CREATIVE CAPITAL IN THE NEWS
From the Los
Angeles Times
August 20, 2006
Creative Types Get a Bit of Business Schooling
As it distributes grants to artists, the Creative Capital Foundation
also tries to teach them how to succeed in the wider world.
By Scott Martelle, Times Staff Writer
SAM EASTERSON was beginning to think his idea for depicting the world
from unexpected perspectives — by strapping mini video cameras
to animals and plants — had about run its course. He wasn't even
sure the concept worked that well.
But just as his confidence was flagging, the New York City-based Creative
Capital Foundation e-mailed that it liked what he was doing and kicked
in $5,000 in 2001 to help with the next phase — a buffalo cam
to go along with his frog cam, tarantula cam, tumbleweed cam and the
ever-popular armadillo cam.
"I don't know if I would have continued after that project, quite
frankly," said Easterson, of Studio City. "It meant a lot
that there were people across the country who were thinking about this,
understanding what you're trying to do. It wasn't just me in a room
in an apartment, which is so defeating."
Since its founding in 1999, Creative Capital has delivered $5 million
in similar shots of adrenaline to nearly 250 artists, and in the process
is creating a new template for private arts funding, using a mix of
old-style grant-making and post-dot-com venture capitalism to re-imagine
the relationships among artists, funders and markets.
The program has helped fill a void created when the Clinton administration
ended the National Endowment for the Arts' grants programs for artists,
leaving private groups, such as the John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation,
as the main sources of such grants.
"We basically were looking to find a way to bring new support for
artists in America," said Joel Wachs, the former Los Angeles City
Council member who in 2001 was named president of the Andy Warhol Foundation
for the Visual Arts, which helped launch Creative Capital.
Rather than drop a check on a project and wait for a year-end report,
Creative Capital targets "catalytic" moments in artists' careers,
then signs on as a combination guidance counselor and business partner.
"They don't just give them a fish, but they teach them to fish,"
said Mark Murphy, executive director of the REDCAT performance space
at Walt Disney Concert Hall. "Sometimes people consider the business
of art to be an oxymoron, but the artists, with rare exceptions, would
love to have a chance to build a bit of infrastructure."
Creative Capital has helped filmmakers, performers and cutting-edge
experimenters refocus their work, propelling some down new avenues of
creativity that have slowly begun to seep into the central currents
of American art.
Scores of its artists have gone on to place projects in galleries and
museums small and large, little known and famous, including L.A.'s Mark
Moore Gallery and Telic Arts Exchange, New York's Whitney Museum of
American Art and the Chicago Museum of Contemporary Art.
Musical pieces have premiered in noted venues, including at Disney Hall
in the "Minimalist Jukebox" festival. Films, such as Sam Green's
"The Weather Underground," have screened at Sundance and other
festivals. Lisa Kron's play "Well" debuted at New York's Public
Theater two years ago. But it's the less visible elements that have
fed Creative Capital's success. The organization acts as a professional
network host, drawing together artists from disparate disciplines in
retreats with gallery owners, museum curators and consultants. And it
holds clinics across the country for non-grantees that have drawn more
than 1,000 artists, said Alyson Pou, who runs the professional development
program.
All of Creative Capital's efforts are directed at one goal: helping
artists become self-sufficient.
"Businesses are not built overnight or within a calendar year,"
said Ruby Lerner, founding director of Creative Capital. "To make
something successful, you have to be willing to make a long-term commitment.
We expect a three- to five-year relationship with a project."
Lerner describes herself as an evangelist spreading the concept of investing
grant money in projects, and Creative Capital's internal reports are
filled with such lingo as establishing a "cohesive system of support"
that creates a "chain of opportunity for the artists," which
has "helped people with project planning as well as career and
life planning."
That bureaucratic tone obscures the cutting-edge nature of much of the
work, such as Marie Sester's "Access," an interactive installation
that explores the effect of surveillance by using Web-based controls
to capture unsuspecting pedestrians in a cone of light and sound, and
Amelia Rudolph's Bay-area Project Bandaloop troupe, which in 2001 performed
its west-to-east "Crossing" dance over the Sierra Nevada in
what was likely the world's first alpine aerial dance hike.
For artists, the grants are akin to accepting a not-so-silent limited
partner. If a project makes money — so far, few have — the
artists pay dividends back to Creative Capital. But making money is
far down the organization's priority list. The focus is on nurturing
talent and trying to create a community of creative minds across disciplines.
