Partners for Arts Education (PAE) -- a Syracuse-based organization that provides funding and support to deepen and enrich educational experiences in and through the arts for students, teachers and artists -- and Imagining America, a national consortium of colleges and universities based at Syracuse University committed to public scholarship in the arts, humanities and design, have announced a new collaborative arts initiative. The new Hyphenated Artist Series will enhance and promote the region's cultural activity by exploring expanded opportunities for artists in combinations such as artist-educator and artist-organizer.
The Hyphenated Artist Series will offer a slate of public presentations, seminars and workshops by a variety of community-focused writers and artists from the performing and visual arts, beginning in March and running through December 2008. Events will take place at SU's Warehouse and other locations.
The Hyphenated Artist Series, for which PAE received a grant from the Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation, is the first phase of a larger initiative between Imagining America and PAE to incubate new opportunities with those in the arts and cultural sector. The series aims to provide a way for artists to continue to expand their skill set -- including an entrepreneurial component -- by exploring the transfer and enhancement of arts and cultural skills in order to maximize ways of making a livelihood in Central New York in the arts. Working together, the two organizations hope to evolve the initiative, perhaps eventually into a community institute with a physical, downtown presence. The series will also help convene partner populations, including colleges, community service organizations, arts and cultural organizations and economic advocacy consortia.
"The constant learning that happens as part of the creative process is shared by campus and community citizens alike. This is an opportunity for us to demonstrate the real entrepreneurial capacities that are common to artistry in all forms," says PAE Executive Director Laura Reeder.
"This series expresses the recognition that artists' skills have many terrific applications in the work world," says Jan Cohen-Cruz, director of Imagining America. "The community-campus partnership is so important, given how much student-artists learn alongside people already making their lives in the arts and cultural sector and how crucial it is for universities to share resources beyond their immediate constituencies."
Among the artists and events in the Hyphenated Artist Series:
All of the 2008 Hyphenated Artist Series events will be free to the public. Times and further details will be available through
PAE, http://www.arts4ed.org, 234-9911, and Imagining America, 443-8590,
http://www.imaginingamerica.org.