|
The Alliance for the Arts
serves the entire cultural community through research and advocacy
and serves the public through cultural guides and calendars. We
publish information on the arts and cultural events in New York
City as well as studies highlighting the importance of the arts to
the economy and to education.
The Alliance is a resource for:
- Children, parents and teachers using our arts education guides
- The general public and visitors to New York
- New York's cultural community
- Government and civic leaders who read our studies
- Artists, curators and historians served by the Estate Project for Artists with AIDS.
READ MORE >>
Financial support for
the Alliance comes from a variety of sources, primarily private foundations
and corporations, government agencies at the City, State and Federal levels,
with smaller amounts from the City and State of New York for specific projects.
The Alliance is an advocate for
all the arts, organizing common efforts to increase funding and involve
cultural institutions in the city's economic and educational policy
making. Its publications actively promote support for the arts in general
and for arts education in particular.
The Alliance is a publisher of
a number of books and reports and electronic publications. Two books
are sold commercially, but they and all other Alliance publications are
donated to public libraries, schools and arts organizations for free
public access. A total of seven publications have been produced in the
last year and are currently available:
- The
Arts and Business Survey This report—based on
a survey of Business Improvement Districts, Local Development
Corporations and their relationships with the New York City
Cultural Community—seeks to build a broad composite picture
of the business-culture relationships under investigation,
and to point out the benefits of these interactions and provide
a few illustrative case studies.
- Culture
Builds New York This study takes a look at the economic
impact of capital construction at New York City cultural institutions.
- Who
Pays for the Arts? This report looks at income trends
at New York City's cultural organizations. This pioneering
study reveals the importance of public funding to arts groups,
particularly those in Brooklyn, the Bronx, Queens and Staten
Island and those with smaller budgets citywide. It looks
at the patters of funding from the public and private sectors,
as well as the emergence of earned income as a significant
source of revenue; $12.95 paper, 16.95 from the Alliance
(includes shipping and handling)
- The
Economic Impact of the Arts in New York City and New York
(1997) This study was commissioned by the New York
State Council on the Art and the New York City Department
of Cultural Affairs. It is the first of its kind and provides
new information that the arts continue to have a major impact
on the economic health of New York City and State;
- New
York City Culture Catalog, published by Harry N.
Abrams, Inc. (1994). The most complete cultural guide available;
$12.95 paper, 16.95 from the Alliance (includes shipping
and handling).
- Kids
Culture Catalog, 2nd edition, distributed by Harry
N. Abrams, Inc. (1998). A guide for teachers and parents
to arts programs in New York City for children, families
and school groups; $12.95 paper, 16.95 from the Alliance
(includes shipping and handling).
- Future
Safe, Estate Planning for Artists in a Time of AIDS (1992).
Practical advice about the preservation of artistic work. Distributed
free by the Alliance.
- NYCkidsARTS. Twice
yearly pamphlet featuring arts education programs at cultural
institutions or in schools for children, written for teachers
and parents and distributed free by the Alliance with the Board
of Education and the United Federation of Teachers. Teachers
should contact their district arts coordinator to obtain a copy. Copies
may be purchased from the Alliance, $3.95 per copy (includes
shipping and handling).
- NYC
ARTS Culture Guide and Calendar. Published
each summer since the summer of 1996, these calendars have
been highly visible and successful as well as providing an
important source of earned income. They are distributed
free all around the city at visitors centers and cultural
institutions. Copies may be purchased from the Alliance,
$3.95 per copy (includes shipping and handling).
Please contact the Alliance for more information about how to order copies of
these printed publications.
Alliance for the Arts
330 West 42nd Street, #1701
New York, NY 10036
Phone (212) 947-6340
Fax (212) 947-6416
E-Mail: info@allianceforarts.org
The Alliance is a leader in
developing electronic applications of its publishing and research activities. It
has established four sites on the Internet—for the Estate
Project for Artists with AIDS, the NYC
ARTS and for NYCkidsARTS as
well as a general resource and portal site. The Alliance has taken the
lead in working with the Department of Cultural Affairs in developing the Citywide
Cultural Database, a computerized Web-based system linking the city arts agency
with nonprofit organizations. It will collect and use information about the arts
and will promote the city's cultural life to the general public, teachers,
parents and kids. This will be the most comprehensive resource of its kind,
both a centralized location to access information about culture in New York and
a gateway to other cultural resources.
The Alliance is a nonprofit research center, responding to issues in the cultural community which
need study and analysis or in organizing advocacy efforts for government
funding for the arts or promotion of the arts to the tourist industry.
Its economic impact studies have resulted in increased government funding
and have coordinated the centralization of a database reflecting the
arts industry in New York City and State.
The Alliance is based
in New York but has an impact as a national organization, primarily
through the Estate Project for Artists with AIDS and its widely replicated
studies of the economic impact of the arts. The Estate Project is leading
national efforts to preserve the work of artists with AIDS in partnerships
with a variety of institutions including the Guggenheim Museum, the New
York Public Library and the Motion Picture Academy of Arts and Sciences.
|