Monday, December 31, 2007

Writers wanted

Posted by John Stoehr on Mon, Dec 31, 2007 at 2:25 PM

If you're reading this blog, you know I write a lot. Too much, some might say.

So I'm sending this call out to potential writers.

I'm looking for journalists primarily but also critics with demonstrable expertise in one or more of the following areas:

  • architecture
  • historical preservation
  • gaming history, trends, culture
  • design
  • dance, ballet, modern, contemporary, country line-dancing
  • cultural history
  • comic books, graphic novels
  • contemporary classical music
  • visual art
  • art history
  • poetry, spoken word
  • literary studies
  • movies, cinema history and tradition
  • internet technology, new media
  • television
  • theater
  • fashion
  • pop art, graffiti, etc.
  • My immediate need is securing a stable of critics (particularly in theater and visual art), but I'm also looking for people who can write long-form news, profiles, features, analysis and commentary about arts and culture. In short, I'd like to build relationship with cultural and literary journalists in the city and region.

    I'm interested in raising questions about the arts in Charleston and beyond, analyzing controversies, researching an idea or point of view, and reporting what you find to a reader who cares. Examples of this kind of journalism can be found easily via links at Altweeklies, ArtsJournal, BookForum, and Arts & Letters Daily.

    Areas of journalistic interest include:

  • urban planning
  • business of the arts
  • arts and politics
  • new media
  • arts and philosophy
  • psychology and the arts
  • arts and medicine
  • the culture wars
  • art and religion
  • globalization
  • arts education
  • creative workforce
  • arts and race, class, social status
  • consciousness and creativity
  • arts and sports
  • arts and technology
  • There's more, much more. This is only a list and I'm open to talking about your ideas. You never know what will catch my attention. However, it's safe to say I won't be interested in stories about the high school marching band. That is, unless the band is part of a larger framework in a story about arts education, arts and racial issues, etc. Please get in touch via email — stoehr [at] charlestoncitypaper [dot] com.

    Thanks and have a great New Year. —J.S.

    The 2008 Spoleto Festival

    Posted by John Stoehr on Mon, Dec 31, 2007 at 12:41 PM

    From the APJ.S.|

    Spoleto 2008 rechristens old hall with reworked opera "Amistad"

    December 30, 2007

    COLUMBIA, South Carolina: An old hall will be revived for next year's Spoleto Festival USA and will host a reworked version of the 1997 opera "Amistad" about a slave revolt.

    Memminger Auditorium, built in the 1930s as a reproduction of a Colonial-era theater, has gotten a $6 million update. The venue also will be home to the festival's popular chamber music series usually held at the Dock Street Theatre, which is undergoing its own $15 million renovation.

    "We were trying to find something to reopen the Memminger that was off the beaten track and with a strong connection to Charleston," said Emmanuel Villaume, the festival's director of opera and orchestral music.

    "Amistad" is the story of captives who take over the Spanish ship bringing them from Africa to be slaves. The ship was captured by the U.S. off New York's Long Island and several groups laid claim to the slaves, who were later freed by the U.S. Supreme Court and returned to Africa.

    "We wanted an opera in it that would say to the neighborhood, which is one of the few mixed (race) neighborhoods downtown, 'This is a theater for everyone,'" said festival director Nigel Redden.

    "Amistad," written by Anthony Davis, was produced by the Chicago Lyric Opera in late 1997, but it did not do well.

    "I felt this was a piece that clearly meant a lot to (Davis), but it was just too big for its own sake," Redden said. "In some ways, it was a smaller opera hiding in an elephant suit."

    The Spoleto production will be completely new and directed by Sam Helfrich.

    "I'm scaling it down to make it leaner and stronger," Davis said. "I'm very excited about this, and Charleston seems the obvious place to do it, with its connection to the slave trade."

    The festival runs from May 23 to June 8 and will offer 45 productions and 140 performances, including a multimedia piece "Homeland" by musician, composer and performer Laurie Anderson, who is known for using high tech equipment and even creating new musical instruments.

    "Homeland" premiered in New York earlier this year and it has been touring worldwide ever since.

    There will be several American premieres including Chinese director Chen Shi-Zeng's "Monkey: Journey to the West."

    Spoleto's other opera for the 2008 festival will be "La Cenerentola," Rossini's comic telling of the Cinderella story. It was one of the most popular operas of its time. "It's a true entertainment event," Villaume said. "It's one of (Rossini's) best pieces musically."

