Feb 15

Mel Tillis Receives National Medal of Arts From PResident Obama

Alex Wong, Getty Images

Country Music Hall of Famer Mel Tillis was amongst eight recipients of the President Obama’s National Medal of the Arts on Monday. The 79- year-old accepted the honor from the president in the East Room of the White House.
“I’ve had a blessed career, and that has been acknowledged in many ways over the years,” Tillis said, according to the Boot. “I was pleasantly surprised when I got the call because I didn’t know there were any more awards left to win. I’m very thankful and what an honor!”
Other recipients included actor Al Pacino, poet Rita Dove, the United Service Organization, painter Will Barnet, art curator Emily Rauh Pulitzer, sculptor Martin Puryear and pianist Andre Watts. Also honored were nine recipients of the National Medal for the Humanities.
“The arts and humanities do not just reflect America, they shape America,” President Obama said. “As long as I’m president, I look forward to making sure they are a priority for this country.”
Tillis still keeps an active touring schedule, with 10 stops in the fall of 2011 and a handful scheduled for 2012. The most recent release available at his official website is ‘You Ain’t Gonna Believe This,’ a collection of 19 stories and three new songs.

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Feb 15

"Abraham Lincoln: Vampire Hunter" Trailer Released: Arts Roundup …

Credibility, Strained: Attention, world! Abraham Lincoln: Vampire Hunter is not based on facts. The horror flick—filmed in New Orleans, though inspired by a book partially set in D.C.—has released its first trailer, as TBD’s Ryan Kearney points out. Here’s the gist: Abraham Lincoln, a watershed leader in American history, is also a killer of the undead. But one reader questions the film’s commitment to historical accuracy. “Wow, I wish they had done a little bit of homework,” writes a commenter. “The trailer shows a fully-built Washington Monument. The monument was started long before Lincoln became president but was not completed until long after his death.”
Baby I Want Your Money: The president’s 2012 budget request shows love for the Smithsonian, particularly its construction of the National Museum of African American History and Culture. Obama is asking Congress for about $857 million, up from last year’s $810 million.
Rock it Again: Theater J is remounting 2010′s sell-out show New Jerusalem: The Interrogation of Baruch De Spinoza.
A Good Deal?: Take a look inside LivingSocial’s new downtown headquarters.

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Feb 15

ARTSblog » Blog Archive » President Obama's Budget Request for …

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Yesterday, the Obama Administration released their fourth budget request covering all federal agencies, including the National Endowment for the Arts (NEA).
We learned early that morning that President Obama is proposing an increase of $8 million (from $146M to $154M) for the NEA, which was a very positive start.
In the past two years, NEA funding has dropped almost $22M and has yet to recover from the enormous cuts from its high of $176M in 1992.
The fine print of these budget proposals to Congress are read by federal affairs types for additional news and direction about the programs for which they advocate.
With that mission in mind, the following details may be of interest to arts supporters (You can see the full budget document here):
While the NEA’s budget proposal increases several grant categories, it is the Our Town initiative that receives the most significant support: doubled from $5M to $10M.
The Our Town program made a big debut in 2011 with 51 grantees from 34 states receiving a total of $6.5M. More than half of these grants were awarded to communities with a population of less than 200,000 and seven went to places with fewer than 25,000 people. With $10M to spend in 2013, the NEA could make Our Town grants to 115 communities.
Some further details:
1)      Speaking of grants, due to budget cuts in recent years, the total number of direct grants has gone from around 2,400 in 2010 to an estimate of “more than 2,000” in 2013. However, the NEA confirms that more than $500M in matching support is established through its direct grants, calculating a grant dollar ratio of 8:1. The NEA is also one of the only federal agencies to require a one-to-one match.
2)      Donald Trump and his associates have won a bid to turn the current home of the NEA, the Old Post Office Pavilion (named The Nancy Hanks Center after the second NEA chairman), into a luxury hotel. The NEA will be asked to relocate and has requested $3M to move to a new home.
3)      The NEA is cutting administrative costs and has plans to reduce their 162 person staff by four and cut travel costs by 25 percent.
4)      The agency plans to release a new study based on findings from esteemed arts education researcher James Catterall titled, The Arts and Achievement in At-Risk Youth.
5)      Likely in reaction to the recent state arts agency elimination in Kansas, the NEA is asking Congress to approve a provision to clarify that state matching funds must be “controlled and managed by the State”—-not third parties (like foundations).
6)      The most competitive NEA grant category? Literature Fellowships—-with just 3.4 percent of applicants receiving awards.
7)      As part of the the agency-to-agency outreach the NEA has recently undertaken, they announced a new partnership with the Department of Defense just two months ago. Operation Homecoming (an established initiative) will hold a new series of writing workshops for returning troops at Walter Reed National Military Medical Center as part of their clinical rehabilitation and creative writing and storytelling experiences for service members at the Fisher House.
8)      What wasn’t in the budget document? No further details on the recently-announced Federal Interagency Task Force to Promote Research on the Arts and Human Development.
We may learn more about these initiatives as Congress begins consideration of this request in the months to come.
The U.S. House customarily begins the appropriations process with the Senate following by late spring; however, as Congress has had trouble finalizing their appropriations bills by the start of the fiscal year (October 1) in the last five years, don’t hold your breath for this to be done until after November 6—-Election Day—-in what is customarily called a “lame duck” session.
In light of this, it is more important than ever that decision makers at every level of government hear your voice in support of the arts. One way to accomplish that is to join hundreds of fellow arts supporters in Washington, DC for National Arts Advocacy Day on April 16 & 17. For more information about the event, visit ArtsUSA.org.
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Feb 15

