nervous excited bah bah bake sale!!!

soooooo, we are leaving for new orleans in T minus 5 days.  It is truly crunch time.  I feel like I have so much to do between then and now and not much time to do any of it.  But I will continue to breathe and take one step at a time.  Tomorrow we have our last bake sale before we leave.  I made some pretty cool treats.  I made a gluten free and vegan option.  I got gluten free pretzels and vegan chocolate chips and dipped them together. mmmmm i made my room mate who is a vegan be my test rat.  He seemed to really enjoy them.  I really think that the bake sales have been going well.  I think it is hard to have it happen every week though because the glamour behind fresh treats kind of fades within our school.  

Oh also I am going to make some cards for us all to hand out to people so they can check out this blog.  I think it makes a lot of sense to give this site a public viewing.  I really think that being able to give people our site and a reminder that we were there is nice.  Even if no one in New Orleans posts back on the blog, it would be really exciting if they were to simply check it out.  Keep track of us up north.  We shall see.  

 

5 DAYS!!!!!

April 1, 2009. Uncategorized. Leave a comment.

Music and Art Events in NOLA

Here are some links to events going on while we will be in New Orleans.

Concerts:
Vanilla Ice anyone?…..anyone?

No really there’s a bunch of bands most I’ve never heard of but have you…?

http://pollstar.com/resultsCity.aspx?ID=40643&SortBy=Date&SearchBy=new%20orleans,%20la

FOR THE EVIL UNDERGROUND
http://www.nolaunderground.com/gigs.html

Art:
ART IN BLOOM @ NOMA
Art in Bloom is a five-day event that showcases more than 100 exhibitors that create inspirational floral designs, sculptures and sceneries in over a dozen categories.

ST. PATTI’S & JOSEPH’S DAY EVENTS
including a block party with food and drink, and lots of parades
http://goneworleans.about.com/od/festivals/a/stpatstjoe.htm

OTHER WIERD UNDERGROUND LINKS
DIY stuff, Louisiana Punks(sounds interesting…never mind), Miss Binky, Recording Studios….just FYI stuff i guess…

http://www.nolaunderground.com/links.html

any way. have fun

April 1, 2009. Uncategorized. Leave a comment.

Excited for NOLA!

One week to go before New Orleans! As Kim mentioned, it feels pretty surreal that we’re THISCLOSE! i feel like we’re going to hit the ground running because of the time constraints, and I’m sure that everyone has a TON of work to finish in this last week before break. I’m excited to see New Orleans for the first time and to get some good work done while we’re down there (my parents lived there for a long time, and I’ve heard only wonderful and heartfelt/homesick stories from both of them). I have been, admittedly, a bit distracted as events (both expected and unforeseen) on my artistic and personal stratosphere have taken my attention. That being said, I am SUPER psyched to be heading down there with this fantastic group! Three cheers for SMFA-NOLA!!

 

(the ‘Ani DiFranco Helps Kick-Start Katrina Piano Fund’ post was from me as well, so if anyone is interested in finding out more about organizations that help get instruments and equipment to musicians, I would love to get together and chat/research!)

 

-meredythe

April 1, 2009. Uncategorized. Leave a comment.

A week before we leave

So in exactly one week, I will be in New Orleans.  With all the planning and prep work, it is just now sinking in that we are actually leaving.  I am so flipping excited!  Last night, we had such an amazing time at the dance party and I felt like the group was really able to connect, mucho thanks to Brandon and Santi, the music was so fantastic.  It is experiences like last night that make me feel confident that we can all work as a team.  I know that is a big concern for all of us, and it’s totally valid.  But I think we’re going to be great.  If we can manage to figure out how to make noise makers out of the random stuff of the Museum School in like half an hour, I think we’ve got the creative problem solving skills to get us through just about anything.  

Mostly, I’m excited to go back to the city that I love but haven’t spent very much time in.  Last year’s experience was so special and really made me nuts for New Orleans (obviously).  While I was cleaning my room this morning, I found my journal from last year’s trip.  It’s  mostly drawings of spoken word artists we saw one of the nights, but it reminded me of what got all of this started for me.  I remembered the heat and the laughing and the strength of the people we met along the way.  So one week before we go, I’m feeling like I can’t wait, I can’t wait to get dirty and talk to amazing, inspiring people, I can’t wait to hang out with our group, listen to good music, all of it.  I can’t wait for New Orleans.

-Kimmy

March 7, 2009. Uncategorized. Leave a comment.

Creative Fundraising

Creative Fundraising!!!  The Art School way!

 

Some standard fundraising practices for student fundraising:

§         Partner with local businesses.  If you bring in a coupon, they will donate 10% of the proceeds on those sales.

§         Bake sales

§         In school shows/dances.  Put in your paperwork at student affairs to be a student group.  Apply for funds for an in-school event to fundraise for your project, invite students from Massart, Emerson, Tufts

 

Some classic fundraising techniques, which could be reinvented for the art context:

§         Walks for …, or …athons (getting sponsorship to do some endurance or tedious activity)  hmmm…reminds me a little of…performance art?

