Archive for the ‘SC Arts’ Category

Hey, Ken May and the SC Arts Commission – Welcome to Our World

Saturday, June 12th, 2010

I’ve been receiving the following letter by e-mail at Carolina Arts – from some who think I’m going to contact my representatives to ask them to override these vetoes and by some who want to make sure I see this for comment.

Here’s the letter from Ken May, Executive Director of the SC Arts Commission, one person who won’t be losing his job and won’t see a pay cut according to his statement. He may live and operate in a shell and serve no one, but it sounds like he’ll go on.

June 10, 2010

The governor has vetoed the bulk of the Arts Commission’s budget, effectively crippling the agency if the legislature does not override the veto. This cut eliminates all state funds for grants, programs and services, and more than 70 percent of our personnel. The cut also eliminates federal stimulus funds earmarked for grants to local arts organizations. The vetoed funds support arts curriculum and artist residencies in our schools; plays, concerts, dance performances and exhibitions in our communities; and thousands of jobs statewide. These targeted cuts (veto #32 Statewide Arts Services, $1,212,733 and veto #105, ARRA funds, $250,000) will destroy the agency’s ability to fulfill its mission, leaving it with little more than an administrative shell lacking the resources to support the arts industry that benefits all the people of our state. If this concerns you, there are a variety of ways to reach your state legislators this week before the legislature reconvenes on Tuesday, June 15, 2010.

Ken May

Executive Director

How do I feel about this plea to the art community to ask the SC Legislators to override the Governor’s veto? First, I was never sent this letter directly so I can only figure that the Arts Commission doesn’t see me as a friend they can call on, which I guess matches my feelings about them. I know any request for a helping hand by me to them would fall flat. Second, since I can receive no funding from the Arts Commission or any of the people they distribute money to – I don’t see this as a problem which effects me. Yes, some non-profits who receive funding from the Arts Commission have taken out ads in our paper, but we give them a 25% discount on our prices and they get an ad in our paper. We earn every penny of that advertising money. And, just because they receive some funding from the Arts Commission doesn’t mean the money they put towards advertising came from the Arts Commission. I know of no arts organization or artist who solely exist off of the funding they receive from the SC Arts Commission. So, the loss of their funding is just a part of any individual’s or groups’ funding picture. Third, although I still support public tax dollars going towards funding the arts I have learned from watching the SC Arts Commission that the money doesn’t always go to the most deserving, most qualified or groups that represent the overall art community in SC. Fourth, Ken May is wrong when he says, “…lacking the resources to support the arts industry that benefits all the people of our state.” The Arts Commission doesn’t support all the arts industry and not all the people of this state benefit from the arts – many are not even interested in them.

In this case I feel the plea is a little suspect. Is it a plea to save the funding of the Arts Commission staff or money which would go to the artists and art groups of this State? If this cut goes through and the agency is so handicapped as Ken May states – how will they go on? What purpose will they serve other than one for themselves? If there is no money left for funding grants, programs and the staff is reduced by 70% – why doesn’t May state that without this funding he and the rest of the staff will just resign and leave the budget they use up – for the art community?

The art community I know has been suffering for years without help from the Arts Commission – long before the economy went sour. And, not all help requires funding – so that is why I titled this entry – welcome to our world. We’ve been doing without, cutting back – watching a shrinking future, just like many others in the art community, but we’ve been doing it without benefits – like retirement, health insurance, dental plans, paid vacation days, etc. And, we’ve been doing it without taxpayer dollars.

Artists and art groups should operate like regular businesses – within their budgets – budgets that reflect earned revenues. And, all who are involved in producing art which the public can benefit from, should be eligible to apply for public funding. Operating on the hopes that there will always be more funding is like living a dream. It’s time for some to wake up and face the world the rest of us live in. This just might be that day, but I’m not holding my breath.

Yes, a lot of good artists and good arts groups will lose some funding if this cut goes through, but a lot of good artists and good art groups have been going without a lot longer – and, will still go without whatever happens with the budget. Plus, it’s hard to defend restoring funding to the Arts Commission in light of what other cuts are being made in this State. It may seem like a drop in the bucket to some but to some individuals who may lose health services, food allotments, housing, etc. – it’s very important. What’s more important?

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Burroughs-Chapin Art Museum in Myrtle Beach, SC, Offers 7th Annual Gullah Culture Celebration: Free Family Day on June 12, 2010

Saturday, June 5th, 2010

Here’s some info about another event you can enjoy which came to us at Carolina Arts. Excuse the shortening of the Museum’s name – it’s always a mouth full in any title.

Nothing embodies the history and culture of the Lowcountry more than Gullah traditions, and the Franklin G. Burroughs-Simeon B. Chapin Art Museum in Myrtle Beach, SC, will highlight them in A Gullah Culture Celebration, a Free Family Day to be held from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. Saturday, June 12, 2010.

