Tomorrow, I will be speaking at the annual meeting of the National Art Education Association in New York City. I will be in discussion with our beloved reader and frequent commenter Laura Chapman, who has devoted her life to art education. If you happen to be in New York City, we will be in the Grand Ballroom of the New York Hilton at noon.
Make no mistake. Federal support for the arts, humanities, culture, and education are under assault. The president wants to boost spending on the military and make deep cuts everywhere else. We know where the cuts will hurt most, even though the savings will be minuscule: the arts, the humanities, culture, and education.
Here is a statement issued by Lincoln Center and its partner institutions. I am aware of many families and foundations in New York and across the nation that generously fund the arts as a treasure for all. I am not aware of the Trump family name as a sponsor of any of them. He could change that negative impression by increasing funding for the National Endowments for the Arts and the Humanities.
PRESS CONTACT
Mary Caraccioli / 212.875.5100 / mcaraccioli@lincolncenter.org
From our stages and screens at Lincoln Center in New York City—which draw more than six million people to the largest performing arts center in the world—to theaters, concert halls, and galleries across America, the arts inspire and delight people from every walk of life, at every stage of life.
A child’s early introduction to ballet teaches strength and discipline. A veteran’s exposure to art therapy brings healing and hope. A student’s participation in music class improves math scores and critical thinking skills. Art shapes achievement, with profound and practical effects.
Still more, art anchors communities. In American cities and towns, arts institutions and districts are breathing life into neighborhoods—attracting investment, spurring development, fueling innovation, and creating jobs. Arts and culture help power the U.S. economy at the astounding level of $704.2 billion each year.
Beyond our shores, American arts institutions are the envy of the world. In a unique public-private model, private sources provide the vast majority of funding for our artists and arts organizations. Government helps in targeted ways at pivotal moments, for example, by providing early funding to get projects off the ground or helping to create or expand promising initiatives to achieve greater reach and impact.
Underlying all of this is the National Endowment for the Arts.
For more than 50 years, the NEA has provided leadership in the public arts arena. Yet today it faces an uncertain future as its federal funding is considered for elimination. The total cost of the NEA is less than one dollar a year for every American. But because it is so successful and its imprimatur so prestigious, every dollar the NEA contributes leads to nine additional dollars being donated from other sources.
A great America needs that kind of return.
We hold close the words of Lincoln Center’s inaugural president, John D. Rockefeller III, who said, “The arts are not for the privileged few, but for the many. Their place is not on the periphery of daily life, but at its center. They should function not merely as another form of entertainment but, rather, should contribute significantly to our well-being and happiness.”
To preserve the human and economic benefits of the arts, we urge continued federal support for the National Endowment for the Arts.
The Chamber Music Society of Lincoln Center
Suzanne Davidson, Executive Director
Film Society of Lincoln Center
Lesli Klainberg, Executive Director
Jazz at Lincoln Center
Greg Scholl, Executive Director
The Juilliard School
Joseph W. Polisi, President
Lincoln Center Theater
André Bishop, Producing Artistic Director
The Metropolitan Opera
Peter Gelb, General Manager
New York City Ballet
Katherine E. Brown, Executive Director
New York Philharmonic
Matthew VanBesien, President
The New York Public Library for the Performing Arts
Jacqueline Z. Davis, Barbara G. & Lawrence A. Fleischman Executive Director
School of American Ballet
Marjorie Van Dercook, Executive Director
Lincoln Center for the Performing Arts
Liza Parker, Chief Operating Officer

TERRIFIC! Glad you are speaking! Will look for your post about your talk and the event. Good luck! 🙂 And thank you.
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Looking forward to attending your session tomorrow!
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If there is a link for a video or transcript can you please provide it afterwards. TIA, Duane
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http://www.stltoday.com/news/opinion/columns/the-platform/editorial-don-t-cut-funding-for-arts-and-public-broadcasting/article_40f21fc1-7ede-59f0-aded-9732f1e3e426.html
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StlPD, the newspaper, along with the Globe Democrat, of my childhood and my go to site for StL sports, getting it right. No comments yet but I’m sure the usual PD regressive suspects will chime in soon.
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“The arts and humanities have always been something of great personal importance to Nancy and me. Nations are more often than not remembered for their art and thought.” Ronald Regan October 14, 1981.
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The GOPers are salivating like ghouls and zombies at a brain eating contest. Now they have the power to seriously wound and disable the NEA, the arts, the CPB, PBS and NPR.
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On Friday, @realDonaldTrump will visit a Catholic school in Orlando to conduct a “listening session” on choice.
I told you. The plan is to exclude public schools from any input on public education.
You won’t see a public school student, teacher or parent for the next 4 years at one of these Trump/DeVos political events unless it’s a story about a failing public school.
Pure politics, pure ideology. Public schools are the collateral damage in this crusade and ed reform will back all of it.
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Van Cliburn, Moscow, 1958, Rachmaninov Concerto No. 3,
Leonard Bernstein, Berlin, 1989, Beethoven Symphony No. 9
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IInG5nY_wrU
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TrueReformer,
Thank you for those beautiful gifts.
I hadn’t though of Van Cliburn in years. He was magnificent. To think that great talent was nurtured by his mother in Fort Worth! Listening to him play Rachmaninov puts me in the right mood to speak with Laura and arts educators tomorrow.
