Festival lauds architecture

Festival lauds architecture

By Lisa Millegan Renner

Arch FestFew Modestans realize that in the mid-20th century, the city attracted some of the most famous architects and landscape designers in the country. Their work was lauded nationally and featured in books published by New York’s Museum of Modern Art.

Now, for the first time, the new locally produced 16-minute documentary “Modesto Modernism” tells that story. It will premiere at the sixth annual Modesto International Architecture Festival, which runs Sept. 14-22 at various venues around the area.

The film was produced by California State University, Stanislaus, art professor Jessica Gomula-Kruzic and Steve Arounsack and highlights the Modesto work of such architects as Frank Lloyd Wright, Thomas Church and Lawrence Halprin. It will be shown Sept. 20 at the State Theatre and Sept. 22 at the Carnegie Arts Center in Turlock.

“I had no idea when we started doing the research we would uncover designs from so many major architects,” said Bob Barzan, director of the Modesto Art Museum, which sponsors the festival along with the Sierra Valley Chapter of the American Institute of Architects. “As of today, we’ve uncovered 85 landscapes and architecture of the biggest names in architecture for modernism.”

The architecture festival features many other ways to learn and celebrate architecture. Read more here.

Architecture View: Modesto Modernism

Architecture View: Modesto Modernism

By Bob Barzan

Heckendorf cover heckendorfhouse-100x100In the middle decades of the 20th century, the Modernist architecture of Modesto, California, was on the cutting edge of environmental and artistic design and it received national attention. In the 1940s, the New York Museum of Modern Art published three books featuring Modesto architecture and a photo of a Modesto home was on the cover of the catalogue for its trend-setting 1944 exhibition on modern architecture. From the 1940s through the 1960s, many books, professional journals, and popular magazines published articles on Modesto buildings. The city’s national stature in architecture began with the Heckendorf House designed by John Funk in 1939, but many more significant pieces of architecture were built in the following years.

The Modesto Art Museum has so far documented more than 85 Modernist buildings and landscapes in Modesto from 1939 to 1972 by noted 20th century designers including John Funk, William Wurster, Frank Lloyd Wright, Gardner Dailey, Henry Hill, Cliff May, Anshen and Allan, Christopher Alexander, William Turnbull, Brian Green, Joseph Esherick, SOM, Thomas Church, Lawrence Halprin, and many more. Modesto’s architecture was a model for other cities and a laboratory in the development of a distinctive California style that blended the indoors with the outdoors, Central Valley Modernism. Next month, at the architecture festival, the museum will premiere the new movie about Modesto’s remarkable modernist architecture and how it influenced the development of domestic architecture in California and beyond.

The movie, Modesto Modernism, is made possible by a grant from the San Francisco based Creative Work Fund. The grant enabled the museum to employee two local movie makers, Jessica Gomula-Kruzic and Steve Arounsack. Working with a team of local movie making professionals, Jessica and Steve have created a 16 minute short that documents and introduces viewers to Modesto’s extraordinary and long-forgotten architectural heritage, tells the story of how the city came to have such a heritage, and serves as a catalyst for community conversation on livability for Modesto’s future.

Best of all, the movie will show what a cool place Modesto was and still is. Come to the free premiere at the Architecture Movie Night, Friday, September 20, 6 pm, at the State Theatre.

Read more here.

How the Arts and Cultural Tourism Spur Economic Development

How the Arts and Cultural Tourism Spur Economic Development

Craig Watson is director of the California Arts Council and can be reached at cwatson@cac.ca.gov.


It’s the question that all local officials ask themselves: How can we attract and retain profitable businesses and talented people? A key component of such efforts — and one that’s often mislabeled an “amenity” —is arts and culture.

Creative businesses play a huge part in the California economy. These businesses comprise the arts, design, digital media and other fields that utilize a creative workforce. More than 134,000 creative businesses employ 500,000 Californians, with another 100,000 freelance or part-time creative workers in the mix. In addition, the Golden State’s 4,553 arts organizations contribute $3.56 billion annually to its economy.

But the value of the arts extends beyond the direct economic impact. When Gallup and the Knight Foundation set out to answer the question “What attaches people to their communities?” in a three-year study, researchers found that the key reasons cited by residents for loving their cities were entertainment and social offerings, how welcoming the city is and its aesthetics — in other words, the arts and culture.

