• Home
  • About
    • For What it’s Worth
    • Michael Rushton
    • Contact
  • AJBlogs
  • ArtsJournal

For What It's Worth

Michael Rushton on pricing the arts

Bill Ivey

November 12, 2025 by Michael Rushton Leave a Comment

Bill Ivey died this past weekend; he was eighty-one years old. It came as a shock to us – just last week he was here in Bloomington meeting with our arts policy students, something he loved doing. He was a great friend to our program, generous with his time and advice to students and to younger faculty. He had studied Folklore and Ethnomusicology here at IU, and enjoyed visiting.

He is best known for having been Chairman of the National Endowment for the Arts in the last years of the Clinton administration – you can read more about his career here.

I really enjoyed his 2010 book Arts, Inc. – an idiosyncratic look at American cultural policy, and what he saw as issues that were, unwisely, being neglected, such as with large corporations taking ownership of what ought by rights to be public domain national heritage. I used to assign to my students this essay he wrote for the Chronicle of Higher Education – “America Needs a New System for Supporting the Arts” (2005 – paywalled, sorry) – where he, rightly I’ve always thought, took aim at a public and big-philanthropy sector that assumed nonprofit arts presenters were the unique and special home of anything seriously worth consideration in the arts.

I first met him a little over twenty years ago, and enjoyed the chance to talk with him whenever I could – he was a very fine listener as well as a speaker, a really stimulating conversationalist. We could disagree on things – when Obama was first elected President, Bill was much more keen that the US create an executive position akin to a “Secretary of Culture” than I was – but our disagreements were always friendly, always with a smile.

We will all miss him here in Bloomington, and I send my condolences to his family and everyone close to him.

Cross-posted at https://michaelrushton.substack.com/

Share:

  • Click to email a link to a friend (Opens in new window) Email
  • Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
  • Click to share on X (Opens in new window) X
  • Click to share on LinkedIn (Opens in new window) LinkedIn
  • Click to print (Opens in new window) Print

Related

Filed Under: issues

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Michael Rushton

Michael Rushton taught in the Arts Administration programs at Indiana University, and lives in Bloomington. An economist by training, he has published widely on such topics as public funding of the … MORE

About For What It’s Worth

What’s the price? Everything has one; admission, subscriptions, memberships, special exhibitions, box seats, refreshments, souvenirs, and on and on – a full menu. What the price is matters. Generally, nonprofit arts organizations in the US receive about half of their revenue as “earned income,” and … [Read More...]

Archives

Recent Comments

  • Howard Mandel on Public Funding for the Arts and Viewpoint Discrimination at the NEA: “This is the problem with government-funded the arts — it tends to reduce artists’ freedom to the caprices of the…” Oct 4, 13:19
  • Carlo on Artists and Compelled Speech: “Agree totally. No one seems to boycott Chinese artists because of the Chinese occupation of Tibet. Or the Chinese persecution…” Sep 15, 08:49
  • antonio c. cuyler on Should we subsidize arts consumers, art producers, or neither?: “As a form of indirect funding, the federal government has equitably afforded all cultural nonprofits tax exemption and the ability…” Jul 5, 14:16
  • Paul Kassel on Should we subsidize arts consumers, art producers, or neither?: “I think the goal of public art policy is the creation of art by, for, and of the people. Resources…” Jul 3, 07:24
  • Carlo on What to do with the NEA? Make it Conservative?: “The Kennedy Center is offering $25 tickets in only select orchestra seating for the performances of Washington National Opera: Porgy…” May 20, 14:17
Return to top of page

an ArtsJournal blog

This blog published under a Creative Commons license

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