Arts-Based Community Development Convening
Transforming Post-Industrial Cities through Art and Innovation
April 12 through 14, 2012 - St. Louis

Freedom Fandango: Conflict, Justice and the MUSE

Day 2 / Apr, 13 @ 4:15 pm
Top Floor : Starlight Room

Many cultural workers are advancing the development of healthy communities by applying their creative resources in most distressed regions of our society. As these interventions in community cultural development has increased, so have the stakes for communities and creators tackling daunting issues like public safety, urban redevelopment, education reform, and economic and social justice. This talk explores the opportunities and challenges encountered when artists, arts organizations and their community partners in join forces America’s conflict zones. It will share some of the lessons and strategies that that have emerged in the field in response to the unique demands of this kind of work. Some specific questions to be addressed include:

­ What skills do creative problem solvers need to enter into successful collaborations?

­ Are there different aspects of the creative called up by different circumstances?

­ How do partners share power, define success and build trust?

­ Are there principals that can be applied that can strengthen the creative impulse as communities confront their most difficult problems?

­ What are the moral and ethical dimensions of the work?

 

Speaker(s):

Bill Cleveland

Seattle, Washington

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William Cleveland is a pioneer in the community arts movement and one of its most poetic documenters. His books Art In Other Places and Making Exact Change and Art and Upheaval: Artists at work on the Worlds Frontlines are considered seminal works in the field of arts-based community development. Activist, teacher, lecturer and musician, he also directs the Center for the Study of Art and Community. Established in 1991, CSA&C works to build new working relationships between the arts and the broader community specializing in the development and assessment of arts-based community partnerships, and training for artists, and their community and institutional partners. The Center works with artists and arts organizations, schools, human service and criminal justice agencies, local and state government and the business and philanthropic organizations. Mr. Cleveland’s 30-year history, producing arts programs in cultural, educational and community also includes his leadership of the Walker Art Center’s Education and Community Programs Department, California’s Arts-In-Corrections Program and the California State Summer School for the Arts.  He has also been an Assistant Director of the California Department of Corrections and worked as a youth services counselor and resident artist under the auspices of the Department of Labor’s Comprehensive Employment and Development Program.  His most recent book Between Grace and Fear: The Role of the Arts in a Time of Change written with Patricia Shifferd was published in 2010. His new CD, Songlines, based, in part, on stories from Art and Upheaval, was just released.

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