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The Artful Manager

Andrew Taylor on the business of arts & culture

You are here: Home / 2006 / Archives for August 2006

Archives for August 2006

Mission, Models, and Money

August 14, 2006 by Andrew Taylor

The Mission, Models, Money initiative in the UK seems to be tracking similar issues to those in this weblog, through conferences, case studies, provocation papers, and such. Particularly interesting are their identified principal issues facing arts and cultural organizations in the UK, many of which might sound familiar across the pond in North America, as […]

Sharing the power

August 11, 2006 by Andrew Taylor

Helen De Michiel of the National Alliance for Media Arts and Culture (NAMAC) has posted a thoughtful discussion about her organization’s administrative division of labor. Instead of the traditional hierarchy with a single administrative director, NAMAC now has co-directors, sharing equally the burden of executive leadership. Says she: Many arts nonprofits find themselves dealing with […]

Understanding and fulfilling the presenter’s contract

August 9, 2006 by Andrew Taylor

Public presentations — speeches, conference panels, reports, proposals, and so on — can be engaging moments of learning or excruciating wastes of time, depending on how well the presenter understands his or her job and prepares to deliver on that understanding. The ability to make an engaging presentation remains one of the key competencies of […]

Designed to dissolve

August 8, 2006 by Andrew Taylor

We’ve been chatting a lot lately about the lifecycle of the nonprofit arts organization, and whether that cycle is as open as it could be to evolution, dissolution, or dramatic change. Thanks for the many thoughtful comments on the matter (here and here, for starters). But there’s another wrinkle in the conversation worthy of note: […]

But how do you REALLY feel about ballet?

August 7, 2006 by Andrew Taylor

Lewis Segal at the LA Times is fed up with ballet, and isn’t afraid to say why in his recent opinion column. Most ballet is every bit as bad as audiences secretly suspect — and it’s not going to improve until companies stop conning or shaming us into accepting damaged goods. In the meantime, guilt-free […]

Of death and dying

August 4, 2006 by Andrew Taylor

There have been lots of productive comments to my Wednesday post about euthanizing arts organizations. Nothing like a controversial metaphor to spark a conversation. In my opinion, euthanasia is likely the wrong metaphor and approach to address the issue of sick arts institutions, or a supply-heavy industry facing declining revenue on many fronts. The term […]

Thinning the nonprofit arts herd

August 2, 2006 by Andrew Taylor

Western States Arts Federation (WESTAF) Executive Director Anthony Radich makes some rather bold statements in a weblog conversation by the Hessenius group (scroll about halfway down the page). In his opinion, the volume of arts production has grown beyond sustainability in many communities, and the oversupply is killing vitality and connection between arts and audience. […]

What makes a museum?

August 1, 2006 by Andrew Taylor

NPR had a story last week about museum collections on-line (both professional and avocational). Central to the story was MoOM, the Museum of On-line Museums, which gathers links to favored sites (from the Rijksmuseum Amsterdam to a collection of whistling records). The story explored whether any curated, on-line aggregation of content is worthy of the […]

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About Andrew Taylor

Andrew Taylor is a faculty member in American University's Arts Management Program in Washington, DC. [Read More …]

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#ArtsManaged logoAndrew Taylor also publishes a weekly email newsletter, ArtsManaged Field Notes, on Arts Management practice. The most recent notes are listed below.

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