Tuesday, June 21, 2011

COCA's blog has moved!

Please visit us at our brand new website, www.cocanet.org, and our blog at http://www.cocanet.org/news/!

Thursday, April 14, 2011


COCA (the Council on Culture & Arts) announces

Culture Club: Where the community convenes for cultural conversations.


For anyone who makes a living or a hobby of the arts or enjoys the view from the audience; plays in an orchestra or sings in a band; dances, acts, directs, costumes or lights a show; paints, takes photographs, makes films or buys local art; teaches any type of art at any level, writes books, attends or organizes festivals, explores an historic site, admires exhibitions in a museum or hangs them yourself, you are the Culture Club.


Tallahassee has the Economic Club of Florida, The Capital Tiger Bay Club, & dozens of others. Culture Club now joins them and knows that members of those clubs are also members of the Culture Club.


All Culture Club meetings will begin with light hors d’oeuvres and a cash bar followed by the sit-down portion of the meeting where “Inside the Actors Studio” meets “NPR’s Press Club” meets “The Phil Donahue Show” (for those old enough to know who he is).


Culture Club’s featured guests may be famous or infamous, citizens or politicians with opinions, do-ers and/or teachers of the arts, and more.


COCA thanks The Knight Foundation for their help in launching this inaugural meeting on Wednesday, April 27 at 5:30-7:30 pm at the Tallahassee Little Theatre. Tickets for the general public are $15 and for COCA Members are $10. It’s easy to register your attendance online at http://cocanet.org/assistance/cultureclub.html . But, it’s first come, first serve for this first meeting and space is limited.


The first Culture Club conversation begins with no politics. We welcome as our featured guests…Michael Bakan & The Artism Music-Play Project.


How does music affect children? Or, more specifically, can making music have an impact on children on the autism spectrum? Through the Artism Music-Play Project, Michael Bakan and his Artism Ensemble collaborators are exploring such questions in a very practical—and a very musical—way.


The music of Artism draws from a vast array of musical traditions, from Chinese zheng and Aboriginal Australian didgeridoo music to rumba, flamenco, jazz, salsa, gamelan, and West African drum-dance forms. At the heart of the repertoire, however, are the musical and cultural innovations of the children themselves. They are the real stars of the ensemble, and it is their original compositions and arrangements that truly define Artism’s unique musi-cultural identity and vision.


Michael, who is Professor and Head of Ethnomusicology/World Music at Florida State University, formed the Artism Ensemble as a research and public outreach project aimed at promoting autism awareness, facilitating social and creative agency, and highlighting the abilities—rather than disabilities—of children on the autism spectrum. This music improvisation collective is made up of professional musicians from diverse world cultures plus five children, ages 7-14, with special abilities, as well as the co-participating parents of these children.


Michael Bakan is using his knowledge to improve the world, one child at a time. And he is here in Tallahassee. This is your chance to meet and get to know him, and to see what the Artism Music-Play Project is doing to change our conceptions of both autism and music. Join us for this unique opportunity to explore music in a new way.


COCA is planning more Culture Club meetings for 2011 and will decide how many we can do in 2012 with the community’s enthusiasm as the barometer.


REGISTRATION INFORMATION


Event Information:

Wednesday, April 27, 2011 ..........................5:30–7:30 pm

Tallahassee Little Theater; 1861 Thomasville Road


5:30-6:00 Mingle with members of the Artism Ensemble and enjoy light hors d'Ĺ“uvres and a cash bar


6:00-7:30 Participate in a conversation with Michael Bakan and the Artism Ensemble


Admission:

COCA Members .......................................$10.00

General Public ......................................... $15.00

To become a COCA member, visit http://cocanet.org/about/join.html


Deadlines:

Registration Deadline ........................... 4/22- the sooner the better, because those who hesitate may miss their chance.

Registration forms available online at: http://cocanet.org/assistance/cultureclub.html

Late Registration (including at the door) is based on space availability.


Questions:

Contact the Council on Culture & Arts .........(850) 224-2500 or amanda@cocanet.org

Sunday, April 3, 2011

Important Invitation

Dear Friends and Colleagues,

Right now, our City, State and country have a tough line to toe. They need to rank their priorities and decide what is appropriate for public funding.

As governments at all levels are weighing those priorities, they are discussing where the arts fit into that list. We see the Federal government considering the elimination of the NEA, State legislators considering to barely fund cultural grants at all, even at a level that is already 95% less than it was five years ago.