    Because of the renovations to Dock Street, there will be an outdoor theater performance for the first time in years. "Burial at Thebes" is a version of the Greek tragedy "Antigone," written in 442 B.C. by Sophocles. The recent translation by Irish poet Seamus Heaney is being performed by the Nottingham Playhouse Theatre under the live oaks at the College of Charleston.

    In dance, the Ballet du Grand Theatre de Geneve makes its first appearance at the festival. The Swiss company will be joined by the Boston Ballet and Shantala Shivalingappa, who will do a solo dance accompanied by a classical Indian music ensemble.

    "These are companies that have performed all over the world," said Nunally Kersh, festival producer, "but haven't had much exposure here."

    Are economic impact studies good for the arts?

    Posted by John Stoehr on Mon, Dec 31, 2007 at 11:38 AM

    Here's a version of a June report I wrote about the specious nature of "economic impact" studies for a daily newspaper in Georgia. I hope you find it edifying. I wrote it when I was beat reporter covering arts and culture — everything from puff pieces to annual fiscal reports to the intersection between arts and medicine.

    The article came after the Americans for the Arts released its survey, finding that Savannah saw an arts impact of nearly $50 million in 2005, a huge, and dubious, number for a metro area of over 300,000.

    In this article, I put findings by American for the Arts side-by-side with a study by the RAND Corporation that found "noteworthy weaknesses" in studies like the one applied to Savannah (and for that matter, Charleston).

    The RAND study makes a fairly convincing case that arts organizations stop emphasizing art's quantitative aspects — i.e., that the arts are good for business — and start stressing art's qualitative aspects — i.e., that art is inherently good, that it is important to literate, civilized communities, and that it promotes quality of life.

    What I found most intriguing about the RAND study was its creation of a dichotomy: supply-side thinking and demand-side thinking on the part of arts organizations.

    In other words, instead of spending oodles of money creating free concerts, performances, etc. (what economists would call "supply"), why not spend that same money encouraging people to value the arts vis-a-vis arts education and outreach (that is, "demand")?

    Such thinking would go a long way toward achieving long-range, not short-term, goals.

    On a more philosophical note, this is the similar dilemma that early scientists faced when they sought evidence of God's divine providence in their studies of the earth, human anatomy and outer space. The more they looked to the material world, the more reason they found to doubt their faith. By Darwin's time, faith has become something you couldn't prove, because the evidence keeping pointing to the contrary.

    At the same time, even though faith couldn't be proved, it also couldn't be disproved. For some (though perhaps not many), having faith in a power larger than oneself became something good for its own sake.

    Same with art. It's good for us. We don't have to prove. We just have to make a successful case for it.

    Or as one source for my article, the president of an arts organization and lawyer at a high-powered law firm, put it: "You can always back up requests for funding with statistics. The experience of the arts is very subjective. Sometimes you just have to say that this is the right thing to do." —J.S. |

    A Washington-based advocacy group's survey reports that Savannah realized more than $46.6 million in arts- and culture-related spending in 2005.

    Arts groups, according to the study, spent more than $21.8 million. Audiences here spent more than $24.7 million.

    Americans for the Arts issued "Arts & Economic Prosperity III" Wednesday, the third in a series of detailed reports tracking the economic impact of nonprofit arts and culture organizations in communities across the nation.

    The report includes data from arts groups in Savannah, such as theater companies, dance troupes, arts festivals and musical ensembles. It is the first attempt in over a decade to provide evidence of what city officials, residents, patrons and consumers materially gain from their investment in arts and cultural organizations.

    Arts organizations, the study suggests, created more than 1,600 full-time jobs or their equivalent. More than $2.8 million in local tax revenue was generated.

    Nationally, more than $166 billion in economic activity was recorded during the same period, including nearly $30 billion in federal, state and local tax revenue.

    Researchers from the Georgia Institute of Technology examined data from 156 communities - 116 cities and counties, 35 multi-county regions and five states - to measure industry spending. The report asserts that the arts are a cornerstone of tourism.

    "When a community attracts cultural tourists, it harnesses significant economic rewards," the report states.

    All this sounds good to Savannah city officials who allocate money every year to various arts organizations, especially those in the "cultural tourism" category of public funding. For 2007, Savannah City Council provided more than $978,000 for arts groups, including $150,000 for the Savannah Music Festival and $50,000 for the Savannah Film Festival.

    Reframing the debate

    Although such studies are good for advocates and politicians, they don't facilitate good research, according to a 2005 report by the Rand Corporation called "Gifts of the Muse: Reframing the Debate about the Benefits of the Arts."

    Among dozens of surveys reported in recent years that attempt to measure the economic impact of the arts, most of those surveys suffer from "noteworthy weaknesses" and "holes in the evidence" because of the data used, the Rand report states.

