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    NC Music Factory is all about music. Like most, if not all, art forms, music is best experienced live. In addition to the different music venues, there are also a variety of bars, offices, music studios and restaurants, including the exclusive hotspot “Butter." There is even a film company, Reel...
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    Jennifer Thomas, Akron program director This afternoon, Jeannie Wilson and her friends and neighbors in Akron’s Cascade Village will gather to celebrate their new neighborhood. New is a relative term. For generations, the neighborhood was a dilapidated housing project considered one of the most troubled areas in the city. Its rebirth began in 2006, when 250 new homes, complete with front porches and tree-lined streets, were built on the site. The neighborhood was physically transformed. But what about the residents? The Community Builders, which has 50 years of experience in affordable housing, knew that the key to the neighborhood’s success was the people who lived there, not just the bricks and mortar. The staff at Cascade Village started to invite residents to coffee hours, knitting circles and salsa classes - as a way to build the personal relationships and networks that strengthen communities. Today, Knight Foundation is enhancing this resident-led effort, with $1.7 million in support to help residents come together to build a community as welcoming and engaging as its new homes. The  program will provide career and financial coaching, improve school and youth programming and bring people together so that neighbors can help each other solve problems. The key here: it’s resident-led. Neighbors will rely on each other come up with their own solutions to problems. They aren’t turning to outside experts. As Knight Foundation Vice President Paula Ellis told the Akron Beacon Journal: ''We are committed to helping unlock all of the power that people have and involve people in creating their own solutions. The idea is that you have a more resilient community if there are more people creating solutions.'' The support is part of Knight Foundation’s efforts to strengthen communities by engaging them in issues critical to their future. Jeannie Wilson, a community organizer who lives in Cascade Village with her son, is excited by what’s to come. “When I heard about this program, I got really excited,” Wilson said. I couldn’t help but think that my neighborhood would be like the one I grew up in – where everybody knew each other, and looked out for each other. You didn’t have to go outside for help.”
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    By Laura Zabel, Executive Director Springboard for the Arts After a very long winter, things are finally feeling like Spring here in St. Paul. And a lot of the planning and work we did over the winter at Springboard for the Arts is also blooming. Last week all of those...
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    I recently hit the road to see and discuss all things Knight Arts. I first went to Akron, then it was off to St Paul where I was joined by Knight Foundation St Paul program director Polly Talen, program associate Stuart Kennedy and assistant Delta Giordano for two days of...
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    Cross-posted from Knightarts.org On Wednesday, April 13 I was invited to be a panelist at a Christie’s panel discussion titled “A Second Look at the Future of Arts Journalism.” The auction house convened a pretty august group, including Lindsey Pollack, editor in chief of Art in America, a 98-year-old magazine and one of the big three in contemporary art and Eric Gibson, editor of the Wall Street Journal’s Leisure & Arts page, which has been become a must-read with for all things cultural with the infusion of Rupert Murdock's money. The panel was led by Sree Sreenivasan, dean of student affairs & digital media professor at the Columbia Journalism School The room was filled with some of the leading arts journalists in the world, including Blake Gopnik of Newsweek; Kelly Crow of the WSJ; freelancer Lee Rosenbaum, also know by her blog handle CultureGrrl; and Phoebe Hoban, author of the recently published and beautifully written biography Alice Neel: The Art of Not Sitting Pretty. The discussion was far ranging, but landed quickly on the search for the elusive business model that would allow arts journalists to make a living wage.  Doug McClennan's oft quoted statistic of the number of arts journalists in America dropping 50% from 5,000 to 2,500 in the last five years put the issue in perspective. I whispered about a yet to be formally announced Knight initiative in partnership with the National Endowment for the Arts called the Arts Journalism Challenge. The challenge will launch in July in the eight Knight resident cities of Akron, Charlotte, Detroit, Macon, Miami, Philadelphia, Saint Paul and San Jose. Together with the NEA, Knight Foundation will be seeking ideas for how to increase community arts coverage in those eight cities. Knight and the NEA will send out an RFP, select the best ideas and fund the development of an action plan for each of them. The best plans will receive up to two years of funding to be launched with the goal to create a series of sustainable models to increase the level of community arts coverage. The eight knight cities are acting as a beta, with the possibility of a national launch in 2012. The crowd at Christie’s was quite interested and the Twitter traffic was significant. The panel was live streamed and you can take a look at the discussion here. I want to thank Mary Trudel of Trudel Macpherson for all her efforts in putting the panel together and including me.  And additional thanks to Toby Usnik at Christie’s for sharing feedback on Knight initiatives like Random Acts of Culture and the Knight Arts Challenge.
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      Some of the videos in Jillian Mayer's solo show at the David Castillo Gallery are not for the faint of heart. They aren't violent. They aren't repulsive. But, they may make you turn your head — only to turn it back...
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    I recently hit the road to see and discuss all things Knight Arts. First, I spent two days in Akron meeting with potential arts grantees with program director Jennifer Thomas. The visit was highlighted by two sold-out performances of Porgy and Bess by the Akron Symphony Orchestra. I was able...
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    By Lucas Leyva, Minister of the Interior, Borscht Film Festival This is exactly what running Borscht feels like: In the last six weeks, we rallied almost the entire independent film community in South Florida to come together for the first time, poached veteran crew members to work on small passion...
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    DDCDances, the local company known previously as the Detroit Dance Collective, is concluding its 31st season with a concert at Marygrove College on Friday night. "New Moves," which also includes performances by the Marygrove College Dance Company, will feature works by founding member and artistic director Barbara Selinger, company choreographer...
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    Congratulations to Knight Arts grantee P. Scott Cunningham. The founder of the University of Wynwood and O, Miami, Miami’s first month-long poetry festival, was recently named one of 51 “bold and brilliant urbanites” by Fast Company in its United States of Innovation article. Named as the Florida innovator, Cunningham is...
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    By Susan Mernit In the hardscrabble city of Akron, staffers at the Akron Community Foundation are putting the finishing touches on of The Akronist, a citizen media web site that will  give local citizens both the tools and a platform to make their voices heard. Back in 2009, Akron Community Foundation VP Donae Eckert applied for a Knight Community Information Challenge. The ask? Matching funding for a project whose goal was to provide residents in Akron and the Northeast Ohio region with a training academy and a citizen-journalism website where residents could publish, read and comment on locally produced features on critical issues and share news and information about what was happening in their city. Fast-forward to spring 2011, and the Akron Community Foundation’s dream is becoming a reality. The Akronist, the ACF’s new citizen journalist web site, officially launches soon. The media academy has trained more than 200 people and is...