Tuesday, July 22, 2008

International Conference on Creative Tourism Comes to Santa Fe


The Santa Fe International Conference on Creative Tourism is the first global gathering of its kind. Taking place in santa Fe, September 28 to October 2, 2008; the conference will provide the skills and knowledge necessary for developing creative tourism programs by experiencing practical applications and through sessions with some of the world’s foremost leaders in the field. Key to the learning process will be the participation of UNESCO Creative Cities Network representatives; a group of international experts who will share background information, advice, and lessons from their own creative tourism programs. This concept of cities helping cities is fundamental to the Creative Cities Network charter.

Wednesday, July 16, 2008

Join the New Creativity Champions Community

If you write about, research, teach, train, celebrate or value creativity - then you're a Creativity Champion. Now there's an online community made for you...


View my page on Creativity Champions

Saturday, July 12, 2008

Art The Vote Says "Vote!" (Creatively)

Art the Vote is a nonpartisan, arts-driven effort to engage, register and mobilize young voters and the creative community in the political process prior to the November 2008 election. Using contemporary artists' original works on billboards throughout the state of Missouri, from early September to early November 2008, Art the Vote hopes to elevate the importance of registering and voting in the November election. Art the Vote was launched by a committee of artists and arts supporters in January of 2008. It is a Missouri-based unprecedented effort. Using original art, Art the Vote will build awareness through its billboard campaign and take action through voter registration efforts targeting young voters and members of the creative community.


I really like this design by David Stephensen. His statement: "I am 19 years old and just graduated from Sumner High School in St. Louis. I work as an artist's apprentice at Boomerang Press, the social enterprise of St. Louis ArtWorks. We work after school and through the summer doing graphic design and learning other disciplines. During the 2008 spring program, our writing group created poetry about democracy and we illustrated their ideas. They wrote of both the positive and the negatives of living in a free country, and what that means to us as urban teens, many who will be voting for the first time in this fall’s presidential election. I was asked to create an illustration for the cover of the book we published of their work, and this image is a modified version of that cover"





Tuesday, July 1, 2008

Take a Survey on Going to the Theater

The League of Chicago Theatres asks you to participate in an important study of arts and leisure activity in the U.S . The study, which is being conducted through Northwestern's J.L. Kellogg School of Management and funded by Boeing and a national arts organization called Leveraging Investments in Creativity ("LINC"), takes a new approach to studying how and why people participate in the arts. If successful, this research promises to help arts organizations understand and serve their audiences better.

Your answers and identity will be kept separate and used only to create an aggregate picture of participation and engagement in theater and other activities. Your answers, though part of a group, are essential to the program's success. It is a big study, and a large a group of thoughtful participants is needed.

The survey generally takes just 15-20 minutes of people's time, and gives you a unique chance to share your opinions and experiences with the people who really care about the arts. As an incentive for participating, the League will enter any participant who wishes in a drawing for a chance to win $100 in Play Money gift certificates, which can be used to buy tickets to 75 Chicago theater companies. If you win, you can use the Play Money yourself or give it to a friend who you'd like to join you at the theater more often. It's up to you.

To participate in this study, simply click the hyperlink below and answer all of the questions in the survey. Upon completion, you will be able to enter to win $100 in Play Money gift certificates.

Thanks for your time and support of this important effort. Please click here to take the survey:

http://kellogg.qualtrics.com/SE?SID=SV_esqji7A63E7tCQc&SVID=Prod


Tuesday, June 17, 2008

Make a Video for Cinemocracy for the Democratic Convention

During a year of monumental change, the Denver Film Society and Denver Office of Cultural Affairs, in partnership with the Denver 2008 Convention Host Committee, invite you to share your definition of democracy. By giving you an outlet for your voice, we hope to come closer to our own definition of democracy!

Submit a film up to five minutes in length answering the question "How do you define democracy?" The top 25 videos (as determined by public online voting) will be screened publicly during the week of the 2008 Democratic National Convention. The winning film will be screened as part of the official program of the 31st Starz Denver Film Festival.

