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Can Funding Save the Arts in America?
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12914 |
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Section : |
THE ARTS
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| Issue
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5 / 1987 |
2,722 Words |
| Author
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Liza Mundy Liza Mundy is a freelance writer living in Charlottesville,
Virginia. |
There are some things in life that the more you know about, the less you understand. Funding for the arts seems to be one of these things. At a quick glance the situation seems straightforward enough: As a nonprofit organization you might have a small, underpaid but dedicated staff who work days, nights, weekends, and holidays to fill out and mail the interminable government grant applications - federal, state, and local - and who spend what spare time they have thinking up special projects for next year's proposals. Next you have a Board of Trustees, equally overworked but usually not paid at all, who provide the necessary entrance into the business and corporate world. Then you have your individual contributors who, year after year, give donations and emotional support. If you are lucky you have some women's auxiliary to organize special fund-raising events. If your are even more fortunate, you have a volunteer or intern to research the countless local and national foundations to find those few who might, just might, be interested in your company, over and above thousands of others whose proposals drop through their mail slots every year.
And, in the meantime, you try to get a show together.
Complex Situation
Upon closer examination, however, the situation proves far more complicated. Having worked for several years in the nonprofit arts, I thought this description was a fairly accurate one; but now, after conversations with administrators, artists, marketing consultants, and government employees in charge of funding for the arts, I have discovered that there is more to this kind of giving than the well-known staples of individuals,
... (1997 of 17035 Characters)
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