This year, the City of Tallahassee is implementing a new strategy of obtaining community input on budget matters early in the process by holding Budget Public Meetings
this week in three different locations in the community. Citizens will have the opportunity to “interact with staff in an open house format, review service areas and provide feedback about how they would like to see the budget divided”. Their goal for these meetings is to get a better sense of community priorities before staff begins crafting the budget to present to the City Commissioners for their consideration and approval.

Those who think public safety is a high priority will be there.


Those who think social services should be a high priority will be there.


Those who think government funding should not go to anything but those two things will be there.


Some will be there who may think government has no reason to support the arts and culture at all.


As someone who appreciates what the arts and culture bring to this community you must come forward and let them know that arts and cultural City funding is important or your voice will be telling them with its silence that it should not be considered a priority.


As always, I hope that all of you will use positive comments about the impact you have felt and seen as a result of the City’s current support for arts and culture and/or constructive criticism that includes suggestions for improvement. If you have anything to say about COCA’s role in the community or the impact it has had on you we encourage you to add that to your statement as well.
This is not the time to stay home and hope someone else speaks for you. COCA is urging you to choose at least one of the meetings to attend and bring your message of support for the City to fund the arts and culture.

Choose from one of the below meetings or attend more than one:

6:00 PM Monday, April 4-Gilchrist Elementary School, 1301 Timberlane Road
6:00 PM Tuesday, April 5-Walker-Ford Community Center, 2301 Pasco St.
6:00 PM Wednesday, April 6-Tallahassee Senior Center, 1400 North Monroe St.

I have included some Facts to Consider on the following page and of course, please feel free to call us at COCA if you would like to discuss anything prior to the meetings. As always, we are grateful to have such an engaged community and when an invitation is extended from your local government to share your opinion, we hope you will seize the opportunity. Let us know if you plan to attend so we can have an idea of how many voices will be heard.

Thanks for all your work, your support and your participation in making arts and culture strong in Tallahassee,

Peggy Brady, Executive Director

FACTS TO CONSIDER: ECONOMIC IMPACT
No matter how tight a budget, during the Great Depression the arts and culture received more not less government support because of its transformative and affective impact, not just its economic ones. Today, we must also speak to its economic impact. Here in Tallahassee that impact has been surveyed and documented and it was done in a down time-during this current recession. That data shows that with the City and County’s support combined with the earnings of local arts organizations, which include private, corporate and admission/ticket sales there is a healthy ROI for the local community. Translated into dollars, for every dollar that comes from local government into the local arts organizations, even now in this recession, $7.66 is spent back in the local economy.

If growing the economy, creating jobs and working in public/private partnerships is their goal, the City can count on arts and culture as valuable partners and a good use of public funding during these times as is documented by objective data.

WHERE IS THE CULTURAL FUNDING IN THE CITY’S BUDGET NOW
In the City's budget the cultural funding is found in FUNDING FOR OUTSIDE AGENCIES. Local non-profit arts and cultural organizations submit competitive grant applications through COCA each year providing detailed information on the projects and outcomes they will achieve with the use of these public funds. These applications are then reviewed by a citizen’s panel to recommend the distribution of $529,298 to the highest scoring of over 25 local non-profit organizations. The cultural organizations who receive the funding also provide interim and final reports on the use of the funds. Eight local non-profit organizations that have successfully competed in past years were left with no funding this year due to the decreased grant fund.

COCA, the Council on Culture and Arts is designated local arts agency, a non-profit public service organization that works with the city through performance service contracts. As a public agency, created by statute and inter-local agreements, COCA was also given a restriction from raising private dollars for its own operating in order to assist those local organizations seeking those same dollars. COCA's services include providing promotional outlets about cultural offerings and opportunities to the public, providing exhibition opportunities and business tools for local artists and creative businesses, managing the competitive grants programs for both the City and the County, working with the school district and teachers to support arts education, providing a central resource to citizens for locating and learning about local arts and culture and serving as a public/private partner with the City and County in absence of a department of Cultural Affairs. COCA's City contract funding totals $192,036.

www.cocanet.org
cultural@cocanet.org

850.224.2500



Tuesday, March 22, 2011

Power and Politics: Paintings by Lance deHaven-Smith

Dancing Trees by Lance deHaven-Smith

The Council on Culture & Arts is pleased to present Power and Politics:
Paintings by Lance deHaven-Smith
an exhibition at the Artport Gallery from March 23 – May 23, 2011 as part of the Arts in Public Places program.

As an adept oil painter and a professor in the School of Public Administration and Policy at FSU, Lance deHaven-Smith is uniquely capable of using art to explore power and status. deHaven-Smith's art is an aspect of his lifelong interest in politics and power. His oil paintings show how power relations are written into the architecture, location and the even the heights of the buildings in downtown Tallahassee.