Thursday, May 1, 2008

Guest Essay - "Anything is Possible"


Kathryn Blume is an actor, writer, activist, and solo performer currently on tour with her show The Boycott – the story of the First Lady of the US launching a nationwide sex strike to combat global warming. She contributed this essay on her experience as a creative activist.

I'm always struck when well-known actors and musicians are ridiculed for participating in some aspect of the political process. Remember Meryl Streep testifying in front of Congress to ban Alar on apples or Tim Robbins and Susan Sarandon protesting the war or Angelina Jolie serving as a goodwill ambassador for the UN. Frequently the public reaction runs along the lines of what do a bunch of dumb actors know? Or when Natalie Maines spoke out against Bush people told her to just shut up and sing.

To be honest, I'm more than struck, I'm tweaked. Or more than tweaked, I'm infuriated. I'm an actor. Since when did my choice of career abrogate my responsibility as a citizen? Since when did my choice of career cause my brain to leak out my ears? Clearly never, that's when (Though I will allow for making fun of Harrison Ford waxing his chest hair to demonstrate the pain of tropical deforestation. That was just silly.).

But really, if artists are just dumb and harmless, then why, when fascism strikes, are we first up against the wall? Why were so many actors and writers and musicians and painters vilified by the House Un-American Affairs Committee? Why was Victor Jara murdered during the military coup in Chile? Why did Hitler ban Ernst, van Gogh, Chagall, Picasso, and Cezanne?

The truth is, we're not harmless, and we're not dumb. As Susan Sarandon said, "People should fear art, film, and theatre. This is where ideas happen. This is where somebody goes into a dark room and starts to watch something and their perspective can be completely questioned...the very seeds of activism are empathy and imagination." In other words, we're potent and powerful and dangerous in a wonderful, world-changing way.

It's something I became convinced of following my experience as Co-Founder of the Lysistrata Project. In early 2003, right before the US attacked Iraq, my friend Sharron Bower and I organized over 1000 readings of the ancient Greek anti-war comedy Lysistrata in 59 countries and all 50 US states.

Both immediately afterwards and in the years since, I've had the great fortune to hear from numerous participants, many of whom spoke of their participation in terms of re-validating their artistic careers – or, more specifically, that it was a renewing of their sense of relevance as artists. And I've been hearing a lot more discussion lately in academic circles, conferences, and activist groups, about the vital role that the arts can play in galvanizing people to awareness and action.

The act of reading a play as an act of protest was also important, in that it gave people who were disinclined to march in the streets or write letters to the editor or call their congressperson a means of expressing themselves in a way which felt both pointed and playful, but still entirely non-confrontational. Lysistrata Project participants also felt their voice multiplied exponentially by their awareness of thousands of other people doing exactly the same thing at exactly the same time. And, it was flat-out fun - something with which activists aren't immediately associated.

In a recent edition of Yes Magazine, the editors posed the question: "What happens when we throw off the invisible chains that keep us from realizing the world we want—when we, as they say in the global south, decolonize our minds?" That's a wonderful question, but we've also got to consider exactly how that happens. How do we learn to see the invisible chains, how do we rattle them, learn to throw them off, and then how do we know what kind of a world it is that we want?

Here, I think, is the greatest purview of the artist. And it happens on a couple different levels. Art shows us the world as it is, names the true-but-as-yet-unnamed. Art allow us to see ourselves, our whole selves, in infinite shades of dark and light. Art reflects ourselves back to us in an intense, highly concentrated, extremely potent, and sneakily digestible form. Often, we connect and relate to what we're seeing and hearing in a work of art long before we recognize our actual selves reflected back. We get surreptitiously trapped in a vision of truth. And once we see, it's very difficult to un-see. It's hard to walk away unchanged.

I've had many audience members come up to me after performances of both The Accidental Activist (which told the story of Lysistrata Project) and my current global warming show The Boycott and tell me that I'd just articulated out loud ideas and feelings which they'd been experiencing, but hadn't expressed – either to themselves or other people.

