Chicago Sun-Times

UNITED IN SERVING THE ARTS — NOW AS ONE CORPORATIO­N

Lawyers for the Creative Arts and the Arts & Business Council of Chicago say they’ll combine to better serve arts organizati­ons

- BY AMY YEE, BUSINESS & ECONOMY REPORTER ayee@suntimes.com | @amyyeewrit­es

Two Chicago nonprofits serving arts organizati­ons throughout Illinois are combining to create what they describe as one of the “largest volunteer corps serving the arts” in the country.

Lawyers for the Creative Arts, based in the Loop, announced on Wednesday that it will acquire the operations of the Arts & Business Council of Chicago, including the council’s signature Business Volunteers for the Arts program, according to a news release.

“We’ll now be able to provide a simpler, one-stop shop,” said Jan Feldman, Lawyers for the Creative Arts executive director, who will continue in his role.

In most other cities, similar groups for the arts have operated under a single corporate structure, he said.

Lawyers for the Creative Arts offers pro bono legal service to arts organizati­ons in Illinois. The Arts & Business Council of Chicago offers education and consulting services to artists and arts organizati­ons.

New partners for tough times

In Chicago and across the U.S., visitors to cultural institutio­ns have returned, but not to their pre-pandemic levels — and other challenges have surfaced.

In August, Chicago’s storied Steppenwol­f Theatre announced it would lay off 12% of its staff due to dwindling revenue and attendance. Lookinggla­ss Theatre paused all operations last June after 35 years, laid off staff and launched a $2.5 million fundraisin­g initiative. In March, Lookinggla­ss announced that it met its fundraisin­g goal. It also unveiled a new artistic director, business plan and ensemble members.

“There is a growing — rather than waning — sense of financial and operating crisis in the arts,” said an October 2023 report from the Chicago Department of Cultural Affairs and Special Events. Many organizati­ons are in crisis because of “dwindling ticket sales, increased costs and private donations that failed to keep pace with inflation.”

Arts organizati­ons are also grappling with burnout among staff and board members, difficulty with hiring, uncertain revenue streams that hinder financial planning and other challenges, Feldman said.

The Arts & Business Council’s funding has declined recently, Feldman said, but the two organizati­ons had discussed joining forces years ago. “It’s really an idea whose time has come in Chicago, just as it has in other cities,” he said.

Kristin Larsen, executive director of Arts & Business Council, will help with the transition through May 10. Larsen is the organizati­on’s one full-time staff member.

Storied legacies, a hope to regroup

Founded in 1985, A&BC has assisted thousands of arts groups. Its volunteers have provided over 100,000 hours of free business consulting valued at over $14 million, according to a news release.

In the last five years, 2,200 participan­ts have joined A&BC programs, and the organizati­on “provided over $1 million in pro bono services to more than 70 arts organizati­ons throughout Illinois,” Larsen said.

Lawyers for the Creative Arts was founded in 1972 by a group of Chicago lawyers to help with the legal and business needs of artists and arts organizati­ons. It has connected tens of thousands of clients with volunteer lawyers from most of the state’s largest firms.

LCA has worked with organizati­ons such as the Goodman Theatre, Hubbard Street Dance and Marwen, as well as Forward Momentum Chicago, the Hideout and the Chopin Theatre.

It helped Forward Momentum Chicago, a dance education organizati­on, obtain nonprofit status, said its founder and executive director, Pierre Lockett. LCA held workshops and walked him through the applicatio­n process.

“My expertise is dance and dance instructio­n,” said Lockett, a former dancer with the Joffrey Ballet. “My entire background is artistic. When you’re trying to start a nonprofit, you don’t realize all the components necessary to make that work.”

LCA also offers educationa­l seminars, workshops and clinics for artists and arts groups that are growing in demand. Last year, those programs reached 4,000 participan­ts, compared to about 2,500 before the pandemic, Feldman said.

 ?? PROVIDED ?? Guests take part in a learning lab held by the Arts & Business Council of Chicago.
PROVIDED Guests take part in a learning lab held by the Arts & Business Council of Chicago.

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