't" pay their staff what they deserve for the work they do, and I'd like to advance the likely unpopular idea that until the pool of people willing to work for low wages and no healthcare dries up, this trend will continue. There are enough passionate people out there to keep the engine limping along, and thank goodness for that. But what would happen if we took a close look at how we "should" compensate people for their work, and decided that if we can't compensate people properly, we shouldn't be in business? We are afraid to challenge the current model and demand the resources needed to do our jobs right. Because what if we did, and our community said it's not worth it?

Andrew:
Barry, your question about compensation and financial benefits raises two larger, more ecological issues.

First, the size of the total labor pool is soon to take a major dip as the Boomers move toward retirement and other factors that grew the labor pool over the past decades decline as well. This will place an even more competitive pressure on young leaders from the commercial sector, which will be ever more hungry for talent.

Second, as we've discussed in past on-line, there's a growing sense that the professional nonprofit cultural infrastructure may be overbuilt, that is, unsustainable at its current scope and scale. The influx of labor, wealth, and untapped audiences that formed our industry as it now stands may all be flattening out.

These external pressures suggest to me, again, that the arts organization of tomorrow will be leaner, more focused, and more thoughtful about ALL the resources that flow through it (artistic talent, administrative talent, earned income, contributed income, volunteers, social capital, and so forth).
Problem is, few arts organization were ever recognized and rewarded for getting SMALLER.

Lisle:
I think that Shannon's point about the importance of integrating emerging leaders into the conversation is an excellent one. In Arizona we've conducted several emerging leaders conversations both with WESTAF and Americans for the Arts, as well as independently. By and large one of the most widespread and simplest to address needs of emerging leaders that I've heard is one of mentorship. I have been extremely fortunate to have some very generous folks take me under their wings and simply introduce me to others, allow me to be a part of meetings, and serve as a resource to answer my questions. Talking to ourselves in emerging leaders groups is valuable in terms of networking and identifying key issues, but if we are not integrated into the larger conversation our needs will not truly be addressed.

Secondly, a recommendation I would make to any "emerging leader" is to get involved with their locally based leadership groups. I am currently in Valley Leadership, and this gives me the opportunity to network with other young professionals in a variety of fields, to receive a broad range of information about my community, and to develop relationships with alumni of that program that have gone on to be important local leaders. When we integrate emerging arts leaders in with emerging leaders in government, large corporations, and other nonprofits we also connect our fields with the broader community, which is essential to its perceived relevancy and public value. Not only is this a good succession plan, it is a good business and advocacy plan.

Third: How do I know when I've "emerged"?

Jerry:
The comments about succession planning, retirement funds, health benefits, salaries, etc. encouraged me to think again how undercapitalized we are as a field. Whether it's about raising more capital or shifting it away from groups with failed business models (as Andrew Taylor alluded), a long term capital strategy is a necessity. Possibly the banker in the group, Mr. Miller, might have some ideas.
In addition to being under-capitalized, our decentralized structures encourage many inefficiencies that could be addressed through economies of scale.

Our peer review panel processes, while meritorious, suck time out of panelists lives that can never be retrieved, taking hours away from raising money, running the organization and our personal relationships and time. Is there another way?

One of the great contributions the next generation of leaders could make to this field is to come up with solutions to some of these (and other) problems. We elders haven't been able to come up with solutions, maybe it's time to create some task forces of younger people to take on some of the big issues of our field. In fact, maybe this blog space could be the place for that conversation.

I was involved in a national task force when I was 39 years old. It met for a year and a half, engaged commentaries from over 150 people, and in the end produced a publication entitled An American Dialogue. Maybe it's time for another national task force.

The topic I'd choose is: The Arts Organizations of the Future (The Year 2015). We'd have the people who'll be running those organizations be the ones to serve on the task force. Any volunteers?

Jerry:
There's a body of leadership training and theory that I thought would be important to mention. It's described as leading from the middle, leading up, leading with limited authority, three hundred sixty degree leadership.

It's about developing the skills to lead an organization from whatever place you happen to be at the moment. Mike Useem, Ronald Heifetz and John Maxwell are the 3 authors I've read on the topic.

One possible idea would be to have a moving workshop that could be developed and then move from location to location. And it'd be best if were facilitated by people of a younger generation. Possibly some of Andrew's recent graduates or others could be the workshop facilitators. Let me know if you'd like some reference materials.

BARRY:
Cora mentions that the Boards that hire the Executive Directors (and many, many arts organizations have scant staffing beyond an Executive Director), may need a wholesale re-orientation as to the skill sets they should be looking for when making the 'hiring' decision, and Andrew points out that the future leaders may not fit the current mold of what we perceive to be the qualifications we seek in future leaders. So how do we get out of the proverbial box in terms of our thinking about succession so that we become more attractive to younger leadership?

We've come a long way in the past two decades in the arts, but we've been stuck on many fronts. As the baby boomers retire and the graying reaches in apex, as succession happens one way or the other, do we need some kind of radical change in the kind of leadership we attract? How do we attract and integrate into our matrix the next generatioin of the best and the brightest then? What about Cora's suggestion that grant funding be predicated on change of thinking and approach by grantees in the area? Can we mandate that kind of change in thinking? Isn't Lisle right in suggesting that we start by trying to change our own perception of how we go about attracting younger leaders by helping current leaders re-think the issue? How do we do that? What about Jerry's suggestion that we institutionalize the dialogue in some way, as a start? What about some kind of pilot program that takes greater risks in handing over the reins to new people - as a controlled experiment?

If one looks at the job postings in the arts, one sees the same litany of qualifications being sought - the same skills the candidate should possess. Can we begin by taking a long look at that and try to revamp the thinking behind that approach? What should we be looking for in new leadership? How necessary is experience in the arts or nonprofit field? What exactly do we mean by "superior oral and written skills"? Does the expectation of "a proven record in fundraising" really mean anything?

Jerry:
This morning, I received an e-newsletter from next generation consulting http://www.nextgenerationconsulting.com/ Amongst other projects, they're doing some work in Indianapolis to reach the next generation of audiences. I was referred to them by Rob Cline, Marketing Director at Hancher Auditorium at the University of Iowa, who's convened a group of x-gen workers to market to x-gen audiences.