Creative Placemaking: “Every Mayor’s Dream”

Today’s buzzword to describe communities’ investment in arts and culture is “creative placemaking” — which means using the arts to develop an area where people want to live, work and congregate. Urban-planning researcherAnn Markusen defined this concept for the Mayors’ Institute on City Design in the white paper Creative Placemaking:

In creative placemaking, partners from public, private, nonprofit and community sectors strategically shape the physical and social character of a neighborhood, town, city or region around arts and cultural activities.

The economic impact of clustering creative businesses was explained by Jamie Bennett, director of public affairs for the National Endowment for the Arts. Bennett said, “A theater has 1,000 people show up at eight o’clock and leave at eleven o’clock. A museum might have 1,000 visitors spread out over the course of an eight-hour day. A rehearsal studio might have 30 people coming and going every hour over 12 hours. You put the three different organizations in proximity to one another and, all of a sudden, you have a full day of positive foot traffic on a street — feet that belong to people who need to eat meals, buy newspapers, go shopping and take public transportation. You have every mayor’s dream.”

The key is to treat the arts as an essential part of the city’s identity. Successful creative placemaking builds the economy at the local level, enhances surrounding non-arts businesses and provides job opportunities and ways for individuals to participate in activities associated with the arts and cultural events. The results bring people together, spark community pride and create a more vibrant “place.”

Other states are actively investing in arts and culture as a challenge to California’s historic leadership in the global creative economy. The National Governors Association (www.nga.org) examined this issue in the report New Engines of Growth: Five Roles for Arts, Culture and Design. The report notes that as technology sectors have shifted from basic engineering to the added values of innovative design and creative products, establishing a network of creative workers is vital to staying competitive.

Tap Your Local Talent

Successful creative placemaking acknowledges and supports local arts and culture. “Art and artists are the asset all communities are gifted with,” noted Carol Coletta, director of ArtPlace, a collaboration of 13 leading national and regional foundations and six of the nation’s largest banks that invests in creative placemaking. “In a time when we especially need to jump-start economic and development momentum in our communities, I have to ask, ‘Why wouldn’t you put every single asset you have available to work to make that happen?’ And that includes art and artists.”

Creative clusters that combine artists and entrepreneurs have mushroomed in California cities. In Santa Monica, an old rail yard has blossomed into the visual-art gallery complex of Bergamot Station. Originally a railway station in the 19th century, Bergamot Station functioned as a warehouse storage facility until the 1980s when the City of Santa Monica purchased it for a future use as a light-rail station. When the light-rail project stalled, the city approached a local developer and architect to create an artists’ and gallery space. It opened in 1994 and has since become a key attraction both locally and for tourists, with more than 600,000 visitors each year visiting the galleries and other businesses in the complex.

In San Francisco’s South of Market neighborhood, a handful of nonprofits teamed up with entrepreneurs to establish the 5MPlaceWorks partnership where tech entrepreneurs mix with artists and designers. These creative clusters may seem spontaneous, but are the result of direct andmeaningful planning and investment.

Yet clusters of arts, culture and entrepreneurship aren’t exclusive to major urban areas. Smaller cities can take advantage of local talent to showcase the community’s unique personality and, at the same time, provide important job training and creative interaction for local citizens.

Modesto Fosters Creative Innovation

Modesto’s new Building Imagination Center is a contemporary art and video-art venue. It’s also an education and artist residency center. Its activities, including investment in local video artists, encourage production and job training for anyone interested — mid-level professionals, recent graduates of California State University, Stanislaus, and members of the public.

The Building Imagination Center is part of a greater network of the Modesto arts and culture scene, and its monthly short documentary projects on local subjects enhance these characteristics and bring the community together, according to Jessica Gomula-Kruzic, the center’s director. The center plans to highlight other local cultural assets, such as the American Graffiti Car Show and Festival and the area’s largely unknown architectural treasures, which include buildings designed by Julia Morgan, Frank Lloyd Wright and other notable architects.