Gullah is the name given to descendants of former slaves of West African descent who settled in the coastal regions of South Carolina, Georgia and Florida, and their cultural traditions. The term is often used interchangeably with the name Geechee.
A Gullah Culture Celebration includes music, art, dance and, of course, food – both to sample and for purchase to enjoy later at home. All activities at the event, other than purchased items, are free.

Setting the mood for the day will be an African market with the Egbe Killimanjaro group. Other tasty treats will be available from Ultimate Eating in Beaufort, SC, whose owner Jesse Gantt is co-author of The Gullah Cookbook. Inside, on the Tea Porch, visitors can sample watermelon tea and sweet potato pone. (Watermelon tea is made from the recipe included in The Gullah Cookbook, written by Veronica Davis Gerald and Jesse Gantt. The cookbook is for sale in the Museum Shop.)

In the tent guests can enjoy listening to the gospel sounds of Billy Shepherd and the Celebration Gospel Ensemble, the Plantation Singers, and Carl Winters “The Kalimba King”. Later in the tent, Georgetown, SC, entertainers Egbe Killimanjaro will dance and drum along with Master Drummer Gene Golden.

At various locations within the Museum, a wealth of entertaining and educational activities will be available for visitors of all ages. See a demonstration on carving a walking cane, learn about Mancala, an African board game, and see how hammocks are made. There will also be sweetgrass basket making, storytelling with Adrene Harper, and noted Georgetown artist Zenobia Washington will lead a doll-making workshop.

Dr. Corrie Claiborne, Claflin University, will present her lecture From Sweetgrass to Housetop: Continuities in the cultures of the South Carolina Lowcountry and Gee’s Bend, Alabama. Later, Dr. Claiborne will give a docent tour of the exhibit A Survey of Gee’s Bend Quilts, on view at the Museum through Oct. 3, 2010.


Quilt by Mary Lee Bend

For the small fry, there will be face painting, along with workshops to learn to make Gee’s Bend-inspired wall hangings, church fans and a Gee’s Bend quilt square. Kids can also help paint a Gee’s Bend-inspired mural. Art Museum Education staffers Lori Seckinger and Arielle Fatuova will lead the workshops.

The Franklin G. Burroughs-Simeon B. Chapin Art Museum is a wholly nonprofit institution located across from Springmaid Pier at 3100 South Ocean Boulevard in Myrtle Beach.  Hours are Tuesday through Saturday, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. and Sundays, 1 p.m. to 4 p.m.  Admission is free, but donations are welcomed.  Components of Museum programs are funded in part by support from the City of Myrtle Beach, the Horry County Council and the South Carolina Arts Commission, which receives support from the National Endowment for the Arts.

For further information call the Museum at 843/238-2510 or visit (www.MyrtleBeachArtMuseum.org).

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6th Annual Sweetgrass Cultural Arts Festival Takes Place at Memorial Waterfront Park in Mt. Pleasant, SC – June 5, 2010

Thursday, May 27th, 2010

Talk about your best kept secrets or events that don’t get much publicity in the shadow of the Spoleto and Piccolo Spoleto Festivals – this event takes the cake. I picked up a flyer at one of the local library branches – otherwise we haven’t been sent a lick of info about this event at Carolina Arts.

Here’s some info:

6th Annual Sweetgrass Cultural Arts Festival Takes Place at Memorial Waterfront Park in Mt. Pleasant, SC – June 5, 2010, from 10am to 8pm.

Memorial Waterfront Park is located at 99 Harry Hallman Jr. Blvd. in Mt. Pleasant, SC, under the Arthur Ravenel Bridge.

The highly anticipated 6th Annual Sweetgrass Cultural Arts Festival will celebrate the rich Gullah Geechee cultural heritage and provides the most extensive showcase of sweetgrass baskets in the Lowcountry area.

This year’s event features an assortment of unique handmade arts & crafts, paintings, live performances, and documentary films. Festival-goers will enjoy a day filled with entertainment that includes gospel songs and praise dance, storytelling and Gullah Geechee skits, basket-making demonstrations and the Adande African Drummers and Dancers. Visitors will be treated to a variety of authentic Gullah cuisine, classic barbeque, fish, chicken and beverages offered for sale by more than 15 Lowcountry restaurants and food vendors. Children and adults will enjoy family friendly activities including a waterslide. Publications on Lowcountry Gullah Geechee history, fiction, and cookbooks will be available for sale as well.

Admission and parking are free. The festival is a family event and no alcohol is sold.

For further info visit (www.sweetgrassfestival.org).

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SC Arts Commission’s Canvas of the People Grand Tour is Over – Now What?

Thursday, April 15th, 2010

OK, the seven public gatherings of the Canvas of the People 2010 have taken place – plus one special, unannounced, gathering at the recent Arts Alliance Board meeting, and the private gatherings held with community and business leaders in several, if not all the original seven locations – before the general public gathered. Why some folks couldn’t participate like the rest of us in a public forum – I don’t know, but it fits the pattern of secrecy conducted by the Arts Commission. It’s always about not telling the whole story – holding back information.