Suggest you may want to get the report described below.

In this edition of our Next Generation Workplace e-zine, we report on some of the key findings from a landmark study of the agile working practices of large corporations and the corresponding preferences for agile working of individual knowledge workers. We focus on the latter data, which among other things, should raise questions about widely accepted demographic stereotypes of the workforce.

Who Will Win The Battle To Redefine The Workplace?
By Tony DiRomualdo

There is a largely unseen battle now raging in the workplace. It pits incumbent powers against emerging upstarts. On the one side are managers who covet the traditional employment deal ? money, career progression and status - in return for a total commitment to playing the organizational game by traditional rules, e.g., long hours in the office, grueling travel, and an otherwise unquestioning willingness to do whatever the business requires. Only Type A's need apply.

On the other side is an emerging group of workers who are also highly ambitious but they are seeking a new kind of workplace deal that combines opportunities to perform at high levels, grow their careers and achieve financial rewards with an extensive array of flexible working and non-traditional employment arrangements.

The winner of this battle will determine whether the rules and mores of the workplace change dramatically or remain largely the same.

How is this battle currently unfolding? A newly released study, "Manifesto for the New Agile Workplace" describes the players in this fierce fight to define the workplace rules of engagement. It provides new insights into what different groups of knowledge workers think about their current 'employment deals' and the changes in their working and employment arrangements that they seek most.

Drawing on research led by Career Innovation, a think tank based in Oxford, United Kingdom, and conducted by an international team of experts including Next Generation Workplace, the study findings turn some of the conventional wisdom about knowledge workers on its head.

The executive summary of the report is available free at: http://www.careerinnovation.com/employers/index.cfm?Articleid=364&articleaction=requestform&reportid=cimanifesto.

Shelley:
I am first responding to the thought about panelists and panel review. I think that the discussions that panelists have regarding grants review can be a very vital professional development opportunity for both emerging leaders and people new into the community. I think the value of the learning and discussion goes far beyond the actual recommendations regarding grants. They learn what is happening in the community, how different applicants present themselves, how the actual panelists react to that information in relation to the grantees and to each other on the panel.

As far as the book about the different styles of boomers and gen xers, I am trying to locate the title and author.

But my memories; there is a different sense of loyalty to an organization with younger folks than the older. The older were more likely to stay in a position much longer; but the younger folks have seen organizations that are not loyal to their employees (reducing pensions, downsizing, eliminating positions near retirement); thus younger people say why should I be loyal when the organization is not loyal to me. Attention span: with technology and multi-tasking, does the old style of working keep the interest and attention of younger staff. When a younger staff member becomes frustrated or bored, they are much more likely to look for different opportunities regardless of the monetary rewards.

Younger staff are much more inclined to seek balance between life at work and outside of work. It is important, I believe, to remember some of these things when giving feedback to younger staff.

Shannon:
This is such a multi-faceted conversation, I'm not quite sure where to begin. Obviously this whole discussion points to the multitude of issues that are currently facing the arts field, and how the next generation of arts leaders plays a part in all of it. When Jerry proposes a national dialogue about how the arts field will look in 10-15 years, I can't help but think that it is bound to look extremely different, unless the young leaders currently being brought up in the system learn to adopt, wholesale, the system as it currently exists. I find the prospect of a new culture and structure of the arts in this country really dynamic and exciting. But what do we do? Become founders of our own organizations that will, in 40 years, be facing extinction once we're out of the picture? How do we continually invite new energy and perspectives into our work?

I believe that younger artistic/cultural workers see the greatest opportunity outside of the NEA/SAA/LAA framework. Many of them are even being so bold as to think outside of the 501(c)3 box! New approaches are being created, and artistically-inclined, entrepenurially-friendly structures are being embraced by younger generations. For this generation, the situation is no longer for-profit "entertainment" versus non-profit arts.

On another note, while reading the discussion about the salary issue, I couldn't help but disagree. I am probably paid nowhere near my corporate-working peers, but frankly I wouldn't know because most of those that I would consider my friends and peers do not work in that field--they are committed to working for things that they believe in, like the environment, women's rights issues, social justice, etc. My point being that, ultimately, my decision to work in the arts is not about money, it's about doing something that I care about every day, and feeling fulfilled in what I do. For my generation, I don't think I'm alone in that feeling.

Andrew:
Thanks to all for the great conversation this week. I hope it's the beginning of several such discussions among people who can make meaningful change, even if only in a single organization, or a single department.

I'll admit that I'm prone to explore the systemic problems that stand in our way -- the contraction of the labor pool, the lack of available capital, the absense of human resource knowledge in arts organizations. The tide is obviously against us, but we can still make a remarkable difference if we swim in small and simple strokes.

I've just been reading Jim Collins' ''social sector'' addendum to his business book "Good to Great", he frames the issue this way:

"It might take decades to change the entire systemic context, and you might be retired or dead by the time those changes come. In the meantime, what are you going to do 'now'?....You must retain faith that you can prevail to greatness in the end, while retaining the discipline to confront the brutal facts of your current reality. What can you do 'today' to create a pocket of greatness, despite the brutal facts of your environment?"

So, let's keep looking for leverage points in the larger system of leadership, but let's also pause to make meaningful connections with the promising leaders among us -- younger, older, mid-career, whatever. Those individual connections defy the tide.

BARRY:
So where do we go from here? There are numerous programs across the country addressing these issues - the outstanding programs of Americans for the Arts, including their Emerging Leadership program, the Illinois program Jerry referred to earlier in the week, and doubtless scores of others. So how do we take the "best practices" and apply them systemically - to the extent possible? I have been working on a mapping and assessment project for the Hewlett Foundation on Youth Involvement in the Arts, and the first phase - a comprehensive survey of nearly 300 arts organizations in California - is now complete, and the data is being analyzed. It will tell us the extent to which the younger arts leadership sits on boards of directors, comprises paid staff, is being actively recruited and much more. Publication should be in the fall of this year, and I hope that report, like this dialogue, will shine a spotlight on these issues so that more people in the field can begin to consider what we might do to increase younger leadership attendance at conferences, put more younger people on boards of directors, figure out how to recruit the next generation of leaders in what is sure to be an increasingly competitive market, and address the issue of how best to equip the new leadership with resources and skills for them to do their jobs.