The center is not solely for professional artists and filmmakers, however. It also offers free workshops that teach individuals how to create short videos using common devices like smart phones. As technology advances, the nature of work is changing, and employers increasingly expect employees to have multimedia skills. One-minute videos for YouTube and websites are being produced by businesses from real estate to restaurants and retail. “We’re hoping to give people the skills to do those things,” said Gomula-Kruzic.

The Role of Cultural Districts

Cultural districts are zones that aggregate cultural or artistic ventures (both nonprofit and commercial) and, in the process, stimulate economic development. A dozen states nationwide have enacted official cultural-district designations, some with remarkable measurable results. An analysis of Maryland’s arts and entertainment districts notes a 17 percent growth in new jobs, goods and services, and wages from new business in the state’s arts and entertainment districts between 2008 and 2010 — a significant achievement during the recession.

Some California communities are already moving in this direction. A part of San Diego’s downtown East Village area, called the I.D.E.A. District for its focus on innovation, design, education and arts, was conceived by a pair of local developers who have partnered with higher education institutions, the San Diego Foundation, community groups and others.

“[Local governments] need to answer the question, ‘What do people want?’ Artistic, cultural and social experiences are what keep people in a community,” said David Malmuth, one of the founders of the I.D.E.A. District.

Pete Garcia, Malmuth’s partner in the I.D.E.A. District project, emphasizes the need for communities to identify their own strengths and not be swayed by what’s popular elsewhere. Cultural district supporters need to ask the question, “What is our city about? And what is it missing?”

Malmuth encourages planners and coordinators to work quickly, perhaps in small ways rather than spending too much time on long-term planning. He said, “Take too long and the community loses focus, loses enthusiasm.”

Creating an Arts Oasis

A rebirth of the creative community is under way in Palm Springs and the Coachella Valley. Palm Springs has long been a popular vacation spot for film stars. In the 1980s and ‘90s the area was better known as a retirement community than as a place of creative economic activity.

Today the creative economy is thriving in the region, notes Robert Stearns, the executive director of ArtsOasis, an initiative of the Coachella Valley Economic Partnership. Policy-makers and leaders in the area sensed that the arts and creative businesses were a strong economic driver. A study of the area, Creative California Desert, revealed that the creative economy is “a robust engine that employs nearly one out of every five persons working in the Coachella Valley and produces a raw impact of close to $1 billion per year.”

This vigorous creative activity started in small ways. The Palm Springs International Film Festival began as a modest proposal in 1989. Now, almost 25 years later, it’s a major international event that draws 140,000 visitors in a 10-day period. The festival’s success encouraged film-related businesses to set up in the area. A weekend trade show grew into the Modernism Week, a celebration of architecture and related businesses, like clean energy and design, that attracts experts worldwide. Interest in visual art, architecture, design and modern art produced art festivals and fostered a unique brand of cultural tourism, where people visit different art studios and participate in hands-on projects. The area has also been successful in attracting younger people, due in part to the success of the Coachella Valley Music and Arts Festival, a six-day event spanning two weekends.

One result of local leaders’ discussions and planning around arts and economic activity was the ArtsOasis website (http://artsoasis.org), which lists the regional arts-related activities in a single comprehensive resource to help facilitate event planning and cultural tourism. Another result is the development of a creative marketplace and trade center for talent, services and products — initially for film and media workers, but with the goal of expanding to other creative industries.

Stearns sees this collaboration as a key way to build the creative economy during tough economic times. “It doesn’t take a lot of infrastructure money for this community,” he said. “Building the creativeeconomy requires building the creative community.”

The first step, according to Stearns, is to determine exactly who is in the local creative community. “If you look at the broad field, you may see there is a much bigger world than the ‘starving artists’ and the nonprofits,” he said. While the traditional arts play a very big role, they are only part of the overall creative economy. If your community is home to creative businesses or related industries, invite them to participate and include them in your city’s creative placemaking efforts.

Pasadena and Levitt Pavilions Partner to Revitalize Area, Create Festivals

While local governments are strapped for funding, public-private partnerships can be instrumental in building the creative economy, and Levitt Pavilion in Pasadena offers a great example.

Levitt Pavilions is a national nonprofit whose goal is bringing communities together through music. To qualify for its support, a city must make available a publicly owned space and commit to at least 50 free music concerts annually. Levitt Pavilions provides capital seed funding to renovate or build a music venue, and a local “Friends of the Levitt Pavilion” nonprofit must be formed. In addition, the local government maintains the location.