Van did something wonderful for me tonight. He set me free from the moment. The magic of music.
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My mother would have been 100 this fall. She grew up in a small North Carolina town where she took piano and went to a small town public school. A few years after she got a degree in music, she attended Julliard for a couple of summers before she finally finished her advanced degree and married a Tennessee farmer.
The degree to which she enriched our community with her talent cannot be overestimated. Head and shoulders above all the local musicians, she nonetheless graciously added to the mix by playing what everyone wanted her to play. Her contribution to the community could not be measured with money.
This is what we will lose if we lose the arts. These priceless aspects to society that cannot be measured will missed the way I have missed my mother these 25 years.
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Like!
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Thank you truereformer for the clip of a beautiful musician’s soul.
Here is his own words:
[start quote]
“One of the MOST PROFOUND TRUTHS that has characterized my life is St. Paul’s advice to ‘PRAY WITHOUT CEASING,’” Mr. Cliburn told Brent Beasley, his pastor at Broadway Baptist, shortly before his death. “THAT’S HOW I HAVE LIVED MY LIFE.”
…
“He actually made the comment, ‘I’m more afraid of living than dying,’” Beasley, his pastor at Broadway Baptist, said.
[end quote]
In 2004, Russian President Vladimir Putin presented Mr. Cliburn with the Order of Friendship.
“He understood the role music could play in the lives of diverse people,” said Robert Blocker, dean of the Yale School of Music. “He just saw MUSIC AS A VEHICLE OF HOPE.
He lived that out, whether it was with [President] Carter or Khrushchev. I see him as being one of the world’s great cultural leaders.
The message he carried to presidents and to children was that MUSIC IS IMPORTANT.”
In short, ignorant and bullying authority will intimidate and humiliate TALENTED and ALTRUISTIC PEOPLE to comment that “I’m more afraid of living than dying” as in the case of world renowned pianist Van Cliburn. Back2basic
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I serve on the board of Revels North, a local arts organization that provides after school programs and community theater and cultural activities for communities in NH and VT located in the Upper CT River Valley. Our organization and several other non-profit community theater, music, and arts organizations would experience budget shortfalls since we all rely to some degree on grants from the State Arts Councils, both of whom rely heavily on the National Endowment for the Arts (NEA) for funding. A $5,000 grant from either VT or NH Arts Council is a big deal for our organization and the other shoe-string non-profit arts organizations in our region. For us, a State grant can make or break our ability to offer traditional arts programming to children in our region, for others it can make or break the offering of affordable dance, opera, film, music, and arts programs. Additionally, many school districts in our region rely State Arts Council grants to offer Artist-in-Schools program to augment their arts programs, which often consist of limited direct instruction. If the State Arts Councils lose NEA funds, it will result in the loss of opportunities for students in our region to experience the arts.
In the coming weeks, I am certain that the GOP will find some avant garde programs or artists-in-the-schools programs that seem “frivolous and wasteful” and they will become Exhibit A for cutting the NEA. Some in the GOP will look at the list of signatories of the appeal letter from the Lincoln Center and ask why federal dollars should underwrite cultural programs that only “elitists” benefit from, and that will become Exhibit B. Finally, the GOP will argue that funding for programs like ours should be solely derived from LOCAL funds, which in our region would mean that children in the affluent communities would be the only ones who get to experience the arts first hand.
I read recently that when the British wanted to suppress the revolutionaries in Ireland, they arrested the harpists and banned the singing outside of churches. The arts ARE subversive to those who want to control the hearts and minds of the public… but powerful for those who value democracy. I hope that politicians will keep that in mind as they consider funding for the NEA.
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“Make no mistake. Federal support for the arts, humanities, culture, and education are under assault. ”
I wouldn’t leave out basic research. It’s more and more about immediately applicable research—to benefit industry and the billionaires’ economy.
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Mate,
Add to that list “science and basic research.” The new director of the budget said in a tweet that he didn’t see the need to spend money on research.
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Thank you all for the kind words. Music, along with all expressive arts, has amazing power to enrich, to unite, to heal. The arts belong in our schools, in our lives. We must support the arts by all means possible.
Van Cliburn, Moscow, Rachmaniov Concerto No. 2
Van Cliburn, Moscow, Chopin Fantasie, (spoken dedication on stage to Nikita Khrushchev)
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Last night, I shut off the news and listened. It was like taking a vacation.
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Thanks to Diane and Laura… you just ROCKED IT. And Diane now has an official whistleblower whistle thanks to Laura that she can don at her shadow cabinet meetings AND THEN SOME!
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In 1999, I was the recipient of an NEH grant to attend a Summer Seminar for School Teachers on “The Shape and Message of the Psalms” directed by William J. Urbrock, Professor of Religious Studies at the University of Wisconsin, Oshkosh, Wisconsin. This was a highlight of my life and I have given seminars on the Psalms to churches and others interested in the Bible as Literature since. Several of us teachers have a reunion every ten years, and we are of various faiths. Perhaps DeVos and others need to know that we in the public schools can teach about religion as long as we don’t proselytize, which we don’t. Maybe they would be less likely to cut funding if they knew the history of some of the NEH offerings.
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