Economic Turmoil and Change
The long economic decline of Detroit has prompted Hudson-Webber and other foundations in the region to change how they operate. Faced with sharply declining resources and exploding need, they are being forced to pick winners and losers, engaging in what … Continue reading
Read More...“The principal argument is that the theatrical establishment in America has lost sight of the values that led to the establishment of regional theaters, and in its place are institutions that value buildings over artists, isolation over engagement and corporate … Continue reading
Read More...Rachel Dry in the Washington Post “There’s nothing like a Great Recession to make people want to read about the Great Depression. Seventy years after John Steinbeck published his best-selling tale of the Joad family’s journey from Oklahoma to California … Continue reading
Read More...In Wednesday’s New York Times. columnist Nicholas Kristof wrote about “The Daily Me” – the tendency for people to seek out and read news (in particular) and information that confirms their existing opinions and prejudices. This piece seemed like a … Continue reading
Read More...Venture capitalists are talking about products that get to market with only the most basic features. These products/services think iPhone, twitter, Flip video camera go out to customers in a near raw state and then the developers behind … Continue reading
Read More...This article by Bob Goldfarb on Jewish Philanthropy.com has some great ideas about sharing operating costs, and links to some successful operating nonprofits shared spaces and services. A key finding of the recent Jumpstart study of Jewish startups is that … Continue reading
Read More...Two years ago, almost to the day, Tony Blair addressed a crowd of cultural leaders in the Tate Modern. He talked of the past decade as a “golden age” for the arts. Art, he said, “enlarges a country’s capacity to … Continue reading
Read More...The National Committee for Responsive Philanthropy last month riled some foundation feathers by recommending that grant makers spend at least half of their grant dollars to help the poor, minorities, and other disadvantaged people. While some critics said the foundation … Continue reading
Read More...Doug McLennan on Arts Journal A ridiculous question, sure. The National Endowment for the Arts is the channel through which the federal government invests money in the arts. And though it’s not much money, compared to what other countries invest, … Continue reading
Read More...The job of preserving jobs has fallen in part to a small state agency that normally specializes in promoting the arts: The Wyoming Arts Council. The council has applied for $290,000 in National Endowment for the Arts funding through the … Continue reading
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