Shownotes
What makes the difference between a community where artists simply survive… and one where creativity becomes part of the living infrastructure of democracy?
Today we’re continuing our series exploring the building blocks of effective community arts practice. Joining me once again are activist poet, performer, educator, and creative change agent Alice Lovelace, along with educator, cultural strategist, and longtime arts and democracy leader Barbara Shaffer Bacon.
Together we tackle a deceptively simple question: What are the essential ingredients of a healthy and thriving art and social change ecosystem?
We Explore:
- Why healthy arts ecosystems don’t happen by accident.
- The false assumption that cultural health is defined by economic development.
- Why the strongest cultural ecosystems reach far beyond the arts themselves—connecting artists with public health, education, environmental justice, youth development, and other sectors that shape the well-being of a community.
This is a conversation about community, stewardship, and what it really takes to build an ecosystem where artists—and the communities they serve—can flourish together.
Notable Mentions
People
- Alice Lovelace: Poet, educator, Executive Director of ArtsXchange, and longtime leader in community-based arts, cultural organizing, and social justice.
- Barbara Shaffer Bacon: Cultural policy leader, educator, and founding co-director of Animating Democracy, widely recognized for advancing arts-based civic engagement and cultural policy.
- Lenny Sloan: Beloved community arts advocate, cultural organizer, and longtime colleague remembered as one of the inspirations behind this conversation series.
- Maynard Jackson: Atlanta's first African American mayor, remembered for expanding civic participation and public investment in the arts.
- Shirley Franklin: Former mayor of Atlanta whose administration continued significant investment in the city's cultural infrastructure.
- Robert Peters: Mashpee Wampanoag artist, writer, and cultural leader whose work integrates Indigenous traditions, storytelling, ceremony, and community healing.
- Roberta Uno: Founder of New WORLD Theater and one of America's leading advocates for culturally specific and community-based theater.
Organizations & Initiatives
- Center for the Study of Art & Community: Producer of ART IS CHANGE and advancing arts-based community development and cultural organizing.
- ArtsXchange: Atlanta-based interdisciplinary arts organization dedicated to community cultural development, creative leadership, and social justice.
- Animating Democracy: National initiative advancing civic engagement, community development, and social change through the arts.
- New WORLD Theater: Groundbreaking multicultural theater that elevated artists and communities of color while reshaping American theater.
- Public Art Network: National professional network supporting public artists, public art programs, and civic arts leadership.
- Arts on Prescription: An emerging healthcare movement integrating arts participation into medical care through clinician referrals and social prescribing.
Places
- Atlanta, Georgia: Principal case study illustrating strengths and vulnerabilities of long-term community arts ecosystems.
- New Bedford, Massachusetts: Example of a city where artists, government, and community organizations have built a collaborative cultural ecosystem.
- Alameda, California: Home base of host Bill Cleveland and the Center for the Study of Art & Community.
- Minneapolis, Minnesota: Referenced as an example of a deeply interconnected community arts ecosystem.
Key Concepts & Practices
- Arts Ecosystems: The interconnected relationships among artists, organizations, funders, institutions, and communities that collectively sustain creative life.
- Cross-sector Collaboration: Partnerships linking artists with public health, education, environmental justice, youth development, and community planning.
- Creative Commons (Community Sense): Bill Cleveland's metaphor describing artistic communities where collaboration, mentoring, reciprocity, and mutual aid become cultural norms.
- Arts on Prescription: A growing international practice in which healthcare professionals prescribe arts participation as part of treatment for physical, mental, and social well-being.
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Art Is CHANGE is a podcast that chronicles the power of art and community transformation, providing a platform for activist artists to share their experiences and gain the skills and strategies they need to thrive as agents of social change.
Through compelling conversations with artist activists, artivists, and cultural organizers, the podcast explores how art and activism intersect to fuel cultural transformation and drive meaningful change. Guests discuss the challenges and triumphs of community arts, socially engaged art, and creative placemaking, offering insights into artist mentorship, building credibility, and communicating impact.
Episodes delve into the realities of artist isolation, burnout, and funding for artists, while celebrating the role of artists in residence and creative leadership in shaping a more just and inclusive world. Whether you’re an emerging or established artist for social justice, this podcast offers inspiration, practical advice, and a sense of solidarity in the journey toward art and social change.