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The Artful Manager

Andrew Taylor on the business of arts & culture

The problem with purpose

March 29, 2004 by Andrew Taylor

So I get this pizza pan as a gift…I’m pro-pizza, to be sure. But when reading the promotional copy on the pizza pan, I find this: Sensible and sublime, practical and whimsical, the objects envisioned by the world-renowned architect infuse our daily lives with joy. Then I’m in Starbucks buying my mega-venti semi-caf no-foam mocha […]

More on value…but now it’s just silly

March 26, 2004 by Andrew Taylor

This weblog talks a lot about how we ‘value’ culture (pricing, community support, etc.). So I couldn’t pass up the hilarious burst of responses to a recent story out of Germany. Sixteen violinists from the Beethoven Orchestra in Bonn are suing for a pay raise, because they play more during a performance than the other […]

How to kill classical music…a pointer

March 25, 2004 by Andrew Taylor

Fellow weblogger Greg Sandow is running a great series (okay, two entries in a row) on ‘how to kill classical music’. Phase one was about the appalling CD cover art in so many classical releases, phase two talked about dry and uniformative press releases. Both entries speak to the point of selling what people buy, […]

Shopping mall responses

March 24, 2004 by Andrew Taylor

My post earlier this week about shopping malls and performing arts centers generated some thoughtful reader response. Richard Layman took me to task for putting only a positive spin on the self-contained ‘mall’ concept (as defined by shopping malls and extended by Lincoln Center-style ‘culture malls’). Says Richard: Your discussion about Lincoln Center ignored the […]

Get thee to the Getty

March 23, 2004 by Andrew Taylor

The Los Angeles Times offers a quick view of a current exhibit at the Getty entitled ‘The Business of Art: Evidence from the Art Market’ (which has a nice on-line component). The exhibit tracks the transactions of visual art, and explores the complex relationships that have determined the ‘market value’ of works and artists over […]

The performing arts center and the mall

March 22, 2004 by Andrew Taylor

The New Yorker has a fabulous piece on the two pioneers of the American shopping mall, Victor Gruen and A. Alfred Taubman. Gruen created what is recognized as the archtypical shopping mall (two stories, facing inward, air conditioned, anchored by two major retailers, and featuring a central courtyard) in Edina, Minnesota, fifty years ago. Taubman […]

Don’t change the players, change the game

March 19, 2004 by Andrew Taylor

An interesting NPR segment on campaign finance reform in federal elections (two years after the McCain-Feingold Campaign Finance Law passed) may not seem related to arts management issues. But frequent readers will anticipate what I’m going to say: it is. The law sought to disentangle federal candidates from the ‘soft money’ that seemed to be […]

Here come the theaters

March 17, 2004 by Andrew Taylor

The Boston Herald reports on the Boston boom in new and renovated theater openings in the next 18 months. It’s only a net gain of 4000 seats, spread among 8 new spaces (one of them having 2500 seats), but it’s bound to change the theater/audience ecology in subtle and interesting ways. The two most interesting […]

Stuck in traffic of our own design

March 16, 2004 by Andrew Taylor

The parody newspaper The Onion has a great mock article that should strike a chord with us all: Urban Planner Stuck In Traffic Of Own Design PITTSBURGH, PA‹Bernard Rothstein, an urban planner and traffic-flow modulation specialist with the Urban Redevelopment Authority, found himself stuck in rush-hour traffic of his own design for more than an […]

Three questions worth asking

March 15, 2004 by Andrew Taylor

I’m back from an intense discussion experience at the American Assembly, focusing on how higher education and the performing arts can create more synergy and support of each other’s mission and goals. According to one author in the event’s prep packet: The great, unheralded art patron of the 20th century is the American university. Looking […]

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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

  • Vision, capacity, and capital January 27, 2026
    Organizational growth is never in one direction, but rather three directions at once.
  • Sorting artists by social type January 20, 2026
    Clustering artists (and arts organizations) by their relationship to an "art world" can be both useful and terrible
  • Strategic outsourcing: when and why to DIY January 13, 2026
    Outsourcing can improve focus, amplify expertise, and reduce costs. But don't give away the farm.
  • Invitation to recalibration January 6, 2026
    In this new year, consider a next chapter in your Arts Management story
  • Top 10 Posts of 2025 December 30, 2025
    The most-read ArtsManaged Field Notes in a bumpy, grumpy year.

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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