HomeMy WebLinkAbout19 - 2009-2010 Cultural Arts GrantsCITY OF NEWPORT BEACH
CITY COUNCIL STAFF REPORT
Agenda Item No. 19
July 14, 2009
TO: HONORABLE MAYOR AND MEMBERS OF THE CITY COUNCIL
FROM: LIBRARY SERVICESC
Cynthia Cowell, Library t ervices Director; Arts and Cultural Services
Division; Jana Barbier, Cultural Arts Coordinator (717 -3870)
jbarbier@city.newport-beach.ca.us
SUBJECT: 2009/2010 Cultural Arts Grants
RECOMMENDATION:
Approve recommended recipients for FY 2009/2010 Cultural Arts Grants as
selected by the City Arts Commission in accordance with City Council Policy 1 -10
- Financial Support for Culture and Arts.
DISCUSSION:
BACKGROUND: City Council Policy 1 -10 recognizes the importance of promoting
culture and the arts within the City and establishes a Reserve Fund for Culture and Arts.
The sum of $55,000 is provided each year for specific cultural or artistic planning or
projects as approved by the City Council. The City Arts Commission has the
responsibility to review all programs and requests for support from arts groups and
make recommendations for funding to the City Council for final approval.
The Commission received written grant proposals from eleven organizations for funding
of approximately $61,240 in free cultural arts programming for the Newport Beach
community in fiscal year 2009/10. After careful deliberation the following
recommendations, totaling $40,000, were approved at the June 11, 2009 meeting:
The Baroque Music Festival, Corona del Mar, after 29 annual seasons, is the only
continuing, locally produced, fully - professional musical performance venture in the City
of Newport Beach.
The special project for which the
orchestra in celebration of their
compositions, written for important
a larger than usual orchestra that
and timpani in addition to strings,
New York and Northern Californi
afestival is requesting funding is for an expanded
30tt' anniversary season. Particularly dramatic
historic occasions by Bach and Handel, necessitate
includes three trumpets, three oboes, two bassoons
harpsichord and organ. Instrumental specialists from
will be brought in to perform with historic, period
instruments. During their 30`h annual season, the festival is planning to premiere a new
work written specifically for the celebration.
City Arts Commission $12,000
The City of Newport Beach Arts Commission is dedicated to providing a range of free
cultural programming that enriches the entire community, especially children and
families. The Arts Commission sponsors multidisciplinary arts programs funded by the
Cultural Arts Grant Program such as the Concerts in the Parks Series; arts lectures,
public art projects, and visual art exhibitions in Central Library and at City Hall. The Arts
Commission extends the range of arts programming by providing additional funding for
the Shakespeare by the Sea festival held each summer.
Festival Ballet Theatre will bring its "Ballet to Schools" program to two Newport Beach
Elementary Schools in November /December 2009. They will perform a narrated,
abbreviated version of the Nutcracker, tailored for children ranging in age from five to
fourteen years old. A program coordinator, with the assistance of the performers, will
guide the students through an interactive lesson on how pantomime, music, and
costumes tell a story and express emotions without words. Students will be taught
appropriate ways to express appreciation for a theatrical performance.
The Newport Beach Film Festival is planning a one -day educational industry seminar
program, similar to past seminars, to be held on the first Saturday during the Festival,
tentatively scheduled for April 24, 2010 at a Newport Beach location. Past seminar
topics have included directing, screenwriting, production design, cinematography, film
music composer, animation and special effects. Artists of past seminars include Elmer
Bernstien (To Kill a Mockingbird,) John Waters (Polyester,) Don Burgess (Castaway,)
John Landis (Twilight Zone,) and Judiann Makovsky (Harry Potter and the Sorcerers
Stone). The Festival Seminar Series attracts a wide variety of people with a strong
representation of students, seniors, film experts, avid fans, and novice filmmakers.
Ages span from 13 to 85. The seminar program intends to serve approximately 800
people. In 2007, the Festival expanded its outreach to colleges and high school
students.
