Two people standing next to each other. One is holding a microphone and gesturing to a crowd. The other is holding a piece of paper in both hands.
Lisa Funderburke, President + CEO, Artist Communities Alliance and Kristin Makholm, former Executive Director, Minnesota Museum of American Art. 

Field Conversation

Artist Communities Alliance (ACA) aspires to lead the field in engaging challenging conversations and concrete actions around social, environmental and political issues. 

Field Conversation is a virtual discussion featuring a panel of thought leaders who address topical issues that may impact or promote a new way of thinking about artist support or the artist residency field.

These conversations center artists’ voices and directly engage residency leaders to explore how the artist residency field is connected to the arts sector, and explore areas of growth and innovation. They are typically free and open to all. 
 

Accessibility: All Field Conversation events are live-captioned and ASL interpreted. ACA is committed to providing full access to all. Please send accessibility inquiries and requests to ACA Programs Coordinator, Crystal Sasaki, at programs [at] artistcommunities.org.

Questions about Field Conversation? Please contact programs [at] artistcommunities.org.


Upcoming Field Conversations

 

SAVE THE DATE!

Thursday, January 23, 2025

Details and Registration will open in early January

Sign up for ACA's Newsletter to be the first to know about upcoming #ResidenciesConnect sessions for our member network!

 


Past Field Conversations

Mission Driven Leadership: A Conversation with Alana Hernandez

Thursday, Sep. 26, 2024

This conversation between Lisa Funderburke, ACA President + CEO, and Alana Hernandez, Senior Curator at Arizona State University Museum, discussed artistic expression, labor, care and well-being.


It's Not A Day's Work

Thursday, May 1, 2024

Lisa Funderburke, ACA President + CEO, and Chiwoniso “Chi” Kaitano, Executive Director of MacDowell, invite you to an intimate conversation with arts leaders to discuss what it means to inherit the legacy of an institution; steward conditions of care for artists, arts workers and community; and the power of artist residencies to create pathways for transformation.

This discussion will include Rob Bailis (Artistic and Executive Director, Eli & Edythe Broad Stage), Esther Grimm (Executive Director, 3Arts), and Jericho Parms (Director of Development and Communications, MacDowell) who will offer their own insights and perspectives as first responders. 


There is No Safety Net: Protections, Relief, and Advocacy

Thursday, Jan. 18, 2024

Artists and cultural workers who have been historically under-resourced in areas of pay, protections and direct support are more vulnerable than ever. In a world where the language to provide context is contested and in some places criminalized, ACA's President and CEO, Lisa Funderburke, will host a timely conversation with advocates and program administrators to explore innovative and practical ways to strengthen support for artists and cultural workers.

Panelists in this Field Conversation included:

  • Dr. Brea Heidelberg, PhD - ISO Arts Consulting Founder and Principal
  • Roberto Bedoya - Cultural Affairs Manager for the City of Oakland
  • Zita Holbourne -  Joint National Chair of Artists Union England, multi-award winning multidisciplinary artist, and equality/human rights activist

Field Conversation | The Aftermath: Supporting Black Arts Workers after the 2020 Racial Reckoning

Wednesday, March 15, 2023

ACA’s President + CEO, Lisa Funderburke hosted a conversation with a panel of arts leaders, who are doing the essential work of supporting Black arts workers across the field:

  • Dr. Samantha E. Erskine, Assistant Professor, University of Massachusetts Boston
  • Quanice Floyd, Executive Director, National Guild for Community Arts Education
  • Jeffreen M. Hayes, Ph.D., Executive Director, Threewalls
  • Paul Rucker, Artist, Assistant Professor Virginia Commonwealth University, Executive Director of Cary Forward

    The year 2020 was marked by platitudes and statements from organizations promising change for racial equity. Was there in fact a reckoning in the arts? Were these well-publicized pledges backed up with clear and consistent action? Are Black arts workers and artists receiving more support outside of your organization and within your professional communities? What can non-Black arts workers do to create true transformation? 

Field Conversation | Response + Risk: Navigating COVID's Impact on the Arts Sector

Thursday, February 24, 2022

From travel restrictions limiting artists' mobility and monitoring communal spaces and facilities; to working with the public and handling vaccination mandates, arts organizations have had to manage instability, tension and anxiety. However, in many ways, the COVID-19 pandemic has not fundamentally changed the fabric of the arts sector, but has rather made pre-existing shortcomings and strains more visible. 

