CREATIVE CAPITAL IN THE NEWS
From the Fast Company
April, 2007
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It Sure Beats the NEA
Creative Capital brings venture philanthropy— and business
savvy— to the arts.
By Lisa LaMotta and Alex C. Pasquariello
No one misses the controversies that beset the National Endowment for
the Arts in the 1990s. Its funding of cutting-edge, but controversial,
art exposed how outmoded the New Deal--era approach to promoting culture
truly was.
Creative Capital is a private-sector response to such messiness. Bringing
venture philanthropy to the arts, it has funded 242 projects with grants
of up to $50,000 since 1999. But its approach is about more than money.
"We look for people open to changing how they market themselves,"
says executive director Ruby Lerner.
To that end, Creative Capital offers artists services and strategic
advice in such disciplines as public relations, marketing, and fund-raising.
Lerner is exploring having Creative Capital's financial donors contribute
their business expertise as well. "The goal is for artists to build
a sustaining constituency," she says.
Although there's no defining aesthetic in the work Creative Capital
funds (that would defeat the purpose), "there is a lot of sassiness."
And outside the gallery, there's plenty of savvy. Here are four of Creative
Capital's success stories.
Liz Cohen, "Bodywork"
In her conceptual piece, Cohen converts a Trabant--the egregiously plain
compact car of Communist East Germany--into a tricked-out Chevrolet
(NYSE:GM) El Camino low-rider, and herself into both a body-shop customizer
and a voluptuous, bikini-clad car model. It's an exploration, she says,
of transformation and group membership. But to work with Creative Capital,
Cohen first had to morph into a businesswoman. She confronted a financial
budget, which "de-romanticized the art and helped me understand
that I'm creating a product that is worth money."
Hasan Elahi, "Tracking Transience: The Orwell Project"
In "Tracking Transience," Elahi documents his every move in
maps and images on the Web, his reaction to a six-month FBI investigation
into his alleged terrorist activities. Since being exonerated, the Muslim-American
artist has sought to devalue the bureau's primary asset--restricted
information--by flooding the market with his own. Managing growth--he
has hired two assistants--has now become a full-time job: "The
venture-capital model helped me see a bigger picture, where, by bridging
the divide between the studio and the business, my art can grow,"
he says.
Brent Green, "Paulina Hollers"
Before Creative Capital, Green's most intimate connection with private
enterprise was his job as a waiter. He was fired from that. Unemployed,
his business strategy consisted of sending his stop-animation short
films, unsolicited, to his favorite musicians. That got some traction--but
it was at a Creative Capital retreat that Green figured it out: He was
targeting the wrong audience. "The film people weren't into my
work at all, but the art people were digging it, and I started getting
shows at the Getty and stuff," he says. "I went there thinking
I was a filmmaker, but I learned that marketing is all about selling
it right." Recast as an artist, he's just off a solo show in New
York.
Chris Doyle, "50,000 Beds"
This summer, 45 artists will each spend a night in a hotel somewhere
in Connecticut (the title refers to the number of hotel and motel rooms
in the state) and, while there, make a short video or film. The results
will be divvied up among three sponsoring museums and displayed for
six weeks. For Doyle, all that represents a daunting exercise in logistics
management: Besides overseeing 45 art projects, he has been working
with the museums to come up with an overall concept and schedule, connecting
with state officials, and teaming with marketing consultants to get
the word out. "It has been fun to do all the parts," he says.
"I feel much more confident about pulling people together behind
a single project."