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Archive for October, 2011

The Absolute Beginner’s Guide To Changing The World With Art

gia bloggers

Hoong Yee, Richard, Janet

&

Barry

Blogging for a better world

At this year’s conference, I was joined by two other bloggers to capture in words the spirit and essence of this universe we call grantmakers in the arts – Richard Kessler and Barry Hessenius.

What is art about, really?

If you have ever heard Dr. Manuel Pastor speak, you would know what he would say.

Dr Manuel Pastor writes and speaks frequently on issues of demographic change, economic inequality and community empowerment.  At his keynote speech at the Grantmakers in the Arts 2011 Conference, he said many things I thought were cool:

On December 15, 199, we became a majority/minority state.

Collaboration and conflict go together.

Collaboration is principled conflict.

Do you know the difference between chess and jigsaw puzzles?

Chess                                                                                               Jigsaw puzzles

2 colors                                                                                            many colors

some pieces are more powerful than others                              every piece is important

you gain by knocking a piece out                                                 you gain by putting pieces together

the goal is to win                                                                             the goal is to complete

 

As a nation we play way too much chess

 

Art is making things of beauty with friends

 

beowulf sox

Frances Phillips and her Beowulf socks

Frances Phillips is a quietly impressive force with a knitted sock patterned with the opening lines of Beowulf beginning with, “Hwaet…” wrapped around two slender needles tucked away in her pocketbook.

Hwaet?

“I’ll send you the instructions, you’ll love it.”  Frances clearly loves literature and knitting to depths beyond me and the rest of the GIA Knitting Circle.  ”Just remember to weave in your strands when changing colors mid row.”

 

Believe it or not, that makes sense to me.  Later on during the conference, Tommer asked me if I had lost a ball of green yarn.  At the moment I am knitting something in a silver cotton so no, the yarn did not belong to me.

“Hmmm, I wonder if Frances is using green in her Beowulf socks.  Lynn Stern might be, she is working on a pair of multicolored gloves.  Let me put the word out for you.”  In my opinion, the fact that I know this stuff is actually impressive as an example of niche knowledge, thank you very much.

I turned to Frances, smiled bravely thinking to myself, “Wonderful!  Just in time for holiday knitting.”

We were serenaded at the plenary brunch by Eugene Rodriguez, Linda Ronstadt, David Hidalgo and Los Cenzontles.

Throw me the lemon

Throw me the lime

Throw me the key

To your heart.

 

You are my dear

You are my love

You are my dove

That sings at sunrise.

 

Here’s something Linda Ronstadt said at the closing of the conference:

Mexican audiences know just when to howl and they know when to be quiet.

 

Hwaet everybody!

 

 

 


 

About the Author: Hoong Yee Lee Krakauer writes about how to be a nimble nonprofit, make life creative and make a difference at www.hoongyee.com.

She is also the Executive Director of the Queens Council on the Arts. Hoong Yee can be found surfing in the Rockaways whenever there are waves.

Do you want to know the fears, visions of perfect worlds and world changing advice of your peers and keynote speakers?

I have a special bonus post for you of interviews I conducted with people during the conference.  Just leave me a comment with your email or better still, subscribe at www.hoongyee.com and get my interview post and new style notes for people who change the world delivered to your inbox.

 

October 22nd, 2011 Comments off

What A String Quartet Can Teach Us About Crowd Control

Mason

Mason Bates

What do you think of when you hear the word – symphony?

I am sure these are a few that may come to mind:

Classical
Full
Concert
Beethoven

Crowd management

What?

Try hiding your surprise without choking on an artichoke heart in a ballroom filled with hundreds of Grantmakers with arched eyebrows.

Yet, crowd management shared space with other words such as

acoustic
perfect
string quartet

- and of course, it took the American composer of symphonic music, Mason Bates, to make musical sense of it all.  And it took the San Francisco based Del Sol String Quartet to bring everything to life.

We lucky Grantmakers were serenaded by Del Sol who performed Mason’s  ”Bagatelles”, a piece for strings and electronica.

“The string quartet,” Mason stepped up to the podium wearing a black leather jacket and a boyish smile.  ”is a perfect acoustic creation.”

I love that.

