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Introducing This Year’s Luncheon Plenary
plenary folks
GIA is excited to share that on Tuesday, October 23, our 2018 Conference features Boots Riley and W. Kamau Bell in conversation, with a special introduction by Favianna Rodriguez, in its luncheon plenary.
  • Favianna Rodriguez is a transnational interdisciplinary artist and cultural organizer on a mission to create profound social change in the world.
  • Boots Riley is a provocative and prolific poet, rapper, songwriter, producer, screenwriter, director, community organizer, and public speaker.
  • W. Kamau Bell is a sociopolitical comedian and the host of the Emmy Award winning CNN docu-series United Shades of America with W. Kamau Bell.
Register for the 2018 GIA Conference to experience rich conversations like the ones this plenary will showcase. For more information on the conference speakers, visit us here.
Special Hotel Conference Rate
Guest rooms at the Oakland Marriott City Center at the conference rate are selling out and based on availability until Wednesday, September 26. There may be rooms or suites available at other rates at the discretion of the hotel. For more information about the conference hotel and other nearby hotels, click here.
“Round Two: Art and accessibility without assumptions” webinar
In mainstream culture, there are communities and identity groups who are overlooked, devalued, and passively dismissed. As we move towards a more inclusive and equitable culture, it is critical that we evaluate our understanding of how to be more welcoming, inclusive, and equitable. Last year we talked about the history of accessibility in the United States, types of accessibility, and the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA). This year we brought back Anne Mulgrave, manager of Grants and Accessibility, Greater Pittsburgh Arts Council, and Leah Krauss, senior program officer for Dance and Special Projects, Mertz Gilmore Foundation, and Krauss’ special guest, Alice Sheppard, choreographer and dancer who is disabled. They will provide an overview of welcoming people with disabilities and funding disability arts projects, and they will discuss Sheppard’s piece DESCENT which she says “obliterates assumptions of what dance, beauty, and disability can be…”

“Round Two: Art and accessibility without assumptions” will be held Thursday, September 27, at 2:00pm EDT / 11:00am PDT. Details and registration available here.
Piper Charitable Trust
News from the Field
A Foundation Sheds Light on Arts as Political Activism in its Annual Report
In its 2017 annual report, the George Gund Foundation focuses on "arts as political activism," making the case for how the presence of artists as activists is more prominent than ever…
A Look at Artists who Hold Leadership Roles in their Cities
With the midterm elections two months away and as New York rolled out its primary election on Thursday, September 13, we showcase a story series by ArtPlace that points out to artists who hold leadership roles in their cities…
Reading Poetry Grows Substantially: The NEA reports in survey of participation in the arts
Gains in arts attendance totals, rates, and demographic groups plus sizeable growth in poetry-reading are part of the latest survey findings from the National Endowment for the Arts. The U.S. Trends in Arts Attendance and Literary Reading: 2002-2017 is a first look at results from the 2017 Survey of Public Participation in the Arts, a partnership of the NEA and the U.S. Census Bureau…
With Over $266 Million in Funding, the Native American Agriculture Fund Emerges
The largest philanthropic organization serving American Indians, the Native American Agriculture Fund, was recently established from a landmark 2010 civil rights settlement in which the U.S. government agreed to pay for almost 20 years of official discrimination, reported The Washington Post

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