We must, I think, carry the ball forward with ideas like's Jerry's for a national focus on the issue, and like Cora's suggestion that funders might get involved. We must also explore thoughts such as those put forth by Andrew, Shelley and others as to critically examining our own limitations in how we perceive new leadership, succession, transition etc. And we must expand how the current leadership listens to those outstanding younger professionals already in our ranks - and embrace the new ideas like those put forward by our guest panelists this week.

So I ask each of you - is there one specific thing you might recommend we, as a field, do now? And, what final thoughts do you have to share?

Jodi:
To take the conversation from the systemic to the personal - I recommend that we all consider two things.

1. Remember a mentor you've had. Leaders very rarely get anywhere without smart, passionate people on their side. Remember what that mentor did for you; did he/she listen to you, challenge you, invite you to the table, debate all of these issues about salary, work/life balance, purpose of art, etc? Remember what you valued about that person or persons, and try to bring those qualities to your colleagues.

2. Realize that in most cases, opportunity is not presented - it must be sought out and taken. We've listed a number of tremendous resources and paths for emerging (and established) leaders to take in this blog. But all the systemic changes in the world won't matter if the present and future leaders of our field don't reach out with both hands and say "I am ready to take on this challenge."

It's been a great pleasure to join this conversation. Thank you to Barry and everyone involved. Happy St. Patrick's Day!

Jerry:
Happy St. Patrick's Day.

Today's Chicago Tribune had a story on non-profit execs leaving orgs http://hosted.ap.org/dynamic/stories/C/CAMPUS_THEATERS?SITE=COSTE&SECTION=HOME&TEMPLATE=DEFAULT

Also I was able to download and read the Manifesto for the New Agile Workplace by Tony DiRomualdo and Joanathan Winter. It's free until March 29, so I would suggest downloading it soon.
They suggest the need for totally different work formats and structures - for both non-profits and for-profits.

I would suggest the creation of a small working group from across the sector - presenters, local arts agencies, producing orgs, museums, foundations, etc. - maybe AFTA could take the lead here because of the work done thus far. This group might work with resources that specialize in these issues, such as nextgeneration consulting. A small project proposal could be developed and then presented to some funders for consideration. For example, possibly Diane Ragsdale of the Mellon Foundation might be willing to convene a followup conversation to this year's GIA discussion.

It's been good to be part of this conversation. Have a great St. Paddy's day weekend.

BARRY:
I want to thank all the group regulars, and especially our younger guest participants - Marialaura Leslie, Shannon Daut, Jodi Beznoska, and Lisle Soukup - for a very good discussion on this important topic. And thanks to Jamie Bignall for her help.

I urge everyone to visit the Emerging Leaders section of Americans for the Arts website to see everything that is going on in this area. Click here: www.artsusa.org It's under the Field Services banner at the top.

And those of you who aren't subscribers to Andrew Taylor's The Artful Manager blog, you should be -- it is one of the best resources in our field - intelligent, insightful, challenging. Click here: http://www.artsjournal.com/artfulmanager/

Finally, check out the Center for Cultural Innovation, led by Cora Mirikitani. Click here:
http://www.cci2002.org/


Next HESSENIUS GROUP starts Tuesday, April 11th. Mark your calendars.

Happy end of St. Patrick's Day. Have a great weekend everybody.

And remember: Don't Quit.

Barry

Tuesday, February 14, 2006

HESSENIUS GROUP on the lack of the arts in the President's State of the Union Address

Hello Everybody.

"And the beat goes on................"

Welcome to the February HESSENIUS GROUP on the arts. This month's panel:
Cora Mirikitani
Anthony Radich
Diane Matarazza
Jonathan Katz
Moy Eng


The dialogue between the panel members will continue until Friday, February 17th - so check back daily for new entries.

Feel free to enter you own comments at any time. Scroll to the end. We are screening comments to eliminate commercial and bad taste entries from unknown sources that seem to plague blogs now. But all comments will be posted as of the day they are entered - subject to editing for space reasons.

Thanks.

And Happy Valentine's Day.

ISSUE ONE:The President's State of the Union Address
In the State of the Union address two weeks ago, the President made a point of the importance of "creativity" to our economic future. He spoke of a Competitive Initiative that would focus a priority on math and science. Yet again there was no recognition whatsoever of the role the arts play in fostering and nurturing creativity; no mention of what role the arts ought to, and might play to insure America's creativity; no acknowledgment that the arts of value in teaching math and science, no appreciation of the fact that the mere teaching of math and science does not insure that those so trained will necessarily use their acquired knowledge or skills in a creative way; no understanding that human creativity is a force that might be honed, nurtured, expanded etc.

Despite our efforts to educate government of the role the arts might have in developing America's creative power, despite the burgeoning recognition by corporate America of the value of the arts in fostering creativity within the workforce, despite minor increased support for the NEA, despite the progress with groups such as the Governor's Conference as to an appreciation of the arts, we still face this ignorance, this barrier.

What do we do?

There is a math and science lobby -- one that obviously far outstrips any arts lobby. It makes headlines and gets results. Does this lobby appreciate the arts and its potential to complement their objectives? Have we made any attempt to educate this lobby?

What do we do? I ask you Anthony Radich

ANTHONY RADICH:
There are many things we can do. Following are some ideas:

* We need to recognize that the Richard Florida creative class conversation has created a buzz in state and local government. Though in my opinion Florida overreaches, we need to systematically take advantage of the fact that he has prompted many non-arts people in this country to think and talk about creativity and its value to the economy for the first time.

* We need to stop being so desperate in depending on inadequately researched and even false claims about the contribution the arts make to education. I believe the arts do make a difference in the educational process; however, the proof the field has used to argue this point has been unconvincing to those genuinely seeking more robust evidence.

