Advocacy Organizations - Dance
Courtesy of New York Foundation for the Arts and their NYFA Source national database of awards services and publications for the arts.
Showing 1 - 10 of 34 organizations representing 39 opportunities.
ACTORS' FUND OF AMERICA, THE Phone: (212)221-7300 Fax: (212)764-0238 Email: info@actorsfund.org |
The Fund’s Actors’ Work Program provides comprehensive employment and training services, including career counseling, training, tuition assistance, and job search and placement support. All members of the Actors’ Work Program are given the guidance and support to develop a career/education plan that will enable them to find a dignified sideline career. With offices in New York City and Los Angeles, over 9,000 entertainment industry professionals have utilized the services of the Actors’ Work Program in the past decade, enabling them to sustain a productive and financially stable life. |
ALLIANCE OF ARTISTS' COMMUNITIES Phone: (401)351-4320 Fax: (401)351-4507 Email: aac@artistcommunities.org |
Organized by the Alliance of Artists Communities and hosted by Brown University and the Rhode Island School of Design, the American Creativity At Risk symposium explored the nature of human creativity and its significance in a wide range of disciplines, taking artists' communities as a model and a metaphor for fostering pure research and innovation in all sectors of society and culture. The symposium resulted in a call to action addressing the challenges and opportunities of restoring creativity as a priority in public policy, cultural philanthropy, and education. Symposium speakers and panelists included Robert MacNeil, Lewis Hyde, Brendan Gill, Guillermo Gómez-Peña, Mary Schmidt Campbell, Mierle Laderman Ukeles, Ellen Winner, David Liddle, Mary Catherine Bateson, Ned Hall, and Stewart Brand, among others. Can be ordered through the Alliance website. |
ALLIANCE OF NEW YORK STATE ARTS ORGANIZATIONS Phone: (631)298-1234 Fax: (631)298-1101 Email: jkweiner@worldnet.att.net |
Monthly newsletter that summarizes key developments at art councils around New York State. |
AMERICAN ARTS ALLIANCE Phone: (202)207-3850 Fax: (202)833-1543 Email: info@americanartsalliance.org |
A bimonthly newsletter that summarizes federal legislation pertaining to the arts. |
AMERICAN LIBRARY ASSOCIATION (ALA) Phone: (800)545-2433 Fax: (312)440-9374 Email: feedback@ala.org |
The ALA site offers a wealth of free updated information on anti-censorship advocacy for artists, librarians and others. |
AMERICANS FOR THE ARTS Phone: (202)371-2830 Fax: (212)980-4857 |
Annual membership with benefits such as: annual convention, regional workshops, listservs, newsletters, opportunities for peer-to-peer networking and a variety of online services. The National Arts Policy Database is a comprehensive research/resource tool containing approximately 7,000 items (published since 1960) documenting information on the arts and culture in the United States. |
ART & SCIENCE COLLABORATIONS, INC. (ASCI) Phone: (941)955-5103 Fax: (000)000-0000 Email: asci@asci.org |
Membership is open to anyone interested in the
intersection of art and science/technology.
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ART & UNDERSTANDING, INC. (A & U) Phone: (888)245-4333 Fax: (888)790-1790 Email: mailbox@aumag.org |
A&U is an unusual hybrid publication whose readership reflects a cross section of society: leading intellectuals, business and civic leaders, artists, AIDS educators, AIDS activists, doctors, pharmacists, and others who are well-informed about the disease. |
ARTS AND HEALING NETWORK Phone: (000)000-0000 Fax: (000)000-0000 Email: ahn@artheals.org |
The Arts and Healing Network is dedicated to celebrating the connection between art and healing. Its focus is a web site that serves as an international resource for anyone interested in the healing potential of art, especially environmentalists, social activists, artists, art professionals, health care practitioners, and those challenged by illness. |
ARTS EDUCATION PARTNERSHIP (AEP) Phone: (202)326-8693 Fax: (202)408-8081 Email: aep@ccsso.org |
Online information pertinent to artist educators on topics like education reform, and funding trends for arts in education. |