We’ve had our say on what’s working in the arts, what our challenges are, and what opportunities lie ahead, but what now?

Of course if you didn’t show up, you can probably still participate by doing the online Canvas survey. Here’s the link (http://www.southcarolinaarts.com/canvas2010/index.shtml). You can also see what others said throughout SC at this link as well – see listings on the left of the page. Of course you won’t see any comments from the private gathering.

We’re not told much about what happens now, but my guess is someone will sort through all the comments in the three categories and pull them together in some kind of report and then distribute that report or at least make it available as a download on the Arts Commission’s website. There you go – problems solved.

Of course we were told at each of the gatherings that this plan for the next ten years was a plan for us – not the Arts Commission – they’ll be doing that later, on their own – behind closed doors.

My guess is that this plan will look a lot like the previous plans – except for the pleas for more funding from somewhere – which doesn’t exist.

So all the calls for working together will fade and the dog eat dog scramble for a bigger slice of the funding pie will resume amongst the non-profits and not much will change.

We’re already seeing the “too big to fail” factor being floated by the Charleston Symphony Orchestra and its supporters (a shrinking number), which has been in financial trouble for ten years, and continues to rob funding from the greater Charleston art community. Giving money to the Orchestra is like stealing funding from the fiscally responsible to give it to the fiscally irresponsible. But the cry to save the “artistic soul of Charleston” drones on at the expense of the other worthy art groups.

From all my years of experience and attending the Canvas of the People process – my advice to the people who attended these meetings is to forget about having the Arts Commission lead you around by the nose and schedule more gatherings of the art community in your area, on a regular basis, for a longer period of time, and work on your own challenges and opportunities. Follow through on what you come up with and you’ll get a lot further along than worrying about the size of the pie you’ll get from the Arts Commission. Who knows your community and its resources better than you?

In my opinion, more would be accomplished if members of the art community gathered at a local watering hole on a regular basis and discussed issues over a few drinks than attending these Canvas gatherings – there will be more pressure to monitor the follow-through on ideas and plans – more accountability. Our art communities don’t need more art walks – they need art talks once a month.

I went to a few of the Canvas gatherings to observe and make a plea for the non-profits to work with the commercial side of the art community – not just look at us as a source for funding and handouts. I also asked why commercial businesses in the arts, who support individual artists, help build audiences, promote the arts, and support the community with taxes – can’t share in applying for funding from the Arts Commission. Some of our ideas might be better that those proposed by some non-profits and might pay off better for the overall art community and community in general. Most of us live in a world where if you can’t pay your bills, you’re out of business – not begging the community for another chance to get your act together. Reality for us is the bottom line and we don’t enter into risky ventures, knowing there is always another funding cycle around the corner. Yet, in our case, when Carolina Arts got into financial troubles when the economy collapsed, we made cuts to the bone, took on personal debt, and we reached out to followers and people responded and helped us survive, but there was no chance for public support – none at all.

So, I hope there are not a lot of folks out there waiting for this final report from the Canvas of the People 2010 to solve their problems. There will be a few who do that, but they are going to be disappointed. Waiting for funding, much less more funding from the SC Arts Commission is futile as long as the State of South Carolina continues to have budget shortfalls. At some point, someone in the SC Legislature is going to be asking – do we need to pay for this big fat bureaucracy of a state agency – why don’t we give our money directly to the counties to decide where it should go in their art communities? At that point, non-profits will discover a pie that is not already half eaten by the time they get to it.

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8th Annual Art Market at Historic Honey Horn Takes Place on Hilton Head Island, SC – April 24 & 25, 2010

Tuesday, April 13th, 2010

We usually receive a press release about this show, but this year we only received a card in the mail, which came well after our April issue of Carolina Arts was printed. So I visited the Coastal Discovery Museum’s website to find this info about the event.

The 8th Annual Art Market at Historic Honey Horn, presents a juried fine art and craft show, set for April 24 and April 25, 2010, on Hilton Head Island, SC. The Coastal Discovery Museum will jury in artists in media that includes: clay, wood, fibers, metals, glass, jewelry, watercolors, oil, mixed media and photography. All work will be on display and for sale.

This event hosts artists from 13 states annually and well-known local artists share the spotlight during this weekend-long event as they compete for prizes totaling $5,000.

The show is open to the public on Saturday, from 10am until 5pm and on Sunday, from 11am until 4pm. There is a $6.00 per car parking donation, while admission to the show is free. Demonstrations throughout the weekend will be held in glass, pine needle basketry, clay and much more. Food and beverages are for sale during the event.