COVID is not the source of harmful cultures and norms within the arts, but should instead be considered an inciter of change; a signal that it is time to create climates of safety and care. In this Field Conversation, the following panelists joined ACA's Executive Director, Lisa Funderburke, to discuss the impact of COVID-19 on the arts and examine how we move forward:

  • Carolyn Clayton, Events & Welcome Manager - Studios at MASS MoCA, Co-Founder - Walkaway House
  • Bertha Hidalgo, Ph.D., MPH, Associate Professor - Department of Epidemiology at The University of Alabama at Birmingham 
  • Janet Newcomb, Executive Director - National Coalition for Arts’ Preparedness & Emergency ResponseFrom improving internal communication and listening to staff at all levels to developing plans for emergency preparedness and considering broad spectrums of safety, there is a lot to be done to emerge from this pandemic as a more equitable and sustainable field.

Artist Conversation: ACA's Strategic Plan
Thursday, December 9, 2021

In this session, a panel of artists engaged with ACA staff about their experiences and how we may work together to build a more generative and healthy artist residency field. In the spirit of relevance and responsiveness, we are eager to bring artists’ voices forward and provide clarity about the ways we can move with the intention to support environments where all artists can prosper.


Living the Aspiration: The Strategic Planning Process
Monday, September 27, 2021

Artist Communities Alliance recently announced its new name and released the 2021-2023 Strategic Plan. In this plan we ask ourselves, “How can ACA unite the people who power residencies and inspire a field?” Throughout the strategic planning process, we examined our values and questioned how we can create structural change that uplifts and inspires and now we are excited to engage in this ongoing dialogue with you.

In this Field Conversation, ACA board members Melissa Franklin, Sanjit Sethi, and Mario Durham; our Strategic Visioning Consultant, Jennifer Shropshire; and our Executive Director, Lisa Funderburke discussed the strategic planning process and how ACA’s partnership with our Board of Directors led to the embracing of this dramatic repositioning.
 


A Year Later: Reflections + Opportunities
Thursday, March 18, 2021 

Leaders from across the field talk about a year of unprecedented transition. What decisions and experiences shaped programs and organizations in 2020? What new working strategies emerged? 

Guest presenters included Jessica Gaynelle Moss (Sibyls Shrine + The Roll Up CLT), Mary Anne Quiroz (Indigenous Roots), Brandon Gryde (National Endowment for the Arts), and John Davis (Rural Policy Research Institute). Facilitated by ACA executive director Lisa Funderburke.


A Conversation About Repair
Thursday, November 19, 2020

What does repair mean in the arts? The year 2020 will be remembered as a defining moment in world history that has illuminated structural inequities and brought the role of the arts into question. How do we dismantle the systems that bind us and bring into existence the different ways of world-building we aspire to in the arts? What are our individual and collective roles in this work? How might we rethink our business models, policies, processes, and practices to move beyond acknowledgments to transformative action? How can reparative action enlarge your organizational identity, equitable capacity, and business model?

Guest speakers included Carlton Turner, lead artist and director of the Mississippi Center for Cultural Production (Sipp Culture); Nicole J. Caruth, writer, cultural strategist, and holistic health coach; and Alec Duffy, co-director of JACK NY. Facilitated by Lisa Funderburke, Executive Director at the ACA.
 


Artist Communities + Civic Engagement
Thursday, October 15, 2020

What role should artist communities play in getting out the vote and supporting civic engagement? How can we leverage our networks and resources to back artists and organizers effecting change? A panel of guest speakers will discuss practices that organizations and individuals can cultivate for meaningful engagement now and far beyond the election. This session will be moderated by Lisa Funderburke, Executive Director at ACA.

Guest speakers included: Amikogaabawiikwe (Adrienne M. Benjamin), artist and advocate; Elizabeth Jabar, printmaker and Director of Civic Engagement and Community Partnerships at Colby College; Najean Lee, Director of Government Affairs & Education Advocacy at League of American Orchestras; Favianna Rodriguez, interdisciplinary artist, cultural strategist, and social justice activist.


Rethinking The Residency Business Model
Thursday, August 6, 2020

The current pandemic, economic crisis, and racial reckoning are stretching and stressing many nonprofits, and raising questions about the sustainability of prevailing nonprofit revenue models. Residencies are being challenged to change how their organizations bring in and sustain revenue. How does your money line up with your program, impact, and strategy? What could change look like? What capacities are required to make the shift?

Guest speakers included: Angie Kim, President + CEO at Center for Cultural Innovation, Dorian Spears, Chief Partnerships Officer at Momentum Nonprofit Partners, Risë Wilson, Senior Advisor at the Art for Justice Fund and Founder of The Laundromat Project and Thaddeus Squire, Chief Commons Steward at Social Impact Commons. Moderated by Lisa Funderburke, Executive Director at ACA.


Beyond Place: Inspiration and Resilience
Thursday, May 14, 2020

In this session, we explored sustaining residency missions in a social climate where the arts are considered non-essential. 

Guest speakers: Sunny Widmann, Director of National Arts Strategies, and Edwidge Danticat, award-winning author. Facilitated by Lisa Funderburke, Executive Director at ACA.