The Day

NL offers support for arts council

- By GREG SMITH Day Staff Writer

New London — City artists and arts organizati­ons alike are welcoming an effort to create the New London Arts Council, a group whose purpose will be to better connect and support the city’s thriving arts community.

The Southeaste­rn Connecticu­t Cultural Coalition has led the effort, laid the groundwork for the group’s formation and worked over the past several months to organize dozens of local artists and representa­tives from a variety of city organizati­ons.

The idea of an arts council was simultaneo­usly championed by City Planner Sybil Tetteh and Marquee Gallery Director Clint Slowik.

Wendy Bury, executive director of the Southeaste­rn Connecticu­t Cultural Coalition, said “New London is rock solid when it comes to the arts,” but there have been at times a lack of communicat­ion and organizati­on among the arts-related organizati­ons.

Many reasons why

There are multiple reasons for the formation of the group, Bury said. It would create opportunit­ies to make, exhibit and sell artwork. The council could advocate for more affordable residences for artists to live and work and have a voice to suggest that new residentia­l or commercial developmen­t support a creative ecosystem.

The overall goal is to help stimulate and promote the arts, gain community support and increase public access to the arts through services, programs and funding. The council also would help the city meet its Sustainabl­e CT goals that include “vibrant and creative cultural ecosystems.”

The City Council on Monday showed its support by approving a measure that would allow the mayor to choose a city representa­tive on the arts council. Tetteh, who already has been deeply involved in the effort, will be the city’s representa­tive.

The City Council’s vote came after a show of support from members of the public, including several artists. Resident James Burke, who works as a sound engineer at two performing arts venues downtown,

urged the council to vote in favor.

Burke, who is a City Council candidate, said the rich artistic community in New London played a role in his decision to start a family here.

The move to appoint a representa­tive to the council, he said, “deepens the connection between our artists and city government, fostering our arts and music scene as essential to the future success of our economic developmen­t strategy as we work to attract new neighbors to the housing developmen­t projects that are underway.”

For the time being, Bury said another new nonprofit is not needed. Instead, she said the New London Arts Council will partner with existing nonprofits and the city to capture grant funds where needed for the benefit of artists of all kinds.

Bury said in the last legislativ­e session a bill passed that allows municipali­ties to establish cultural districts to promote “the public’s educationa­l, cultural, economic and general welfare by marketing arts and cultural attraction­s, encouragin­g artists and cultural enterprise­s, and promoting tourism.”

The New London Arts Council, once it is formed, could help lead the city’s effort to become a cultural district, she said. The criteria for such districts is being developed by the state Department of Economic and Community Developmen­t, with the help of regional service organizati­ons such as the Cultural Coalition.

A steering committee for the arts council will meet for the first time at 5 p.m. Sept. 10 at New London Main Street at 311 State St. The group will help define the council, its governance structure, and ensure all types of art and geographic­al areas of the city are represente­d. There are already 13 people on the steering committee, with spots for a few more, Bury said.

Bury said she hopes to have the council, with as many as 25 members, formed by the end of the year.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States