The Art Market is presented by the Coastal Discovery Museum and is part of BRAVO – Celebrate the Arts! Festival held in May each year. BRAVO is a month-long celebration of our area’s vibrant arts community and diverse cultural heritage in partnership with the Hilton Head Island-Bluffton Chamber of Commerce.

For further info contact the Coastal Discovery Museum (http://www.coastaldiscovery.org/) by calling 843/689-6767.

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Another Canvas of the People Event – This Time in North Charleston, SC – March 29, 2010

Thursday, April 1st, 2010

I was extremely disappointed that less than 30 people showed up for this Canvas process in the greater Charleston area. Most of the crowd was from the North Charleston area and north of there – including some folks from Dorchester and Berkeley Counties, but very few from Charleston – the great arts city of South Carolina. Such are the politics of the area. If art doesn’t happen in downtown Charleston – it’s not art – in some people’s minds.

But those who didn’t come missed a great opportunity to see the new North Charleston City Hall and I got a fast tour of the new offices of the North Charleston Cultural Arts Department – which were first class. I know some folks in Charleston can only dream of ever having facilities like this, but that’s another story.

And again, the folks who did show up to this Canvas of the People had a nice discussion of what’s good, what’s a challenge and what opportunities might be out there, but again I saw no plan for future solutions – as if talking about these things once is all people need to get them energized or inspired. Of course all that happens after the final report is made by the SC Arts Commission. Right!

It’s too bad someone from the Palmetto Project wasn’t there to give us all stickers to wear to show we participated – like when we vote in SC.

Of course, perhaps most people are participating by doing the online Canvas survey. Here’s the link.

I don’t think I have anything relevant to say about the meeting – most of it is a blur now anyway, but I did want to say something about the first 15 minutes of every one of the Canvas gatherings where Ken May, acting director of the SC Arts Commission talks about some questions the Arts Commission paid to be included in the South Carolina State Survey taken in 2009.

If anyone cares, you can download the final survey report at this link. I found it highly amusing, sad, contradictive, and detached from reality – at least the reality that we at Carolina Arts have been going through – and I think most artists, art businesses and arts organizations.

May starts off his speech about the survey with this good news: “Almost 67% of adult South Carolinians participated in the arts at least once during the last year.” That’s slightly down from 2007, but we all can understand that considering…

This is what participation in the arts was defined as in the survey. This statement was read to give people an idea of what participation could mean before they gave their answer:

“Participation in the arts may include a wide variety of activities including attending music concerts and live performances of dance or theatre; attending a performance or play at a child’s school; visiting museums and galleries; reading literature or attending a book club; singing in church choir or acting in community theatre; creating art yourself, such as painting, writing poetry, or playing a musical instrument; or serving as a volunteer or board member for an arts organization or arts events. During the last twelve months, approximately how many times have you participated in the arts in any way?”

Under this broad definition you could assume that going to the movies, listening to public radio, humming in the shower, doodling on a piece of paper while you’re on hold when calling your cable company or watching cheerleaders at a USC football game could be considered participating in the arts. And, with that broad definition – “Almost 67% of adult South Carolinians participated in the arts at least once during the last year.”

Oh happy day! The arts have a bright future in South Carolina.

“The average frequency of participation was 14 times during the year.”

Here’s the reality of being in the arts in South Carolina. The results of this survey show how many people in various category breakdowns had no participation in the arts – even under such a broad definition:

Total (2007) – 38.2%
Total (2009) – 33.2%

Sex
Male – 36.1%
Female – 30.6%

Age
18 – 29 – 35.9%
30 – 44 – 17.9%
45 – 64 – 33.2%
65 and over – 55.6%

Education
Less than High School – 59.7%
High School Diploma – 43.8%
Some College – 31.6%
College Degree – 16.5%

Income
Under $25,000 – 48.6%
$25,000 – $49,999 – 31.5%
$50,000 – $74,999 – 15.9%
$75,000 – and over – 16.9%

Type of Area
Urban – 30%
Suburban – 27.3%
Rural – 39.5%

Region
Upstate – 33.7%
Midlands – 36.2%
Lowcountry – 29%

These numbers are staggering to think that under such a broad definition – these folks had no participation in the arts – none! What sad lives they must live. Under this broad view I can imagine some days when I have 14 different contacts with the arts and surely every week I go way beyond that level. It also shows how ignorant people are as to how much the arts or artistic expression touches their lives – every day.

We in the arts are doing a poor job of pointing that out. Do you think kids would like to go back to the days of Pong or stay with the high level of art presented in today’s video games? I’d give more examples but I’m sure my readers are at my level or higher. I don’t need to preach to the choir.

For those in the visual arts, they might be interested in one part of the survey where respondents were asked if they had purchased original art in the last 12 months. No definition was offered as to what original art was – which was a surprise after the participation definition was offered.

