theater and opera programming at the library - Public Libraries Online https://publiclibrariesonline.org A Publication of the Public Library Association Fri, 28 Jun 2013 16:21:40 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.4.5 Lifetime Arts: Delivering Arts Education Programs for Today’s Older Adults https://publiclibrariesonline.org/2013/06/lifetime-arts-delivering-arts-education-programs-for-todays-older-adults/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=lifetime-arts-delivering-arts-education-programs-for-todays-older-adults https://publiclibrariesonline.org/2013/06/lifetime-arts-delivering-arts-education-programs-for-todays-older-adults/#respond Wed, 26 Jun 2013 20:49:14 +0000 http://publiclibrariesonline.org/?p=2908 Increasingly important as community centers for learning and cultural access, libraries are struggling to respond to the changing needs of today’s older adult library patrons. One of the biggest related questions facing library system directors, branch managers, and programming librarians is what kind of programs can libraries provide that offer meaningful engagement for older adults—and how can libraries implement and pay for programs with limited staff and shrinking budgets? Through the development of their award-winning program, the Creative Aging Libraries Project, Lifetime Arts has cracked the code to this conundrum, already having partnered with 125+ libraries and assisted and trained 250 librarians to work with professional teaching artists and engaging thousands of older adults in nearly 1,000 visual, performing, and literary arts classes. This innovative program model is demonstrating how public libraries can fulfill their potential as community centers for positive and creative aging.

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Increasingly important as community centers for learning and cultural access, libraries are struggling to respond to the changing needs of today’s older adult library patrons. One of the biggest related questions facing library system directors, branch managers, and programming librarians is what kind of programs can libraries provide that offer meaningful engagement for older adults—and how can libraries implement and pay for programs with limited staff and shrinking budgets? Through the development of their award-winning program, the Creative Aging Libraries Project, Lifetime Arts has cracked the code to this conundrum, already having partnered with 125+ libraries and assisted and trained 250 librarians to work with professional teaching artists and engaging thousands of older adults in nearly 1,000 visual, performing, and literary arts classes. This innovative program model is demonstrating how public libraries can fulfill their potential as community centers for positive and creative aging.

As of 2011, a whopping one-quarter of the U.S. population is aged 55 or older.1 Despite the fact that the people who span different generations have varying life experiences, cultural references, and exposure to educational opportunities, they all share the same very human needs: to create, convene, learn, and express themselves. The arts are the perfect lens through which older adults may explore life and share their personal experiences with others.

The fact that the older adult population is growing heralds an exciting opportunity for libraries to reimagine programming for this healthier generation who seek active engagement in a social environment. Libraries, the most universal and most democratic of America’s cultural institutions, are “age neutral” and so appeal to older adults who are reluctant to go to senior centers. Increasingly important as community centers for learning and cultural access, libraries are ideally positioned to evolve as centers for creative aging.

Creative Aging Programs

The emerging field of creative aging focuses on the powerful and beneficial role of the arts in improving the quality of life for older adults. Creative aging programs—arts education for older adults—offer sequential instruction in all disciplines (visual, performing, and literary arts) with goals of skills mastery and social engagement.

Now in its fifth year, the Creative Aging Public Libraries Project is a demonstration and capacity-building program that supports collaborations between professional teaching artists and public libraries resulting in free instructional arts programs for older adults. The program has been developed by Lifetime Arts, a national nonprofit organization based in New York, in partnership with eight major library systems in four states. To build the capacity of libraries to initiate, develop, and sustain creative aging programming, Lifetime Arts provides incentive grants to select library system partners and employs a replicable program model and approach that includes professional development, ongoing technical assistance, and access to resources for participating librarians, library administrators, artists, and other partners.

The work is based on a vision for mobilizing the trusted, familiar, information-rich public space of the library to deliver arts education for older adults. That vision includes building effective collaborations between teaching artists and librarians and building the capacity of different library systems to carry out and sustain creative aging programs.

Teaching artists and librarians find that they share a vision for positive aging and bring complementary strengths to designing and implementing meaningful programs for older adults. One obvious advantage to holding creative aging programs in public libraries is the opportunity for participants to use the library to explore their medium or topic further.

In partnership with the American Library Association’s (ALA) Public Programs Office (PPO), the Creative Aging Libraries Project program model and resources will be disseminated nationally through an online Creative Aging Toolkit for Public Libraries (available in June 2013). Lifetime Arts is currently developing an affiliate network that will offer training, resources, and access to a national network of creative aging practitioners.

This nationally recognized program is funded with generous grants from the Institute for Museum and Library Services, AARP Foundation, Fan Fox and Leslie R. Samuels Foundation, Helen Andrus Benedict Foundation, Laura Jane Musser Trust, MetLife Foundation, and New York State Council on the Arts. Current participating library systems include Boston Public Library; Brooklyn Public Library; Clinton Essex Franklin Library System, headquartered in Plattsburgh, New York; Dallas Public Library; Miami-Dade (Fl.) Public Library System; New York Public Library; and Westchester (N.Y.) Library System.