* We need to recognize that a far more sophisticated education and lobbying effort needs to be put into place for the arts than exists today. I appreciate the efforts that are underway today in this regard. However, compared to the sophisticated approaches employed by other interests--and for many years now--the work of the arts field as a whole remains poorly grounded, unfocused and inconsistent.

* We need to recognize that this country has a deep-seated strain of ambivalence if not hostility toward the arts. We need to understand that this situation will not change overnight. Perhaps we are talking about a 100 year effort to fundamentally change the perception of Americans about the value of the arts. Are we ready to develop the 100 year plan?

If the President thought a conversation about the value of the arts and creativity would resonate with a public he is desperate to reconnect with, I am certain we would have heard him address the arts in his State of the Union speech. But we did not. He has chosen not to lead the way on this one. Our task must be to create a thirst for the arts among the followers and to fashion that desire with an insightful, creative and disciplined strategy that is well executed. Then we will hear a president ask the nation to support the arts.

BARRY:
Diane, Anthony echoes a 'mantra' near and dear to my heart - to wit: the Arts lobbying effort is still anemic at best. What's your take on that claim?

DIANE MATARAZZA:
Given this administration, I think we need to continue to keep the arts message as strong and as visible as we can on the national level, while pushing for funding policy gains at the local and state levels.
Americans for the Arts has come a long, long way in successfully promoting the arts message nationally. For the time being, it's probably the smartest use of our resources. Some have criticized the content of the 'Arts, Ask for more Campaign,' but for the first time, the arts message is consistent and visible, and that's in our favor.

Though advocacy success closer to home at the local and state levels has been hard earned, we've made great gains accessing education, transportation, tourism, community development, job training, youth development, and other kinds of funding for the arts. Local and state policy makers are more accessible, relationship building is easier, strategies are more manageable and local and state level governments are more transparent. Our field has learned to navigate those waters well - in some communities and states - very well. Sharing successful strategies from communities of all sizes is something we should continue to do.

(But) I think current federal priorities and the kind of lobby machine needed to affect policy within the DC beltway far, far exceeds our means. I googled the American Competitiveness Initiative in the President's State of the Union to learn more. The majority of funding looks like its for the 'continued and new programs' of three standing federal agencies over the next 10 years: the National Science Foundation, Dept of Energy's Office of Science and the National Institute of Standards and Technology within the Dept of Commerce. The combined budgets of those three ACI named agencies is in excess of $30 billion. Even with the combined federal arts, museum and humanities purse ($500 million), trying to leverage support and build alliances at those bigger agency tables would be no more than tilting at windmills. Curiously, the President's American Competitiveness Initiative also recommends $5.9 billion in FY 2007 for the Dept of Defense and its DARPA Program [Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency].

So what about those math and science initiatives? At about page 16 of 23 in the American Competitiveness Initiative document are the details. $400+ million is recommended for spending in the next 10 years: $122 million is earmarked over five years to bolster International Baccalaureate teacher training programs in underserved areas; $250 million is for "Math Now," tools, training and research for elementary and middle school students and $25 million is proposed for an adjunct teacher corps. Between now and 2015 there's supposed to be 30,000 new souls from outside the public education system recruited to shore up the ranks of math and science teachers. ($25 million has to be matched by the States and private sector.) Yes, there is money for math and science education initiatives - but it would be curious to hear what math and science education leaders think.

BARRY:
Cora, if Diane is right, and we can't yet "lobby" our way to greater success, will further educating government people be enough?

CORA MIRIKITANI:
I wasn't surprised that there was no mention of the arts in the State of the Union address. Nor that the generous use of the word "creativity" was not linked in any way to the arts. And here's the really sad thing - I don't think further "educating" our current political leaders is the issue here, because their disregard (and even distain) for the arts comes more from an opposing ideology on content-related issues, or a lack of political will, than from a lack of information.

So what can we do about this? First, we need to find our voice. I've been involved most recently with an organization called the Center for Cultural Innovation that is developing a broad range of knowledge, networking and financial tools for individual artists. Our experience has shown that there's a huge need for more functional artist services out there, but one thing is particularly striking - that artists in LA, and everywhere across the country, I think - want a place to belong, to be connected, and to have a voice that can speak to their issues. In politics, a collective voice, especially a BIG one when you add up all the artists and creative entrepreneurs across the country, means clout. So getting organized and finding our voice - that's the first thing we could do.

Second, we need to find our heroes. By this, I mean that we have been focusing mostly on top legislative leaders at the federal and state levels to advocate our cause. This is good, but what I'm talking about is finding and advancing a broader range of leaders in the arts who have been making a difference - trustees of nonprofit organizations, painters, musicians, community arts activists, art school teachers - there are so many unsung heroes who are making a big difference every day. We need to find out who they are and help them to tell their stories to a broader audience of influentials.

And third, I think that the arts field (who is this exactly? I'm not sure) needs to figure out how to better collaborate. This word has been used so often that I'm almost sick of hearing it. But there is something about the arts that are very insular, and therefore not well understood by other fields and domains that would have a natural affinity - in math, the sciences, technology, you name it. We need to change that and to encourage our cultural policy leaders to reach out beyond their current power bases and comfort zones to see how the arts can support other fields, and to ask for help.

JONATHAN KATZ:
Decision makers who control resources can be persuaded the arts are worthy of investment by different means. Some will respond to evidence of (a) the value of arts learning and arts experience, (b) the public benefits they provide, and (c) the necessity of an investment at their specific level of government. Others will respond to (a) maintain and build influence, (b) enjoy the affection and esteem of valued people, and (c) make a beneficial difference in the world. These investment decisions are personal. Therefore, key elements in advocacy must be personal relationships and personal experience. When arts advocates organize their efforts effectively around these elements, they have the kind of success we have seen in New Jersey when a governor recommended zeroing cultural agency budgets and now NJSCA has higher funding than at that time, in Charlotte-Mecklenburg County when county board members who recommended cutting the arts fund appropriation because of their disapproval of a theatre grant were removed the next election amid increases in private contributions to the fund, in Sarasota when it was necessary to pass a tax increase in order to build the arts education program, and in Maryland when a campaign to invite legislators into arts classrooms preceded increased state arts support. For efforts such as these to become the rule rather than the exception, the cultural community has to organize at the level of the policy or resource to be affected; artists and arts groups must spend time in targeting decision makers, establishing personal relationships with them, and sharing the experience of the arts; arts groups must engage their board members. When we all make every arts event an advocacy event, sharing and documenting arts experiences in a purposeful, personally rewarding way with decision makers, the people who become governors, legislators and presidents will be better prepared to foster creativity as they should.

