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Summit on artists
as catalysts for redevelopment
Cleveland
hosts a national summit on artists and the role they can play in
revitalizing local economies in Rust Belt cities like
Detroit,
Pittsburgh,
and
Milwaukee.
The one-day summit on
May 14, 2008,
From Rust Belt to Artist Belt, is sponsored by the
Cleveland-based Community Partnership for Arts and Culture (CPAC).
The summit, which will taking place at the
Maxine Goodman Levin College of
Urban Affairs, Cleveland State University, is part of Creative
Compass, CPAC’s multi-year initiative to increase artists’ access
to affordable space and better integrate them into Rust Belt
community revitalization efforts. The summit brings together an
alliance of community development experts to discuss the
challenges and opportunities facing America ’s post-industrial
cities and how to leverage the arts as a community development
strategy.
“Post-industrial cities have a range of assets that are
particularly appealing to artists. These cities have highly
developed arts and cultural sectors, an important feature for
artists who often rely on nonprofit arts and culture organizations
as a supplementary source of income, as well as an abundance of
affordable property and close proximity to major US markets,” said
Tom Schorgl, President and CEO, Community Partnership for Arts and
Culture.
“What’s
exciting about this event is that it will bring together under one
roof an unprecedented array of the nation’s leading thinkers on
Rust Belt revitalization efforts as well as creative economy
experts who have experience in artist-oriented community
development in Illinois, Indiana, Michigan,
Minnesota, upstate New York, Ohio,
Pennsylvania, and
Wisconsin,” said Schorgl.
Experts include:
Mark Barone,
Senior Director for Engagement Initiatives, University of
Syracuse; Founder, Paducah Artist Relocation Project; Robert
Brown, Director, Cleveland City Planning Commission; Pat
Cirillo, President, Cypress Research Group; Amy Green
Deines, Board President, Contemporary Art Institute of
Detroit; Brian Friedman, Executive
Director, Northeast Shores Development Corporation; Marc Folk,
Executive Director, Arts Commission of Greater Toledo; Matthew
Galluzzo, District Manager, Penn Avenue Arts Initiative;
Kumani Gantt, Executive Director, Village of Arts &
Humanities; Nathan Guequierre,
URS Corp.,
East Side Arts Incubator; Wendy Holmes, Vice President of
Consulting and Resource Development, Artspace USA; Barbara
Koenen, Director – Chicago Artists Resource, Cultural Planning
Division, Chicago Department of Cultural Affairs; Lillian Kuri,
Director of Special Projects, The Cleveland Foundation; Ann
Markusen, Director, Project on Regional and Industrial
Economics, University of Minnesota;
Jeremy Nowak, President & CEO, The Reinvestment Fund
(mid-Atlantic cities); Judilee Reed, Executive Director,
Leveraging Investments in Creativity; Esther Robinson, Founder,
ArtHome; James Rokakis, County Treasurer, Cuyahoga County,
OH; Mary Margaret Schoenfeld, Community Development
Manager, Americans for the Arts; and Linda Warren,
President, Village Capital Corporation.
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