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Arts, the democratic ideal, and community leadership

Community Foundation Sonoma County

“The arts are common ground for community, a meeting ground,” says Melissa Kester, Arts Development Officer for Community Foundation Sonoma County. “It’s about expressing different points of view, understanding things in new ways, and coming together around shared experiences.” This insight opens a window for viewing the foundation’s partnership with its local arts sector.

CFSC Logo“It is a relationship that began in 1989,” reports CEO Kay Marquet, “with an initial grant made possible through the National Endowment for the Arts. And it is a relationship that has blossomed in recent years through a creative, collaborative focus on the arts.”

Making connections

This focus involves connecting with individual artists, arts nonprofits (ranging from grassroots organizations to nationally recognized arts centers), donors and other funders who seek to build community through arts. At the center of this network is a strategic partnership between Community Foundation Sonoma County and the Arts Council of Sonoma County.

“The Arts Council is a wonderful resource to, and an effective champion for, this region’s diverse, dynamic arts sector,” adds Robert Judd, Community Foundation Sonoma County Vice President for Programs. “Together with a cadre of local arts organizations, we are able to present a united sector. This in turn allows us to invite a wider base of donors and public leaders to step forwardand add to an ever-greater vision for what arts can achieve in and for this community.”

Some big steps forward

Recent results of this approach have been encouraging, to say the least. Between 2005 and 2007, with support from The James Irvine Foundation’s Communities Advancing the Arts initiative, the Community Foundation and Arts Council worked with local leaders to establish a Santa Rosa Arts District in the center of the county’s largest city. Three popular, countywide projects were initiated as well: an Artist Awards program, Sculpture Sonoma, and Performance Sonoma.

As part of the Performance Sonoma festival, 12 local performing arts organizations put on productions related to the featured theme, Crossing Borders. In Healdsburg, The Imaginists Theatre Collective created an original production, “The Divide/La División,” which explored issues of immigration and the challenges in finding common ground between local immigrant Latinos and resident Anglos in the area. The bilingual production led to an opening in community dialogue around these challenges (view a video documentary on YouTube).

“Participating in Performance Sonoma allowed our company to explore issues that influence everyday life in our community,” said Brent Lindsay, The Imaginists’ Executive Director.

Community Foundation Sonoma County also launched an Artists Award as a way to raise the visibility of budding local visual artists. Six award winners selected by a panel of highly-regarded independent judges have received unrestricted grants of $5,000 each. In addition to the grant funds, the winning artists haveThree Photos–Sonoma enjoyed growing recognition within Sonoma County and beyond. For example, Seth Minor, a 2006 award winner, is commissioned to create public artwork for the City of Santa Rosa. Complementing these efforts to support local artists, the foundation also worked with Sonoma State University to conduct a series of public discussions for artists on navigating “the business” of the arts.

A growth agenda

Community Foundation Sonoma County and its partners aim to double the nearly $300,000 already raised to endow the Artists Award Fund, with the goal of expanding awards to include performing and literary artists. Near-term plans involve further engaging with the City of Santa Rosa around its newly-established Arts Districtand working collaboratively with private donors and public officials to create a lasting and vibrant downtown arts area.

Also on the drawing board are plans to explore creating a signature festival that would invigorate local arts audiences and attract tourists to the region’s arts scene. And an exciting project is well underway, led by the Arts Council, to provide a centralized online portal for arts information and access throughout Sonoma County.

Lessons learned

What have Community Foundation leaders learned so far? Three major lessons stand out. For one, creating partnerships is worthwhile workbut takes time. “We probably underestimated this point as we got started on a more earnest approach to arts outreach three years ago,” says Melissa Kester, who also emphasizes the importance of carefully assessing and understanding the capacity of key partner organizations.

Second, deeper engagement with the arts sectornonprofits, government, and donorscan be a model opportunity for community foundations to explore new ways of working. According to Paul DeMarco, Finance and Administration Vice President, “In many ways this program is serving as a prototype for our role in community leadership… providing us with new ways to interact with donors… and helping us demonstrate high levels of value through our work convening others.”

Third, and perhaps most important, says Kay Marquet, “We are proving that arts are as good for community as community is for arts.”

Community Foundation Sonoma County is a participant in Communities Advancing the Arts, a major funding initiative of The James Irvine Foundation.

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