(With the last week of summer upon us – yes, it’s technically still summer – our season of reruns is about to come to a close. To finish out with a bang, we’re republishing our Top 10 Arts Policy Stories list from each of the past five years. Every December since 2009, we’ve attempted toRead More
[Createquity Reruns]: Arts Policy Library: Arts & Economic Prosperity III
(Arts Policy Library week at Createquity finishes up with this monster review of Americans for the Arts’s flagship economic impact report, Arts & Economic Prosperity III. Written in 2009 during a brief moment between graduating from school and starting my present job when I actually had lots of time on my hands, this is theRead More
[Createquity Reruns] Arts Policy Library: Fusing Arts, Culture and Social Change
(Holly Sidford’s “Fusing Arts, Culture and Social Change” is perhaps the most talked-about arts research publication of the past five years, and Createquity’s take on it went against conventional wisdom in several important ways. This review by Talia Gibas is a great example of the nuance we try to capture when we’re considering what researchRead More
[Createquity Reruns] MASS MoCA and the Revitalization of North Adams
(This week, we’re celebrating the Createquity Arts Policy Library, our collection of in-depth investigations of specific research reports and other publications that have something of interest to say about the arts. Today’s entry highlights a lesser-known study published in 2006 that provides some of the best evidence we’ve amassed to date about the causal relationshipRead More
[Createquity Reruns] Economicsitis: A Response
(If left on their own, are markets in the real world more likely to work or to fail? That’s the fundamental issue at hand in this week’s reruns, including this one which features a lengthy back and forth both in the post itself and in the comments. Though it’s a little on the abstract sideRead More
[Createquity Reruns] Economists Don’t Care About Poor People
(Economics week at Createquity continues with this provocatively-titled post (don’t worry, it’s a reference) published in March 2010. In addition to the post itself, the original comment thread is well worth checking out (and generated a follow-up post, which is coming next). -IDM) My around the horn post from this week included an item on theRead More
[Createquity Reruns] Economics myths
(Happy Labor Day! For those of you who are wondering when the new Createquity is coming, never fear – we’ll have an announcement about that soon. In the meantime, our rerun programming continues with a series of posts about economics. Createquity has always loved exploring the intersection between the arts and various other fields, butRead More
[Createquity Reruns] Supply is Not Going to Decrease (So It’s Time to Think About Curating)
(Our reruns this week have focused intensely on the competition among artists that makes it difficult to make a sustainable living as one. This exact issue blew up in the arts world some three and a half years ago, after then-NEA-Chairman Rocco Landesman dared to invoke the words “supply and demand” at a convening andRead More
[Createquity Reruns] Artists not alone in steep climb to the top
(For all the talk of how artists face challenges making a living, they’re not alone. Former Createquity Fellow Jena Lee takes a look here at how individuals in other fields, including fashion and even law, are singing the winner-take-all blues. Some of the lyrics might sound surprisingly familiar. -IDM) Philip Glass drove a taxi, PattiRead More
[Createquity Reruns] TEDx Talk
(By 2011, I was writing pretty frequently on the issue of how high-quality curation connects to the distribution of opportuniteis for professional artists. My views were encapsulated most fully in this talk for TEDxMichiganAve at the Chicago Symphony Center’s Club 8, May 7, 2011, which discusses rationales for subsidizing the arts, the debilitating effects ofRead More
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