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DonViejo

(60,536 posts)
Fri Mar 10, 2017, 02:28 PM Mar 2017

An obituary: The National Endowment for the Arts, 52, of unnatural causes

BY MICHAEL WILKERSON, OPINION CONTRIBUTOR - 03/07/17 12:10 PM EST

The National Endowment for the Arts, aged 52, has finally died. After brushes with extinction in the 1980’s and 1990’s, along with a three-decade wait to be launched after the McCarthy-era’s relentless attacks on artists, police are describing the NEA’s demise as “totally preventable, but oddly, both a homicide and a suicide.” The agency had been ill although determined to make a difference for many years.

The NEA expired under the care of President Donald Trump and the Tea Party Congress. It leaves as survivors its parent, the United States government. We are now the only country in the world without a federal arts presence. Other survivors include millions of artists and thousands of arts organizations. The NEA died because artists tried too hard to be “the other,” apart from the society they chronicled. It failed to make the case that the arts should mean more to ordinary Americans than whatever they did as children (overwhelmingly, Americans participate in the arts only when young). Late attempts at awkward medical procedures such as translating art into economic development did not improve the agency’s health.

The NEA will be remembered for its controversies, such as supporting artists who performed in the nude, or who explicitly sought to shock their audiences into facing hard truths of racism, sexism, the patriarchy, genocide, war and homophobia; for being unable to simultaneously fund the best American art while reaching every state; and for its political blunders, numerous and often naive.
But the NEA will also be remembered as the agency that created arts councils in every state and most cities; that spread the professionalization of arts organizations throughout America; and that generated important new fields, such as art therapy for war victims; creative place making and the rebirth of cities; research into economics, mental health, inequality and aging, among many; and whose leaders persuaded private funders of the value of artists and the arts.

Life without the NEA will not be a lot different than before. At its end, the agency was so small that the cost of one military jet equaled its entire grants budget. Few if any organizations will go out of business because of the loss of the NEA, though arts advocates have often asserted that NEA funding was the catalyst for vast amounts of additional private donations. Researchers will now have a perfect opportunity to ascertain finally what the financial impact of an NEA grant was on giving to the arts.

more
http://thehill.com/blogs/congress-blog/education/322704-an-obituary-the-national-endowment-for-the-arts-52-of-unnatural

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An obituary: The National Endowment for the Arts, 52, of unnatural causes (Original Post) DonViejo Mar 2017 OP
do not go gently into that good night, NEA. niyad Mar 2017 #1
It's not going anywhere yeoman6987 Mar 2017 #3
Not true pos a local level. Zoonart Mar 2017 #4
Sorry. I was only focused on federal yeoman6987 Mar 2017 #5
Hopefully...Yes. Zoonart Mar 2017 #6
Dearly Departed Zoonart Mar 2017 #2
 

yeoman6987

(14,449 posts)
3. It's not going anywhere
Fri Mar 10, 2017, 02:38 PM
Mar 2017

The Feds give a small amount to the NEA. It will easily be replaced by donors. I even gave a month or so ago and will continue as they need it. Why give up? We won't let the federal government win. NEA will be around longer then trump with or without the pennies they throw at us.

Zoonart

(11,879 posts)
4. Not true pos a local level.
Fri Mar 10, 2017, 02:42 PM
Mar 2017

If the State and County funding follow suit. and de-fund our Arts Council, there is no way we could make up that loss of income through fundraising.
You may save the arts on a macro level, PBS,NPR...etc., but on a local level, we are dead I the water.

 

yeoman6987

(14,449 posts)
5. Sorry. I was only focused on federal
Fri Mar 10, 2017, 02:44 PM
Mar 2017

As far as local and state, so far I have not heard funding cuts. Hopefully it will stay that way.

Zoonart

(11,879 posts)
6. Hopefully...Yes.
Fri Mar 10, 2017, 02:47 PM
Mar 2017

On the State level, it all depends who is in the statehouse. Here in NYS we are probably safe on the State level for the moment, but on the County level...we are toast.

Zoonart

(11,879 posts)
2. Dearly Departed
Fri Mar 10, 2017, 02:35 PM
Mar 2017

we are gathered here to bury the Arts. As Secretary of the Board OF Directors of the Putnam County Arts Council, I mourn the passing of the NEA.
In 2016 we granted somewhere around $40,000.00 to local arts programs in the Lower Hudson Valley, NY.

That breeze we feel ops the back of our necks is the whisper of the axe.
Ask not for whom the bell tolls... it tolls for thee.

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