Obama Proposes Five Percent Increase In Arts Funding

Obama Proposes Five Percent Increase In Arts Funding”Obama aims to boost outlays from $1.501 billion to $1.576 billion, encompassing the National Endowments for the Arts and Humanities (NEA and NEH), the Institute of Museum and Library Services (IMLS), the Smithsonian Institution, the Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts and the National Gallery of Art.” Los Angeles Times 02/014/12

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Feb 14

UVa Professor Receives Prestigious Arts Award

February 13, 2012
Pulitzer Prize-winning poet and University of Virginia professor Rita Dove was honored at the White House Monday. She was of several artists, writers and organizations honored by President Barack Obama for their contributions to the nation.
Obama bestowed eight National Medal of Arts and nine National Humanities Medals during a ceremony in the White House East Room. Among this year’s recipients were actor Al Pacino, poet Rita Dove and the United Service Organization, which holds performances for American service members stationed around the world.
Before awarding the medals, Obama said the arts have the power to bring together people of different backgrounds and beliefs. And he urged the honorees to help mentor a new generation of artists and scholars, saying their role in the nation’s future would be equally as important as the next generation of engineers and scientists.
“The arts and humanities do not just reflect America, they shape America,” Obama said. “As long as I’m president, I look forward to making sure they are a priority for this country.”
Dove recently published “The Penguin Anthology of Twentieth-Century American Poetry”, a project on which she served as sole editor. Among her nine poetry collections are “Sonata Mulattica,” “American Smooth,” and “On the Bus with Rosa Parks.” She won the Pulitzer Prize in poetry for “Thomas and Beulah” in 1987.
The National Medal of Arts is the highest award given to artists and arts patrons by the U. S. government who “are deserving of special recognition by reason of their outstanding contributions to the excellence,growth, support and availability of the arts in the United States.”
Others receiving arts medals:
- Will Barnet, painter, printmaker and teacher.- Emily Rauh Pulitzer, curator, art collector and philanthropist.- Martin Puryear, sculptor.- Mel Tillis, singer-songwriter.- AndrDe Watts, pianist and teacher.
Receiving medals for the humanities:
- Kwame Anthony Appiah, philosopher and novelist.- John Ashbery, poet.- Robert Darnton, author and librarian.- Andrew Delbanco, social critic and professor.- National History Day, program that celebrates history.- Charles Rosen, pianist and author.- Teofilo Ruiz, historian and professor.- RamDon SaldDivar, writer and professor.- Amartya Sen, economist.

