What I Learned Today About The Benefits of the Arts

I apologize for missing my posting schedule yesterday. I was involved with an activity that I need to keep confidential. It kept me busy all day and required a bit of driving to return from. However, I can say it was related to my job and I got paid with a big bucket of candy.

I am taking the time to tell you this by way of celebrating the type of opportunities those of us in the arts have in the course of our jobs. It is an amusingly enigmatic, but absolutely true, description of what transpired.

Another of those enjoyable opportunities presented itself again today when people from our state arts council came down to do a site visit for a project we are participating in October. In addition to showing them around my facility, I also took them around town to look at our floodwall murals, our children’s theater and the local museum.

Since we are at one of the most remote parts of the state (I look at the hills of KY across the Ohio River from my office) I wanted to provide a little advocacy for the arts in our community.

Some of what I learned in the process brought to light issues which I suspect are being seen nationwide.

Something the people at the museum noticed in the arts classes and summer camp activities they conduct is that they are having to spend more time working on basic eye-hand coordination exercises with kids than they used to. There is a circus/gymnastics school under the museum’s organizational umbrella and they are having the same issues with coordination and with kids feeling comfortable about throwing their bodies around.

They see this as a result of the reduction of arts classes and recess in schools and the simple fact that kids are more often in front of screens rather than just running around wildly.

So when we talk about the benefits of the arts, we can probably lay claim to improving very elementary abilities like eye-hand coordination and gross and fine motor skills. It probably sounds ridiculous to even consider saying such a thing since it is essentially slightly above walking as part of natural development, but it may not be long before we start hearing about the consequences of people lacking these abilities.

Everywhere I have worked, I frequently hear something along the lines of “X have lived here all their whole lives, but this was the first time they were in this/a arts building.”

In the experience of the museum folks, the things they are having the kids do like making mbira with cigar boxes and wire coat hangers are often among the first projects involving trial and error problem solving the kids have worked on with material objects. (As opposed to solving puzzles, etc on a screen.)

It makes me glad I am supplying my nephews with boxes of Legos. Again, this may eventually become an area in which the arts can claim the provide a notable benefit.

The last thing I learned that made an impression on me was that the circus program, which has a Cirque du Soleil type focus on acrobatics, has been really effective at cutting across social and economic strata. Because physical work is so dependent on body type and weight, students get paired up on this basis rather than with whom they are friends.

Some parents may be rolling coins to allow their kids to participate, but in the practice rooms the value of one person relative to another is all about physical strength and ability to safely counterbalance you. Economic means doesn’t really factor into whether you can trust someone act as your partner.

This is not a claim all arts disciplines can make. In some social background does enable you to progress further. In others, you aren’t necessarily required to depend so entirely on a partner.

That being said, there are ways most of the arts disciplines can structure their instruction to draw attention to the fact that social and economic background doesn’t have any bearing on one’s ability to demonstrate excellence. (Probably best accomplished by drawing as little attention to any differences as possible.)

Yes granted, ability to afford advanced training and internships is tied to economic background, but in the early stages of training especially, it is often clear that background is not a determinant of basic ability. (Though it may determine how inhibited someone is about exhibiting their ability.)

So even though the arts have been branded as elitist, they can be a powerful tool for socialization that de-emphasizes distinctions.

About Joe Patti

I have been writing Butts in the Seats (BitS) on topics of arts and cultural administration since 2004 (yikes!). Given the ever evolving concerns facing the sector, I have yet to exhaust the available subject matter. In addition to BitS, I am a founding contributor to the ArtsHacker (artshacker.com) website where I focus on topics related to boards, law, governance, policy and practice.

I am also an evangelist for the effort to Build Public Will For Arts and Culture being helmed by Arts Midwest and the Metropolitan Group. (http://www.creatingconnection.org/about/)

My most recent role was as Executive Director of the Grand Opera House in Macon, GA.

Among the things I am most proud are having produced an opera in the Hawaiian language and a dance drama about Hawaii's snow goddess Poli'ahu while working as a Theater Manager in Hawaii. Though there are many more highlights than there is space here to list.

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4 thoughts on “What I Learned Today About The Benefits of the Arts”

  1. Joe, you have so adequately stated the need for superlative public funding of the arts in K-12. I know that the things that happened in my day are not happening for my 7th grade daughter at all. From cutting a circle out of paper in Kindergarten to mixing primary to secondary and tertiary colors in 3rd grade, to learning the waltz, climbing the rope to the ceiling and surviving dodgeball in 5th grade, sculpting in 7th grade, sewing,cooking and doing metal arts in middle school, etc. There is no end of basic humanities that are being sacrificed in the name of STEM and related testing, and our military-industrial-educational complex. So the question is, how will artists, arts professionals and art institutions turn this around so that we don’t have to spend so much energy exploring the basics and can devote ourselves to “higher” arts and a higher sense of being. If this is accessible to all through public education, I fail to see how it elitist unless certain dominant classes are imposing their ideas of art.

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    • Yes, I was a little taken aback when they said the kids wouldn’t tear masking tape and always insisted on using scissors. They had difficulty drawing basic shapes at ages that kids should be drawing much more sophisticated compositions. We may get to the point where we hear there is a lack of good welders and surgeons who can operate without computer aid. Those are obvious consequences. What will really surprise us will be when we discover repercussions due to a lack of ability to envision or operate 3 dimensionally or some other indirect consequence.

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    • I want to disagree with Dr. Heather G’s assignment of blame in ” There is no end of basic humanities that are being sacrificed in the name of STEM and related testing, and our military-industrial-educational complex.” STEM education in K–12 has not been getting better, and most engineering professors would love to have students coming to college with some knowledge of how to hold a tool and what to do with it. In fact, “STEM” educators are often the ones providing the most support for hands-on, experiential education. In my freshman design class last year, I asked students about where they had built things before, and high-school physics classes turned out to be the largest source (more than at home and far more than art or shop classes).

      Excessive testing may be partly to blame, but STEM is not. I think that a bigger part has been a reluctance of schools to do anything that might be the slightest bit messy or dangerous (like using real tools) outside of the sacred sports grounds. If you look at where schools have been spending their time and money for the last two decades, it hasn’t been STEM, arts, or humanities—it has been athletics.

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  2. Just to be fair, I should probably acknowledge some of the observations I heard being made may not be entirely true. I am sure at some point our parents and grandparents were bemoaning the dwindling of eye-hand coordination necessary to dress game and fowl.

    There are certainly skills we possess today that won’t be as crucial for the future. Though I still would maintain that there will be unanticipated reprecussions

    Reply

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