BARRY:
OK - so where do we start to make this happen? How do we "find" the collective voice you refer to Cora? How do we launch collaboration that will insure that "every event is an advocacy event", as Jonathan says. Hell, Bob Lynch started the Arts Action Fund PAC several years ago; why don't more people send in $20 so we can organize ourselves. The problem, is it not, is that this kind of effort takes time - people hours - tens of thousands of people hours - and staffing, and the arts are basically small organizations that don't have the time to do that themselves. We know that do we not? Why then can't we contribute to a common cause that will do the work for us -- professionally, competently, comprehensively -- instead of thinking we are still in some damn Mickey Rooney movie where we're all going to get together and hold a big dance and save the school? Virtually every other sector has done this, but in the arts efforts such as Bob's grow very, very slowly. How do we change that mind set?

I ask you all.

ANTHONY:
The design of an effective national advocacy effort is a huge challenge. I agree that AFTA has made large and impressive steps toward the shaping of an effective national effort.
Perhaps the kernel of the problem is that the tent for national-level advocacy is very broad and diverse, yet the barely-disguised more narrow purpose of the effort is the support of the nonprofit arts, individual artists, public sector arts funders and the arts education "establishment." The arts advocacy tent welcomes the money and influence of interests from this country's for-profit arts sector, but really doesn't seem to care much about their issues. In addition, the effort generally disdains the advocational artist [I can't think of one avocational artist in arts advocacy leadership today--at least one who is known for that quality and who speaks for that huge community.] In our efforts, we need to conceptualize the nonprofit arts and those in close nexus with it as an important--but actually very small part of the overall arts ecosystem. We also need to ask ourselves if we have--and if we have wanted the leadership from the other parts of this ecosystem genuinely on board our national-level advocacy engine.

CORA:
It's true that getting a truly effective national advocacy effort for the arts started is like getting a giant boulder to roll it'll take a lot of hands-on pushing by many people to get it to go. My particular interest is in seeing how artists can be mobilized to advance this agenda, and this has to begin by having a new mindset about who artists are. There are so many creative people who "get it" who we have excluded from our conversation because they earn their living commercially in the arts, or because they practice art for the love of it, or are art students, or take part in culturally-based traditions. Somehow, when we talk about "artists" in the nonprofit sector, a lot of these people disappear off our radar. So my first point is that we have to allow more people to define themselves into our discussion as artists.

The other thing we need to do is to create the appropriate platforms so that artists can have a larger, connected discussion that can begin to harness their collective political (and financial) voice. We've seen an inkling of what might be possible in MoveOn.org, and should work on developing both the technology and in-person networking platforms to get more of these discussions going.

BARRY:
I think you've hit on an important point to me Cora: the creation of platforms, or access points, so that there are "ways in" - entry points - for the huge mass of nonprofit arts workers, artists and those that support the arts. Somehow we have to make it easier for people to get involved, to participate - at whatever level they are able - and then market those entry points and platforms. We haven't yet exploited the potential for increasing the "demand" for arts, in part, because we haven't yet made it easy for people to get involved. Any suggestions on how to do that?

MOY ENG:
Am I surprised that our president did not mention the arts when advocating creativity and job development? No! Arts and culture have been low priorities in the public policy arena, except when used as a political tool during the cold war years and in the early 1990s attacks on individual artists. This is so for many reasons, a few of which were succinctly articulated by Mr. Radich. If we continue to presume that it is important, if not essential, to engage our policymakers and political leaders in funding the arts, then we need to identify elements that have real saliency for them and the general public, outline a plan of action, build our collective voice (as Cora wrote) and go for the long term until we win the war. Or using a singular event/issue as a catalyst, develop a coordinated, comprehensive effort to engage leaders from education, business, policy, arts, science as well as the general public in support of increased funding.

Perhaps a question to consider is what if we turn our focus to significantly increase individual funding of arts and culture? Given the projected intergenerational transfer of trillions in the years to come and community foundations' role as the "to go" to resource on community issues and building community support on those same issues, should we turn our attention away from the government?

JONATHAN:
A few observations about strategy in the long term. There's no more strategic investment for our time and money than advocating for arts education. Arts experience makes arts supporters and after childhood it's all remedial work--uphill, expensive and labor intensive. There is lots of documentation of organized citizens groups influencing school boards, superintendents and principals. Absent rewards and penalties for directing resources to arts education, educators will respond to other pressures. A great resource, bloggers, is the Arts Education Partnership, the national forum for advancing arts education directly supported by the U.S. Department of Education and the National Endowment for the Arts, aep-arts.org.

I like the points that have been made about the need to enlist avocational artists as advocates, to engage for-profit and not-for-profit stakeholders in common cause, and to devote more attention to individual giving. Coalition advocacy holds promise and needs strengthening at every level--federal, state and local. And while we're lamenting the distance between what we think our appropriations should be and what they are, we should recognize what coalition advocacy already accomplishes on a regular basis. At the national level, for instance, the Cultural Advocacy Group, which consists of arts, humanities and cultural interest groups who lobby Congress on behalf of the federal cultural agencies, unites the voices that Congress currently hears around a common agenda and organized activities.

Congress has sustained the NEA and grown the budgets of NEH and IMLS in recent years--in this awful budget environment. Each year when the president zeros out the $30+ million the Dept. of Ed. invests in arts education and the House goes along with that, the Senate restores that money and the Senate prevails. Interestingly, many, if not most, of the individuals who lead the associations whose members accomplish this are avocational artists. Those I know best are serious singers, musicians, dancers and creative writers. And they represent amateur constituencies, too--Chorus America, VSA Arts, and others. At the state level, where overall budgets have been devastated in recent years, we're seeing support build around "new economy" coalitions with names like "creative economy," "cultural economy," "creative class," "cool cities," "21st Century Communities" and others. Their hallmark is bringing together the public, private and not-for-profit sectors.

