Lewis Prize Awards $1.25 Million in COVID-19 Relief to CYD Orgs

The Lewis Prize for Music recently announced the recipients of its COVID-19 Community Response Fund. A total of $1.25 million will be awarded to 32 Creative Youth Development (CYD) organizations across the U.S. that have adapted and responded to the pressing needs of the young people they serve amid the challenges of the COVID-19 pandemic.

The recipients, below, include numerous members of the National Guild community:

  • 317 Main Community Music Center (Yarmouth, ME)
  • A Place Called Home (Los Angeles, CA) 
  • Beyond the Bars (Philadelphia, PA)
  • Beyond the Natural (Baltimore, MD)
  • Cambridge Community Center (Cambridge, MA)
  • Center of Life (Pittsburgh, PA)
  • Crescendo Detroit (Detroit, MI)
  • Enriching Lives Through Music (San Rafael, CA)
  • FAME – Foundation for the Advancement of Music & Education (Bowie, MD)
  • Hyde Square Task Force (Jamaica Plain, MA)
  • Memphis Music Initiative (Memphis, TN)
  • MEOW Cares, Inc. (Montgomery, AL)
  • Music Beyond Measure (Montclair, NJ)
  • Neutral Zone (Ann Arbor, MI)
  • New City Kids (Jersey City, NJ)
  • Pico Youth & Family Center (Santa Monica, CA)
  • Play on Philly (Philadelphia, PA)
  • ROCA Music Program (Brownsville, TX)
  • RYSE Youth Center (Richmond, CA)
  • Saint Louis Story Stitchers Artists Collective (St. Louis, MO)
  • Stax Music Academy (Memphis, TN)
  • Sylvester Broome Empowerment Village (Flint, MI)
  • The Choir School of Delaware (Wilmington, DE)
  • The Heartbeat Music Project (Crownpoint, NM)
  • The HUBB (Newark, NJ)
  • The Jessye Norman School of the Arts, Inc. (Augusta, GA)
  • The TETRA (Detroit, MI)
  • White Hall Arts Academy (Los Angeles, CA)
  • Youth Empowerment Project (New Orleans, LA)
  • Youth on Record (Denver, CO)
  • YR Media (Oakland, CA)
  • ZUMIX (East Boston, MA)

“Access to music enriches the social fabric of our lives,” said Daniel Lewis, Founder and Chairman of the Lewis Prize for Music. “The organizations and leaders we have chosen to support in these times play a critical role in the lives and communities of the young people they support. In the face of unprecedented challenges of COVID-19 and racial injustice across the country, Creative Youth Development organizations are devoting all of their resources to uplift both the creative and material well-being of young people and their families. We are thrilled to support these organizations and be an advocate for the entire Creative Youth Development field.”

Learn more here.

Abolitionist Teaching Network Launched

The Abolitionist Teaching Network (ATN) was recently launched with the goal of helping educators fight injustice within their schools and communities. Through the lens of work such as Unapologetic: A Black Queer, & Feminist Mandate for Radical Movement by Charlene Carruthers as well as We Want To Do More Than Survive: Abolitionist Teaching & The Pursuit of Educational Freedom by Bettina Love, ATN will provide grants, support activists in residence, convene annually (starting in 2022), and develop online resources for abolitionist education.

Upcoming programming from ATN includes:

 

Introducing the “Create, Connect, Catalyze” framework

The CYD National Partnership has created the “Create, Connect, Catalyze” framework to weave together perspectives from young peoples’ reflections on their experiences in creative learning environments alongside perspectives from academic research on creative learning environments.

The framework is interactive—on the CYD Partnership website, you can click on each of the 3 outcome areas to delve into how the research connects with young peoples’ experiences. 

With a shared framework for creative youth development, we are hopeful that we will be in a stronger position to develop new, participatory approaches to program evaluation and assessment.

Learn more and explore the framework here.

National Guild Takes the #ArtsGoBlack Pledge

June 26, 2020

The Guild has taken the #ArtsGoBlack pledge, which is part of a campaign launched by the Caribbean Cultural Center African Diaspora Institute (CCCADI) that calls on the arts and culture field to take real action and be held accountable to dismantling white supremacy in our institutions. The campaign's demands are as follows:

 

1) Amend Your Mission

Every arts and cultural organization, especially those in communities of color, must amend their mission to address racial and social injustice.

