Here's my 26 minute introduction.
This is a blog about Arts and Culture in small town America. I'll be sharing inspiring stories and awesome experiences, as well as showcase cautionary tales. My goal is to provide tools for supporting artists around the country in small towns. I look forward to your contributions.
Showing posts with label Ashland Arts Alliance. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ashland Arts Alliance. Show all posts
Tuesday, May 8, 2012
Ashland Arts Alliance Introduction
Sunday, April 29, was the first "Meet and Greet" of the Ashland Arts Alliance in Ashland, Virginia.
Here's my 26 minute introduction.
Here's my 26 minute introduction.
Labels:
Ashland Arts Alliance,
creative economy,
meetup,
meetup.com
Tuesday, May 1, 2012
Motel Families
Ashland, Virginia straddles Rt. 1, about half way between Fredericksburg and Richmond. We are exit 92-B on I-95 northbound. Ashland has a lot of motels.
See, Rt 1 used to be THE highway to get basically from Florida to New York. Rt 1 was a bustling place. Up until the 1970's or so. I'm trying to get a timeline on when I-95 was constructed north of Richmond. As I am currently an unpaid blogger as opposed to a paid reporter, I only have so much time on my hands to do research. The best I can figure it that it was in the 1970's that I-95 turned Rt. 1 into a sort of ghost town. The invention of the interstate exit, with hotels and restaurants and gas stations and everything you need less than a mile from where you get on and off the interstate meant no one had to travel the old U.S. highways anymore. And the business that had long thrived along those highways took a nosedive.
Among the victims of the decline of Rt 1 were the old school sign painters, who not only lost steady clients who had paid them to keep signs in tip top shape, but were later hit with the double whammy of being replaced by cheaper, faster digital sign making. Another brick in the analog vs. digital wall you'll see me write about a lot. Suffice it to say there are a lot of old motels in and near Ashland.
Rates for motels tend to be around $200 a week. As I mentioned in my post The Magic of Fundraising, my friend Dave Powers has come to Ashland many times since 2004. His stays can last up to a few months. (It takes a long time to build and install Halloween decor for an entire theme park. No, we don't only work one month out of the year on such events). The cheapest places to stay in Ashland are motels.
$200 a week is a pretty good deal. That's less than $30 a night. Hotels can easily cost twice that. Dave has generally had good experiences staying in these motels in Ashland. But funny thing... I'd stop by the motel to see Dave, and I realized that there were people LIVING in these motels. You could tell by the sheer amount of stuff they had with them. I've seen laundry hanging up outside of motels. And I've seen more people than probably should have been staying in one room.
My mental wheels started turning. While $200 a month might be a good rate compared to a hotel room, $800 a month for a single room SUCKS compared to living in an apartment. Why in God's name would anyone choose to live in a freaking motel?
Ah... there's the word... "choose".
One day about a year ago, my wife was a bit upset. She told me she had seen a documentary on families that were living in the motels around Ashland. She told me I had to see it. I never got around to it. Until yesterday.
See, last week I attended the Ashland Town Council Candidates Forum. A chance to listen to the candidates speak about why they are running for office. A chance to ask them questions. A chance for them to answer. One of the candidates stuck out to me like a sore thumb. Her name is Lucinda Jones.
See, I was there to ask about the candidates position on forming an arts and culture district in Ashland. I wanted to start a very public conversation about the natural tension that exists between trying to preserve "community standards", (which are subjective and vary from place to place), and an artists freedom of expression, particularly in the context of censorship. My question was taken seriously, with candidates varying somewhat along the spectrum in regards to standing up for freedom of expression. There was some laughter.
Other questions had to do with supporting a theoretical new interstate exchange north of town, and preserving Ashland as a "sleepy little town" vs. trying to stimulate economic grown. Most answers were fairly predictable, with the candidates seeming to agree with one another on most issues.
Except one.
Housing.
There Lucinda Jones stood out like a wearied lighthouse keeper, trying to keep a beacon shining in a turbulent storm so that incoming ships don't dash themselves against the rocks. She spoke for the invisibles.
Among the victims of the decline of Rt 1 were the old school sign painters, who not only lost steady clients who had paid them to keep signs in tip top shape, but were later hit with the double whammy of being replaced by cheaper, faster digital sign making. Another brick in the analog vs. digital wall you'll see me write about a lot. Suffice it to say there are a lot of old motels in and near Ashland.