    Such studies claim benefits that are inherently difficult to measure. They assume money generated by the arts is a net addition to the local economy, when it's more likely to be a replacement for other kinds of spending.

    Moreover, by focusing on the economics of the arts, they do little to help the long-term goals of arts groups, namely, to create a public that values the arts.

    The Rand report recommends that arts advocates stop emphasizing the quantitative aspects of the arts, such as economic rewards, and instead focus on individual experiences, including enlightenment, emotional reflection and personal well-being.

    Rand researchers made the case for less supply-side thinking - putting on shows and exhibits, for example - and more demand-side thinking that would lead to renewed efforts in public school and community arts programs to cultivate new audiences.

    What's the real impact?

    To see evidence of the arts' economic impact, said Patricia Miller, president of the Tybee Island Fine Arts Commission, people need to simply open their eyes. Many cities have revitalized their downtown neighborhoods because of the arts.

    "I'm definitely on the side of the arts being an economic engine," Miller said, citing Douglasville, Statesboro, Brunswick and Savannah as success stories.

    Ken Carter, executive director of the Lucas Theatre and a Georgia Council for the Arts panelist, said economic impact studies do have an upside, but they also have a downside: replacing the inherent and traditional value of the arts with a notion that cultural activity is merely good for business.

    "These studies reinforce the notion that the value of the arts is economic, when it should be seen as the ability to change lives and raise the level of community engagement," he said. "That is the primary attribute of the arts."

    Shonah P. Jefferson, chairwoman of the Friends of African-American Arts, a group affiliated with the Telfair Museum of Art, said that as a lobbyist, she would use economic impact studies to make the case for arts funding. But ultimately, she said, the issue is qualitative, not quantitative.

    "You can always back up requests for funding with statistics," Jefferson said. "The experience of the arts is very subjective. Sometimes you just have to say that this is the right thing to do."

    The results of the study, as they apply to Savannah, are scheduled to be presented July 19 to the Savannah City Council by a representative of Americans for the Arts.

    Sunday, December 30, 2007

    Your Daily Vid: Giant Puppet in the Park

    Posted by John Stoehr on Sun, Dec 30, 2007 at 12:18 PM

    elephant_girl.jpg

    Royal de Luxe is a European marionette/street theater company that creates huge — I mean, huge — puppets. Here's a clip featuring a "little" girl wandering off to stroll in a park in London after she gets a shower from the Sultan's Elephant (pictured above). That's a full-grown man, by the way, sitting atop the elephant's head. For more on Royal de Luxe, click here. — J.S.

    Saturday, December 29, 2007

    Department of Duh: Um, people like quality journalism

    Posted by John Stoehr on Sat, Dec 29, 2007 at 10:16 AM

    From last Tuesday's Sacramento Bee —J.S.

    . . . . .

    KXJZ's surge of popularity proves that quality broadcast journalism, featuring in-depth reporting that eschews the sensational for the analytical, can draw big numbers.

    Not to gloat or anything, but Eytcheson and staff believe these are, indeed, heady days to be in public radio.

    While many other news organizations are cutting back on personnel and budgets due to stagnant advertising, KXJZ is in the process of expanding its morning team with a news anchor to complement local "Morning Edition" host Donna Apidone. The station also is hiring a full-time health reporter, thanks to a grant from the nonprofit California Heathcare Foundation (which has no editorial input).

    Yes, KXJZ will weigh in on the news of the day, especially if it involves state government, but its long-view and long-form approach has proved popular with listeners and peers in journalism. Even with a rigidly defined news hole – a maximum of 10 minutes an hour is carved out for local news – the depth of the reports is impressive. (Of course, the station also has its weekday, hourlong public affairs show, "Insight," with Jeffrey Callison.)

    You won't hear KXJZ reporters, for example, weighing in breathlessly from a stabbing at a Natomas minimart or phoning in a 20-second live report from an Elk Grove house fire. Those are ephemeral events. Rather, KXJZ will take an issue in the news and cover all sides in news reports and features often lasting as long as four minutes, unheard of on commercial news stations.

    Last year's four-part series "All About Bonds," regarding state bond measures (which sounds as if it would test positive for Sominex), explained the legislative process in a way that made it entertaining and informative. And it showed, as reporters Marianne Russ (another KFBK exile) and O'Mara won second place in the national Public Radio News Directors Inc. awards for best series. They were beaten out by KUOW in Seattle, a huge NPR station with significantly more resources. In addition, "Dina's Diary," an account by cancer survivor Dina Howard, won first place in the documentary category for producer Paul Conley.

    Full story . . .

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