C'mon, let's see some courage
THERE have been stumbles. A mentoring program got off to an uneven start
when demand far outpaced the supply of mentors; a promotional campaign
took longer to launch than anticipated, frustrating many of the artists;
and deadlines for follow-up grants had to be retooled when it became
clear that each artist's project was evolving at a different pace.
For those involved, though, the stumbles are just the growing pains
of innovation. The program's biggest strength lies in instilling courage
to push further along artistic roads, said Maya Churi, 35, of South
Pasadena.
Churi received $10,000 in Creative Capital's inaugural year for her
interactive http://www.lettersfromhomeroom.com
project, using fictional classroom notes to trace the lives of two teenage
girl characters. The project, still online but no longer updated, was
so realistic that Churi's characters had e-mail dialogues with real
teens who posted comments and questions.
Churi said the grant — $5,000 for the project and $5,000 for publicity
— affirmed her transition from film to interactive media, and
emboldened her to create http://www.forestgroveestates.com,
an interactive novel about a nonexistent suburban development, told
as a virtual slide show.
"I was still on the fence between film and the Web," said
Churi, who will begin a master's degree program at USC this fall. "Creative
Capital definitely helped in that sense, by their acknowledgment that
this is a form of art and that it was a legitimate creative outlet."
Creative Capital does its work in shared space with the Warhol Foundation
on the seventh floor of a staid-looking building on Manhattan's Bleecker
Street, at the edge of Greenwich Village and the art-heavy SoHo neighborhood.
Creative Capital was born as something of a dodge around the proscriptions
of Warhol's will. The Warhol Foundation gets most of its revenue from
the sale and licensing of Andy Warhol's art, and under his will it can
donate money only to organizations that support the visual arts, foundation
president Wachs says.
In the late 1990s, after the federal NEA scrapped nearly all its grants
for individual artists (it continues to issue grants to organizations),
Archibald L. Giddies, then the Warhol president, helped launch Creative
Capital to fill some of the gap, Wachs said.
Because Creative Capital focuses heavily on visual arts, the foundation
can — and does — funnel about $2 million a year, accounting
for nearly half of Creative Capital's annual budget.
A key component of Creative Capital's program is teaching artists the
sorts of things they didn't learn in art school — in essence,
the business model for being an artist, including introducing them to
such concepts as "capacity building." "Just because you
have a great idea doesn't necessarily mean that you would have the skills
to do all phases, to achieve all phases of the idea," Lerner said.
"You might have a great idea, but you might not know anything about
marketing."
Another key element is using the Creative Capital grant as seed money
to attract other grants — what Lerner sees as a version of an
IPO.
"That's the whole thing about going public," Lerner said.
"You get a business to a certain point and then you want to take
it public where other people will invest in it."
In the case of artists, Creative Capital uses its contacts to help artists
gain other grants to augment its funding, and to entice galleries and
museums to consider displaying the projects.
The program is not for everyone. Early-career artists whose vision has
yet to gel aren't ready for the professional guidance. Established artists
often have already navigated the business part of the arts and don't
need career guidance, contacts or help developing their artistic infrastructure
— conceiving, executing and presenting their works.
Los Angeles artist Ruben Ochoa is just at the beginning of the cycle.
He received a $5,000 grant last year for his still-developing project
"Freeway Extractions," an act of optical illusion in which
he hopes to cover a portion of an Interstate 10 retaining wall with
photographic wallpaper of the green space on the other side. It's part
of a three-stage project that includes erecting a billboard of a photograph
he took of a fake chunk of freeway retaining wall posed in a suburban
neighborhood, and constructing another chunk of retaining wall this
September at LAXART, a nonprofit gallery on La Cienega Boulevard.
The point: to use the freeway retaining walls as cultural artifacts
to draw attention to Los Angeles' class divides, Ochoa said. But to
paper over the freeway wall he needs permission from both the city of
Los Angeles and Caltrans, which he is in the process of obtaining.
Ochoa believes the grant gave his project enough credibility to gain
the attention of public officials whose blessing he needs, and the Creative
Capital retreat he participated in helped him in his discussions. "As
cheesy as it sounds, it gave me a sense of empowerment that I came back
with that, as an artist, I could negotiate," Ochoa said.