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The Artful Manager

Andrew Taylor on the business of arts & culture

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Indoor (and in-brain) GPS

November 8, 2012 by Andrew Taylor

Dead Pixel in Google Earth

Most of us are now used to our electronic devices telling us where we are, where we’re going, and what turns to make along the way. So, it stands to reason that we’d look to those same devices in more and more circumstances. An obvious geographic extension of GPS and ‘turn by turn’ directions is […]

Civic nap, then back to work

November 7, 2012 by Andrew Taylor

After such a long, arduous, and contentious election season, we can all use a short civic nap today. Make it a power nap, at least for your individual citizen self, but before you nod off make a checklist of what your organizational self needs to do the moment you wake up.

Let’s give them something to talk about

November 6, 2012 by Andrew Taylor

Cartoonist Hugh MacCleod’s post about ‘Social Objects for Beginners‘ is many years old (like an ancient rune in webtime), but I keep going back to it. It’s an issue so central to the cultural manager’s work and leadership that it deserves recurring attention. MacCleod builds on the insights of anth­ro­pol­ogist and social software maven Jyri […]

You are here (or not)

October 25, 2012 by Andrew Taylor

Two technology innovations have me thinking about ‘being’ somewhere, and the seemingly divergent forces now at work in our digital lives. The first was this post about ‘remotely piloted telepresence robots’ — essentially iPads on wheels running Facetime or Skype or some other videoconferencing system. I’m usually skeptical about prophecies of human-machine hybrids, but this […]

Research redux

October 22, 2012 by Andrew Taylor

Research redux

The Fall 2012 issue of Grantmakers in the Arts Reader provides exemplary service to us all by revisiting five essential reports on the arts and culture field. While bloggers and professional associations tend to favor the ”new” research that might inform our work, there’s a wealth of insight and information in the stacks of effort and […]

Terrifying efficiency

October 16, 2012 by Andrew Taylor

For as long as I’ve been observing the arts and culture world through a ‘systems’ lens, I’ve been frustrated by the number of apparently broken systems. Thoughtful people in experienced communities building cultural facilities that are too large for their goals. Smart individuals making odd and upside-down decisions when part of a governing board. Foundations […]

How Art Works: Redux

October 11, 2012 by Andrew Taylor

How Art Works

For any who missed the live webstream of our American University public forum on How Art Works, the new report and system map from the National Endowment for the Arts, fear not. The entire event is now available in lovely little video segments online.

Color commentary at the movies

October 10, 2012 by Andrew Taylor

One of the benefits of buying a movie in DVD or Blueray is the commentary track that often accompanies the purchased version (often not on the Netflix rental version, darn it). So, once you’ve watched a movie once or several times, you can watch it again while listening to the director or actors or creative […]

Vibrancy by proxy

October 9, 2012 by Andrew Taylor

The discipline of Economics studies and describes the allocation of scarce resources to competing ends. In other words, economists explore how individuals, collectives (aka, businesses), communities, societies, and civilizations decide where and how to spend their time, talent, and treasure — in a world where each of those things is in limited supply.

Embodied acts, witnessed by others

October 8, 2012 by Andrew Taylor

Farmer as Artist

Nikiko Masumoto offers a lovely essay on the idea of family farmer as performance artist. Given her dual background in a family of family farmers, and her education in gender studies and ‘performance as public practice,’ she seems uniquely suited to the comparison. She suggests that farming can be a performance, according to Elin Diamond’s […]

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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 …]

ArtsManaged Field Notes

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

RSS ArtsManaged Field Notes

  • The strategy screen May 6, 2025
    A strong strategy demands a clear job description
  • What is Arts Management? April 29, 2025
    The practice of aggregating and animating people, stuff, and money toward expressive ends.
  • Outsourcing expertise April 22, 2025
    Sometimes, it's smart to hire outsiders. Sometimes, it's not.
  • Minimum viable process April 15, 2025
    As a nonprofit arts organization, your business systems need to be as simple as possible…but not simpler.
  • Do what you say you will do April 8, 2025
    Commitments are easier made than met. So do the math.

Artful Manager: The Book!

The Artful Manager BookFifty provocations, inquiries, and insights on the business of arts and culture, available in
paperback, Kindle, or Apple Books formats.

Recent Comments

  • Barry Hessenius on Business in service of beauty: “An enormous loss. Diane changed the discourse on culture – its aspirations, its modus operandi, its assumptions. A brilliant thought…” Jan 19, 18:58
  • Sunil Iyengar on Business in service of beauty: “Thank you, Andrew. The loss is immense. Back when Diane was teaching a course called “Approaching Beauty,” to business majors…” Jan 16, 18:36
  • Michael J Rushton on Business in service of beauty: “A wonderful person and a creative thinker, this is a terrible loss. – thank you for posting this.” Jan 16, 13:18
  • Andrew Taylor on Two goals to rule them all: “Absolutely, borrow and build to your heart’s content! The idea that cultural practice BOTH reduces and samples surprise is really…” Jun 2, 18:01
  • Heather Good on Two goals to rule them all: “To “actively sample novel experiences (in safe ways) to build more resilient perception and prediction” is about as useful a…” Jun 2, 15:05

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