If I had a nickel for everyone who claims to have an original Steve Jordan, Jim Harrison or Bob Timberlake hanging on their wall at home – I’d be a rich man. But, nonetheless we have to take these survey results for what they are worth (not much in my book). For all I know it could include framed images of dogs sitting around a table playing poker.

These are the results for those who responded “Yes” to having purchased original art in the last 12 months:

Totals (2007) – 15.1%
Totals (2009) – 13.3%

Say, all you artists and art gallery owners out there in South Carolina – do you believe that your sales are just down 2% from 2007? Of course this could be the Wal Mart factor – more people might be getting their original art there these days.

Sex
Male – 11.8%
Female – 14.8%

Race
Black – 10.4%
White – 14.3%

Age
18 – 29 – 10.6%
20 – 44 – 15.3%
45 – 64 – 15.6%
65 and over – 9.7%

Education
Less than High School – 3.1%
High School Diploma – 7.9%
Some College – 10.8%
College Degree – 24.2%

Income
Under $25,000 – 6.2%
$25,000 – $49,999 – 13.8%
$50,000 – $74,999 – 18.5%
$75,000 and over – 20.4%

Only 20% of people making over $75,000 are purchasing an original piece of art in a year. Folks, this is the group we have to work on. What are they spending their money on? Oh that’s right – these are the folks who are probably supporting the performing arts in South Carolina.

Type of Area
Urban – 14.1%
Suburban – 14.7%
Rural 12%

I guess this shows that people living in rural areas have figured out that they can drive to an art gallery or flea market in the urban areas to buy art.

Region
Upstate – 8.8%
Midlands – 14.8%
Lowcountry – 17.6%

And are we to believe that folks in the Lowcountry buy twice as much original art as folks in the Upstate? I guess this proves that availability is the answer here. The more art offered in an area – the more chances are that people will buy it.

OK – here’s the real kicker for me – showing how much people in South Carolina are interested in the arts or in taking a survey about the arts:

“The response rate for the landline component (people with a phone connected to a wire in their home) was 40.5% and for the cell phone component it was 27.5%. The overall response rate was 37.2%.”

The survey report does not state how many calls were made, it only states that 828 people completed or partially completed the survey, but the response rate was only 37.2%. I guess if you do the math to come up with a 37.2% rate – 2,200 calls would have to have been made to get that percentage. We don’t know if no one answered the phone during the survey period (one month) or refused to take the survey – making up the other 62.8% who did not participate in this survey. We don’t know if return calls were made. We don’t know a lot about surveys in general.

Some people just won’t take time out of their busy lives to do a survey. And, the cell calls could have been made to those folks who never have their cell phone anywhere but up to their ear. Who they are talking to constantly – I don’t have a clue.

So, 67% of those adults in SC who completed the survey (only 37.2%) participated in the arts – at least on the average of 14 times in a year. That’s a lot less than the first statement implies.

It’s sad – very sad – if true. And the speech about the survey was a wasted 15 minutes of the hour and 15 minutes allotted to each Canvas of the People gathering.

I can’t wait for the final report and to read the goals for the next ten years. Of course I’m being sarcastic. It’s a good thing no one is keeping score on how well we did over the last ten years, but my guess is – not very well. Like they say – those who ignore history are doomed to repeat their mistakes.

We need a better process for dealing with our challenges and opportunities, we need better leadership for this process, and we need to do something for the next year or two – or most of us won’t be here at all – much less the next ten years.

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SC Arts Commission Announces Verner Awards & McNair Award Winner

Sunday, March 28th, 2010

I still have no idea as to how the SC Arts Commission or the SC Arts Foundation has come up with money to put on the Verner Awards and their Gala – when they didn’t have any money to do them last year and there is less money out there this year. I guess it’s magic!

This isn’t exactly the press release they sent us at Carolina Arts. Since we’re located in the Lowcountry they sent us one custom made to just announce winners from the Lowcountry area. I don’t know if it’s their idea to do that or based on experience that the media only is interested in news about their own area, but I think it’s a bad idea.

Here’s the news – all the news and some:

The SC Arts Commission Board has announced the recipients of this year’s Elizabeth O’Neill Verner Governor’s Awards for the Arts.

This year’s recipients are:
Lifetime Achievement – Pat Conroy, Fripp Island
Lifetime Achievement – Jonathan Green, Daniel Island
Individual Artist – Julian Wiles, Charleston
Arts in Education – Larry Barnfield, Summerville
Government – City of Rock Hill, with special recognition for its public/private partnership with Comporium, Rock Hill
Individual – Robert (Bob) E. Howard, Greenville
Organization – Newberry Opera House, Newberry
Business – Williams & Fudge, Inc., Rock Hill

They will receive their awards during a Statehouse ceremony on May 6, 2010, and will be honored again that evening during the SC Arts Gala.

You can find out more about the awards and the recipients in a press release found on the Arts Commission’s website at this link.

Extra! Extra! We just received this info from the Arts Commission.Well, it’s a little old now, but new to most of you.

