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#CreativelyPDX
Tweet to Join. Tweet to Win.
You can help the Creative Advocacy Network (CAN) raise $75,000 to establish a ground-breaking new public fund for the arts in Portland. All we need is your tweet! Through the generous support of the City of Portland, CAN will receive $75,000 to fuel the movement, if we inspire 2,500 people to follow @theArtsCAN on Twitter by December 31st.*
To meet the challenge, for the next 12 days (December 8th-19th) CAN will host an online conversation and contest to inspire new followers and ignite the conversation about what makes Portland uniquely creative.
Join our #CreativelyPDX Campaign on Twitter and help us spread the word.
Anyone who follows @theArtsCAN on Twitter and tweets using #CreativelyPDX will be entered to win one of 12 amazing prizes. Win tickets to performances and exhibits at Portland Center Stage, Portland Art Museum, Oregon Symphony, Oregon Ballet Theatre, Tears of Joy Theatre, Wordstock, Portland Baroque Orchestra and PHAME Academy as well as special opportunities to tweet with the Mayor and sing along with Pink Martini’s Thomas Lauderdale. Meanwhile, CAN will keep #CreativelyPDX a trending topic with thought-provoking questions and conversations about arts, culture and creativity in Portland.
In November 2012, Portland voters will be given the opportunity to approve a ground-breaking new public fund for the arts that will restore arts and music education for every Portland elementary school student and brings arts, culture and creativity to life in every classroom and community city-wide. Follow @theArtsCAN on Twitter and join the movement to keep the arts off the endangered list.
*To learn more about CAN’s partnership agreement with the City of Portland, visit the CAN Blog at http://theartscan.org/can-talks/blog/.
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BLOG:
Tweet for the cause and raise $75,000 for CAN
$75,000 for the cause with a little help from our friends
As you may know, the City of Portland has generously supported CAN with significant annual investments and they are scheduled to invest $75,000 more on December 31st, if CAN meets our goals for the Fall and Winter of 2011.
To earn this critically important investment, CAN has accomplished some amazing things in the last five months. We have recruited more than 4,500 new supporters to the cause, engaged 63 volunteers, conducted outreach at nearly 80 events and inspired 60 arts and culture organizations to join the movement as members. All while putting the finishing touches on a ground-breaking new public fund for the arts that, when approved by Portland voters in 2012, will restore arts and music in our classrooms, increase support for the arts orgs and artists that keep Portland creative and offer meaningful opportunities to experience arts, culture and creativity city-wide.
But we are not done. The City has asked that we reach 1,500 Facebook fans and 2,500 Twitter followers by New Years.
Please help. We will never meet these goals without you.
Step 1: Please Like us on Facebook (http://www.Facebook.com/theArtsCAN) and Follow us on Twitter (http://Twitter.com/theArtsCAN).
Step 2: Please ask everyone you know to do the same.
Step 3: Please consider donating an incentive for our #CreativelyPDX Campaign. From December 8th through the 19th, CAN will be giving away free tickets and other prizes daily in a contest for Fans and Followers that retweet or share at least one post. Look for more from us soon on how you can join the conversation #CreativelyPDX.
Huge thanks for all that you do to make art happen here. For more info or to run a piece on #CreativelyPDX on your blog, website or newsletter, I can be reached at 503.781.8538 or jessica@theartscan.org.
CAN Mail: November 2011 Edition
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You’re Invited!
To an Artful Evening of Appreciation.
Please join CAN and the CAN Action Fund in celebrating our amazing accomplishments in 2011 and the success that your support has made possible:
December 7th, 2011
5:30 – 7:00 PM
The Armory Mezzanine
128 NW Eleventh Avenue Portland, Oregon
View our online invitation and RSVP today!
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An Artful Evening of Appreciation!
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Join CAN at a special December 18th matinee performance of George Balanchine’s The Nutcracker and save 30% off tickets as a CAN supporter!