The first Levitt Pavilion project, other than one in the founders’ hometown in Connecticut, was the band shell in Pasadena’s Memorial Park. The park was run-down and suffering from the effects of crime, vagrant drug use, homelessness, graffiti and under use. Levitt Pavilions provided approximately $250,000 in capital seed funding plus annual operating support to improve the band shell for public concerts, the local “friends of” nonprofit raised the additional funds (about $1.5 million), and an annual music program for the community was born.

The free concerts are a vital part of the Levitt Pavilion model. By hosting the community events, the venue becomes a destination in the city for people from all socioeconomic backgrounds, especially families. “It brings out the entire community,” said Vanessa Silberman, director of communications for Levitt Pavilions. “There’s a sense of neighborliness — a nice small-town feel in a city.”

The turnaround for the area in Pasadena is significant, said Silberman. Nearby Colorado Boulevard in the center of Pasadena’s original downtown had undergone a revitalization, evolving into the extremely popular Old Pasadena area. Prior to the Levitt Pavilion investment, local residents avoided Memorial Park because of the crime problem. Now the area around the park has become as vibrant as Colorado Boulevard, with new condominiums, restaurants and other amenities nearby.

The success of the Levitt Pavilion partnership is due to the long-term commitment of the city, the local nonprofit and the national Levitt organization.

In conjunction with the Levitt Pavilion project, Pasadena launched an annual music festival called Make Music Pasadena. Now in its sixth successful year, Make Music Pasadena presents Grammy Award-winning musicians and top recording artists performing blues, jazz, folk, alternative rock and more. The festival’s eclectic mix of music appeals to audiences of all ages and has earned it high praise. It’s been dubbed by L.A. Weekly as “Los Angeles’ best free festival.” More than 30,000 fans flock to Pasadena to hear 500 musicians performing 140 free concerts on 35 stages spread throughout the city — all in one music-filled day.

Your Town, Your Arts

Enhancing the creative sector is essential to the future of the Golden State. But investing in the arts doesn’t necessarily need to strain the pocketbooks of local governments or require extra staff. Assess what is already in your own community. Assist and support the local businesses, nonprofits and residents who propose innovative projects. Invite creative leaders to share ideas, and encourage high-quality proposals that can make a real difference. A little investment in the arts can go a long way toward keeping your community on the forefront of the creative economy.


Creative Placemaking Resources

Resources and funding opportunities for cities interested in investing in creative placemaking are listed below.

  • Our Town grants from the National Endowment for the Arts (www.arts.gov). Organizations may apply for creative placemaking projects that contribute to the livability of communities and place the arts at their core.
  • ArtPlace funding (www.artplace.org). ArtPlace works to accelerate creative placemaking through grants and loans, partnerships, solid and imaginative research, communication and advocacy.
  • Creating Places of Vitality grants from the California Arts Council (www.arts.ca.gov) . This program targets rural and underserved communities in California by supporting partnerships and cultural activities that create a distinct sense of place.
  • Various websites consolidate hundreds of grant opportunity listings. These includewww.California.grantwatch.com, www.foundationcenter.org, and www.arts.ca.gov (see opportunities/grants).

California communities have plenty of creative assets, both large and small, that can be utilized even in this tough economy. The California Arts Council website (www.arts.ca.gov) lists hundreds of festivals throughout the state that demonstrate our will and desire to have arts in our communities. Local governments may be strapped, but a small investment in the arts and creative communities can have a huge impact in the long run.

Additional Resources Available

 

Read the full article here: www.westerncity.com

 

New digs for Building Imagination Center

New digs for Building Imagination Center

By Modesto Bee Staff Reports. July 17, 2013

The Building Imagination Center is downsizing to a smaller location in downtown Modesto but still will be heavily involved in community activities.

The center, which has hosted video production classes and art exhibitions and screened original documentaries at 1009 J St. since September, is relocating to the much smaller Gallery 909, the California State University, Stanislaus, art gallery at 909 10th St.

The center had to change locations because its $170,000 grant with ArtPlace is ending, said the center’s director, Jessica Gomula-Kruzic. ArtPlace is a collaboration of several foundations, large banks and the National Endowment for the Arts.