The SC Arts Foundation is recognizing former SC Governor Richard W. Riley’s leadership and dedication to the arts and arts education in SC by presenting him with the McNair Award at the South Carolina Arts Gala May 6 at the Columbia Museum of Art. You can find the complete press release at this link (www.southcarolinaarts.com/press/031810.shtml).

Established in 2007, the McNair Award is named for the late Governor Robert E. McNair, who signed legislation to create the Arts Commission in 1967 to “ensure that the arts continue to grow and play an ever more significant part in the welfare and educational experiences of our citizens.”

Funny thing, I can’t find any reference to this award being established (before this press release made in 2010) on the Arts Commission’s website, in any of their history descriptions, in searches on the Internet and their website using the name of the award – with the Arts Commission or Arts Foundation. You would think that establishing an award in McNair’s honor would have been mentioned sometime, somewhere, in the public, but I can’t find it – not even on Wikipedia. All I could find is that the SC Arts Foundation honored Gov. McNair at the Verner Awards in May 2008, but there is no mention of anyone establishing an award in his name that would later be given to other deserving individuals. Have you ever seen a call for nominations? I haven’t. So I guess this is just another secret of the Arts Foundation, perhaps mentioned only at the 2008 awards party. They seem to have lots of them – like where their money comes from.

I don’t know why public non-profits get to keep so many secrets, but they do. Try telling the IRS that you don’t want to tell them where you got your money.

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Attending the SC Arts Commission’s Canvas of the People in Bluffton, SC

Saturday, March 13th, 2010

Well, on a day the weatherman said would rain all day – especially in the Bluffton, SC, area, I headed out on a three hour drive there – for a meeting which would only last an hour and 15 minutes. Unlike the Arts Commission staff which would be staying in a hotel over night, I had to drive back home – March 12 is deadline day for our April issue of Carolina Arts. But, I’m sure they had other business to do in the area the next day to justify the hotel stay. And, I was lucky the rain had stopped for my return trip home. Finishing that April issue delayed this posting.

OK, to end the suspense – in answer to the question you’re all wondering. There were 6 Arts Commission staff members and about 16-18 other people, but oh, what a group of folks who just happen to show up in Bluffton.

This crowd had less people than showed up in Columbia, SC, but, that’s to be expected. Some seemed to want to blame the turnout on the rain, but there are no rain days in the arts. Events take place all the time when it is raining and people go to them anyway – if they really want to. Some use rain as an excuse, but rain shouldn’t of been an excuse to not attend such an important meeting. But, I don’t want to diminish the rain – at times it was a real downpour.

About a week before this meeting, the Arts Council of Beaufort County held an Emergency Arts Summit in Beaufort, SC, and about 75 people turned out for that. Somehow they were able to get people to turn out for that meeting.

The group that showed up for this Canvas meeting wasn’t what I would call a normal one. Besides an art collector and an individual artist – the rest of the group were administrators or public officials.

In fact, the Director and Development Director of the Arts Council of Beaufort County were there. They said they were also  artists, which made three people who actually create art. You have to wonder why so few artists showed up.

To my surprise, Suzette M. Surkamer, former Executive Director of the SC Arts Commission and Betty Plumb, director of the SC Arts Alliance from Rock Hill, SC, were also there. What were they doing there? But, I soon learned that a meeting of the South Carolina Association of NonProfit Organizations (SCANPO) just happened to be taking place on Hilton Head March 10 & 11. Two folks were there from the Arts Center of Coastal Carolina on Hilton Head Island, someone from the local School District, and someone from the local Chamber of Commerce. There were a few folks from Jasper County and the others – the introductions went so fast I didn’t get them all. And, I’m sure I was a surprise guest to some, but Bluffton and Hilton Head Island are in the area of coverage of Carolina Arts and I’ve spent many a day in those areas delivering papers.

So, it was no surprise that the answers given to the three questions posed for the Canvas were pretty good coming from seasoned veterans. A few times it sounded like a lovefest. But, in the end they were just words on paper.

These folks won’t be getting together to study or suggest solutions to problems pointed out. They won’t even have a hand in how these words will be incorporated into the final report – which is just more words on paper. And, like the five times before this Canvas of the People (which is #6), no group of people will be gathered together to see how well the goals of the previous Canvas were or were not accomplished.

But, the real surprise of the evening came when I heard Jeanette Guinn, Program Director for Long Range Planning and Performing Arts County Coordinator for Berkeley, Charleston, and Dorchester Counties at the Arts Commission (she was also leading the discussion) say that the Canvas wasn’t to make a plan for them – it was for SC’s art community – shifting the responsibility from them to us.

I copied Guinn’s title description from the Arts Commission’s website – it’s too bad there are no visual or literary arts in the greater Charleston area that need coordinating. Most of the other County Coordinators don’t have such a specific description, but it’s their site – so it must have some meaning.

