GIA News's Blog

Posted on January 31, 2011 by GIA News

(1-31-2011) The Margaret A. Cargill Foundation (first announced on this blog in April of last year) is slated to have assets exceeding $4 billion as Cargill's shares in the Cargill agribusiness fortune are liquidated and transferred over the next four-five years. The Foundation will prioritize Native American culture, folk art, environmental disaster relief, and securing safe drinking water for developing nations. The distribution of assets among these funding areas remains to be determined.

Posted on January 29, 2011 by GIA News

(1-29-2011) The Center for Social Media at American University has published a new guide for fair use in poetry, available online for free.

Posted on January 29, 2011 by GIA News

(1-29-2011) NEA chairman Rocco Landesman in remarks about the state of theater yesterday noted, “You can either increase demand or decrease supply,” he said. “Demand is not going to increase, so it is time to think about decreasing supply.”

Needless to say, this has stirred some comment, see following:

Posted on January 27, 2011 by GIA News

(1-27-2011) Announced today: Modern Art Notes's second annual Super Bowl art loan wager. The Milwaukee Art Museum (MAM) will bet a Caillebotte on the Green Bay Packers and the Carnegie Museum of Art (CMOA) is backing the Pittsburgh Steelers's win with a Renoir.

Posted on January 27, 2011 by GIA News

(1-27-2011) Matthew Westwood for The Australian:

We are all creative industries now, according to the authors of a new Australia Council report, who would put symphony orchestras and video gamemakers in the same cultural paddock. The discussion paper "Arts and Creative Industries" argues there is no longer a division between the subsidized, popular and commercial arts, and government policy should be shaped accordingly.

Posted on January 27, 2011 by GIA News

(1-26-2011) From Huffington Post, Sarah Smarsh, assistant professor of English at Washburn University in Topeka, Kansas writes about the proposed ellimination of the Kansas Arts Commission:

Newly elected governor Sam Brownback plans to issue executive orders eliminating the Kansas Arts Commission... If Brownback is successful in abolishing this state agency, Kansas would be the only state in the nation—including the territories of Guam, Puerto Rico and the Virgin Islands—without a state-funded arts commission.
Posted on January 26, 2011 by GIA News

(1-26-2011) Today, Metlife Foundation and the National Guild for Community Arts Education announced 12 grants totaling more than $80,000 to National Guild member organizations providing arts programs to older adults. The grants were made through the Creative Aging Program, which was initiated in 2009 by Metlife Foundation and the National Guild in response to the rapid population growth of Americans aged 60+, as well as research demonstrating the health benefits of participatory arts programs for older adults.

Posted on January 22, 2011 by GIA News

(1-21-2011) Here's a grassroots giving model amazing in its simplicity.

Posted on January 20, 2011 by GIA News

(1-20-2011) The Kresge Foundation is webcasting an online, pre-proposal information session to assist organizations interested in applying for the Arts and Culture Program’s Facility Investments and Building Reserves Initiative, a program designed to strengthen the long-term financial health of arts and cultural organizations.

Posted on January 20, 2011 by GIA News

(1-20-2011) The Republican Study Committee, a group of House Republicans chaired by Ohio Representative Jim Jordan, have produced a proposal for $2.5 trillion in spending cuts over the course of a decade. The proposal includes eliminating the National Endowment for the Arts, the National Endowment for the Humanities, and the federal subsidy for the Corporation for Public Broadcasting.