The center has a long slate of activities planned this year, including:

• Hosting monthly meetings of the new Filmmaker Social Club, open to professionals and enthusiasts, beginning in August. Check www.buildingimagination.com for the location and date.

• Documenting the Modesto International Architecture Festival, scheduled Sept. 14-22, by creating short films about festival events.

• Showing original films from local and other filmmakers at Gallery 909 and becoming the resident moviemakers at the State Theatre. The center is presenting its first film festival, the Imagination Fest, there Dec. 5.

• Pursuing long-term “creative placemaking” activities with the city of Modesto. A term coined by the National Endowment for the Arts, “creative placemaking” means government and private groups working together to shape the character of a town around arts and cultural activities. Some of the activities the center already has coordinated include creating mini-parks on 10th street and organizing a “chalk walk of art.”

• Extending the center’s activities into Turlock. A Turlock branch location is expected to be announced by the end of this month.

Read more here

ArtPlace interviews the Building Imagination Center about their most rewarding event

ArtPlace interviews the Building Imagination Center about their most rewarding event

The Building Imagination Center is a visual arts and media hub in downtown Modesto. Working with the Modesto Art Museum, the Center provides the community with a visual arts gallery for world class photography, sculpture, paintings, and contemporary art mediums, such as video, animations, and interactive content.

Through its Resident Filmmaker Program, the Center brings regional documentary video artists to Modesto to actively engage the community with hands-on video creation, and to provide real world experience for California State University Stanislaus film students. It is the Center’s mission to create an environment where artists can work, thrive, and feel supported by the community, and then to catalyze this growth and leverage it to benefit the local community by creating a vibrant activation of the downtown art scene.

ArtPlace spoke with Jessica Gomula-Kruzic, Director for the Building Imagination Center.

What has been your best and most rewarding event during the course of your ArtPlace grant?

One of the best events the Center has hosted has been our exhibit Modesto the Next 100 Years. This exhibit was organized by our partner, the Modesto Art Museum, and our city planning office. We literally displayed the city’s long range city growth projections and land use maps for Modesto. The city is currently in the process of planning for a new downtown rail station, which will fundamentally change the accessibility and quality of life for the residents. This exhibit gave many people who had not been a part of the public forums a chance to see the scenarios being considered and to discuss them with their peers.

The exhibit was coordinated with a public forum on the redevelopment of downtown, which was hosted by the city. This forum gave city officials an opportunity to get feedback from many of the key constituents of downtown, such as business owners, property owners, community groups, and the public at large. Using digital clickers, attendees were able to vote on a variety of issues and see the results immediately. This forum is being followed up by the new city development committees, as well as a second public forum during the April Art Walk which will include live music, free food, etc.
This event was a unique application of our mission to create a more vibrant downtown by going outside of the art community to find visual infographics that will have a direct impact on the city’s future.

What did you learn from this event?

This event once again reinforced our appreciation of the ways outside partnerships can strengthen and add depth to our creative placemaking efforts. The exhibits and forums brought an entirely new audience into the Center, and facilitated many wonderful discussions about the future of the city. Once people had the opportunity to see the planning behind the city’s growth, they felt a new sense of ownership towards the city. Their excitement about the city’s future was palpable during the forums, with many of the attendants ready to move past the discussion phase and eager to get started making concrete changes. Changes such as the parklets that the Center helped to create across the street from us, changes like the new wall murals that local business owners have started commissioning on their buildings, or communal projects such as the Chalk Art Walk the center is hosting April 27.

– See more at: http://www.artplaceamerica.org/articles/building-imagination-in-californias-central-valley-7/#sthash.M0MBfZHG.dpuf

ArtPlace spoke with the Building Imagination Center, about advice for new grantees

ArtPlace spoke with the Building Imagination Center, about advice for new grantees

The Building Imagination Center is a visual arts and media hub in downtown Modesto. Working with the Modesto Art Museum, the Center provides the community with a visual arts gallery for world class photography, sculpture, paintings, and contemporary art mediums, such as video, animations, and interactive content.

Through its Resident Filmmaker Program, the Center brings regional documentary video artists to Modesto to actively engage the community with hands-on video creation, and to provide real world experience for California State University Stanislaus film students. It is the Center’s mission to create an environment where artists can work, thrive, and feel supported by the community, and then to catalyze this growth and leverage it to benefit the local community by creating a vibrant activation of the downtown art scene.