Many people have a kind of fear/guilt response to their more powerful emotions – thinking that they shouldn't feel as much or as powerfully as they do, and that if they acknowledge the depth of how they feel, then they might be overwhelmed or destroyed by their emotional experience. I know what that's like – working so hard to contain and deny my inner life that I'm left paralyzed, with no energy to take any kind of action. Seeing your inner life played out truthfully and unabashedly on stage validates and legitimizes the potency of your feelings, releases the energy locked up in the emotional containment field, and allows it to be put to far more productive, proactive use.

There's also a magical, alchemical element to the artistic experience – something dynamically and inherently elevating. There have been times when I've gone to, say, a fantastic Frederic Chiu piano concert or brilliant Bill T. Jones dance performance and not only lost myself in the experience, but lost any sense of distinction between myself and the artist. For a moment, I was Frederic, I was Bill. I walk away having absorbed from them a touch of the divine, believing that I might actually become my best self. And for a moment, at least, I feel that I am. I feel that I'm walking in the borrowed shoes of genius and inspiration, and that right now, anything is possible.

We need that kind of exhilaration because of the truly murky problems we're facing, and how challenging they're going to be to overcome. We need to believe, now and then, that we are capable of anything.

This, of course, begs the question: what, exactly are we capable of? And herein lies another gift artists bring to the table. We live in a world of imagination, a world of not-yet and never-been. We are capable of creating – from glistening filaments of dreams and wonderings and other milky mindstuff - whole and real and concrete worlds. We specialize in overleaping the reality of what is and delving deeply into the could be. It's vital to be able to do that, to shine a light in the murk. It gives us a hopeful, inspired vision to move towards, rather than just a raging, dark fear from which to run.

------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Kathryn won an Outstanding Activist Award from the member organizations of the Vermont Environmental Action Conference for her work on The Boycott. Kathryn is Co-Founder of the Lysistrata Project, the first worldwide theatrical event for peace. She toured The Accidental Activist – her critically acclaimed one-woman show about the Lysistrata Project – to over 30 cities in the US and Canada, receiving an Austin Critics Table Award nomination. Kathryn has had essays published in the books MoveOn.org's 50 Ways To Love Your Country, Code Pink's Stop the Next War Now, Outcry - American Voices of Conscience Post 9/11, and 365 Ways to Change the World. She has also had essays published in the weekly Seven Days and in Yes Magazine.

Photo: Lindsay Raymondjack.

Tuesday, March 11, 2008

Tom to Offer Workshop on "Artists As Leaders" at 2008 Performing Arts Convention

Over 5,000 leaders from America's performing arts community will be gathering in Denver this June for the 2008 National Performing Arts Convention. Chorus America, Dance/USA, Early Music America, the League of American Orchestras, OPERA America and the Theatre Communications Group are the principle conveners. Tom will be doing his workshop on Friday, June 13. This workshop lays out the argument for creativity as a national value and makes the case that artists, cultural workers and creative professionals have values and skills desperately needed in public life.

Sunday, March 9, 2008

Scientist Goes To Congress

Fermi Lab scientist, engineer and entrepreneur Bill Foster won the special election to fill the unexpired term of recently retired Republican Dennis Hastert, the former Speaker of the House. This seat has been held by a Republican for over 100 years. Read the story in The Chicago Tribune. He plans to make science a priority of his service, "With the coming retirement of the Baby Boomer and 'Sputnik' generation, energy sector professionals in the U.S. will be in critically short supply. We must make education and training in the scientific arena a priority and we must have a plan to address any shortfall in the government and private sector. "

Tuesday, March 4, 2008

Are You a Creativity Champion?

I'd like to meet and exchange news with other creativity champions from across the USA and abroad. So If you're involved in accelerating, celebrating, advancing, protecting or evolving creativity - introduce yourself and share your story.

Thursday, February 21, 2008

Tom Makes Viral Video Debut


People for the American Way are one of many groups trying to stop the President from granting telephone companies retroactive immunity for illegally wiretapping American citizens. They sponsored a citizen's video protest contest where thousands of people across the country submitted videos voicing their outrage at the program and proposed immunity. Guess who's being included in the final cut? Watch it now.

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Politics of Creativity

There are 38 million people working in creative industries in America. Creativity is one the key characteristics of the American spirit, economy and promise.
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Read the book - Win With Creativity!

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