See Robert Faires’s account of the 2009 B. Iden Payne Awards.
From the Austin Chronicle: “2009 B. Iden Payne Awards”
October 25th, 20092009 B. Iden Payne Awards
October 12th, 2009Named for the renowned British theater director and teacher who profoundly influenced the drama department at University of Texas at Austin, the B. Iden Payne Awards are awarded annually to recognize outstanding contributions to the Austin theater community.
Each year, a nominating committee reviews eligible productions in order to prepare the ballot that is sent out to all members at the beginning of the new season.
Get your tickets at Now Playing Austin.
From Community Impact Newspaper
October 11th, 2009Community Impact Newspaper has a wonderful feature about our transformation to the Creative Alliance. There are also some lovely photos of a certain someone you all know.
Get Your Art On 2009
October 10th, 2009
Get Your Art On, a program of Greater Austin Cultural Alliance, is a city wide celebration of art, culture and creativity in honor of Americans for the Arts’ National Arts and Humanities Month and the the City of Austin Cultural Arts Division’s CreateAustin cultural planning initiative.
For the complete listing of events, please visit nowplayingaustin.com.
Get Your Art On Showcase
Thursday, Oct. 1
4pm–7pm
Wooldridge Park, 900 Guadalupe St.
A free family-oriented showcase of local creativity at Wooldridge Park. Favorite childrens’ musicians the Biscuit Brothers will be the strolling minstrels as Greater Tuna’s Aunt Pearl (performer Joe Sears) helps children make Halloween crafts and various performances from Austin Bike Zoo, improv comedians and the Austin School for the Performing and Visual Arts put on a show. Participants are encouraged to dress as their favorite artistic character and to bring their own chairs or blankets for seating. Water will be available.
Get Your Art On is proudly sponsored by:
Capital One, Hook’em Marketing, CreateAustin, Americans for the Arts’ National Arts and Humanities Month, City of Austin Cultural Arts Division, Texas Commission on the Arts and National Endowment of the Arts, CreateAustin, Free Night of Theater. Armadillo Christmas Bazaar, Austin American Statesman Inside Line, Emmis Communications, Cap Metro, and News8 Austin.
Advocacy
October 1st, 2009ACoT collaborates with other Arts groups to facilitate Arts Forums to query candidates on their stand on the arts. ACoT also serves on the Create Austin task forces and speaks on behalf of the Arts Community at City Council and sessions at our State Capital. We also meet with funders, government representatives, civic agencies and commissions to encourage more support for the Arts.
Our Story
October 1st, 2009As of October 2009, a new chapter in Austin Circle of Theaters’ 35-year history opens as it restructures its organization, expands its services and embraces a wider mission to serve Austin’s richly diverse and adventuresome creative community across all sectors as the Greater Austin Creative Alliance.
Forming a community-based Creative Alliance to provide essential services and networking opportunities to artists and creative individuals, organizations, and businesses is one of the key recommendations of the CreateAustin Master Plan. It is a recommendation that repeatedly emerged from many different task forces that met in our city’s 16-month cultural planning process. It is a recommendation that Austin Circle of Theaters immediately took to heart.
Our creative community cited the need for advocacy, collaboration, marketing, professional development and capacity building — all services ACoT was providing within the performing arts community. Could ACoT provide those services to others?
A study group of key community stakeholders in different disciplines was formed. Nationally respected experts in arts management such as Kevin McCarthy (Arts and Culture in the Metropolis: Strategies for Sustainability) Stephen Tepper (Engaging Art: The Next Great Transformation of American’s Cultural Life, with Bill Ivey), and Tom Kaiden, COO of Philadelphia Cultural Alliance were brought in for conversations with the study group and the wider arts community. The group also explored successful models in other cities such as the Philadelphia Cultural Alliance and 1st Act Silicon Valley.
In the same time period ACoT established NowPlayingAustin.com, a community arts and cultural portal that now serves more than 900 organizations in the greater Austin region, and attracts 20,000 visitors per month; it expanded its ticketing services to increase its earned income; it instituted a city wide celebration of Arts, Culture, and Creativity in honor of National Arts and Humanities Month called Get Your Art On that has more than 200 organizations participating; and it doubled its staff.
Simultaneously the CreateAustin Leadership Team reconstituted several task forces, including the Creative Alliance, and encouraged an open and collaborative relationship with ACoT and its efforts on behalf of establishing a Creative Alliance.
This past summer Andrew Taylor, Director of the Bolz Center for Arts Administration (artfulmanager.com) came to be with the performing arts community and wider arts community and CreateAustin stakeholders. He presented on the theme of “Considering the Creative Ecology.” The message: What are you waiting for? The Alliance is already here. It is all of you.
So now we begin — all of us.
The mission of the Greater Austin Creative Alliance is to advance, connect and celebrate Austin’s creative life in order to strengthen our creative economy and benefit the well-being of our community. Join us.
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