Mason spoke about the challenge of putting a string quartet in new spaces.  The difficulties in acoustics, outreach, managing audience engagement and expectations. And at the same time, there is the intriguing possibilities in creating a “hybrid musical event” such as his Mercury Sol.

Picture this, or rather, listen to this:

Consider a traditional musical group, such as the Chicago Symphony or the San Francisco Symphony,  who work on artistic programs and invest in large marketing campaigns to prepare audiences for what they are going to hear and shape their expectations.

Now consider a newer musical group such as Mercury Sol, who work with stagecraft, lighting and technology to create immersive experiences for audiences and project program notes and somehow make the artist part of the audience.  The sounds of a string quartet playing slowly drifts into a new space,  gradually there is a change in perception, a light projection draws everyone to a point of focus.

There you have it.  Crowd Management in the key of C.

 

About the Author: Hoong Yee Lee Krakauer writes about how to be a nimble nonprofit, make life creative and make a difference at www.hoongyee.com.

She is also the Executive Director of the Queens Council on the Arts. Hoong Yee can be found surfing in the Rockaways whenever there are waves.

Do you want to know the fears, visions of perfect worlds and world changing advice of your peers and keynote speakers?

I have a special bonus post for you of interviews I conducted with people during the conference.  Just leave me a comment with your email or better still, subscribe at www.hoongyee.com and get my interview post and new style notes for people who change the world delivered to your inbox.

 

October 20th, 2011 Comments off

Art Game Or Game Art?

Alice

 

Alyce Myatt

They say the fastest growing population of video game players are women over 60.

“Oh my God I’ll never be get there!” a woman in the back of the room was clearly overwhelmed by the though of disappointing her demographic.

“Well, that’s because you aren’t 60 yet,” Marian Godfrey, one of the organizers of “Don’t Get Pwnd!  A Video -Gaming Salon  For Grantmakers” held at the Grantmakers In The Arts 2011 Conference, smiled soothingly as we all collegially chuckled, relieved that we all had a little more time to spend with our Playstations.  ”We’ll throw you a party in an arcade.

“My goal, as a game designer, is to create a mind expanding experience for people with rich inner lives.”

Such a game would not be a time eating/time filling activity.  It would include:

  • A system of rules
  • Simulation
  • A tiny toy version of our universe
  • What if?
  • A recreated new history of the world

Interesting objective for someone who gained financial success from Braid, his video game about manipulating time.  Jonathan Blow, an independent video game designer, describes it as an engaged exploration of ethics and consequences.

Sketch 2011-10-12 16_42_58.png

Jonathan Blow

Even more interesting.

Jon began making small independent art games around 1996, riding the video wave. Several years ago, he founded the Indie Fund, a source of funding with the goals of supporting people who want to make art games and to move the field forward. This fund is intentional user friendly, awarding grant amounts ranging from 10k to 200k with an open submission process and a simple application asking for:

A short description of the game describing what the game is and how you interact with it
A YouTube video of a playable prototype

He looks for skill in making games and something he calls the “quality standard gene” which he says is, “very important and rare to find.”

Of five funded projects, two came from the open process.  The rest were people he knew from the field.

There is a low acceptance rate, 1% to a third of 1%.

What is a video game?

Definition: mainstream video games are screen visuals that react with viewers’ input.  In coin-op games, a player receives a fun experience in exchange for coins.  A skinner box that runs slot machines gives rewards in unknown amounts at unknown times to a player which sets off triggers that can become addictive.  Is this ethically bankrupt?

Definitely intriguing: the action that happens between frames of a comic book

Alyce Myatt, director, Media Arts, NEA, shook her head and said with a sigh, “The cycle is the same.  Independent films experienced a similar shift.”

The NEA now funds:

  • games
  • mobile apps
  • satellite delivered content
  • electronic art delivery

About 360 proposals were received with requests ranging from 15k to 200k.  ”The process got people thinking” said Alyce.  She was delighted to see applications come from across disciplines demonstrating how media is embedded in artmaking and in growing audiences.

“Philanthropic dollars are the only risk capital in this country.”