So aren’t we lucky that the Arts Commission is going to all this time and expense to help us organize ourselves – thinking about what works, what our biggest challenges are and what opportunities are out there – as if… as if we don’t think about those things every day – especially in these times.

Just before the end of our time they asked us to suggest what was a plus or a minus – as far as the meeting goes so they can make adjustments for the next meeting. My first suggestion was that the 15 minute talk given by Ken May, the acting Executive Director of the SC Arts Commission, about the results of a survey taken about the arts in SC could have been a handout saving us all that time for further discussion. After all, we only had one hour and 15 minutes and that wasn’t bad for a group this small, but what’s going to happen when it’s a group of 50 or 100 people? That might be wishful thinking, but if it happens, a lot of people are not going to get a chance to talk and there won’t be any time for discussion or follow-ups on comments.

Other comments were about a lack of snacks or coffee and donuts, some thought an hour was just right. I guess it was for busy administrators. Others gave the Arts Commission staff high marks for running the meeting. My list would be too long for this entry and can be found in previous postings about the Canvas of the People process. But I will suggest one thing to all who are planning on attending one of these gatherings. Write your answers to the three questions asked (given here) ahead of time in order to save time and not be distracted by others’ comments. You can always offer reactions on the fly to other comments, but you’ll be glad you wrote yours down ahead of time.

We were reminded that we will probably think of something important on the way home that wasn’t said and that we can always send those comments along to the Arts Commission by taking their survey found on their website.

But why add more words to paper? Where is the plan for action? It’s not like a taskforce is going to be formed to work on the goals which are distilled after combining the words from seven different gatherings. At least it never happened before that I know of and I haven’t gotten the indication that it’s going to happen this time.

The bottom line is – I think you should still go to these gatherings and tell them what you think about what’s going right and what your challenges are. Guinn said she’s not there to control your comments – just to direct them. Hold her to that statement and speak your mind. Don’t expect any administrators who depend on money from the Arts Commission to step outside the box. They’re still hoping it’s all not crashing down around them and the money flow will return.

But I have to wonder – where were all the artists from that area around Bluffton and where were the Board members of the Arts Commission? Where were they and why don’t they want to know what the community has to say, or are they too used to having that information spoon-fed to them by the staff members?

Here’s the remainder of the schedule:
Tuesday, March 16 – Governor’s School for the Arts, Greenville
Monday, March 22 – Black Creek Arts Center, Hartsville
Thursday, March 25 – Aiken Center for the Arts, Aiken
Monday, March 29 – North Charleston City Hall, North Charleston
Thursday, April 8 – Chapman Cultural Center, Spartanburg
For more information about exact locations visit this link (www.SouthCarolinaArts.com/canvas2010).

Here’s a link to my other postings on the Canvas of the People process.

Someone asked how this meeting was promoted and a chorus of voices said – very well, but I don’t agree. This is my fifth posting on these events since the press release first came on Feb. 10, 2010, just 12 days before the first gathering. I doubt any other publication or media outlet has given the Canvas more attention than I have and I doubt the Arts Commission has done any follow-up press release to upcoming areas since the first press release. That’s no way to beat the bushes for people to attend these meetings.

I bet if the SC Legislature was thinking about cutting the SC Arts Commission out of the State’s budget, they would beat all the bushes they could find.

Maybe I’ll see you at one of the next meetings – who knows who is going to show up? I know I was surprised at who was at this meeting. But you won’t know if you don’t show up.

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Questions Asked by SC Arts Commission at Canvas of the People Events

Thursday, March 11th, 2010

The next Canvas of the People events will take place in Bluffton, SC, at the Technical College of the Lowcountry on March 11, 2010 (that’s today) and then at the Governor’s School for the Arts in Greenville, SC, on March 16, 2010. Each runs from 6:45 to 8pm. Registration is not required.

Here’s the schedule:
Thursday, March 11 – Technical College of the Lowcountry, Beaufort area (Bluffton, SC)
Tuesday, March 16 – Governor’s School for the Arts, Greenville
Monday, March 22 – Black Creek Arts Center, Hartsville
Thursday, March 25 – Aiken Center for the Arts, Aiken
Monday, March 29 – North Charleston City Hall, North Charleston
Thursday, April 8 – Chapman Cultural Center, Spartanburg
For more information about exact locations visit this link (www.SouthCarolinaArts.com/canvas2010).

We found the questions you’ll be asked if you attend one of the Canvas of the People events on the Arts Commission’s website. You’ll only have an hour and 15 minutes so it will help if you know the questions ahead of time and have your answers written down. That will leave some time to tell the Arts Commission how stupid this process is. If that’s what you think. You might think you’re lucky that they even want to hear what you have to say.

Here are the questions and a few answers – off the top of my head.

Q1. What is one thing that is working in the arts, either in your community, the state or elsewhere?

