RENEW 2023: Audience Regeneration

Tue Jun 06 2023 at 09:30 am to 02:00 pm

Friendship Auditorium | Los Angeles

Center for Nonprofit Management
Publisher/HostCenter for Nonprofit Management
RENEW 2023: Audience Regeneration
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Annual Leadership Conference for the Nonprofit Arts & Culture Sector
About this Event

Strategic thinking and peer learning have fostered successes at a time when creative economy workers and arts organizations continue to face many challenges. Networking with other leaders and innovators is an open pathway to assess creative solutions that balance community impact with economic resilience.

Join CNM and the City of Los Angeles Department of Cultural Affairs for RENEW – a special one-day event for the nonprofit cultural-arts sector.

This year's event is dedicated to exploring multiple ways to re-generate audiences; whether for: in-person experiences, online archives for national and international exposure, experiencing performances with the use of Virtual Reality, or through a commitment to developing youth accessibility.


Who Should Attend: Nonprofit players (CEOs, program directors, marketing managers, board members, etc.) and community-based artists working independently or embedded in any type of nonprofit service organization.

A light breakfast and lunch are included.



Keynote:

Alan Brown - Managing Principal, WolfBrown

Alan is a leading researcher and management consultant in the arts and culture sector worldwide. His work focuses on understanding consumer demand for cultural experiences, evaluating support structures for the arts, and helping cultural institutions, foundations and agencies to see new opportunities, make informed decisions and respond to changing conditions. His studies have introduced new vocabulary to the lexicon of cultural participation and propelled the field towards a clearer view of the rapidly changing cultural landscape. He speaks frequently at national and international conferences about audience behaviors, trends in cultural participation, and, most recently, the sector’s response to the Covid-19 pandemic.


Speakers:

Daniel Tarica - General Manager, Department of Cultural Affairs, City of Los Angeles

Daniel leads the Department’s work to strengthen the quality of life in Los Angeles by stimulating and supporting arts and cultural activities and ensuring public access to the arts for residents and visitors. The Department empowers Los Angeles’s vibrant communities by supporting and providing access to quality visual, literary, musical, performing, and educational arts programming; managing vital cultural centers; preserving historic sites; creating public art; and funding services provided by arts organizations and individual artists. Managing a full-time staff of 104 and a part-time staff of 150, Daniel oversees the Department’s portfolio of facilities, capital improvement projects, grants, educational initiatives, and programming. Daniel previously served as DCA’s Assistant General Manager and has served in several leadership positions with the Los Angeles City Council, City Controller, and City Administrative Officer.


Panelists & Moderators:

Joel Arquillos - Executive Director, Snap Foundation

Joel leads the Snap Foundation, with a mission to develop pathways to the creative economy for underrepresented youth in Los Angeles. Prior to joining Snap, he was Executive Director at 826LA, a non-profit writing and tutoring organization and before relocating to Los Angeles, Joel worked alongside Dave Eggers and Ninive Calegari as the Founding Director of National Programs for 826 National. Previously, Joel was an award-winning educator who taught social studies in the San Francisco Unified School District at Galileo High School, where he coordinated the Advancement Via Individual Determination program and the Academy of Information Technology. He was named Teacher of the Year in 2001 by the students of Galileo High and recieved 826 Valencia's first-ever Teacher of the Month prize in 2003.


Billy Clark - Artistic Director, CultureHub

Billy has overseen the development of CultureHub’s artistic, education, and community programs since its inception in 2009. With the CultureHub team, he has curated the annual Media Arts Festival, Refest, which showcases artists working at the intersection of art and technology. In 2013 he directed Paul D. Miller aka DJ Spooky’s piece Seoul Counterpoint, which premiered at La MaMa’s Ellen Stewart Theatre. At the La MaMa Galleria, he co-curated Mediated Motion, an exhibit of works that explored how new media technologies alter human movement and our perception of the body in motion. A graduate of the Experimental Theatre Wing at NYU, Billy has performed and directed in the downtown scene for over 20 years. He is currently a professor at the Seoul Institute of the Arts, has taught at CUNY Hunter College, and has been a guest lecturer at Sarah Lawrence College, Gallatin, and NYU's Interactive Telecommunications Program. He was chosen as one of the 100 Top Creatives by Origin Magazine in 2015.


Asuka Hisa - Director of Learning & Engagement, Institute of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles

Asuka programs for museum and community audiences and organizes special projects with artists distinctively anchored in participatory, experiential, and digital learning. She received the medal of Chevalier des Arts et des Lettres from the French Ministry of Culture; a B.A. from Barnard College; and a National Diploma of Art from the Ecole des Beaux Arts, France.


Allison Whorton - Program Director, TeenTix LA

Allison is an arts administrator, educator, and youth development professional with more than 10 years' experience creating equitable arts programs for young people across the country. Previously, she managed the High 5 Tickets to the Arts program in NYC, which allocated more than 12,000 arts tickets to local teens annually. As TeenTix LA’s first-ever Program Director, she launched the TeenTix Pass Program in 2021, which now has 1,500 teen participants and more than 20 arts/community partners.


More speakers to be announced soon!



COVID Protocols

Masks are not required at this time, but we ask you to be considerate of fellow attendees’ health and comfort and practice mindful social distancing. If you are exhibiting any signs of cold or flu symptoms, please stay at home. We are monitoring developments around COVID-19 and will adjust event guidelines accordingly.



About the Department of Cultural Affairs:

The Department of Cultural Affairs (DCA) is a progressive arts and cultural agency in Los Angeles. It promotes quality arts programming, manages cultural centers, preserves historic sites, creates public art, and funds arts organizations and individual artists. Since 1925, DCA has aimed to engage residents and visitors, recognize diverse cultures, and improve the quality of life in Los Angeles. Through grantmaking, community arts, performing arts, and strategic marketing, DCA advances the social and economic impact of arts and culture while providing service in neighborhoods throughout Los Angeles.

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Event Venue & Nearby Stays

Friendship Auditorium, 3201 Riverside Drive, Los Angeles, United States

Tickets

USD 10.00

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