When I suggested in an earlier comment that every arts activity should be an advocacy event, what I had in my mind's eye was a meeting where board members, management and artists decide on a few influential individuals they will cultivate that year by establishing a relationship with them, inviting them to share an arts experience, and rewarding them in a way they would find meaningful. Then they plan exactly how they will do that, and they do it. If 50 organizations or creative industry businesses did that for a few years in any state or city, I believe it would broaden support for community cultural life enormously.

CORA:
I'm taking a moment to reflect on the diversity of thoughts and ideas offered by my colleagues - there is so much to do! I think Moy's suggestion that we consider the role of individual giving to the arts really resonates with the idea that we need to make ownership of culture and arts in this country more widespread. Choosing the right tools and strategies may be the easy part. Getting people engaged - that's our challenge!

DIANE:
I think we're all saying the next iteration of arts advocacy must significantly expand the ranks of those who care.

So what are a few more advocacy ideas to expand the reach and relevance of the arts?

Of all the creative industries, let's identify two or three with which we have the strongest affinity. In what new ways can we communicate with, work with and form alliances with them for greater mutual gain? Given those partners, what are manageable translations of relationship-building strategies that can be worked at the state level and at the community level? (Let's remember strategies should be simple and easy for busy people to implement).

Let's use technology and existing networks for more efficient dissemination and sharing of good research and thinking. For example, how could WESTAF's current assessment and plan to reinvigorate and better position the 12 state agencies in the West as more proactive advocates be applied in all 50 states? Why can't AFTA's 'Art, Ask for More Campaign' be a link on the home page of every arts and cultural website in the country? In what other ways, and in what other arenas, could the campaign be promoted to reach more people? Across the board, how can we be more efficient in sharing ingredients of successful strategies so we don't unknowingly expend limited resources on duplicative endeavors?

How can we better extend our messages outward? In addition to the ideas offered by Cora, Moy, Anthony, you and Jonathan, and other contributors, what if the agenda of every state superintendents annual conference, every state association of counties annual conference, and so on, there were presentations, keynotes and/or panels highlighting specific examples how the arts advanced those sector agendas, maybe the messages would result in more lasting impressions. This same strategy could be applied to national and state gatherings of our creative industry partners. And if presentations were delivered by arts champions from within those sectors ranks, perhaps they would have even more credibility.

ANTHONY:
The point was made that arts education can be a powerful rallying point for advocacy on behalf of the arts. I strongly agree with this. Parents care deeply about what their children's experiences and are one of the last groups left willing to bleed a little to get something done. Interestingly enough, the arts, particularly the formal and classical arts, are currently suffering the disbenefits of the decline in arts education. So we in the arts have a strong nexus with this issue, and we should have a strong motivation to become active in the area of arts education advocacy. Before we do though, I think we need to look at our dismal past in the area of arts education advocacy and ask questions such as:

1) Why have over 30 years of public art funder involvement in arts education failed to arrest the decline in arts eduction--or at least the public's perception of the value of arts education in our society?

2) Isn't it time for us to realize that in many places, implementing or sustaining a K-12 sequential quality arts education within the schools is not going to happen. While not giving up on that ideal, shouldn't more of our efforts be directed to sequential quality arts education in before and after school programs?

3) How have traditional arts educators helped us in this work? What is it about their interests that, in my view, prevent us from reaching a solution to this problem?

4) Why have arts education efforts historically been assigned such a small role in the work of public sector arts agencies?

5) When we talk about arts education advancement, what should we consider to be a victory? Pilot and model programs are nice, but when the arts education delivery system is collapsing around you, are these not an unnecessary distraction?

Finding a solution to the arts education provision conundrum will not be easy. But we have to start somewhere and I propose we begin with a little self examination. Arts education is an area that is very critical for all of us. We have not done very well with it to date. We have got to do better!


BARRY:
I want to thank this month's panel for a lively and thought provoking discussion. And thanks to all of you who took the time this week to follow the discussion - I hope you feel it was worth your effort.
The next HESSENIUS GROUP will begin on Tuesday, March 14th. The regular BARRY'S BLOG will return in two weeks (or sooner). Please tell your colleagues to subscribe.

Have a great President's Day weekend, and remember

Don't Quit.

Barry

Wednesday, January 11, 2006

January 11, 2006

Postcard from Thailand - just a personal journal - you may wish to skip this.


A POSTCARD FROM PHUKET THAILAND THE TSUNAMI REMEMBERED ONE YEAR LATER.

December 26, 2005 8:00 am Phuket, Thailand

I am lying on the couch in my rooms in Patong Beach on the island of Phuket in Thailand. This is my seventh year of traveling to Thailand, to what some ex-pats call the "Kingdom" a paradise some ten thousand miles from San Francisco and my home in Marin County. I fell in love with Thailand on my first visit, and have developed enormous affection and respect for the people and the place. While the beauty of the northern areas of Chaing Mai and Chaing Rai are captivating, I prefer the tropical paradise and beaches of the south.

I have stayed at the same small guest house owned by a Thai woman and her Swiss husband that I discovered some six years ago. I have gotten to know them now the nephew who handles maintenance, the sister who runs the maid service and their son - who has grown up before my eyes.

It is early morning on a day that will mark the single most tragic loss of life to mother nature in my lifetime. Laying on the couch watching television, thinking about a shower before I head down to the beach and breakfast as is my custom several days a week, I think I feel a very slight earthquake. It is not the wind. I am a native Californian I have been in earthquakes. I know how they feel. Yes, this is an earthquake but so slight that it must be far, far away. I give it no further thought.

I read some of the murder mystery novel that I have started. One of ten or more I have brought with me. Mindless fiction satisfying on a purely pedestrian level.. But hunger calls so I shower and throw on shorts and a tee and head out the door. The beach is three hundred meters or so away a four minute walk. The restaurant is named Sabbaiâ (which in Thai means happy) is really nothing more than tables and benches on the sand surrounded by a bamboo fond fence, with a small kitchen built on a cement slab. The ocean is but forty yards away and the early morning vista and quiet are the main attractions for me to have my bacon, eggs and coffee here and not elsewhere. It is obviously run by an extended family- and all the sons and daughters, their husbands and wives and children, and the aunts and uncles work here. I have gotten to know them over time not personally or to any real extent - I don't even know all of their names, and couldn't remember them if I did but I know them well enough as a patron over two to four week periods each of the last five years so that I recognize them and they me.