Newport Beach Public Library Foundation $350.0
The Newport Beach Public Library Foundation is requesting funding to enhance, by at
least two programs, the "Library Live" series, which provides cultural enrichment to the
residents of Newport Beach. In addition to the literary events currently planned, the
Foundation intends to design one event that will introduce the Library audience to the
field of Public Art in the community, and one program which would allow the Library to
present, as a speaker, at least one well -known art historian, architect or artist in the
context of the winter 2010 programs. Additionally, the Foundation expects to
collaborate on generating publicity for the Library Live events and most especially
drawing attention to the community activities and benefits of the Arts Commission.
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Newport Harbor Nautical Museum $3000
Using nautical and ocean themes as a backdrop, the program "Sea Tales" will provide a
platform for parents and their children to engage in a variety of activities including
storytelling, arts and crafts, music and touch -tank exploration that introduces them to all
the wonders of the sea. Participants are encouraged to dress up in costumes related to
the theme. An example of an upcoming theme is "Row Your Boat" which is offered in
conjunction with the museum's current exhibit on navigation and the upcoming
Transpacific Yacht Race. Families will be able to see and touch boats from the
museum's collection as well as enjoy hearing stories, singing "Row, Row, Row Your
Boat" then assembling and painting their very own boat to take with them.
Orange County Museum of Art $3500
The specific program to be funded is a new partnership between the Orange County
Museum of Art (OCMA) and the Newport Beach Public Library. This collaborative
program would allow for works of art from OCMA's collection to be installed in the lobby
area of the Newport Beach Public Library. Specific works of art would be selected by
OCMA curators and approved by the Newport Beach Board of Library Trustees, and
would be appropriate for the NBPL in terms of scale and medium, conservation and
safety issues. The work will be installed by OCMA preparators and registrars in
specially constructed, museum - quality pedestals and vitrines, or on the walls.
Secondly, OCMA and the NBPL would jointly host a series of public programs related to
the work on view. These programs would feature lectures or dialogues with the artists,
curators, critics and historians and would be held in the library's auditorium. The two
key goals of this project are to increase community awareness of outstanding
contemporary artists and of art in public spaces, and to cross - promote the project to
extend the audiences and support for both organizations.
Pacific Symphony $2000
The Pacific Symphony offers a variety of programs designed to integrate the Symphony
and its music into the Orange County community. Through these programs, the
Symphony reaches more than 100,000 people annually. In recent years the Symphony
has partnered with the Arts Commission and the City of Newport Beach to present free
concerts in the park (Symphony in the Cities full orchestra outdoor concerts in 2003 and
2005), chamber concerts at Oasis Senior Center, and educational programs for young
children and their families at Central Library (in 2005 a woodwind quintet was featured
at Imagination Celebration and in 2009, the Symphony presented a brass quartet
"informance" based on Fabulous Fables and Fairy Tales.) Pacific Symphony would like
to continue this successful partnership with a proposal to present another community
" informance" in 2009 -10.
South Coast Repertory Theatre has requested funding for "Theatre for Young
Audiences" (TYA), an annual series of three professionally produced plays initiated by
SCR in 2003. TYA extends the range of the theatre's offerings and makes available to
the community plays based on the finest and most enjoyable works from children's
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literature. Through TYA, educators have an opportunity to introduce students to the
wonder of live theatre in an academically significant way, at little or no cost to the
schools except for transportation to the theatre. At all TYA performances, students
receive a special booklet with biographical information about the playwright, educational
games, and stimulating activities built on the play's central themes.
Southland Opera $2000
Southland Opera proposes to perform one performance of "Stories Come Alive" in each
of the elementary schools in the City of Newport Beach or sequential workshops at one
school and have the students create their own musical piece and perform it. Southland
Opera would work with four classes of students and each class would have four
sessions; the students would perform their original pieces for the school audience and
attending family members. The "Stories Come Alive" program uses familiar fairy tales
as a vehicle to encourage reading and introduce young people to opera and musical
theater. Fairy tales and stories which have been highlighted are Cinderella, Romeo and
Juliet, Little Red Riding Hood, Beauty and the Beast and Hansel and Gretel.
Submitted by:
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ynthia Cowell, Library Services Director
Jana Barbier, Cultural Arts Coordinator (949) 717 -3870
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