2) Center Communities & Artists Of Color

Every arts and cultural organization must implement policies that ensure that communities and artists of color have meaningful engagement and opportunities in exhibitions, presentations and related activities.

3) Diversify Boards & Staff

Every arts and cultural organization must require diversity on the board and staff reflective of the populations they serve.

 

By signing the pledge, we commit to taking the steps above, as well as participating in a one-month introspective period guided by CCCADI's questionnaire and resources. These actions are aligned with our internal racial equity process, driven by the Racial Equity Committee of our Board of Trustees, which we're excited to share more about in the coming months.

 

We encourage organizations committed to ending racism in our field to make the pledge by visiting artsgo.black.

 

Complete CYD Toolkit Series Now Available

The Guild is excited to have completed the CYD Toolkit Seriesan 8-part, free virtual learning series featuring dynamic online conversations with youth, experts, funders, and practitioners to explore new paths forward for supporting youth through creative youth development practice. Thank you to the CYD National Partnership, Americans for the Arts, the Clare Rose Foundation, and all of the guest speakers. 

Recordings of all of the webinars in the series are available in our Resource Center. Practitioners will especially benefit from these conversations as they strive to support youth during this time of ongoing, intensified crises.

Topics include:

CYD and Social Justice in the Classroom

Working in Social Justice

Trends in CYD

Working With Youth

Advocacy and Policy

Preparing Artists and Educators

Funding, Sustainability, and Partnerships

Program Evaluation

 

You can access all of the webinar recordings here.

Exploring the Landscape of Live Theatre for Young Audiences in the U.S.

Theatre for Young Audiences USA (TYA/USA) in partnership with the Center for Scholars & Storytellers (CSS), based at UCLA, announces the release of the Exploring the Landscape of Live Theatre for Young Audiences in the US Report. Initiated last year by the leadership of TYA theatres across the country who were interested in understanding and confronting the inequity across the industry, the study was commissioned by TYA/USA to provide concrete data as a tool for meaningful change and accountability.

Key findings demonstrate that the TYA industry has made strides for increased representation in terms of gender and race across the last decade, but racial diversity in live theatre for young people is not yet representative of the US population. The study showed that productions by POC playwrights nearly doubled in the last decade, but the overall total was still only 20% in the 2018/19 season. Moreover, productions helmed by POC directors accounted for 15% of the 2018/19 season. Examining the national landscape in this way provides an important step in creating an equitable TYA industry that represents all children and families across the US.

Learn more here.

We believe in a future without anti-Black violence

June 4, 2020

Black lives matter.
 

We as community arts education institutions have a responsibility to address white supremacy —because it kills and traumatizes people in our communities, because our institutions themselves are capable of perpetuating racism and inequity, and because our organizations are made up of people who are impacted by this violence in various ways. We applaud the organizations in our field that have aligned themselves with the movement against anti-Black violence.
 

The National Guild for Community Arts Education’s mission is to ensure that everyone can achieve their creative potential. This mission is not possible as long as communities across the United States are terrorized by white supremacy and institutional violence.
 

While an extraordinary amount of funding goes towards policing, arts and cultural organizations—especially those led by people of color—struggle for funding. We stand with the Divest/Invest initiatives of Funders for Justice and Movement for Black Lives. These initiatives call for resources to be divested from policing and incarceration, and invested in things that communities need in order to thrive like housing, food, healthcare, education, and the arts. 
 

We welcome the beginning of Pride month, which itself began as an anti-police uprising led by trans women of color (Trans Queer Pueblo created a beautiful video about this: watch it here). We honor the long legacy of those who have fought to get us to this point, and we stand in solidarity with those who are continuing the fight today.
 

Staff and board at the Guild are committed to the ongoing, transformative process of becoming an anti-racist organization. We recognize that this process is never-ending and worthwhile. If you’re interested to learn more about the racial equity work that we’re doing internally, you can contact us.
 

Here are just a few of the many organizations doing great work on the ground that we encourage you to support (and ask your constituents to support):
 

Black Lives Matter

The official #BlackLivesMatter Global Network builds power to bring justice, healing, and freedom to Black people across the globe.

Black Mental Wellness

Black Mental Wellness provides resources about mental health and behavioral health topics from a Black perspective, to highlight and increase the diversity of mental health professionals, and to decrease the mental health stigma in the Black community.

BYP 100

Founded in 2013, BYP100 (Black Youth Project 100) is a member-based organization of Black youth activists creating justice and freedom for all Black people, through a black, queer, feminist lens.

