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FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
February 9, 2010
Contact: Greg Liakos,
Communications Director 617-727-3668 x343
Rob Watson, Communications
Coordinator 617-727-3668 x268
$700k in New MCC Funding Boosts Creative
Economy
Innovative Projects Will Support Artists, Local Businesses
(Boston, MA) -- The Massachusetts Cultural Council (MCC)
today announced the release of more than $700,000 in grants that
will stimulate new economic activity, create jobs, and revitalize
communities through arts and cultural projects across the state.
The MCC's Adams Arts Program for the Creative Economy
will invest in 27 projects in every region of Massachusetts. Adams
is the oldest and most-far reaching program of its kind in the nation,
supporting projects that harness the unique assets of the Commonwealth
and the creativity of its residents. Adams grants fuel a creative
sector that has a $4.2 billion total impact on the state’s economy
and provides more than 109,000 jobs.
“I am delighted to see the results of our ongoing investments,” said Senate President Therese Murray of Plymouth at a State House announcement this morning. She cited Adams-funded projects such as Harbor Your Arts! in Hyannis, which “helped local artists generate $121,000 in sales in one year.”
“The creative sector is a proven engine for economic development
and revitalization,” said Anita Walker, the MCC’s executive director.
“This year’s Adams grants will generate real dollars for these communities
at a time when innovative strategies to produce wealth and create
jobs are sorely needed.”
MCC’s Adams grants will:
- Promote cultural tourism in the Pioneer Valley through Museums
10, a cross-promotional effort by seven college museums and galleries
and three independent museums in the region. The partners are
collaborating on a joint themed exhibition, Table for 10: The
Art, Science and History of Food, which will bring together several
sectors of the local economy: artists and artisans, small farmers,
restaurants and inns, food writers, and food aficionados.
- Invest in the Gateway Cities: New Bedford, Pittsfield, Fitchburg,
Worcester, and Leominster through a range of strategies to generate
new, arts-based commercial activity in downtown districts.
- Create opportunities for Massachusetts artists to compete in
the global arena with Transcultural Exchange, which includes a
biennial conference that has resulted in hundreds of local artists
finding jobs and residencies worldwide, and draws visitors from
as far away as Mongolia and Nigeria.
- Reinvest in the Cambridge Science Festival, a project of the
MIT Museum that attracts 30,000 annually to the Greater Boston
area, and estimates annual visitor spending at $652,000.
“These grants will help connect our region’s natural beauty with
local businesses and tourist services,” said Senator Stephen Brewer
(D-Barre), whose district is home to the North Quabbin Woods Arts
and Culture Portal, which uses the work of local artisans to drive
ecotourism in the North Quabbin Woods region. “I am proud to support
these important cultural grants that will help increase economic
sustainability for our district and promote the connection between
ecotourism, arts, and culture.”
Full list of Adams grants.
About the Massachusetts Cultural Council
The Massachusetts Cultural Council promotes excellence, access,
education and diversity in the arts, humanities and interpretive
sciences, in order to improve the quality of life for all Massachusetts
residents and contribute to the economic vitality of our communities.
MCC is a state agency committed to building a central place for
arts and culture in the everyday lives of communities across the
Commonwealth. It pursues this mission through a combination of grants,
services and advocacy for cultural organizations, schools, communities
and artists. MCC receives an annual appropriation from the state
Legislature and funds from the National Endowment for the Arts and
other sources.
Adams-funded projects leverage the assets of the creative sector - artists, cultural organizations, and arts-related businesses - in Massachusetts' communities to generate real income. Communities as diverse as Provincetown, Lowell, Salem, New Bedford, and Pittsfield have used these funds to more fully realize these assets for the benefit of residents and visitors alike.
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Massachusetts Cultural Council 2010 |
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