ArtPlace spoke with Jessica Gomula-Kruzic, Director for the Building Imagination Center.

ARTPLACE: Take a moment to think over the past year. What advice would you give to the new grantees? How would you encourage new grantees to leverage their ArtPlace grants for maximum effect?

GOMULA-KRUZIC: One of the suggestions I would give to new grantees is to be open to the visions that others can bring to your project. In most cases, they are coming to you because they share a mutual interest or have a common idea that they would like to expand upon, and with a bit of collaborative thinking, their participation can open new doors for you, as it did for us.

I would also recommend putting in the time and effort for a strong public relations campaign at the very beginning of your project, so that the community knows in advance all of the great ideas you have planned for the upcoming year. Write press releases for these events early on, and create a social media site with new content posted on a regular basis. And take lots and lots of pictures and share them widely with the community-at-large.

Most importantly, enjoy the excitement and anticipation of the year before you! You have a precious opportunity that has only been granted to a select few, to take your project to the next plateau. Enjoy every step of your journey.

Postscript: The Building Imagination Center will be opening a new Center in Turlock, CA, and our Modesto branch will become a resident of Modesto’s historic State Theater – an opportunity that would have never happened without the support from ArtPlace. And we are very excited that our partner, the Modesto Art Museum, is among the new round of grantees. They have a plethora of community art events and awareness planned for the coming year, and we plan to be right there to help them.
We at the Center would like to thank ArtPlace for enabling us to launch the Building Imagination Center, and the Modesto Art Museum for hosting a wide range of community events that certainly helped our project to reach a broad audience.

Most of all, we would like to thank all of the various community groups that stepped forward and became involved in supporting our events and in expanding our scope of activities; groups such as the City of Modesto Downtown planning committee, the Modesto International Architecture Festival, and the local volunteer organization, LOVE Modesto, to name a few.

Thank you,
Jessica Gomula-Kruzic, Director of the Building Imagination Center

ArtPlace interviews the Building Imagination Center about the sustainability of its work

ArtPlace interviews the Building Imagination Center about the sustainability of its work

 The Building Imagination Center is a visual arts and media hub in downtown Modesto. Working with the Modesto Art Museum, the Center provides the community with a visual arts gallery for world class photography, sculpture, paintings, and contemporary art mediums, such as video, animations, and interactive content.

Through its Resident Filmmaker Program, the Center brings regional documentary video artists to Modesto to actively engage the community with hands-on video creation, and to provide real world experience for California State University Stanislaus film students. It is the Center’s mission to create an environment where artists can work, thrive, and feel supported by the community, and then to catalyze this growth and leverage it to benefit the local community by creating a vibrant activation of the downtown art scene.

ArtPlace spoke with Jessica Gomula-Kruzic, Director for the Building Imagination Center, about the next moves for the Center.

ARTPLACE: How will the work that you’ve begun be sustained after your ArtPlace grant ends?

GOMULA-KRUZIC: Unfortunately, without the outside funding, we will not be able to afford to remain in our current location. However, while we will not be physically located in Modesto, our work and involvement with the Modesto community will continue and move forward through the projects we have begun here, such as continuing to offer film screenings, specifically for Modesto’s Third Thursday art walks. Additionally, we will be making more pedestrian friendly enhancements to the downtown corridor, such as our short-term ‘parklets’, with permanent improvements to the walkability of the sidewalk through the use of shade, lighting, and art.

We are also working with Modesto’s Downtown Hospitality group to create a ‘public art block’ outside the Center’s current location. With the full support of our city planners, several pedestals are being provided for the installation of public sculptures downtown, and plans are in the works to build an archway across the street to match others nearby, as well as to increase the number and diversity of wall murals throughout the community. Additionally, we will continue specific activities in the future, such as screening films in the public courtyard outside the Center, and working with the LOVE Modesto volunteer organization to create a Chalk Walk of Art, which we will be doing in April.

ARTPLACE: How has this work affected the work you will do beyond the grant period?