My rooms are on the second floor of the first building of the guest house at which I stay, and I lock my door and walk down the stairs and out to the little Soi (meaning both street and alleyway in Thai) and head towards the beach a circuitous route through a warren of right and left turns past this building,and that house, until it opens on a narrow ten yard stretch lined by beer bars on each side and to the main Beach Road. I get about two thirds of the way, with but one more turn remaining, and I see people running towards me the kind of unmistakable panic one can recognize in peoples eyes no matter where you are, what language you speak.

I hear someone yell "water" and though I don't comprehend as the throng nears me, I turn to run with them. Over my shoulder I see water pushing what appears to be a car and a bus unbelievably tossing them over like they are toys. My mind cannot process the data quickly enough I know nothing of tsunamis, I have no reference point. I am jostled by the crowd, pushed this way and that, and I lose my balance and stumble. I scurry to get up and am pushed again as fear grabs a hold of strangers who wish me no ill but for whom I am not a priority either. I get up again and run. By the time I am back to the front of my small guest house the water has dissipated “ blocked in part by the buildings that stand in its way. Another hundred yards and I am to the main road and the water that has chased us is now but ankle deep.

Nervous banter on faces with incredulous, but relieved looks, is in the air. We keep walking to the other side of the street not sure what just happened, or what will happen next. Within minutes sirens fill the air and emergency vehicles speed this way and that. Uniformed police are blowing whistles moving people away from the beach area and people desperate to understand what it all means talk and pass on rumors amid fact. A consensus arises that a tsunami hit. What is less agreed on is what it did and what will happen next. People move towards the main street that leads into the mountains.

What had happened the world is now fully aware. The single largest natural disaster of our times, claiming 300,000 lives, many of whom remain lost a year later.

Saturday, December 24, 2006:
I arrived back in Phuket yesterday 25 hours, three planes and 10,000 miles after leaving SFO at 12:10 am on Thursday morning. I am returning to Phuket for yet another "high" season as I have for the past seven years now back to the same guest house and the same area I have come to know very well. I am anxious to see how it has been rebuilt how different is will be or not from the pre-tsunami isle of just a year ago when the beach of Patong was a sister paradise of Maui or Mexico with palm trees blowing in the gentle breeze at water's end.

After settling in and a quick nap, then shower, I walk the back entrance down the same Beach Road that had been my escape route a year ago, this time to survey the rebuilding effort. I have thought a thousand times in the past months how lucky I was – that if I had left my rooms just five or ten minutes later I would have been on the beach and likely would not have made it when the power of the tsunami hit.

But unlike in Banda Ache where the tsunamis wake was measured in miles, in Phuket the waves traveled less than a thousand yards inland. It was only the beach road hotels, corrugated tin mini shops and the two main streets leading from the main thoroughfare - Rat-U-Thit road Soi Bangla and Sawaddirak Road - where property the debris of smashed, overturned busses, cars and motorbikes gave such dramatic emphasis to the loss of life that the tsunami wrecked on this community. And eerily, the mound of debris from the beach and the twisted vehicles on both Soi Bangla and Sawaddirak Road stopped half way up the street between the Beach Road and Rat-U-Thit as though a powerful dragon that simply ran out of breath mid way on its charge.

Last year they had begun to bulldoze the beach road debris even before I left some five days after the tsunami and the cleanup had made noticeable progress on my last foray to the beach. Now a year later, virtually everything is re-built much of it the same as before the tragedy same businesses, same locations, often the same look to the building. Tourists who have never been to Patong before would be hard pressed to realize that such a devastating act of mother nature had even occurred. Yet as I talk with local merchants, what is obvious to anyone who has spent time here is that tourism is down maybe by as much as fifty percent. The farrang (Thai slang for foreigners) just haven't yet returned in numbers anywhere near the past. There are normally three seasons in Thailand the "High Season" from mid-November through April when the weather is not so oppressively hot, but rather a pleasant range of the mid to high 80s in the day, and 70s at night, the "Hot Season" when the temperature tops 100 and the humidity drives one into the air conditioned edens of the countless 7-11 convenience stores that dot the landscape of the country, and the "Monsoon Season" that runs from August or September into November and causes mild to severe flooding depending on the year and location (particularly long this year I am told). Christmas and New Year weeks are traditionally the peak of the high season here, and account for a healthy percentage of the tourism trades annual take and tourism is Phukets lifeblood. Americans count for only six percent or so of the tourists, with most coming from China, Australia, Japan, Germany and Scandinavia roughly in that order.

Somehow it seems to take at least two years for any area to recover from the precipitous drop in tourism that inevitably follows a calamity from mother nature. No matter that 95% of the entire island of Phuket, including over half of the beaches, saw absolutely no impact from the tsunami, or that those areas that did suffer are now rebuilt as though nothing had happened; no matter too that the chances of another tsunami are doubtless far less than having lightening strike your head repeatedly over a week period people stay away. I guess they just have it in their minds that the recovery will not be complete, that they will be stranded without conveniences, that the jeopardy of another awful event looms likely  and so they just aren't yet ready to throw their money away on a vacation in what they perceive as a disaster zone. Not good for the Thai people.

As I walk down the Beach Road on the ocean side, the thing that strikes me most is that the beach the sand is now several feet higher than it was last year. Where before, in places, you walked down seven or eight stair steps to get to the sand, today there are only three steps down, and in places, none at all. Last year along the stretch of the Beach Road where there are shops only on the opposite side of the street leaving a view to the water from the road, there were steps down every hundred yards or so, with cement / brick columns framing each set of steps. On the tops of each of these columns were embedded in the cement iron sculpted dolphins, turtles and other animals, with man made patinas of aged copper green. The force of the tsunami had cracked several columns, and in places had simply knocked off these embedded sculptures as though the were made of balsa wood. Two men with sledge hammers might have spent a hour or two trying to accomplish a similar result.