Rates for motels tend to be around $200 a week. As I mentioned in my post The Magic of Fundraising, my friend Dave Powers has come to Ashland many times since 2004. His stays can last up to a few months. (It takes a long time to build and install Halloween decor for an entire theme park. No, we don't only work one month out of the year on such events). The cheapest places to stay in Ashland are motels.
$200 a week is a pretty good deal. That's less than $30 a night. Hotels can easily cost twice that. Dave has generally had good experiences staying in these motels in Ashland. But funny thing... I'd stop by the motel to see Dave, and I realized that there were people LIVING in these motels. You could tell by the sheer amount of stuff they had with them. I've seen laundry hanging up outside of motels. And I've seen more people than probably should have been staying in one room.
My mental wheels started turning. While $200 a month might be a good rate compared to a hotel room, $800 a month for a single room SUCKS compared to living in an apartment. Why in God's name would anyone choose to live in a freaking motel?
Ah... there's the word... "choose".
One day about a year ago, my wife was a bit upset. She told me she had seen a documentary on families that were living in the motels around Ashland. She told me I had to see it. I never got around to it. Until yesterday.
See, last week I attended the Ashland Town Council Candidates Forum. A chance to listen to the candidates speak about why they are running for office. A chance to ask them questions. A chance for them to answer. One of the candidates stuck out to me like a sore thumb. Her name is Lucinda Jones.
See, I was there to ask about the candidates position on forming an arts and culture district in Ashland. I wanted to start a very public conversation about the natural tension that exists between trying to preserve "community standards", (which are subjective and vary from place to place), and an artists freedom of expression, particularly in the context of censorship. My question was taken seriously, with candidates varying somewhat along the spectrum in regards to standing up for freedom of expression. There was some laughter.
Other questions had to do with supporting a theoretical new interstate exchange north of town, and preserving Ashland as a "sleepy little town" vs. trying to stimulate economic grown. Most answers were fairly predictable, with the candidates seeming to agree with one another on most issues.
Except one.
Housing.
There Lucinda Jones stood out like a wearied lighthouse keeper, trying to keep a beacon shining in a turbulent storm so that incoming ships don't dash themselves against the rocks. She spoke for the invisibles.
Photo from Richmond Times Dispatch |
Lucinda Jones is the executive director for Ashland Supportive Housing of Virginia. Her clients are single mothers who are homeless. Her clients are among the people who I've seen living in those well weathered, once vibrant, motels along Ashland's Rt. 1.
Lucinda Jones is the producer of the documentary that upset my wife a year ago.
A documentary called "Motel Families".
------------- Breathe -------------
We had our first Meet and Greet of the Ashland Arts Alliance on Sunday. One of the things I talked about was how our presence in Ashland wasn't necessarily going to be met with open arms by all. We have funny ideas. We talk about those ideas, and express them in our art. Many of us look funny. We often do things that make people uncomfortable.
Artists have a tendency to openly talk about unpleasant realities. Guess what folks. Here's one.
For more info, go to Ashland Supportive Housing of Virginia.
"Have you seen the lighthouse?", Cried Marie Christine
"Have you seen the jagged rocks, and the waters in-between?
Have you seen the lighthouse? Oh save me if you can!
And if you do I promise you I'll never sail again!"
-Gordon Lightfoot
"Have you seen the lighthouse?", Cried Marie Christine
"Have you seen the jagged rocks, and the waters in-between?
Have you seen the lighthouse? Oh save me if you can!
And if you do I promise you I'll never sail again!"
-Gordon Lightfoot
P.S.
Today's election day.
Labels:
Ashland Arts Alliance,
ashland supportive housing of virginia,
motel families,
virginia motels
Monday, April 30, 2012
Yay! First Meeting of the Ashland Arts Alliance
Y is for "Yay!" in the A to Z Challenge
There is a new Meetup.com group in the Ashland, Virginia area, the Ashland Arts Alliance. We are just over a week old, and have 43 plus members. We had our first "Meet and Greet" today, and 23 attended. You can find more about the Alliance at this link:
Ashland Arts Alliance
We had one of the board members from our local Main Street Association attend. This is an email I just sent to the board about the meeting:
Hi Folks,
We had our first offcial Meet and Greet for the Ashland Arts Alliance, and had 23 people attend. Not bad for a group that is only just over a week old! As I was aware of, there is some astounding talent and passion right here in the Ashland region. And I think that is an important term. "Ashland region". Just as there is a "greater Richmond" or "Richmond metro" area, there is a greater Ashland area. Many people live in areas outlying Ashland who would much rather come to Ashland than go to Richmond to network and find like minded people. If you are going to draw people to Ashland from far away, I believe you have to start by drawing those who are close. We are they.