GOMULA-KRUZIC: The ArtPlace grant has enabled us to work with government agencies and with people from within other organizations that we would not have initially thought to align with, such as the Stanislaus Alliance for Arts Education, but also with the Pen Women Society and the Modesto Hotel Council. These new partnerships have expanded our reach and brought about community awareness of the visual arts through exposure to the art exhibitions and art forms previously unavailable to this region. Our resident filmmakers have helped us to create a model for working with community groups to create new documentaries with and about Modesto. This, in turn, has allowed the public to see parts of their own community that they weren’t aware of before, and a chance to contribute to creating artwork in a manner they had not been able to before. Our work with our current partner, the Modesto Art Museum, has also allowed us to bring in artists from outside the region, and the state, and has greatly enriched our programming. We are plan on continuing and building upon all of these relationships and networks in the future.

That’s how art works with the community and for the community, expanding its horizons and bringing about cultural and economic growth.

And that’s what the Building Imagination Center has helped us to achieve.

– See more at: http://www.artplaceamerica.org/articles/building-imagination-in-californias-central-valley-6/#sthash.o3nVKHta.dpuf

ArtPlace interviews the Building Imagination Center about recent Creative Placemaking summit

ArtPlace interviews the Building Imagination Center about recent Creative Placemaking summit

IMG_20130308_173317(1)Through its Resident Filmmaker Program, the Center brings regional documentary video artists to Modesto to actively engage the community with hands-on video creation, and to provide real world experience for California State University Stanislaus film students. It is the Center’s mission to create an environment where artists can work, thrive, and feel supported by the community, and then to catalyze this growth and leverage it to benefit the local community by creating a vibrant activation of the downtown art scene.

Recently, creative placemakers from across the country gathered in Miami for a first-ever Creative Placemaking Summit. This event was hosted by ArtPlace, which is the first major public-private partnership to encourage creative placemaking across America.

ArtPlace spoke with Jessica Gomula-Kruzic, Director for the Building Imagination Center, about the recent Creative Placemaking Summit in Miami, FL.

ARTPLACE: What ideas did you gain, or lessons did you learn, that you plan to apply to your initiative?  

GOMULA-KRUZIC: The Creative Placemaking Summit in Miami was a very engaging event to attend. It was very exciting to hear firsthand all of the projects and initiatives people have been working on all over the country. The speakers themselves were also very engaging. Mostly, the small focus groups were extremely helpful in bringing together projects that had similar goals.

One of the most provocative ideas I came across at the Summit was the Gallup-Knight Foundation’s Soul Poll. This study of 43,000 people in 26 cities over three years found that three community qualities – social offerings, openness and beauty – have consistently emerged as the leading drivers for community attachment – even over such factors as perceptions of local economy, leadership and safety. According to Jon Clifton, deputy director of the Gallup World Poll, who conducted the survey, the results of this survey show a significant, positive link between cultural offerings, resident attachment and local GDP growth.

This last factor is particularly relevant to our goals at the Building Imagination Center and our contribution to the community. By creating new and original documentary films of and with the local community, we are, in essence, documenting the social offerings that Modesto has, and bringing awareness of these offerings to the larger community through film screenings. To know that these activities are directly linked to helping Modesto’s local economy by building Modesto’s residents’ sense of attachment to the community, reinvigorates our work and reaffirms our commitment to the community.

Likewise, our partner, the Modesto Art Museum, has also been building resident attachments to the community through the art events that it sponsors throughout Modesto. In particular, the Modesto International Architecture Festival, now in its sixth year, has exploded in size from its original movie presentations, to now include guided architectural tours, architectural cafes, short and feature length movie presentations, art exhibits, poetry readings, and featured speakers.

One of the key lessons I took away from the Summit was that creative placemaking takes time. This approach has emerged over the past twenty years as a promising way to increase the vitality of communities and to help them grow. In many of the towns identified in America’s Top 12 Artplaces, creative placemaking has been active for over a decade. They have succeeded by being engaged not only in short term projects, but by committing to long term changes in the community as well. They found ways to tie together the arts and local, state, and national agencies to rebuild their downtowns, pass new legislation, and revitalize their communities.

ARTPLACE: Where does this movement go next?   

GOMULA-KRUZIC: In many of the successful creative placemaking initiatives, a long term vision had been embraced by local artists, local art organizations, and local political branches. In the same manner, I think that the placemaking movement needs to embrace multi-year projects.