§         Auctions  (what could you auction?  It doesn’t have to be artwork, the auction itself could be artwork), or in the same line, a raffle

§         Selling stuff, you know, like an art or craft show.  If you are wanting to save money on supplies and get the most bang for the buck, sell found objects, pretty rocks, “art detritus” or process drawings.  It may actually work better then an art show, where people will concentrate on the value of the art object, instead of the value of contributing to your cause.

§         Services for $

o       Cleaning?

o       Art needs, like building stretchers?

§         Sell CD—art screen savers?  Very short video projects?

§         Joint fundraisers with an other organization who has an audience (and money)?

§         Use web fundraising tools.  You know, like a paypal button on your website.  A Chicago artist group is using fundraising web tools to raise money to send trash to the moon.  If they can figure out how to use these strategies, you can too. 

 

SOME PRINCIPLES:

§         Fundraising is a major place people learn about your project.  Make it count!  Let your fundraising, the values and creativity you bring to it, be a part of your project.  Let it SHOW YOUR BRAND.  If you need to build a network, be sure to collect emails

§         Who is your audience?  What is their price-point?  If you are offering a service or something in return for money, what is it’s regular value?  What is your “fundraiser premium”?

§         Put together a business plan!  So you have five dollars.  If you invest the five dollars in materials or publicity to do x and make 25 dollars, you have made a 20 dollar profit.  You can reinvest that 20 dollars in your next activity/project and make 200 dollars.  There is always a risk, but you can build that into your business plan.  So if you have 20 dollars, you might not want to spend it all on your next event.

§         Keep track of $$.  Make sure financial information is open and available for all, so no one can take the cash and drink it all at Punter’s.

§         If your energy is good, people invest in you.  If you are selfish, people will not spend their money on you.  The quickest road to fortune is by giving graciously.  Read “Economy of the Gift” by Lewis Hyde, to see how this principle is embedded in aesthetics.

 

–Andrew

March 7, 2009. Information. Leave a comment.

Ani DiFranco helps kick-start ‘Katrina Piano Fund’

Ani DiFranco, an independent songwriter under her own label, ‘Righteous Babe Records’, previously had a recording studio down in New Orleans. Although she evacuated the city the day before Katrina hit, many of her friends down there lost everything from recording equipment to their instruments to their studios and homes. In addition to writing songs and speaking out about the devastation in New Orleans, Ani helped kick-start ‘Katrina’s Piano Fund’, a not-for-profit organization that provides instruments and equipment to musicians in New Orleans.

            In searching for the link, everything promising led me to Japanese sites (?), but here is the link to Ani’s webpage (the Piano Fund post is mid-way down the page, dated 9/9/2005):

 

http://www.righteousbabe.com/news/latebreaking.asp?mode=1

March 7, 2009. Uncategorized. Leave a comment.

Since we’re talking about planning an activity with the wetlands and coastal erosion in Louisiana I wanted to do what I can to prime everyone for how incredibly huge and yet invisible this issue is.

Long story short, bits of Louisiana have been falling off into the Gulf of Mexico for the past century. This is happening partly from interference with the natural course of the Mississippi River necessary to settle in Louisiana, but accelerated by dredging of wetlands to build canals for oil and gas and other industry, particularly during the past fifty years. Those bits of land are not only important in their own right as natural habitat and resources, but are protection for all of Louisiana from storm surge during hurricanes.

I moved to Boston two days before Katrina happened, and one thing people were asking me about was coastal erosion. I was shocked about what people not from the gulf coast didn’t know about the issue. When I was in elementary school, we were taught every year about how Louisiana loses a football field of wetlands every forty five minutes. I had just assumed that this is what everyone in America learned about in elementary school. So there I was, twenty years old, after having been told about a national emergency since I was five, and then flying somewhere six hours away and finding out that as a nation,it was in fact an issue we were completely blind to.

National acknowledgement of and action on how and why this is happening is necessary restore these wetlands. The distance a hurricane travels over marsh land before it hits a city reduces how high the storm surge is when it lands. Height of storm surge determines whether or not levees hold. Levees holding determine whether or not people drown in their attics.

I would still like to work with everyone about a way I can talk about this. So, please ask me about it.

For now, I hope everyone will look at these two links: http://www4.nau.edu/tribalclimatechange/tribes/gulfcoast.asp This is a little bit about the effects of wetlands loss. The Biloxi Chitimacha-Choctaw people in Terrebone Parish settled where they live in Isle de Jean Charles in the middle of the 1800′s. They chose this remote place to avoid having their land taken from them and being forced to move to Oklahoma. This past year, they have made the decision to abandon the island because there is literally no longer enough land left to live there.

www.mrgomustgo.org Congress recently approved the closure of the Mississippi River Gulf Outlet, “MRGO.” Mister Go is a large canal that was built in the fifties to promote industry, but never lived up to it’s economic value. It runs from the ocean through south Louisiana into the Industrial Canal of the Lower Ninth Ward, and is responsible for a huge amount of wetlands loss. Many activist groups have been working to close MRGO for the safety of people in Louisiana and environmental protection.