There were a lot of great professional connections made, and people got to express their idenity, passions, and visions. I found it to be highly inspiring.
Nancy, thank you so much for coming to the event. You missed my opening introduction, but we recorded it and it will be posted to youtube, my blog, and the meetup site. Some other members may also want to have their introductions posted. Don't worry, nothing you said will be included in any posted video without your permission.
I did want to tell all of you that I was excited with Nancy's insight into the usefullness of the group. As she commented after listening to several introductions, there are talents that can be very useful to the development of downtown Ashland. People with a passion for Architectural preservation, videography, photography, display fabrication, and education. Here is the perfect arena to "stimulate the arts". Find the money to pay these people to be included in such projects as the Ashland Museum. Make them feel that they are a wanted and needed part of the growth of Ashland, and that their economic value is acknowledged and respected. Grow the seed for an arts and cultlure district by actually creating one that is made of people, not just regulations.
As self employed artists, we face the same issues of any other business owners. Finding the money to pay for our studios, equipment, and overhead. Making enough to pay for our mortgates, our healthcare, to send our kids to school and save for some type of retirement. Artists have long been seen as the go-to people to volunteer their talents and time for the needs of others. A win-win solution must be found so that artists can express their passion, and by doing what they love not only make a living wage but also help non-profits raise money and serve as the keystone to the creative economy, which is being promoted as a key element to larger economic health.
-Arthur
"Y" is for Yay!, and April has been Parkinson's Awareness Month
There is a new Meetup.com group in the Ashland, Virginia area, the Ashland Arts Alliance. We are just over a week old, and have 43 plus members. We had our first "Meet and Greet" today, and 23 attended. You can find more about the Alliance at this link:
Ashland Arts Alliance
We had one of the board members from our local Main Street Association attend. This is an email I just sent to the board about the meeting:
Hi Folks,
We had our first offcial Meet and Greet for the Ashland Arts Alliance, and had 23 people attend. Not bad for a group that is only just over a week old! As I was aware of, there is some astounding talent and passion right here in the Ashland region. And I think that is an important term. "Ashland region". Just as there is a "greater Richmond" or "Richmond metro" area, there is a greater Ashland area. Many people live in areas outlying Ashland who would much rather come to Ashland than go to Richmond to network and find like minded people. If you are going to draw people to Ashland from far away, I believe you have to start by drawing those who are close. We are they.
There were a lot of great professional connections made, and people got to express their idenity, passions, and visions. I found it to be highly inspiring.
Nancy, thank you so much for coming to the event. You missed my opening introduction, but we recorded it and it will be posted to youtube, my blog, and the meetup site. Some other members may also want to have their introductions posted. Don't worry, nothing you said will be included in any posted video without your permission.
I did want to tell all of you that I was excited with Nancy's insight into the usefullness of the group. As she commented after listening to several introductions, there are talents that can be very useful to the development of downtown Ashland. People with a passion for Architectural preservation, videography, photography, display fabrication, and education. Here is the perfect arena to "stimulate the arts". Find the money to pay these people to be included in such projects as the Ashland Museum. Make them feel that they are a wanted and needed part of the growth of Ashland, and that their economic value is acknowledged and respected. Grow the seed for an arts and cultlure district by actually creating one that is made of people, not just regulations.
As self employed artists, we face the same issues of any other business owners. Finding the money to pay for our studios, equipment, and overhead. Making enough to pay for our mortgates, our healthcare, to send our kids to school and save for some type of retirement. Artists have long been seen as the go-to people to volunteer their talents and time for the needs of others. A win-win solution must be found so that artists can express their passion, and by doing what they love not only make a living wage but also help non-profits raise money and serve as the keystone to the creative economy, which is being promoted as a key element to larger economic health.
-Arthur
"Y" is for Yay!, and April has been Parkinson's Awareness Month
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