Part III: 2005 to 2010 Was About First Things First
- Posted by Terry Rock on February 3rd, 2011
Here's a little retrospective to set the stage for my next posts that show where we're headed in the next 5 years. Our first 5 years of work has built a base that we're now able to build upon.
Investment
When we started in 2005, Calgary’s arts operating granting programs had been in place for over 35 years with little change, were funding 119 organizations but at the lowest per capita rate in the country (at about $2.3M), and were not clearly connected to any sense of return on investment or strategic aim. This is not surprising: the body in charge of distributing the funds was not resourced or really mandated to do anything other than fairly distribute the funds they received on behalf of Calgarians. That had to change. Our first priority was to review and reposition our granting programs. Now, we fund over 160 organizations with nearly $3.8M ($4.3M if Event Stimulus grants are counted). We can show, with confidence, through statistical, financial and qualitative measures, the public and artistic impact of our investments. Though we are still at or near the bottom in terms of per capita grants to artists and arts organizations, we have closed the gap (well, except for our friends in Edmonton, who recently, ahem, shot ahead of us again).
We continue to make changes to our granting programs, but we can see that we are on the right track towards providing a stable base of resources that allows the organizations we support to flourish.
Spaces
Calgary’s desperate need for new spaces to support the arts had been known for years prior to the existence of Calgary Arts Development. New spaces started to get investment (such as Vertigo Theatre and Theatre Junction Grand), but there were two problems that weren’t going away: first, each case had its own justification, but it was difficult to understand whether the space was actually addressing the top priorities of the broad community. That is, each decision was a “one off,” and there was little sense of whether or not we were actually making progress. Second, each decision to provide municipal funding to a capital project required a search for funds. A plan was needed, and it needed to be fundable to be successful.
With $50,000 in additional funding ($25,000 from The Calgary Foundation and $25,000 from The University of Calgary) and a huge amount of community support through steering committees, engagement sessions, and filling-out-of-yet-another-survey, we were able to produce and publish in early 2007 our Art Spaces Strategy and Capital Plan. About one year later, the Province created the Municipal Sustainability Initiative (MSI), and City Council was able to confidently agree to allocate 5% of that $3.3B flow of funds towards realizing the objectives of the Art Spaces Plan.
Since that time, we have seen City Council authorize several major infrastructure investments (National Music Centre, Folk Festival Hall, Nickle Arts Museum, Mount Royal Conservatory, Lunchbox Theatre). And there are more projects in the pipeline, with a new round of projects in the prioritization process right now. As far as we are aware, we remain the only city in Canada with a long-term vision, plan, and core funding in place to deliver new infrastructure.
We’ve also just completed a survey of demand and preferences for art spaces (thanks to Le Germain for the survey incentive prize pack!). We got a great response, and have learned a lot. We’ll start sharing those results soon.
Awareness
Building awareness and encouraging participation in Calgary’s art scene was the third focus area for our first 5 years. The biggest thing on everyone’s wish list? Some kind of web portal that provided an aggregated view of everything happening in Calgary. We started by working with Pam Lang to bring in ArtsMart, a weekly e-newsletter that had been started by some of Calgary’s largest arts organizations in the early 2000’s. From there, the NAC’s LiveRush program was incorporated into our growing suite of awareness initiatives. And in 2009, we launched CalgaryCulture.com, your free, one-stop-shop for arts & culture listings. Big or small, we list ‘em all. Complete with an awesome weekly e-newsletter that we keep hearing is “great” from our thousands of subscribers. The best thing about this? Our intrepid Information and Communications Technology Officer, Mike “My Job Title Has As Many Syllables as a Haiku” Scullen created this site using the open-source Drupal CMS. He did it basically by himself, with the help of the online Drupal community and graphic designers at Flume Studios.
One of my favourite things about CalgaryCulture.com is the fact that we now have an active database that tracks arts activity in Calgary. In 2010, we know that over 1400 unique events were listed on CalgaryCulture.com. And now, our database provides a feed to Tourism Calgary’s spanky new site VisitCalgary.com. Enter the data once, serve it out multiple times. Efficient. Effective.
Speaking of visiting Calgary, much of our awareness building work was done in partnership with our colleagues at Tourism Calgary and Travel Alberta. We conducted joint research on cultural tourism, worked together to promote our summer festival season and all of the cool things happening during the Christmas season in Calgary, and helped with some big cultural events (Juno Awards and Gemini Awards) that brought the attention of the country to showcase Calgary’s dynamic arts and culture scene.
And now? Tourism Calgary is rocketing forward with really cool marketing initiatives that will showcase Calgary for all that it is: an energetic urban centre with a unique cultural scene. I’m really excited to be able to enthusiastically support their work to bring people to Calgary to see and experience what we have to offer.
And before I forget... we've been facilitating Calgary's PechaKucha Nights for about 18 months... these events bring together between 250 and 300 people 4 or 5 times a year to hear talks about art, architecture, design and other topics of general interest. Acting as a facilitator of these events has been a great way for us to extend our network. The next event is February 14th, and the topic, of course, is Love. Check it out! Free!
More!
I don’t have room to cover everything we’ve done at CADA over the years. There were numerous workshops, seminars, speaker events and community sessions. This past summer, our Board held a series of lunchtime discussions with working artists, learning a lot about their needs and desires in the process. We're a learning organization, and I'm really excited to share what we've learned in the form of our strategic plan... in my next post! Stay tuned!
(If you like what you're reading, why not consider applying for one of our 2 open job calls)





Thanks for posting this recap
Thanks for posting this recap and the other information you've been posting recently and will be posting. I grew up in Calgasry but I left for Vancouver in 2005 so when I came back (in 2009) I didn't know a lot about CADA or what was going on. Luckily, CADA / Calgary Culture made it really easy to learn. I've found Calgary's arts scene really easy to get involved in and while of course that's not all CADA, I think you're doing a great job of creating visibility. And it is pretty easy to know what's going on (but the ICS feed doesn't seem to work).
Thanks for this!Take a look
Thanks for this!
Take a look at the other posts I'm writing. Love to know what you think.
P.S. Our ICS feed should work now!