It is hard to watch the video footage of the waves as they first hit Patong in the amateur shot films and appreciate the real power of the tsunami. If you imagine a crescent shaped beach a mile long, and that each cubic yard of ocean water weighs something like 1200+ pounds, and that the tsunami was two to four stories high, containing millions and millions of cubic yards of water, all traveling at over 500 miles an hour when it broke and it is easier to understand that very little could withstand its awesome power certainly not little children and older retirees unfamiliar and inexperienced in the ways of tidal waves and drawn out of curiosity to the retreating water that left fish and shells uncharacteristically exposed that is the way of the tsunami; too late for those who would have the least chance of running fast enough on sand to escape. If the tsunami had hit at noon instead of at 9:30 am, there would have been 10,000 dead in Patong instead of the thousand or so on this part of the island that didn't make it.

The next morning I make a pilgrimage to the one beach location that has haunted my thoughts all year. For many seasons now, on half the mornings of my time in Patong, I would wind my way through that backdoor warren of turns and make my way to the beach to have my breakfast at one of three or four small restaurants on the sand some fifty yards from the water. These restaurants were little more than tables on the sand, surrounded by a few trees and a makeshift palm frond enclosure. The only real structure to the one I frequented was a cement slab that housed the enclosed in kitchen area where food was prepared.

Sabbai was a little restaurant with a million dollar view of a pristine and beautiful Patong Bay and it was owned, as I said, by an extended family that I had come to know if not by name then by sight  if not intimately then well due to the passage of time.

I was delighted and almost giddy to arrive at Sabbai's back entrance and to almost immediately spy one of the young men who was a waiter and whom I recognized from the family. He recognized me too and there was a genuine moment of shared something. I asked about his younger brother and he assured me he was at their family home elsewhere in Thailand and was indeed ok as well. But without asking I knew that not all of the family had made it out that some must have been caught in the deadly undertow of one year ago. I could tell it wasn't something he wanted to talk about and I did not press him.

While Thailand is often referred to as the land of smiles because the Thai people surrender their smiles so easily and effortlessly, and while my friend with no name at this restaurant smiled again I could tell it wasn't the same, nor would it be again for him. He was young and had lost something that he had not yet replaced and wouldn't for awhile.

I shed a silent tear for him as he was, in that moment, for me the embodiment of the whole of the suffering of last year I grieved for him for the loss of his loved ones, and for the loss of his innocence as well, for he was no longer a boy, but a man reluctantly I suspect, at the hand that the fates had decreed.

Monday December 26, 2006 One Year Later

I get up early this morning. I want to go to the planned morning event to commemorate the one year anniversary of the tsunami. I have no idea what is planned, but I want to be there. It is to take place in the small park at the north end of the beach where the Beach Road again has open space on the ocean side of the street.

When I arrive a little before 9:00 am, a sizable crowd has already gathered. There are plastic chairs provided for guests, and reserved seating under canopies to shield the VIPs from the hot sun. The Prime Minister arrives a few minutes later in shirtsleeves to pay his respects to the families of the victims. I sit down on the last step of a large circular fountain immediately behind the plastic chairs. A podium stands in front of a makeshift monument announcing the one year anniversary of the tsunami. A woman soon sits next to me in the one remaining space on the step I share with a score of other people. We talk. She is Swedish, was not here at the tsunami last year, but has lived in the south of Thailand for the past dozen years. She and her brother and mother have driven up to Phuket. Her name is Tina. Blond, mid-thirties I guess she looks the part of the tsunami victims surviving family. I tell her what it was like to have been here last year and we share an abiding respect for the Thai people.

There is no shortage of television cameras set up to cover the event, and roving reporters are working the crowd looking for likely interview subjects. A woman reporter with the Sky Channel logo on her microphone stops and asks Tina if she was a tsunami survivor. Tina tells her no, but tells her that I was and nods in my direction. The reporter asks me if she can ask me a question on camera and I say "sure". She asks if I was in the tsunami last year and what has brought me back. I tell her that I am here because I have come every year for the last seven, and that I have come to this remembrance this morning out of respect for the Thai and foreign people who have lost loved ones and out of affection and admiration for the Thai people who were so caring and generous to their visitors last year. I tell her that this is an amazing country and that the Thai people who suffered the greatest loss were extraordinary in their generosity to their guests during that tragedy, in their ceaseless efforts to comfort and help the victims and that all of us who were here a year ago are grateful to be alive and share a bond that will last us our lifetimes. Like my generation knowing exactly where they were when JFK was assassinated, those in the affected areas on the rim of the Indian Ocean when the tsunami hit will likewise never forget that moment. She thanks me and moves on.

The Prime Minister is apparently gone. In his place, the Minister of Tourism and Sports (an odd combination) delivers the official remarks and hits just the right tone of sympathy, respect and hope for the future. The ceremony ends with guests invited to place flowers previously distributed to those present at the base of a marker denoting the day and time of the worlds worst natural disaster in recorded history. I get in line and fight the surge of people making their way to pay their respects. The television camera crews surround the site and make it that much more difficult to navigate to the monument which sparks the ire of a woman in the crowd, who mounts the stage and, using the microphone, decries the insensitivity of the press from her perspective in an emotional harangue. She is met with a smattering of applause from the crowd many of whom agree with her assessment. I understand her need to lash out somewhere her pain is just too much for her to cope with.

I think about last year again as I leave the area and make my way along the beach and then I think about the victims of hurricane Katrina. For a fleeting moment the question enters my mind why tsunamis aren't given names as hurricanes are but I guess they are too few and infrequent and thank god for that. A tear or two stay in my eyes as I pass the Sabbai restaurant and and continue down the beach the water calm and tranquil so very different than the angry and ranging powerful sea of a dozen months ago. Life goes on as it always does, and my guess is that more people were born on planet earth during the week after the tsunami than died as a result of its wrath. I am again so very glad to be alive and I say my silent thanks to god, buddah and the powers that be.

Have a good week.

Don't Quit!

Barry