PPO is supporting the dissemination of the program through Programming Librarian.org and with a preconference workshop and general session at the 2013 ALA Annual Conference.

If Not Now, When?

When Lifetime Arts cofounder and President/CEO Maura O’Malley was caring for her own aging mother, she was struck by the lack of inclusive, participatory arts programs available to this population, who needed something engaging and productive to do with their time. “The assisted living facility where my mother was living offered residents a poetry program, but the poster advertising it stressed that it was ‘not for people who hadn’t written poetry before’ and specifically uninvited people who wanted to learn how to write poetry,” she said. “How frustrating is that?”2 Moreover, after thirty years in arts education, O’Malley instinctively knew that making art is good for everyone and could be especially good for older adults. She would soon learn that there was research to back up her thinking.

In 2006, Gene Cohen, working out of the Center on Aging, Health and Humanities at George Washington University, published “The Creativity and Aging Study: The Impact of Professionally Conducted Cultural Programs on Older Adults.” The goal of this landmark study for which the National Endowment for the Arts was lead sponsor, was “to evaluate the effects relevant to general health, mental health, overall functioning, and sense of wellbeing in older persons caused by active participation in cultural programs provided by professional artists involved in visual and literary arts, music, and other cultural domains.”3

Cohen’s study found that for those older adults who participated in long-term, culturally enriching programs,

  • overall health improved and stabilized;
  • fewer doctor visits were required;
  • less medication was necessary;
  • fewer suffered from falling down and physical instability;
  • feelings of morale increased while symptoms of depression decreased; and
  • social and other activity increased, in some cases significantly.

That settled it for O’Malley. Following lengthy conversations over several months with Ed Friedman, longtime deputy director for the Bronx Council on the Arts with whom O’Malley was serving on a committee, the two veteran arts administrators realized that there was an enormous opportunity for libraries and other community organizations to use arts education programming to drastically improve the lives of older adults.

O’Malley quit her job at a major New York City arts education organization, she and Friedman cofounded Lifetime Arts in 2008, and they positioned it as a service organization to help build an infrastructure for the emerging field of creative aging. Friedman eventually retired from the arts council and started his full-time “encore” career at age 60. He serves as Lifetime Arts’ executive director.

Running the organization out of a spare room in O’Malley’s family home until November 2011, Lifetime Arts quickly attracted partners like the Westchester Library System and the New York Public Library. Through support from generous funders interested in supporting the arts and the use of programming in public libraries to combat isolation in older adults, Lifetime Arts has developed and implemented training institutes, tested and evaluated program service models, launched a creative aging roster of vetted teaching artists, and re-granted more than $375,000 to seven library systems in four states.

What Happens During Library-Based Creative Aging Programs?

Workshop series (usually a minimum of eight sessions, two hours each) are guided by professional teaching artists and allow for in-depth arts learning (mastery). Participants build skills, explore new materials, and learn a variety of art-making techniques. They share their learning with each other through facilitated, modeled conversation (social engagement). On average, registration for each series ranges from ten to twenty, depending on the discipline and space. Choruses often exceed forty participants.

Teaching artists create a safe, risk-free environment where experimentation and engagement is encouraged. Importantly, creative aging library programs foster new relationships between older adults and the larger community. They succeed in breaking down the chronic isolation and passive existence of many older adults as they unlock expressive abilities.

At each library, a culminating event—free and open to the public—celebrates the achievements of each participant and provides confirmation of the value of their work. Event attendees find encouragement and inspiration in the celebration of their peers’ accomplishments.

Librarians promote the workshop series locally and recruit participants. Partnering librarians and artists work together to identify library materials and resources to enhance the instruction, and librarians help patrons access those materials, further strengthening the bond between patron and library.

How It Works

The first step in planning any creative aging program in your library is to find out about the older population of your community and how it uses the library currently. Perhaps you have surveyed the population already to learn about their interests. If you haven’t asked your older adult patrons about their interests, do. You’ll be surprised! It is also a great idea to get to know which organizations in your community are offering arts education programs and which are already serving the 55+ population.

Knowing the answers to these questions will help you to determine what type of creative aging programming at your library makes sense for your community and whether there are partnerships that can be struck to take advantage of momentum and funding already in play.

In addition to the in-kind staff cost of running a public library program, an average eight-session creative aging workshop costs between $1,800 and $3,500. Teaching artist fees for instruction range between $35 and $150 per hour, and their planning and prep time ranges between $25 and $50 per hour. Art materials and supplies for participants (depending on the discipline) range between $10 and $35 per person.

Current Creative Aging Libraries Project participants are funded through restricted grants to serve particular library systems. Library Friends groups, local businesses, partnerships with arts organizations, library programming budgets, bequests, and foundation grants are all sources for program support.