Just follow this link and use our special offer code: CANCAN
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Our members make it happen:
Fueling the movement and shaping the future of the arts in Portland
CAN welcomes our newest member organizations: Do Jump! Extremely Physical Theatre, Friends of Chamber Music, Hollywood Theatre, Portland Youth Philharmonic & Tears of Joy Theatre.
Leading the movement, our nearly 60 member organizations do more than write checks. They provide space at their events to raise public awareness, ad space in programs, and even host information about CAN on their web sites such as this wonderful page that Friends of Chamber Music recently posted: http://focm.org/about/CAN
The support we receive from these visionary arts and culture organizations not only fuels the movement with vital funding and outreach, it inspires business and community leaders alike to support CAN’s efforts. Together, we will restore and strengthen creativity and culture in our classrooms and communities.
To join the movement today, please visit http://theartscan.org/get-involved/donate or email keith@theArtsCAN.org.
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Friends of Chamber Music’s wonderful recognition of CAN on their web site.
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CAN Mail: October 2011 Edition
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CAN Mail: September 2011 Edition
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CAN Mail: August 2011 Edition
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“There is no one to keep music ‘on the table’ when budget constraints are discussed.”
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Sounds of silence. California children left behind in music.
A five year study of music instruction and participation in California’s K-12 schools was recently published with startling findings.
Student participation in music courses, the overall percentage of student involvement, and the number of teachers has declined dramatically over the past 5 years.
While the student population grew by 5.8% over the 5 year period studied, music education declined by 50%, the largest of any academic area.
Music educators declined by 26.7% or 1,053 teachers.
Course participation for basic music and skills for young people declined by 85.8%.
Disturbed by this, U.S. Secretary of Education Rod Paige has recently been moved to exhort school superintendents that “the No Child Left Behind Act include the arts as a core academic subject because of their importance to a child’s education.”
The complete study and its recommendations can be found at CaliforniaMusicProject.com.
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Economic Impact. Creative jobs slated to have highest growth through 2018.
A new research report from the National Endowment for the Arts (NEA) examines projected job growth for artists and other selected cultural occupations.
Based on the Bureau of Labor Statistic’s Occupational Outlook Handbook 2010–2011, this research report looks at creative occupational growth trends in the U.S. labor force from 2008– 2018.
Among the highest projected growth rates are museum technicians and conservators, curators, landscape architects, and interior designers.
For more research reports on the field released by the NEA, including studies on how art-goers are more civically engaged, please visit:
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Occupations with the highest projected growth include architects, musuem curators, and writers.
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CAN Mail: July 2011 Edition
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CAN Responds: Our Update on our work to establish a new public fund for the arts.
As you may have read in today’s Oregonian, CAN is just months away from announcing a ground-breaking new public funding plan for the arts and arts education in the Portland area. Unfortunately, the Oregonian’s D.K. Row broadly mischaracterized the momentum and current outlook of our movement. However, the article offers us an excellent opportunity to share some exciting updates.
In 2011, CAN has made tremendous progress towards our goals of increasing access to arts and culture for every resident, making free arts and music experiences available to every school-age child in their classrooms and communities, and strengthening our highest-quality arts and cultural organizations.
In addition, we have identified a viable funding mechanism, gained strong, clear support from leadership at both the City of Portland and Multnomah County, and tested our public funding package with very promising polling results. All of this work has been accomplished as we continue fulfilling our mission of advocating at the top of our lungs for more and better support for the arts—in our classrooms and our communities.
While we understand and share D.K. Row’s eagerness to have this new public funding stream for the arts in place, our efforts are still well within the timeline we collectively established for this work by the Act for Art Plan. As you may know, in 2008 a region-wide planning process under the leadership of Metro Councilor Carlotta Collette, Washington County Commissioner Dick Schouten, and Mayor Sam Adams, we engaged 1,500 members of our community to develop a Creative Action Plan for the Portland Metropolitan Area called Act for Art. This vision for the future of the arts and culture in our region identified the need for a new dedicated annual fund for the arts and for arts education. The Creative Advocacy Network (CAN) was established in 2008 to make this goal a reality, and we were given until 2014 to achieve success. At CAN, we believe that our efforts will allow Portland to reach our true creative and cultural potential by 2012—two years ahead of schedule.