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Feb 14

National Medal Of Arts And Humanities 2012: Obama Honors Al …

WASHINGTON — President Barack Obama on Monday honored several artists, writers and organizations for their contributions to the nation, and pledged to make the arts and humanities a priority for as long as he is in the White House.
Obama bestowed eight National Medal of Arts and nine National Humanities Medals during a ceremony in the White House East Room. Among this year’s recipients were actor Al Pacino, poet Rita Dove and the United Service Organization, which holds performances for American service members stationed around the world.
Before awarding the medals, Obama said the arts have the power to bring together people of different backgrounds and beliefs. And he urged the honorees to help mentor a new generation of artists and scholars, saying their role in the nation’s future would be equally as important as the next generation of engineers and scientists.
“The arts and humanities do not just reflect America, they shape America,” Obama said. “As long as I’m president, I look forward to making sure they are a priority for this country.”
Others receiving arts medals:
_ Will Barnet, painter, printmaker and teacher.
_ Emily Rauh Pulitzer, curator, art collector and philanthropist.
_ Martin Puryear, sculptor.
_ Mel Tillis, singer-songwriter.

_ Andre Watts, pianist and teacher.
Receiving medals for the humanities:
_ Kwame Anthony Appiah, philosopher and novelist.
_ John Ashbery, poet.
_ Robert Darnton, author and librarian.
_ Andrew Delbanco, social critic and professor.
_ National History Day, program that celebrates history.
_ Charles Rosen, pianist and author.
_ Teofilo Ruiz, historian and professor.
_ Ramon Saldivar, writer and professor.
_ Amartya Sen, economist.

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Feb 14

Capitol Confidential » NYers Pacino, Ashbery receive arts medals at …

Caroline Ward of the D.C. bureau reports:
On Monday, the White House hosted the 2011 National Medal of Arts and National Humanities Medal Ceremony, where a Hollywood legend was honored for his life’s work, and was made an offer he could not refuse.
There were 17 medal recipients, who represented various professions, including teachers, painters, poets, writers, actors, directors, curators, sculptors, musicians, librarians and philosophers.
Actor Al Pacino, a Bronx native, was one of the honorees. In addition to his association with The Actor’s Studio, most of Pacino’s most notable film roles have been New York-set: the “Godfather” films, “Serpico,” “Dog Day Afternoon,” “Scent of a Woman” to name but a few.
Also honored was Pulitzer-winning poet John Ashbery, a Rochester native who splits his time between New York City and Hudson.
Obama expressed the importance of the ceremony to the recipients and the audience. “It’s a moment when America has a chance to pay tribute to extraordinary men and women who have excelled in the arts and the humanities,” said Obama, “and who along the way have left their mark on American culture.”
He referenced a famous work of a classic poetess to emphasize the importance of the arts and humanities: “Emily Dickenson wrote: ‘I dwell in possibility.’ … So does the American spirit. That’s who we are as a people. That’s who our honorees are.”
Others who were honored for their work included: Will Bartet, Rita Dove, Emily Rauh Pulitzer, Martin Puryear, Mel Tillis, United Service Organization, Andre Watts, Kwame Anthony Appiah, John Ashbery, Robert Darnton, Andrew Delbanco, National History Day, Charles Rosen, Teofilo Ruiz, Ramon Saldivar and Amartya Sen.

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Feb 11

National Medal of Arts and National Humanities Medals announced …

The White House announced the recipients of the National Medal of Arts and the National Humanities Medals today. Poet Rita Dove (above) is the leading literary figure among the seven who will receive the National Medal of Arts, joining actor Al Pacino, singer Mel Tillis, painter Will Barnet, sculptor Martin Puryear, pianist André Watts, and creative arts patron Emily Rauh Pulitzer.
Rita Dove served as the U.S. Poet Laureate from 1993 to ’95. Dove, born in 1952 in Ohio, received an MFA from the University of Iowa and published her first poetry collection in 1980. She won the 1987 Pulitzer Prize for poetry for the collection “Thomas and Beulah.” She teaches at the University of Virginia; her many accolades include a National Humanities Medal.
National Humanities Medals will be awarded to eight writers, including another poet, John Ashbery (pictured at the 2011 National Book Awards, where he was presented with the Medal for Distinguished Contribution to American Letters). The other winners are Kwame Anthony Appiah, critic Andrew Delbanco, historian Robert Darnton, musical scholar Charles Rosen, historian Teofilo Ruiz, literary scholar Ramón Saldívar, and Amartya Sen, a Nobel laureate in economics. After the jump, brief descriptions of their work.
President Obama will present the National Medal of Arts and the National Humanities Medals at a White House to the above individuals, as well as arts organizations, at a ceremony on Monday, Feb. 13, streaming live at 1:45pm eastern.

