In January, The San Francisco Foundation and Grants for the Arts, with support from The Wallace Foundation, hosted a daylong Dynamic Adaptability Conference.  Over 700 community members attended, learning from creative thinkers from the arts, neuroscience, business, media, and philanthropy.

Neuroscientist Jonah Lehrer encouraged us to reclaim our value proposition and have faith in our stories.  His research on meta-cognition drew upon many examples of artists.  Lehrer also stressed the importance of building in periods of relaxation as part of the creative process, cautioning when people get too focused on solving a particular problem, this often results in being ‘locked in’.

James Rucker from Color of Change and Hugo Morales from Radio Bilingüe called for rethinking relationships to audiences and donors and forming deeper and more authentic connections to communities.  Merely broadcasting invitations isn’t enough in the socially engaged, interactive, high-touch, and multi-platform online environment.

Psychographic research by WolfBrown and Helicon Collaborative revealed that donors become engaged via four connection points:  a personal relationship, passion for the art form, emotional or intellectual connect to the subject matter, and/or a connection to the culture or community involved. Values and empathy matter.

Despite the grim realities of artists in this economic recession, Judilee Reed from Leveraging Investments in Creativity shared that 75% of the artists in her research believe it is an inspiring time to be an artist and 89% think artists have a special role in strengthening communities.

Artists underscored these hopeful points.  Performance provocateur Philip Huang challenged colleagues to be thrilling and bold.  Veteran choreographer Margaret Jenkins talked about the only way to keep balanced, is by moving forward.
I closed the conference by reiterating my trust in artists. Everyday they start anew with a blank page, an empty canvas, a barren rehearsal room; everyday struggling to go deeper. If something does not work, they think of something else.  If it does work, they make it even better.

These are essential skills in tumultuous times for society in general and requisite for working in the nonprofit arts – moving forward with whatever resources available; building a future by crafting the present.

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One Response to “Essential Skills for Making the Most of Resources in the Nonprofit Arts”

  1. [...] earlier last year, this post on ARTSblog outlines the “Essential Skills for Making the Most of Resources in the Nonprofit Arts, referencing the Dynamic Adaptability convening hosted by the Initiative last [...]

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