“I truly believe that CAN will change the creative landscape for our children and our communities and could not imagine a better investment in our future,” CAN Board Chair Chris Coleman says.
As stewards of public funding, as well as the financial support of many private individuals and organizations who believe in CAN’s cause, we take our responsibility to deliver on our goals very seriously. We are more than happy to shine a light on the City of Portland’s funding of our effort because we believe it tells an impressive story. For 20 years, the City annually funded arts and culture through the Regional Arts & Culture Council, to provide millions of arts experiences, and tens of thousands of free arts and music interactions for children. In 2009 and 2011, the Portland City Council unanimously chose to direct 3 percent of these investments towards the CAN effort, which has educated thousands and will lay the groundwork to more than triple the annual impact of their on-going investments in arts and culture. We at CAN are proud to have been established under the leadership of Mayor Sam Adams, and are honored to have gained the trust of the City of Portland and Multnomah County as we steward their investments of time and money towards a future where arts and music are available in every classroom and across every community.
We were disappointed that Mayor Adams was not initially given the opportunity to comment for D.K. Row’s piece on this movement—a movement that Mayor Adams launched with such vision in 2008, as a City Commissioner, and one that he continues to be deeply involved with. Late yesterday, the story was updated to include the Mayor’s thoughts, including his comment that “In the 20 years we’ve been trying to get a dedicated source of funding for the arts … we’ve never been closer.”
With the Mayor’s continued leadership, and the strong support of people like you, we are confident that we will fulfill our mission of creating a dedicated annual fund for the arts and arts education in the near future.
“I couldn’t be prouder of CAN’s work to create a much-needed dedicated source of arts and arts education funding for Portland,” Mayor Sam Adams said. “We set ambitious goals for our arts and culture community in 2008 when we adopted the Act for Art vision, and together we are making steady progress toward fulfilling that goal.”
CAN Mail: June 2011 Edition
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CAN Outreach Event: Milepost 5 First Friday, June 3
CAN will be attending First Friday at Milepost 5, Friday June 3, 2011. And just to keep it fun, we’re hosting a free raffle as we gather new supporters for public funding of the arts!
At CAN, we believe that the arts are not a luxury, but a necessity to life in Portland. Our mission is to establish a dedicated public fund for the arts, to increase access to arts and culture for every resident, make free arts and music experiences available to every school-age child in their classrooms and communities and strengthen our highest-quality arts and cultural institutions allowing Portland to finally reach our true creative and cultural capacity.
For Milepost 5 First Friday, come by our table to show your support for public funding of the arts and sign up for our free raffle! Our Raffle Prizes are all from Milepost 5 businesses, and they’re pretty grand:
- $25 Gift certificate from Eat.Art.Theater. EatArtTheater.com – Their focus is on fresh, local, house made food, with an emphasis on old world techniques.
- $18 Soy Wax ‘Portland Rose Garden’ Candle from Just the Good Stuff. JustTheGoodStuff.net – A writing & gift boutique.
- $25 Gift Certificate from Muse Art+Design. museartanddesign.com – Essentials for everyday artists, located at 4224 SE Hawthorne Boulevard, with a store opening soon at Milepost 5.
- $150 For a 30 minute Stone Reading and a free stone. theStoneMuse.com – Stone work jewelry & readings.
For more information about Milepost 5 First Friday, check out their site.
Fast Facts
- 81% of Portland public elementary school students have never received certified instruction in art.
- 10,321 Full-time equivalent jobs are provided by arts non-profits.
- Arts & culture non-profits provide 6.25 Million cultural experiences each year.
- $318 Million in revenue, jobs & spending is provided by arts non-profits.
- Kids who are involved in the arts are four times more likely to participate in a math and science fair.
- Recognition for academic achievement is four times more likely for kids who participate in the arts.
- Attendance in school is improved for those kids involved in arts; they are three times more likely to win school attendance awards.
