There are several challenges:

  1. Production and development – attending game development conferences are expensive, admission ranging between 2k to 4k.  Alyce stressed how important it is for grantmakers to be at these gatherings.  Is there funding for travel to conferences such as SXSW and Indie K?
  2. Distribution – a marketing plan takes time and intense effort.  A game faces the challenge of bottlenecks when trying to get to the market.  Alyce suggested exploring the possibility of getting a graduate student with marketing skills.  Is there funding for marketing fellowships?
  3. Open video movement – this helps to get games out to larger audiences.  Grantmakers should be funding these initiatives.

 

Questions from the bewildered:

How deeply can we understand the artistic process and value of making games when making funding decisions? How can we learn from this?

Jon:

Play games.  Don’t get hung up in the “tooliness” of the tools.  It is better to allow someone to explore, broaden an experience, knowledge, context and be immersed in it.

Alyce:

We need an independent nonprofit game community and public media for the stability and the benefit of society.

Ron:

Think of games as novels that ask big questions of humanity and the way we see each other

 

 

About the Author: Hoong Yee Lee Krakauer writes about how to be a nimble nonprofit, make life creative and make a difference at www.hoongyee.com.

She is also the Executive Director of the Queens Council on the Arts. Hoong Yee can be found surfing in the Rockaways whenever there are waves.

Do you want to know the fears, visions of perfect worlds and world changing advice of your peers and keynote speakers?

I have a special bonus post for you of interviews I conducted with people during the conference.  Just leave me a comment with your email or better still, subscribe at www.hoongyee.com and get my interview post and new style notes for people who change the world delivered to your inbox.

 

October 19th, 2011 Comments off

The Buzz About HIVE: Digital Media Learning

Christian

Christian Greer

We are tech heads, not lab rats.

 

Well, there you have it.

That is what kids felt about themselves as they entered the space Christian Greer of the Chicago Community Trust created for youth to explore games, music DJ-ing and app development.
In New York, the New York Community Trust learning network, HIVE, developed a project with the NY Hall of Science that helped kids become citizen activists.  They travelled throughout Flushing, New York armed with smartphones with probes designed to measure CO2 content, air quality, collect data and report back on their findings.  They developed a public relations program about the risk of idling vehicles on the streets and they became lobbyists who pestered the CEO of NYSCI to move buses off the street.

Be careful what you wish for.

KerryKerry McCarthy

 

In a session presented by Kerry McCarthy of the New York Community Trust, Christian Greer and Stephanie Schipper of The Mozilla Foundation talked about the opportunities and the challenges of how kids can use digital media constructively and how funders can work in a networked philanthropic landscape.

In 2011 and 2012, the New York Community Trust made grants to middle and high schools that linked youth, art, science, museums, libraries and new partners with the intent to gain insight to the community, extend into the five boroughs and to serve the most disadvantaged kids.  Was it possible to create an innovative process where learning happened anytime, anywhere that could scale?  And could this happen on their preferred devices where they become creators?

A project involving the New York Public Library and Global Kids involved kids in a social media scavenger hung by using QR codes on iPads.  This initiative, piloted in the Bronx, challenged kids to build a game to find and discover things such as, where did Edgar Allen Poe live?

The enduring question is how to replicate such projects in other branches and in other boroughs.

Stephanie

Stephanie Schipper

Stephanie, just a few days into her new position at Mozilla as the VP of Web Strategy, said that the goal of Mozilla is to leverage open networks of people to create things.  In 2003, Internet Explorer had 97% of the market share.  The Mozilla browser was created to safeguard the open web.  The Firefox open source browser is open for participation.  This open source philosophy can be applied to learning.  As a platform of created opportunities, scaffolding and shared mission, Mozilla engages large networks to amplify impact.  The Mozilla Foundation’s goal is to support the next generation of web makers.

Here’s a cool idea:   X Ray Goggles

With X Ray Goggles, you can look at the actual structure of the web and remix it in real time.  For example, you can go to the Google home page and replace the Google logo.  The goal of this program is to encourage people to think of the web as something they can make changes to and to create things out of and to facilitate the use of co-creating products such as Hackasaurus.

Here’s what is highly encouraged:

early fail often models

bringing learners to co-create products

de-scarifying the process

 

About the Author: Hoong Yee Lee Krakauer writes about how to be a nimble nonprofit, make life creative and make a difference at www.hoongyee.com.