A1. In North Carolina the NC Arts Council (equal to the SC Arts Commission) runs their program based on a Grassroots outlook – giving funding to the communities to use the way they feel best fits their needs. Not by everyone trying to fit their square pegs into the Arts Commission’s round holes.

Q2. What is one of the biggest challenges facing the arts where you live?

A2. Well, everyone in the arts is not a non-profit and those who are for-profit are invisible to the Arts Commission. They only want to assist groups that lose money and stay dependent on handouts and the Arts Commission. Let for-profits compete for funding too. Let the best ideas that serve the arts community get the funding – not just non-profits in need.

Q3. What is a great opportunity for the arts in our state?

A3. Since the state of South Carolina is in such a financial hole they could disband the Arts Commission and take all the money that doesn’t go toward the Commission’s overhead (huge staff and facility) and give it directly to each county on a per-capita basis. The overhead money could go toward keeping people on the job in safety, health and education positions.

I’m not saying that these are my answers. They just came off the top of a long list developed over the years. And, that’s one of the problems with this Canvas process – there are only three questions offered and you get only one answer. It’s like they don’t want to admit to any other problems or suggested solutions.

You want to know what was said in Columbia, SC – the first Canvas event where 20 people showed up. Click this link.

You say you can’t attend any of the planned gatherings – take this survey on the Arts Commission’s site. You can leave your written comments to be part of the official record. Of course – unlike a public meeting – if you do the survey, there is no way to guard against lost comments.

Funny, this survey – the ability to leave comments without attending the gathering wasn’t mentioned in the initial press release about the 2010 Canvas of the People process. You can always count on finding something extra on the Arts Commission’s website if you just dig deep enough – something not mentioned at first.

For instance I thought I was receiving all press releases from the Arts Commission – not so. I found notice of another Board meeting scheduled for March 10, 2010, 11am to 2pm, in Columbia, SC, at the Arts Commission’s headquarters dated March 1, 2010. Another ten day notice to such an important event.

They say the public is welcome to come to these board meeting, but the public has to know about them first. They shouldn’t rely on me to spread the word.

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Arts Council of Beaufort County in Beaufort, SC, Offers ARTsBiz Sessions

Friday, March 5th, 2010

We received this press release at Carolina Arts with a personal request in the form of – “just sending more food for thought for your blog!”. I think that might be a shot at me for pointing out that the Arts Council of Beaufort County was calling for supporters to help make them a Top 25 Art Destination in a magazine’s poll.

We don’t usually include info about classes or workshops in our paper or electronic media, but since I will have posted one about one in Greensboro, NC, by the time this comes up and the “fairness factor” kicks in, I’m including this, but don’t send any others. You hear that folks – don’t send us info about classes and workshops – we’re not including them. Why is that? There are too many – several every day – many never take place, and I think they are something these groups should promote in paid advertising.

By the way – all the dates mentioned are for 2010. That’s a hint to all you press release writers. This info is going to be in cyberspace for some time and there is nothing more disappointing than finding something good on the internet and later finding out the info is several years old. The year is just as important as the month and day in a date.

Here’s their info:

Social Media & Networking Online: How to blog, facebook, tweet, flickr, etsy, and why.

Tuesday, April 6th, 1-3pm @ ARTworks, with Ian Leslie, digital sherpa and director of marketing for the Lowcountry Economic Network, and Jessica Lebos, pro blogger and culture yenta. This $10 ARTsbiz session is an in-person discussion of the keywords, tags, tips, techniques and precautions that artists need to know to establish themselves online and populate the digital art scene representing Beaufort County.

Disaster Preparedness: Artists, what’s your continuity plan?

Monday, April 12, 1-3pm, @ ARTworks with Todd Ferguson, director of the Beaufort County Emergency Management Division, Kim Keats, SC Craft Fellow and phoenix risen from the ashes, and Grace Cordial, evacuator extraordinaire and director of the Beaufort District Collection for the Beaufort County Library. This $10 ARTsbiz session will provide information to artists about hurricanes, fault lines, local and national resources such as the Craft Emergency Emergency Relief Fund, while focusing on the measures most critical to resilient arts careers.

Shopping Locally & Artfully: the many unexpected benefits of art-collection for Beaufort County’s creative class.

Tuesday, April 27th, 1-3pm @ ARTworks with Martha Ahrens, curator, exhibit designer, collector, and the recipient of the arts council’s 2009 Town of Hilton Head Mayor’s Award for the Arts. This $10 ARTsbiz session is for artists and collectors of all levels and artforms: How to start and build a collection in the Lowcountry; Why artists should collect too; The history of artists bartering with each other, and which artists now are interested in a TBA barter event in Beaufort County.

ARTworks is the home of the Arts Council of Beaufort County, in Beaufort Town Center, Beaufort. For further info call Lisa Annelouise Rentz at 843/379-2787 or visit (www.beaufortcountyarts.com).

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