I went by the Belcourt for two of the Arts Summit panels on Saturday. This was a more or less day long event organized by the
The visual arts panel was not great. It was a small group, which should have worked out better than it did, and most of the comment were of the variety of “let me tell you about this great community arts program we have going.” Try to get more involved in the schools and in promoting arts education. Lots of nice advice about how to make a living as an artist here. One person (I think he was from the Nashville Composer’s Association) said we should bring the Artspace group from
The music panel was a lot better. It was all people who are involved in genres other than Country and Christian, and it included Alan Valentine from the Symphony and Carol Penterman from the Opera. The others were someone from the blues community, Lori Mechem from the Nashville Jazz Workshop, someone from the Americana Music Association, I think a bluegrass guy, and Chris Stenstrom from Alias.
Valentine in particular had some great ideas. One was to do a big festival covering a lot of genres, like Spoleto but a wider range. His main point was to start out big, do something the national music audience and press have to pay attention to, like the new hall. That made sense, even if everyone did get a little carried away—“look at the range of music on this stage, no other city can do this.” False. Just about any major city and lots of smaller ones. Although the panel didn’t represent our newer communities (for one, Sankaran Mahadevan wasn’t there), tons of cities can claim a lot more going on in a variety of Latino styles, strong local African scenes, etc. But it doesn’t really matter whether another city can do this.
Valentine also talked about starting “the world’s best art school” in downtown
One thing he brought up, and some other people made similar points, was the lack of media coverage for the arts. Now he started by acknowledging the Scene and saying we do pretty well because that’s what we’re there for, and that the Tennessean has gotten better. I was wondering if he was envisioning another media outlet, but I suspect he was more concerned with seeing the Tennessean give the arts more space in the daily, and maybe wanting to see more on TV. I have a feeling that for the Symphony and other big organizations, all that really matters are the big outlets, and I can imagine that’s frustrating.
The contributions from Valentine and Penterman on the music panel point to one problem with the visual arts panel—the
2 comments:
i am glad to see that someone has commented on how lame the visual arts forum was at the summit. I was there (actually, one who tried to curb "the self-promotion" but failed)....i agree that some of the major contributors to publicly transferring the arts to the public such as Frist and cheekwood, should have been present - was Lain York there? or Chris Campbell?
i think the main aspect in Nashville about the arts visually is that artists need to get involved within the community to be active in setting up community projects such as "beautification" and turning around parts of nashville that are A. lacking in funds & B. lacking in encouragement from community leaders or residence.... when i mean "beautification", i mean resurrection through creative discoveries - materials that are already on hand - work with what you got in a creative adn meaningful way!!!
cheers,
beth seiters, plowhaus arts education coordinator
Beth,
I think you're right about that, although it seems in line with some of the comments about engagement with the schools--unless you're thinking of something more revolutionary in terms of the impact on communities and people. Not just uplift, but creating the space through art where people can find the alternative to the disenfranchised hampster wheel to which the economy and society try to relegate just about everybody.
Also--and this might be contradictory to the idea above--I want to see the scene in Nashville become so distinctive it has an impact outside town, and also so you don't really have a reason to leave Nashville. The aesthetic version of post-colonial import substitution strategies.
D
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