Arts regional agenda

Regional agenda


Posted in | »

Musicians perform at 2006 Ingenuity FestivalArtists are often solitary creators, but the arts community in Northeast Ohio has been coming together in recent years to assert its importance. Much of the activism has centered on making an economic case for arts and culture. Beyond that, what is our strategy for enlivening the region with art? How can art be an integral part of livable communties? How can it help us tell our story?

To paraphrase economist Richard Florida’s theory from “Rise of the Creative Class” artists flock to cities with the right mix of a liberal culture, a vibrant street life and cheap, big spaces for making art or staging performances. By most measures, Cleveland should be a boom town for artists, and in some neighborhoods like Tremont, Archwood-Denison, the Quadrangle and Collinwood, artists have clustered, and galleries or art collectives have followed.

But, for all of our vacant warehouses and storefronts, world-class institutions like the Cleveland Orchestra and the Cleveland Museum of Art, well-respected outfits like Cleveland Public Theater and hipster outposts like the Beachland Ballroom, has Cleveland effectively promoted itself outside the region as a destination for artists?

We're asking local artists or “creative types” to think about a regional agenda for the arts in Northeast Ohio. Specifically, what can we do better as a city, as a region, to attract and retain artists?

What follows is the beginning of a list of ideas that Northeast Ohio can capitalize on right now to promote itself and become more attractive to artists. Take a moment to add your own.


Sketch the Seasons at Old Woman Creek

Submitted by Heather Elmer on July 9, 2008 - 12:09pm.
Posted in | »
Jul 19 2008 - 10:00am
Jul 19 2008 - 12:00pm

Location(s)

Old Woman Creek National Estuarine Research Reserve
2514 Cleveland Road East
Huron, OH
See map: Google Maps, Yahoo! Maps, MapQuest

Join this group for seasonal adventures in sketching the Old Woman Creek estuary and its watershed. The class begins with classroom drawing warm-ups and a sketching hike and the second hour is "free" sketch time and wrap-up. Bring your own sketching materials. All skill levels welcomed. Attendance at all classes not required.

In event of rain, class is held in dormitory at Old Woman Creek Reserve beach access: 2005 Cleveland Road East Huron, Ohio 44839.

Visit www.oldwomancreek.org or call (419) 433-4601 for more information.


Cleveland Public Theatre Pandemonium 2008

Submitted by Rebecca Moore on June 2, 2008 - 9:57am.
Posted in | »
Sep 13 2008 - 7:00pm
Sep 13 2008 - 10:00pm

Location(s)

Cleveland Public Theatre
6415 Detroit Ave
Cleveland, OH
See map: Google Maps, Yahoo! Maps, MapQuest

Unlock the treasure at Cleveland Public Theatre's annual fundraising event. Jim Rokakis, Cuyahoga County Treasurer and Laurie Rokakis will be honered with the "Pan Award." Fee. For more details call Judith Ross at 216/631-2727 or look for updates here.


Sketch the Seasons at Old Woman Creek

Submitted by Heather Elmer on April 15, 2008 - 11:35am.
Posted in | »
May 17 2008 - 10:00am
May 17 2008 - 12:00pm

Location(s)

Old Woman Creek National Estuarine Research Reserve
2514 Cleveland Road East
Huron, OH
See map: Google Maps, Yahoo! Maps, MapQuest

Join this group for seasonal adventures in sketching the Old Woman Creek estuary. Bring your own pencils, paper, and other sketching materials. All skill levels welcomed- attendance at all classes not required. For more information visit www.oldwomancreek.org or call (419) 433-4601.


Science in the Circle


Posted in | »

From the Spring '07 issue of Case Magazine

What is 'Real Science' and what does an artist or humanitarian need science for anyway? Some Cleveland Municipal School District (CMSD) students are about to find out.

Case's Center for Science and Mathematics Education (CSME) recently received a $786,000 grant from the National Science Foundation for their groundbreaking program, Science in the Circle: Integrating Arts and Humanities into Authentic Science Experiences.

Science in the Circle brings together CMSD students, University Circle institutions, and Case students for a summer of science and art exploration.

