Atlanta’s arts organizations brace for funding crisis
March 11, 2009 at 1:34 pm by Scott Henry in NewsLast fall, when Congress was grappling with the first of several bank bailouts, Buckhead art dealer Alan Avery came to appreciate that the current recession is different from others he’s faced in his 27 years in business.
“There have been weeks when I didn’t have a single person come into the gallery,” says Avery, who represents such well-known artists as Chuck Close and David Hockney. “That’s the first time I’ve ever seen that happen.”
Sydney Ellis, director of marketing for 7 Stages theater in Little Five Points, is also familiar with that sinking feeling.
“We opened our first show last fall on the same day there was no gas in Atlanta,” she recalls. “That seemed to set the tone for the entire season.”
Kim Patrick Bitz, founding executive director of the Atlanta Coalition of Performing Arts, recently decided to launch a 25th anniversary e-mail fundraising campaign for his organization, which operates the AtlanTIX half-price ticket booth.
In its first three weeks, the campaign collected just $380.
“We’d expected a few thousand,” says a stunned Bitz.
Nearly every member of the Atlanta arts community has a similar anecdote illustrating when the impact of a slumping economy made itself felt.
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March 11th, 2009 at 1:55 pm
And with Obama’s plan to limit the tax deductibility of charitable contributions the situation will only get worse