“If you look at the governmental buildings in relation to other (downtown) buildings, they are straining to be on top and overshadow one another. They aren’t thinking about how they look as a group. You end up with a good deal of struggle for presence.”

In this exhibit, deHaven-Smith displays his impressionistic style filled with color, movement and energy. Downtown scenes and city-scapes that are familiar to residents and frequent visitors are compressed and presented from unusual and imaginary vantage points challenging the viewer to contemplate how power and politics are expressed in the world around us.

The exhibition is curated by the Council on Culture & Arts’ Arts in Public Places program on behalf of the City of Tallahassee. For more information about this program, visit http://www.cocanet.org/.

For more information about this exciting exhibition or upcoming exhibitions contact Amanda Karioth Thompson at (850) 224-2500 or Amanda@cocanet.org. For a schedule of other exhibitions and arts and culture programs throughout north Florida, visit http://www.morethanyouthought.com/. Learn more about COCA and sign up to receive COCA’s weekly email blast at http://www.cocanet.org/.

Monday, March 21, 2011

Creative Tallahassee Exhibition Winners

Congratualtions to all of the artists who currently have work displayed in the 2011 Creative Tallahassee exhibit. This annual juried show has become very competitive and although it is an honor to be selected for this exhibition, COCA announced some additional kudos to a few of the artists who have artwork in this show during a public reception on March 18th.


Honorable Mention Award Winners:

Let Go by Noah Z. Brock

The Kawamoto Series by Ann Kawamoto


Tarpon by Pam Talley

3rd Place Winner:
Bridge at Southwood by Peter Bigelow

2nd Place Winner:
Mill Wheel 1832 by Marguerite Foxon

1st Place Winner:

Corrugated Castle by Bill McKeown


Congratulations to these six artists and to all of the artists selected to exhibit in Creative Tallahassee exhibition.

Monday, March 14, 2011

Creative Tallahassee 2011 Exhibit at the City Hall Art Gallery

Mothership
Photography by Steve Coleman

Don Quixote
Oil on Canvas by Stephen Bennett


Sidewalk Silhouette
Photography by Niki Dunlap


Rosa and Granite
Gouache & Graphite on Paper by Ananda Balingit-LeFils



Creative Tallahassee 2011

Celebrate the skill, talent, ingenuity and creativity of some of the most exciting artists in the Big Bend area. In this multi-media show at the City Hall Gallery, the Council on Culture & Arts’ Creative Tallahassee 2011 highlights the work of many well-known Tallahassee artists, as well as emerging artists in this highly-anticipated annual juried exhibition. The exhibition of paintings, photographs, textiles and sculptures will be on display from March 9th until May 9th.

Competition in 2011 was fierce. Over 130 individual pieces were submitted for consideration. And from those, forty artists were selected by a special jury to have their work shown in this year’s Creative Tallahassee show.

Meet the artists in the City Hall Art Gallery during a reception and awards ceremony on Friday evening, March 18th from 6:00 pm to 7:30 pm, and enjoy light refreshments. Awards will be presented at 6:30 pm. There is no charge for the reception or the exhibition.

The City Hall Art Gallery is located on the second floor of City Hall at 300 South Adams Street and is open Monday through Friday,
8:00 am – 5:30 pm.

Creative Tallahassee 2011 is one of over a dozen annual exhibitions curated by the Council on Culture & Arts. The exhibit is part of the City of Tallahassee’s Art in Public Places program. For more information about this exhibition, upcoming exhibitions, or the Art in Public Places program, contact Amanda Karioth Thompson at COCA, (850) 224-2500 or amanda@cocanet.org.

Tuesday, January 25, 2011

SAIL High School Receives College Board’s First National Award for Innovation in the Arts


SAIL High School is one of six schools in the United States to be chosen as the inaugural recipient of the College Board Award for Excellence and Innovation in the Arts. Granted to one school in each of the College Board regions, this award was established to recognize and celebrate the achievements of K-12 institutions that have implemented an arts program that promotes student learning and creativity in exemplary and innovative ways. SAIL was chosen from applicants across the College Board’s Southern region, which consists of 10 states (LA, MS, AL, GA, FL, SC, NC, TN, KY, VA).

“The selection committee was very impressed with the diverse array of student artwork that was reflected in SAIL’s work sample and the high level of engagement and achievement that was reflected throughout. Your commitment to admitting students to SAIL regardless of their prior art experience and academic achievement, shows a commitment to access and equity that we greatly admire, and makes the high level of artistic and academic achievement even more inspiring. We are delighted to present SAIL High School with a $3,000 award to support its exemplary arts programming.”