For example, in Hartford Connecticut, the National Arts Endowment joined forces with the Department of Transportation, and over a dozen other agencies and organizations, to connect their cultural institutions and make Hartford more walkable by better linking Union Station to Main Street, improving public transit routing through Downtown, and stitching Bushnell Park to the cityscape.

Another example, in Chicago, the MacArthur Foundation and the Pearson Foundation worked with the Chicago Public Library Foundation to create YOUmedia, an innovative, 21st century teen learning space housed at the Chicago Public Library’s downtown center. YOUmedia was created to connect young adults, books, media, mentors, and institutions throughout the city of Chicago, in one dynamic space designed to inspire collaboration and creativity.

These are both excellent examples of the types of collaboration that can happen when art organizations and government agencies work together.

And this is exactly what the Building Imagination Center, working together with the City of Modesto Planning Committee, has been accomplishing through the transformation of 10th Street and downtown Modesto.

Last month we worked with the City to help create Parklets – tiny parks in unused parking areas. During our February Artwalk, we will have several outdoor video performances transforming the downtown plaza into a visual experience. You will also see this during our April LOVE Modesto event, in which we are inviting the community to make an art chalk-walk, again transforming the downtown with local creativity.

Creative placemaking is a community-based approach to the planning, design, management of spaces and implementation of practices that will make our community, Modesto, distinctive, economically viable, accessible, and visually pleasing.

And the Building Imagination Center will be there to help.

The Building Imagination Center is a new visual arts and media hub in downtown Modesto. Working with the Modesto Art Museum, the Center provides the community with a visual arts gallery for world class photography, sculpture, paintings, and contemporary art mediums, such as video, animations, and interactive content.

– See more at: http://www.artplaceamerica.org/articles/building-imagination-in-californias-central-valley-5/#sthash.cao7NBEh.dpuf

ArtPlace spoke with the Building Imagination Center about creating political allies

ArtPlace spoke with the Building Imagination Center about creating political allies

courtyard-viewThrough its Resident Filmmaker Program, the Center brings regional documentary video artists to Modesto to actively engage the community with hands-on video creation, and to provide real world experience for California State University Stanislaus film students. It is the Center’s mission to create an environment where artists can work, thrive, and feel supported by the community, and then to catalyze this growth and leverage it to benefit the local community by creating a vibrant activation of the downtown art scene.

ArtPlace spoke with Jessica Gomula-Kruzic, Director for the Building Imagination Center, about the goals of the Center and the downtown art scene in Modesto, California.

ARTPLACE: Have you gained any political traction with your efforts?  If so, with whom and how did you do it?

GOMULA-KRUZIC: The Building Imagination Center has been very well received in Modesto by local residents, other art and civic organizations, and officials in public office. One significant indication of this acceptance is our recent invitation to be a part of the Modesto Downtown Hospitality and Promotions group. Recently, the City initiated an effort in conjunction with the Downtown Improvement District, Chamber of Commerce, and Convention and Visitor’s Bureau to improve the sociability of our downtown. This program consists of three branches: Operations, Promotions, and Economic Development. Due to the Center’s interest in creative placemaking in our downtown, we were invited to be part of the Promotions Group.

The Promotions Group focuses on promotions, marketing, special events, and public relations for the downtown area, focusing on making it look more inviting and appealing to the local citizens. While we have been contributing to the research about exactly what type of person or group is currently using the downtown area, and for what purposes, we have also played a key part in the first transformation project, which was featured in the local newspaper. Right outside of our windows, we can see the City taking its first steps towards re-imagining downtown Modesto by converting non-usable street corners into pedestrian friendly ‘parklets’. These are small urban parks created to provide a public place for citizens to relax and enjoy the atmosphere of the city around them.  Through the redistribution of city owned tree and flower planters, the addition of some decoupage painting techniques, and cafe tables and chairs, the city has in one weekend transformed the urban experience of 10th and J street. And the Building Imagination Center was right there to help.

Read more…

The Building Imagination Center is a new visual arts and media hub in downtown Modesto. Working with the Modesto Art Museum, the Center provides the community with a visual arts gallery for world class photography, sculpture, paintings, and various other art mediums, such as video animations and interactive content.