Million Artist Movement

Million Artist Movement is a global movement and vision that focuses on the role of art in the campaign to dismantle oppressive racist systems against Black, Brown, Indigenous, and disenfranchised peoples.

Movement for Black Lives

The Movement for Black Lives (M4BL) seeks to reach millions, mobilize hundreds of thousands, and organize tens of thousands, so that Black political power is a force able to influence national and local agendas in the direction of our shared Vision for Black Lives.

National Queer and Trans Therapists of Color Network

The National Queer and Trans Therapists of Color Network (NQTTCN) is a healing justice organization committed to transforming mental health for queer and trans people of color.

Solutions Not Punishment Collaborative

The Solutions Not Punishment Collaborative is working to build a black trans futurist framework for practical abolition as the way to liberation.

Soul Fire Farm

Soul Fire Farm is a BIPOC (Black, Indigenous, and People of Color) centered community farm committed to ending racism and injustice in the food system.
 

Bail funds to support protesters:

Split a donation between 40 community bail funds (ActBlue)

Directory of community bail funds (National Bail Fund Network)

LGBTQ Fund

The Bail Project

 

We thank the artists who are using their art to make space for grief, healing, anger, and action.

We believe that a just future is possible, and that artists have a powerful role in bringing this future to life.

 

In the spirit of healing and justice,

The National Guild Team

AFTA Continues Research on COVID-19 Impact on the Arts

Americans for the Arts has provided an update on ongoing research tracking the human and financial impacts of the COVID-19 crisis in the arts and culture sector. If you haven't already, you can fill out the 5-minute survey that will help AFTA track COVID's effect on the arts.

According to the most recent data:

  • Nationally, financial losses to nonprofit arts and cultural organizations are an estimated $5.5 billion, to date. They have also lost 210 million admissions due to cancelled events, resulting in a $6.7 billion loss in event-related spending by audiences at local businesses (restaurants, lodging, retail). The economic impact of these losses is $2.0 billion in lost government revenue and 348,000 jobs no longer being supported. Findings are based on 11,500 survey responses.

    • Even with devestating losses, 68% are still delivering artistic content to support their community.

  • Artists/creatives are among the most severely affected workers by the COVID-19 crisis. 62% have become fully unemployed and the average financial loss per artist/creative worker is $21,000, to date. Nationally, they expect to lose $50.6 billion in income in 2020. Findings are based on 17,800 survey responses.

Learn more and read the full update here.

Update on the 2020 Conference for Community Arts Education

May 19, 2020

 

Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, we will not be hosting an in-person conference in New York City this fall.

We are deeply saddened that we won't be able to gather in-person with our arts education community—we cherish this time together each year. We know that for many people as well as for us, the Conference for Community Arts Education is a mind- and soul-nourishing gathering which offers a rare chance to see friends and colleagues from across the country, and which pushes forward our work for the entire year. For now, we are taking time to pause, reflect, and reimagine the shape of our programming for the coming months.

We've come to this decision for several reasons, including uncertainty around the safety of gathering in person, consideration for the NYC organizations who were engaged in planning and hosting the conference, and recognition of the serious financial realities that many organizations are facing.

Although we cannot convene in New York, we are committed to bringing the field together in the summer and fall. We are inspired to design learning opportunities that respond to the current moment and support the community arts education field as we collectively build our future. We've already been developing ideas based on our conversations with the field through our three COVID-19 response virtual series (you can find recordings here, and our Community Conversations series is still ongoing). 

Over the coming months, we will be reaching out to our community to tell you more, and to ask for your help. We very much look forward to being with you all, virtually.

Wishing you health, safety, and peace of mind, 

The National Guild Staff

Villa Musica Profiled for Program Treating Alzheimers with Music Therapy

The San Diego Union Tribune recently profiled Villa Music (San Diego, CA) for the NEA-supported musical biography program, which "guides people living with dementia and their caregivers as they create a scrapbook and playlist to trigger memories from their lives." According to the article:

"In a partnership with the Shiley-Marcos Alzheimer’s Disease Research Center at UC San Diego, people in the early stages of dementia and their caregivers attend weekly sessions at Villa Musica. The pair work together to create the project, along with a team comprised of a musical therapist, social workers, expressive arts therapists and [Executive Director Fiona] Chatwin."

You can read the full article here.