-- Nancy Rubino, Director of Office of Academic Initiatives at the College Board

On Janurary 27 at 10:35, Superintendent Jackie Pons will be coming to SAIL to congratulate the students and staff on this prestigious award. SAIL performing arts students will present a 5 minute showcase of the dance, art, drama and music that we are being recognized for.

Tiffany Thomas, Assistant Principal, will accept the award on behalf of SAIL at the College Board’s Regional Forum in Atlanta on February 10- 11, 2011.

Friday, January 7, 2011

East Point’s Treasures by Shehla Milliron

Iamonia by Pam Talley

Spring Morning Horizon Lines-Detail by Mary Urquhart


The Council on Culture & Arts is pleased to present

Horizon Lines: Oil Paintings by Shehla Milliron, Pam Talley and Mary Urquhart
an exhibition at the City Hall Gallery from January 12 – March 7, 2011
as part of the Arts in Public Places program

Capturing images on canvas is Shehla Milliron’s way of going back in time and revisiting the places she has encountered. As an an oil painter focused primarily on landscapes and animals, Milliron spends the year living between Tallahassee and Jackson Hole, Wyoming. Her work depicts subjects from these two diverse regions. She paints on location whenever possible and also uses photography as an aid in the creation of her works, especially the wildlife.

Pam Talley is always evolving as an artist and she strives to show the beauty that great light can bring to everyday subjects. She works in oils and uses impressonistic brush and knife work to make her subjects come to life. Pam pursued painting throughout early school years and is a trained graphic artist. Pam teaches art classes at Brush and Palette Studio and is continually developing new ideas for paintings.

Born and raised in the Midwest, Mary Urquhart now sees wild beauty in the landscapes of the Southeast. Her paintings allow her the opportunity to discover, take chances and be taken by surprise. Whether it is a marsh, lake, river or the Gulf of Mexico, she finds allure in watery reflections. Urquhart's romantic realism invites you to drift into the glass-like reflections of water.

The City Hall Gallery is located at 300 South Adams Street, second floor lobby of Tallahassee’s City Hall. This gallery is free to the public and open Monday through Friday, 8:00 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. Parking is available in Kleman Plaza.

The exhibition is curated by the Council on Culture & Arts’ Arts in Public Places program on behalf of the City of Tallahassee. For more information about this program, visit our web site.

For more information about this exciting exhibition or upcoming exhibitions contact Amanda Karioth Thompson at (850) 224-2500 or amanda@cocanet.org.

For a schedule of other exhibitions and arts and culture programs throughout north Florida, visit www.morethanyouthought.com. Learn more about COCA and sign up to receive COCA’s weekly email blast at www.cocanet.org.

Thursday, January 6, 2011


The Council on Culture & Arts is pleased to present

Natural Awakenings: Paintings by Liu Nan

an exhibition at the Artport Gallery from

January 11 – March 21, 2011

as part of the Arts in Public Places program.

Born, raised and artistically trained in China, Liu Nan is now a Tallahassee resident. His landscapes include familiar scenes from the Big Bend Area and demonstrate the spirit of traditional Chinese art. Nature has consistently served as the main theme in his works and his goal is to promote natural and simple artistic expression. In this landscape series of oil and watercolor paintings, Nan seeks to express the joyous sensations he gets from the natural world, especially in undisturbed and undestroyed locales.

“The ‘Sunshine State’ has offered me an entirely new perspective on the value of the untouched and pristine. Growing up in a large metropolitan city in north China, crowded with millions of people and an increasingly obliterated natural environment due to modern urbanization, I rarely glimpsed the world that opened up to me in Florida.”

Nan expresses this new awakening to the varied beauty of our area in a series of paintings of natural environments; woods, water, and grass fields. His artwork is on display at the Artport Gallery.

This exhibition is free and open to the public. Gallery Hours: 8:00am – 11:30pm daily. The Artport Gallery is located inside the Tallahassee Regional Airport, 3300 Capital Circle SW.

The exhibition is curated by the Council on Culture & Arts’ Art in Public Places program on behalf of the City of Tallahassee. For more information about this program, visit www.cocanet.org.

For more information about this exhibition or upcoming exhibitions contact Amanda Karioth Thompson at (850) 224-2500 or Amanda@cocanet.org.

For a schedule of other exhibitions and arts and culture programs throughout north Florida, visit www.morethanyouthought.com. Learn more about COCA and sign up to receive COCA’s weekly email blast at www.cocanet.org.