Beginning in the sixth grade and continuing for three years, CMSD students will engage in real science experiences, says CMSE Director James Bader. Students are assigned to teams comprised of a teacher, a museum staff member, a Case student seeking teacher certification and a high school mentor. Teams will work on projects integrating art and science, such as creating a three-dimensional early Western Reserve swamp and using Western Reserve Historical Society's archival material to compare Moses Cleveland's surveying practices to current information.

The 100 students in the program will spend about 20 hours over five weeks at each partnering institution that includes Case, the Cleveland Museum of Natural History, the Cleveland Botanical Garden, the Western Reserve Historical Society, and the Nature Center at Shaker Lakes. The Cleveland Clinic will provide instructional materials and in-service teacher training.

Science in the Circle students will complete their projects on campus during the summer and will make formal presentations to parents, teachers, museum educators, and other invited guests—much like real scientists at real national and international meetings.


Parade the Circle

Submitted by Jaimie Cohen on May 15, 2007 - 9:57am.
Posted in | »
Jun 9 2007 - 11:00am
Jun 9 2007 - 7:00pm

This free community arts parade is presented annually by the Cleveland Museum of Art. Circle Village, which includes the activities, entertainment, and food, is presented by University Circle Inc. For more information on the parade, please contact the Community Arts Department, 216-707-2483.


MOCA exhibit: Designs for public spaces/Uptown

Submitted by Marc Lefkowitz on May 10, 2007 - 3:54pm.
Posted in | »
Jun 1 2007 - 7:00pm
Jun 1 2007 - 9:00pm

MOCA Cleveland, which is planning a move to a new location in University Circle, opens its Summer Season featuring OPEN: new designs for public spaces, Expanding the Circle / Uptown Launch Pad.

Also, Olga Ziemska: Mirror Matter (Wendy L. Moore Emerging Artist Series), and Anthony Caro: Wending Back (CMA@MOCA Series).


A transit-oriented arts district?

Submitted by Marc Lefkowitz on April 20, 2007 - 4:02pm.
Posted in | »

A key ingredient to the University Circle Arts and Retail District will be transit – and artists. In the wake of Greater Cleveland Regional Transit Authority discovering transit-oriented design as a priority, New York-based urban design firm Project for Public Spaces appeared with the major players from the Circle to burnish Euclid and Mayfield as a transit village. 

They spoke openly about moving the E. 120th St. station closer to campus and building a node of activity. The stop might include simple, glass-covered stairs/ramp leading to the platform with entrances from the red brick road (E. 117th St.) behind the Cleveland Institute of Art (CIA) factory as well as across the tracks at Mayfield and E. 119th – the road leading into Sidari’s Italian Foods. CIA and Case students will bring more street life to the area around the station if public spaces are carved out with just enough suggestion of uses but with openness to change how the students want to use it. Read more.


EXPERIENCE THE DEMOSCENE - Blockparty @ Notacon

Submitted by tyger on April 13, 2007 - 9:28am.
Posted in | »
Apr 27 2007 - 12:00pm
Apr 29 2007 - 2:00pm

EXPERIENCE THE DEMOSCENE
Blockparty @ Notacon 2007 continues a decades-long worldwide
party tradition in a rare North American setting

Cleveland, OH (April 13, 2007) -- BLOCKPARTY 2007 is an exciting 3-day multimedia event
taking place this April 27-29, catering to those who have an interest in programming,
graphics, animation and digital audio.


Innovation key to economic health

Submitted by Marc Lefkowitz on March 26, 2007 - 1:42pm.
Posted in | »

David Morganthaler, founder of venture capital firm Morganthaler Ventures, spoke last Thursday at the Levin College Forum, which is focused this year on the theme Our Place in the Urban Age.

More than coffee shops and arts districts, innovation is what Northeast Ohio needs to revitalize its economic health, Morganthaler stated. “The bottom line is we must create jobs that are high paying.”

CSU Forum intern Erin Aleman posted a review of what Morganthaler said at the event in the GCBL Forum section, here.

For more of Morganthaler's views on what will make Northeast Ohio competitive, see this article.