• Home
  • About
    • About this Blog
    • About Andrew Taylor
    • Contact
  • Subscribe
  • Other AJBlogs
  • ArtsJournal

The Artful Manager

Andrew Taylor on the business of arts & culture

Rethinking the audience chamber

November 16, 2007 by Andrew Taylor

It’s always a kick to hang out with Elizabeth Streb, which I got to do last weekend during a special course at Carnegie Mellon’s arts administration program. Course instructor Matt Dooley had invited me, Elizabeth, and theater scholar Lynne Conner to express and explore how the audience/art relationship might be changing (or not changing fast […]

Ben Cameron on ”financial masochism”

November 14, 2007 by Andrew Taylor

The Doris Duke Charitable Foundation’s Ben Cameron had yet more productive, provocative, and insightful things to say about the present and future of the nonprofit arts in his keynote to the Southern Arts Federation in September [just posted in audio (mp3) and transcript (pdf) form, on the Federation’s web site]. The bulk of the speech […]

For those about to rock

November 12, 2007 by Andrew Taylor

In an interesting twist on more traditional arts education, Bruce Springsteen sidekick ”Little Steven” Van Zandt is pushing for new emphasis on the classics in middle and high school — that is, classic rock ‘n’ roll. Van Zandt’s foundation is announcing a new curriculum resource today. Says the USA Today article: The plan is to […]

Talk about transparent!

November 9, 2007 by Andrew Taylor

Neighbor blogger Tyler Green switched me onto this new feature on the Indianapolis Museum of Art website: the Dashboard. It’s a user-friendly view into all sorts of operational data from the museum — electrical consumption, percentage of membership attendance, current expenses against budget, percentage attendance from the museum’s Metropolitan Statistical Area. For arts administration nerds […]

Where law meets creative expression

November 8, 2007 by Andrew Taylor

It’s a bit of a thicket to untangle the impact of law on the expressive life of a nation. Law is dry and detached. Expression is explosive and personal. And yet the laws that govern ownership and property do define the context and quality of expression. That makes them the direct business of arts and […]

Pre-natal brand preference?

November 6, 2007 by Andrew Taylor

UPDATE: The folks at Trendwatching revealed that their entire series of trends posted in November were fakes, were jokes, were intentionally fraud — including the ‘Generation Z’ trend I posted on below. What can I say, they got me…perhaps because even the bizarre seems reasonable these days. I leave the original post as evidence that […]

Who gives the gift, and who gets the gift?

November 5, 2007 by Andrew Taylor

American Public Media’s ”Marketplace” radio program took time off from its usual coverage of commerce and finance to explore philanthropy, as advanced by Lincoln Center for the Performing Arts President Reynold Levy. Rather than a chore and a burden, Levy describes the philanthropic process as a joy and a gift, in itself: It’s an extraordinary […]

Digging into arts administration education

November 1, 2007 by Andrew Taylor

I generally don’t talk a lot in this blog about my direct work in higher education — finding, fostering, teaching, and connecting cultural managers through a two-year, resident, MBA degree in Arts Administration. I figure that I serve a wider audience by talking about the industry itself, rather than that tiny, tiny subset of the […]

A major matrix

October 31, 2007 by Andrew Taylor

Is someone in your life having trouble picking a major in college, or a purpose in life? This handy little graphic of college majors and their relative skills should help sort things out (permalink here). Taken from the ever-humorous and graphically inclined Indexed blog.

Ten tips for new theater buildings

October 30, 2007 by Andrew Taylor

Chicago Tribune theater critic Chris Jones has ten nice things to say about the Guthrie’s new theater space in Minneapolis. And he lists them as a tip-sheet for theaters yet to be built. For those who haven’t seen the new venue for the venerable organization, it’s worth a look on the Guthrie’s website, but even […]

« Previous Page
Next Page »

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 bother of bylaws July 8, 2025
    Does your arts nonprofit's map for action match the terrain?
  • Minimum viable everything July 1, 2025
    Getting better as an arts organization doesn't always (or even often) mean getting bigger.
  • The rise and stall of the nonprofit arts June 24, 2025
    The modern arts nonprofit evolved in an ecology of growth. It's time to evolve again.
  • Connection, concern, and capacity June 17, 2025
    The three-legged stool of fundraising strategy.
  • Is your workplace a pyramid or a wheel? June 10, 2025
    Johan Galtung defined two structures for collective action: thin-and-big (the pyramid) or thick-and-small (the wheel). Which describes your workplace?

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

Archives

Creative Commons License
The written content of this blog is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International License. Images are not covered under this license, but are linked (whenever possible) to their original author.

an ArtsJournal blog

Copyright © 2025 · Magazine Pro Theme on Genesis Framework · WordPress · Log in