From the White House press release:
Kwame Anthony Appiah, philosopher, for seeking eternal truths in the contemporary world. His books and essays within and beyond his academic discipline have shed moral and intellectual light on the individual in an era of globalization and evolving group identities. John Ashbery, poet, for his contributions to American letters. Since his first book was published in 1956, he has been awarded nearly every prize available for poetry, including a Pulitzer Prize and the Grand Prix de Biennales Internationales de Poésie. One of the New York School poets, he has changed how we read poetry and has influenced generations of poets.Robert Darnton, historian and librarian, for his determination to make knowledge accessible to everyone. As an author he has illuminated the world of Enlightenment and Revolutionary France, and as a librarian he has endeavored to make his vision for a comprehensive national library of digitized books a reality. Andrew Delbanco, literary scholar, for his insight into the American character, past and present. He has been called “America’s best social critic” for his essays on current issues and higher education. As a professor in American studies, he reveals how classics by Melville and Emerson have shaped our history and contemporary life. Charles Rosen, musician and scholar, for his rare ability to join artistry to the history of culture and ideas. His writings — about Classical composers and Romantic tradition — highlight how music evolves and remains a vibrant, living art. 
Teofilo Ruiz, medieval historian, for his inspired teaching and writing. His erudite studies have deepened our understanding of medieval Spain and Europe, while his late examination of how society has coped with terror has taught important lessons about the dark side of western progress. Ramón Saldívar, literary scholar, for his bold explorations of identity along the border separating the United States and Mexico. Through his studies of Chicano literature and the development of the novel in Europe and America, he beckons us to notice the cultural and literary markings that unite and divide us.Amartya Sen, economist and Nobel laureate, for his insights into the causes of poverty, famine, and injustice. By applying philosophical thinking to questions of policy, he has changed how standards of living are measured and increased our understanding of how to fight hunger.
RELATED:
2011: Harper Lee to receive National Medal of the Arts
$100,000 Kingsley Tufts Poetry Award goes to Timothy Donnelly
2011 National Book Awards [video]
– Carolyn Kellogg
Photos: Left, Rita Dove in 1994. Credit: Bill McClain / Associated Press. Right, John Ashbery at the National Book Awards in 2011. Credit: Tina Fineberg / Associated Press 

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Feb 10

3quarksdaily: Hungary's Government Tightens Grip on Arts

February 10, 2012
Hungary’s Government Tightens Grip on Arts
Julia Michalska in The Art Newspaper:

Already under attack from the European Commission for its policies on banking, the law and the media, Hungary’s national conservative government is now facing a tide of protest from the arts community. The government, led by Viktor Orban, stands accused of systematically replacing key figures in cultural institutions, staging pro-government exhibitions, rethinking permanent museum displays and replacing historic statues to fit its political agenda. “The fact that an authoritarian government wants to control the arts is in itself not surprising,” says the Hungarian economist Janos Kovacs. “But it’s incredible that this is happening in the middle of the European Union without provoking angry reactions in Brussels.”
Since coming to power with a two-thirds majority in 2010, Orban’s Fidesz party has passed more than 350 laws and rushed through a constitution which, the international community argues, endangers Hungarian demo­cracy. Last month, to celebrate the official inauguration of the constitution, Orban opened a government-organised exhibition at the National Gallery. It chronicles 1,000 years of Hungarian history, focusing on sovereign statehood and Christ­ian­ity (until 16 August). The show includes 15 large state-commissioned canvases depicting important historic events spanning 150 years, including an image of Orban. The event contributed to the decision by the National Gallery’s director, Ferenc Csak, to resign before the show opened. “The government shouldn’t have the power to order exhibitions with such a high political agenda. Museums shouldn’t be getting involved in politics,” says Csak.
There have been other government-instigated changes in personnel at leading institutions. Laszlo Simon, a Fidesz party MP and chairman of the parliamentary cultural and press committee, has become the head of the National Cultural Fund of Hungary—which up until now was a body independent of government, monitored by the culture committee. It is one of the most important organisations that funds Hungarian cultural institutions, including museums, libraries, theatres and archives.

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