GIA Blog

Posted on April 29, 2011 by Abigail

Chris Langston, program director at the John A. Hartford Foundation, participated in the April 6th Thought Leader Forum on Arts and Aging, which was co-sponsored by GIA, Grantmakers in Aging, and the National Center for Creative Aging. He reflects on the days proceedings on the Hartford Foundation blog, outlining several potential strategies for a collaboration between arts, aging, and health funders.

Posted on April 28, 2011 by Steve

A new Research Note from the National Endowment for the Arts, Time and Money: Using Federal Data to Measure the Value of Performing Arts Activities, analyzes the value of arts and culture through concrete monetary measures, through ‘revealed preferences’ as seen through consumer spending, and through time use, which is a ‘quality of life’ measure.

Posted on April 27, 2011 by Abigail

I have Tyler Green's daily 3rd of May (titled after Goya's painting of the same name) post supplied to my iGoogle home page, also daily. Green's description of his undertaking follows below. My two cents: By pairing current events (or opinions or quips) with art, the gravity of the moment and the resonance of the artwork, they both grow.

Posted on April 26, 2011 by Steve

Rick Moyers, from The Chronicle of Philanthropy:

The general aversion of many boards to talking about finances in any detail creates an initial roadblock to conversations about reserves. And the lack of a widely understood and commonly used definition of operating reserves doesn’t help. It’s hard to talk about something if you don’t know what it is.

Posted on April 26, 2011 by Abigail

In an article for boston.com, Michael Rezendes outlines Boston's updated tax-related-non-taxing of the city's larger education, health, and cultural nonprofits. He explains:

Posted on April 25, 2011 by Tommer

On Tuesday, the university plans to announce that Joichi Ito, known as Joi, will become the fourth director of the M.I.T. Media Laboratory, which was originally founded by the architect Nicholas Negroponte in 1985 and has since become recognized for its willingness to take risks in developing technologies that are at the edge of the computing frontier.

Posted on April 25, 2011 by Tommer

"First, whenever I hear that an arts organization has had recurring deficits (often leading to the accumulation of excessively high debt), my first question is: does this organization’s trustees know how to read an audited financial statement and a cash flow statement? This is a sincere question."

Posted on April 22, 2011 by Abigail

Last fall, I blogged about the launch of Facebook co-founder Chris Hughes' nonprofit social networking site, Jumo. Since then, over 15,000 nonprofits and NGOs have created profiles on the Facebook-intertwined Beta site. Kerry A. Dolan interviewed Hughes and reported yesterday on the website's progress for Forbes:

Posted on April 22, 2011 by Steve

A variety of events from April's Arts Advocacy Day are now available from Americans for the Arts and Ovation TV, including Kevin Spacey's Nancy Hanks Lecture, but also including Spacey, Alec Baldwin and Hill Harper speaking to the advocates for Congressional Arts Kick-Off on Capitol Hill and a flash mob performance of “America the Beautiful.”

See it all here.

Posted on April 21, 2011 by Steve

On April 27 - 29 in Chicago, more than 50 Mayors along with design and development experts will convene at the Chicago Hilton for a National Summit on City Design to identify challenges, opportunities and funding sources for cities that work well. Participants will examine the power of arts and design to transform cities while celebrating the Mayors Institute of City Design (MICD) – a collaboration of the National Endowment of the Arts (NEA), The U.S. Conference of Mayors (USCM), and the American Architectural Foundation (AAF) – and honoring the design legacy of former Chicago Mayor Richard Daley.