Determine if there is adequate and appropriate space available in your library for arts instruction in the disciplines that you would like to offer. For example, wet media require a nearby water source. Similarly, if you are partnering with a senior center or other community space to offer a creative aging workshop series, determine whether they have the right kind of space, and be careful about the scheduling so that the classes don’t conflict with other regularly scheduled events (like meals). While your teaching artist partner is facilitating the program, the library coordinator will need to allocate time to provide administrative support.

Creative aging programs are defined as sequential learning (usually eight to twelve sessions) in a particular arts discipline led by qualified teaching artists. The artist develops and teaches a curriculum that will build skills mastery and foster social interaction. Teaching artists should focus on developing the skills of participants so that they can create original, expressive artwork. This includes learning how to use art-making materials and tools and experimenting with various forms and techniques. A skilled teaching artist builds opportunities for meaningful social engagement into each workshop session. While drop-in classes or even regular meetings (like knitting groups) in libraries are beneficial, they don’t necessarily
have the same impact as creative aging programs do.

Similarly, while librarians and local artists who show work at the library may forge lasting relationships, there is a big difference between an accomplished artist giving a successful talk on her own work and a teaching artist delivering sequential, skill-building art instruction. Sometimes
these are the same people, other times they are not. Local arts organizations are great resources for finding qualified teaching artists in your area.

Subscribe to the Lifetime Arts YouTube Channel to view videos of participants, teaching artists, and librarians. Follow @lifetimearts on Twitter and like us at Facebook.com/lifetimearts.

REFERENCES

  1. The Older Population in the United States: 2011,” United States Census Bureau, accessed Feb. 27, 2013.
  2. Maura O’Malley, interview with the author, Feb. 15, 2013.
  3. Gene D. Cohen et al., “The Impactof Professionally Conducted CulturalPrograms on the Physical Health, Mental Health, and Social Functioning of Older Adults,” The Gerontologist 48, no. 6 (2006): 726.

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A ‘School For the Audience’ – Theater and Opera Programs at the Library https://publiclibrariesonline.org/2013/04/a-school-for-the-audience-theater-and-opera-programs-at-the-library/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=a-school-for-the-audience-theater-and-opera-programs-at-the-library https://publiclibrariesonline.org/2013/04/a-school-for-the-audience-theater-and-opera-programs-at-the-library/#respond Tue, 23 Apr 2013 20:38:14 +0000 http://publiclibrariesonline.org/?p=2203 Theatre and opera programs are a great way to provide a mix of entertainment and learning. Public libraries can also reach new users and showcase collections.

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Theater and opera programs are a great way to provide the right mix of entertainment and learning in public libraries. These types of programs can help reach new users and  also connect with the local performing arts community and related organizations. Collections and services can benefit, with an overall impact on the library’s profile. Program formats can vary a lot. They can have the somewhat intimate atmosphere of reading groups, like in Rome, where two public library locations developed two similar programs, called Invito all’opera (at Renato Nicolini library) and Il circolo del teatro (at Guglielmo Marconi library).

The “circolo del teatro” – the “circle of theater” – is a small group of theater lovers which meet two or three times a a month to discuss upcoming shows, generally before (as a preparation) and afterwards (for comments and discussion). The members choose the shows and a calendar is scheduled in advance for the period October-May. The circle invites directors and actors for talks and of course the lively scene of a capital city with more than 70 theater venues helps a lot. The meetings are lead and moderated by a passionate expert, Paolo Albani, who launched the idea three years ago. “He wanted to propose his idea of a school for the audience: the more you know about the show […] the better you enjoy it[1],” Marina Girardet, head of the Guglielmo Marconi branch says. Other activities include watching videos of performances or guided listening, as in the Invito all’opera program.

On a larger scale, Toronto Public Library combines performance and lectures, in partnership with the Canadian Opera Company and the Stratford Festival. A popular program series is called On Stage. Lectures discuss upcoming shows and often include a short performance. A lot of work is necessary to establish relationships, but also to organize and test technical details. One of the challenges is “finding the right space,” Paul Trumphour, Access and Information Manager of the Toronto Reference Library, explains. “It has to be large enough to accommodate a sizable audience and it must be acoustically appropriate so that people can hear the performance and speakers[2].”In addition to these programs, which appeal to older adults, Toronto Public Library also dedicates a library club for kids (ages 7-12) based on Shakespeare’s plays.

But libraries can also be the space where plays are written (workshops) or held, even in complete silence, with participants listening through headphones (yes, as in the “silent disco.”) Take, for example the case of The Quiet Volume by Tim Etchells and Ant Hampton, a piece of audio-theater held in several London libraries in 2011. Natasha Tripney, in her review on the Guardian theater blog, suggested further investigation of  the relationship between libraries and theater – their affinity in terms of social role and places of gathering – and the idea of library theaters. What are we waiting for?

1. E-mail to author (03/26/2013)

2. E-mail to author (03/26/2013)

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