New Arts Facility and Collaborative Business Model
Located at Chicago’s Fine Arts Building
The Chicago Human Rhythm Project (CHRP) announces the establishment of the American
Rhythm Center (ARC), a new initiative to provide a shared, affordable and
sustainable education, rehearsal and administrative facility for several
leading Chicago arts organizations. This new institution is located in
renovated spaces at Chicago’s historic Fine Arts Building, 410 S. Michigan
Avenue.
CHRP will develop the ARC, a
collaborative effort to foster community growth through rhythmic expression, in
several phases. The aim is to offer diverse, high-quality dance and movement
classes to the general public while centralizing the education programs,
rehearsal space and administrative offices of several core groups, as well as
additional emerging companies and independent artists.
The idea for ARC grew from a
CHRP strategic planning process followed by intensive, collaborative planning
with participating community partners, including:
• Cerqua
Rivera Dance Theatre
• Chicago
Chinese Cultural Institute
• Chicago
Youth Symphony Orchestras (already in
residence at the Fine Arts Building)
• Giordano
Dance Chicago
• Kalapriya,
Center for Indian Performing Arts
• Luna
Negra Dance Theater
• Ping
Pong Productions, which facilitates
collaborations between Chinese and international artists
• River
North Dance Chicago
In the first phase of
development, CHRP is updating space occupied for three decades by the Boitsov
Ballet, which will feature three professional, flexible-use studios ranging in
size from 750 to 1,500 square feet, as well as a remodeled lobby, dressing
rooms and a separate floor of administrative offices. In the second and third
phases, CHRP will add supplemental program space, a black box theater and
updated administrative facilities. Limited operations will begin at the end of
July in conjunction with CHRP’s 22nd annual Rhythm World Festival;
a grand opening with all the partners will take place in early September.
CHRP’s ARC will provide a
long-term platform for stability and growth in several key areas by:
• addressing the near-universal need among small and
mid-sized dance and other arts organizations for professional administrative,
rehearsal and education spaces as well as a desire to unify as many
organizational functions as possible in a single location
• creating a venue that will allow arts organizations
to develop and maximize earned income from tuition-based education programs
while lessening reliance on subsidies
• enabling longer-term program planning as well as
enhancing the potential scope and impact of tuition-based education programs
• attracting thousands of students from Chicago, the
U.S. and around the world to study dance in Chicago’s emerging dance corridor,
furthering Mayor Rahm Emanuel’s vision for Chicago as a center for dance education and performance
• managing the facility, mitigating many users’
current space management burdens
“We are proposing to alter the
traditional business model by offering arts groups the opportunity to shift
their reliance on contributed income and dwindling revenue from ticket sales to
self-sustaining revenue via educational programming,” commented CHRP Founder
and Director Lane Alexander, who had the original vision for ARC. “The value
proposition for most people has changed, and making art has become more
nourishing than watching others make art. CHRP’s new ARC will serve a two-fold
purpose: to offer world-class dance instruction for the public and a stable
platform for small and medium-sized nonprofit companies.”
According to new CHRP Executive
Director Frank Sonntag, who recently led the opening of the Cowles Center for
Dance and the Performing Arts in Minneapolis, “Lane’s vision is all about
creating a collaborative environment with shared resources, which will provide
the partnering organizations with a creative hub and educational platform
greater than the sum of its parts. I think such efforts will become more
commonplace and integral to capacity-building efforts throughout the arts and
culture field in the future.”
Funding
CHRP’s ARC has raised more than
$1 million to date as part of a multi-phased $2.5 million capital start-up
campaign. Jenner & Block LLP has provided pro bono legal support. Major
funding for capital and start-up operations has been provided by Elaine Cohen
and Arlen Rubin, The John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation, The Gaylord
and Dorothy Donnelley Foundation, The Joyce Foundation and The Boeing Company,
with additional support from Pamela Crutchfield, The Richard H. Driehaus
Foundation, The MacArthur Fund for the Arts and Culture at Prince, Arts Work
Fund for Organizational Development, the James. S. Kemper Foundation, the
Illinois Arts Council, matching funds from the Polk Bros. Foundation through
IFF, Jenner & Block LLP and many generous individuals.
CHRP Board President and ARC
lead donor Elaine Cohen said, “It is very exciting for us to think of how much
vitality ARC will add to Chicago—providing myriad opportunities not only to
CHRP but to a host of ARC resident companies as well as tourists and the public
looking to participate in an amazing variety of dance class offerings taught by
professionals.”
About Chicago Human Rhythm
Project
Founded in 1990, Chicago Human Rhythm Project (CHRP) builds community by presenting American tap
dance and contemporary percussive arts in world-class and innovative
performance, education and community outreach programs. During the last 22
years, CHRP has produced multiple community-based collaborations involving
shared revenue programs, concerts and touring opportunities, including:
• annual National Tap Dance Day concerts, featuring an
array of tap and percussive dance artists
• a shared revenue program designed to assist
Chicago’s budding tap community to build capacity through audience development,
created in 2001
• Thanks 4 Giving, another innovative shared revenue
program launched in 2005 as part of its annual Global Rhythms concerts at the
Harris Theater, through which CHRP has partnered with more than 100
Chicago-based nonprofits to raise funds for a wide variety of service agencies
• participation in the 5th Anniversary Beijing
International Dance Festival, assembling 70 artists to represent the United
States
CHRP’s vision is to establish the first global center for American tap and percussive arts, which will create a complete ecosystem of education, performance, creation and community in a state-of-the-art facility uniting generations of diverse artists and the general public.
CHRP’s vision is to establish the first global center for American tap and percussive arts, which will create a complete ecosystem of education, performance, creation and community in a state-of-the-art facility uniting generations of diverse artists and the general public.
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