Okay, and some lagniappe links: http://blog.nola.com/graphics/2008/12/SinkingLand.swf (Great summary and pictures) www.healthygulf.org (Look at their resources for taking political action) www.saveourlake.org (Look at the ‘Coastal Lines of Defense’)

—-Amanda

image: The Times Picayune “Chief Albert Naquin walks with a remnant of his tribe of Biloxi-Chitimacha Choctaw Indians along the Isle de Jean Charles community road, which has eroded to a single lane.”

March 6, 2009. Uncategorized. Leave a comment.

Calendar

So apparently, we can’t have a calendar on the blog through wordpress, super dumb.  But I’ve uploaded the one Nikki put together, and that will have to do for now.  If any of you a have any brilliant wordpress skillz, please let me know.

-Kimmy

 

February 2009

Sun

Mon

Tue

Wed

Thu

Fri

Sat

1

2

3

4

5

6

7

8

9

10

11

12

13

14

15

16

17

18

19

20

21

22

Get Together to Build

Ambassador Bead Necklaces (sometime between 1pm-2pm)

23

24

FAT TUESDAY

Bake Sale and Build Your Own Bead Necklace Fundraiser

Atrium Lunchtime 12pm-2pm

25

Cultural Awareness and Social Action training with Patty Bode 12pm-2pm

Mission Hill Building

Room C110

 

5:30pm: Making NOWAC Thank You Cards. Room is TBD.

26

27

28

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

March 2009

Sun

Mon

Tue

Wed

Thu

Fri

Sat

1

2

3

Build Your Own Bead Necklaces Event

Atrium from 12pm-2pm

4

5

6

Dance Party and Food Fundraiser

Room is TBD

6pm-10pm

7

8

9

NOLA Bake Sale

Atrium 12pm-2pm

10

NOLA Bake Sale

Atrium 12pm-2pm

11

12

13

14

15

16

17

18

19

20

21

22

23

24

25

26

27

28

29

30

31

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

February 21, 2009. Uncategorized. Leave a comment.

Student Voice

Hey Everyone, 

This afternoon, Student Voice had a meeting focused on community at SMFA.  For those of you that don’t know, Student Voice is a student run forum to discuss what is and is not going well here at school.  It meets every 3 weeks right after the Sbinc meeting in the same room.  This weeks meeting centered around student individuals and groups that are contributing to a community.  Ben Smart was there representing BARF, Chris Dombeck with Recycling Club, and I talked about what’s going on in all things NOLA.  There were some common themes to what people said, a lot of people talked about similar struggles to what I’ve faced over the last few months, about how difficult it can be to reach students here at school.  Sometimes it seems like nobody is seeing all the fliers, checking their email, it can feel sometimes like nobody is listening.  We are all very busy and maybe due to the fact that we’re artists or something, it can be hard to come out of the studio and be active in the school.  And everyone said pretty much the same thing in response to that, that you have to come at it from every angle.  You have to send the emails, post fabulous fliers, send those mass emails, but most of all, it is important to talk to people.  Talk to people at lunch in the atrium, talk in your classes.  What was so great about this meeting was that that there were so many people there!  Not just those of us talking about our own projects, but just students interested in community here at school.  There is so much potential for change at the Museum School, what is so great about this place is that we decide what kind of school this has to be.  I think conversations about community at school are crucial and we need to have more!  By talking about it, we can see how many people are on the same page.  Maybe we should start thinking about some sort of collaboration with these other groups, there is so much overlap in our missions.  Anyway, something to think about.  So this week, let’s all try to talk to students, faculty, staff.  Talk about your excitement about the trip, about how great it was to see so much involvement in the bake sale, whatever.  Just keep communicating with the people around you, it really is how changes happen.

Kim Fox

February 12, 2009. Uncategorized. Leave a comment.

Bake Sale, Pt. 2+3!!

                                                Bake Sale, Parts 2 + 3 !!

                              TUESDAY + WEDNESDAY (FEB 10 + 11) 

                                                     12 NOON- 2 PM

that’s right; it was so lucrative the first time that now we can hit them up two days in a row! 

i’ve spoken with Nikki and she’s reserving the same space in the atrium for us to fill with wonderful baked goodies. i’m drafting an LCD screen ‘ad’ so that we can the word out even earlier. 

it would be great to have everyone there for at least part of the bake sale, even just to generate more ENTHUSIASM and get the word out that there is still a lot of moneyto be raised. bring in any DECORATIONS you might have for the table, too (Kirsten’s PINK BOA was a huge hit! let’s play up the Mardi Gras theme!). 

*** we are also approaching VALENTINE’S DAY, which could make for bigger, better sales and fancy decorating opportunity

i am baking vegan brownies again. we had great variety last time with baked goods + the ‘real food’, and the tableside frosting was a huge success as well. 

                      this is going to be a really great sale!! GO NOLA!!!

-Meredythe

February 6, 2009. Uncategorized. Leave a comment.

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