She is also the Executive Director of the Queens Council on the Arts. Hoong Yee can be found surfing in the Rockaways whenever there are waves.

Do you want to know the fears, visions of perfect worlds and world changing advice of your peers and keynote speakers?

I have a special bonus post for you of interviews I conducted with people during the conference.  Just leave me a comment with your email or better still, subscribe at www.hoongyee.com and get my interview post and new style notes for people who change the world delivered to your inbox.

 

October 17th, 2011 Comments off

Racial Equity, Grantmaking & Chandeliers

Javier tim Roberto

F. Javier Torres, Tim Dorsey and Roberto Bedoya

 

Have you ever sat at the edge of the pool with a bunch of friends waiting to see who would jump in first?

chandelier

“Is this the gayest chandelier you ever saw?”

Tim had everyone in the Pavilion Room looking up at a  verpitzt lighting fixture hovering heavily above us.

 

Welcome to Grantmaking with a Racial Equity Lens, a salon session organized by Justin Laing of the Heinz Foundation.

No question, racial equity is a highly charged topic that brings people together with complex emotions simmering beneath their conference badges.  No question, we work in a dominant society that is managing our system of race and culture.  It is structured racialism, poverty and colonization, all the time.

“We must commit to rootwork.  To constantly question powerbrokering.”  said Tim.  I like that word rootwork.  In my mind I imagine deep questioning and determined fistfuls of newer ideas.

Lynn Stern of Surdna described her foundation’s working challenges in supporting “artistic training for young artists, building a training pipeline through college and investing in art colleges committed to outreach and scholarships to targeted populations.  There is currently no conversation where a racial equity lens is used.  Another question is how to fund small community based organizations.  Surdna’s grantmaking mechanism with a budget of $7.5 million has 3 staff members.  How can we become familiar with the field?  Should we be working with intermediaries?”

 

Justin

Justin Laing

 

Justin spoke of a racial framework of “your people and you”.  This is why culture doesn’t work.  He sent a survey that explored whiteness to colleagues and family.  There was no response.  OK, so I am thinking that whiteness, another highly charged and potentially polarizing topic, cannot be something you ask people to examine without setting up a little context. Blacks have had way more time discussing racial identity.

As Gary Vaynerchuk of VaynerMedia says, “Content is king.  Marketing is queen and she rules the house.  But context is the heir apparent.”

Clearly we all know the current context and challenges racial equity and social justice pose in our field.  Michelle Coffey of the Lambent Foundation suggests “working with critical research partners to help us in our challenge facing race.”  She says, “Our concept of race is still dated.  We need stronger partners. We are flawed.”

Justin describes a capacity building initiative that identifies young leaders of color by asking the following questions:

  1. Who are they and what are they doing?
  2. What is the logic model, the scorecard, the projected impact?
  3. What resources do they need?
  4. What about people with disabilities?
  5. What is their branding, messaging, communications plan?
  6. Is there a dashboard with quarterly benchmarks for assessment?
  7. Do they have a strong board?
  8. What is their fundraising plan?

 

Huong Vo of Boeing raised the question of individual strategy.

“Don’t you get tired of being the one who has to be indignant about racism just because you are the person of color on staff?”

There is always the spectre of consequences and repercussions – financial, emotional, psychological – when you challenge an unacceptable statement or action, when we summon up personal courage to own our actions.

Perhaps there are other ways to work with colleagues and board members such as challenging imagery that portray white people as donors and privileged, and people of color as receivers and less fortunate.

We need to speak as a group more often, more knowledgeably.

So come on in, the water’s fine.

About the Author: Hoong Yee Lee Krakauer writes about how to be a nimble nonprofit, make life creative and make a difference at www.hoongyee.com.

She is also the Executive Director of the Queens Council on the Arts. Hoong Yee can be found surfing in the Rockaways whenever there are waves.

Do you want to know the fears, visions of perfect worlds and world changing advice of your peers and keynote speakers?

I have a special bonus post for you of interviews I conducted with people during the conference.  Just leave me a comment with your email or better still, subscribe at www.hoongyee.com and get my interview post and new style notes for people who change the world delivered to your inbox.

 

 

October 15th, 2011 Comments off