Kailey Bryan's piece in my upcoming exhibition is one I am very excited about. |
My mind is a very crowded place: too many ideas, projects and even languages. I knew I was quickly becoming toast
this week when I found myself writing in, of all things, Latin. When I get very tired the languages in
my brain all run together and I lose track of them. This entertains my son to no end. I start a sentence in one and end up in another. This week has been a good week for
languages. I dusted off my Arabic,
which I haven't spoken in decades.
I have some new friends from the Middle East.
OK. This
week I have been stopped on the street and asked about the changing tone of my
blog. Yes, thank you for noticing. What has happened is that when I
started the blog it was just a place for me to vent and have a digital
presence. As time has gone on, I
have gotten more and more readers.
With that comes responsibility.
I understand that words have impact and I try and be an ethical person. So, that means acknowledging what I do
has consequences. Consider it the
literary version of recycling, if you will. The tone reflects whatever intent I have when I write. I have done just about everything you
can do with words– from advertising to speech writing, to art criticism so tone
is like vocabulary to me –or changing socks.
Any old who, what has been on my mind this week is
philanthropy in the arts. My professional life has been spent in the arts and
that has left me cash poor but usually happy. From time to time I ask myself if I should do something more
profitable so that I could spend money in support of the arts. Clearly, I am still in the arts
sector. But I have very strong
opinions on how we should support the arts. What I choose to do is to donate in, a what I hope, is a
conscious fashion. I give a piece
of jewelry every year to a silent auction for example. And one year I gave five. It depends on what I have and who is
asking. My kid for example has always
used his birthday party as a fundraiser for a charity of his choice. When we travel I also give him a budget
to spend on art because I think that ingrains the idea that art is no more a
luxury than candy or books.
It has always rankled me that artists get hit on to donate
to fundraising auctions. I do like the practice that has evolved of artists
getting a minimum bid and the balance going to charity. That makes sense.
This week I attended two musical events with an allusion to
fundraising (and yes I paid for my tickets). One was in support of the REAL program, which funds sports,
dance, music, etc in the City of St. John's and it really helps out families
who can't afford musical instruments, sport equipment, lessons, etc. It makes a huge difference to the
quality of life for families and helps them immeasurably. It is my understanding that 95
organizations city-wide cooperate to make that happen along with our municipal
government. Good for you City of
St. John's. Sometimes you get it
right.
The other event was at the Memorial University School of
Music. It was a gala that
showcased the talents of staff, students and alumni and the philanthropist in
question is Edwin Procunier, who while alive made a bequest to the
university. Procunier was an all
round arts supporter (music, visual arts, literature, etc). If I've got this right, this year four
full scholarships in the School of Music where made possible through the
bequest. And there is a show up at
The Rooms Provincial Art Gallery currently that is made possible with the
generosity of Procunier estate.
So, I'll end with this question: what do you support?
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