Arts Summit 2019
Program Name
The Human Journey: Creating the Story of US
²ÝÝ®ÊÓƵÃâ·Ñ°æapp Arts Summit is an annual one-day convening to investigate the power and potential of the arts. Bringing together thought leaders for conversation and connection, the Arts Summit engages experts from across numerous fields, aiming to challenge old ideas, spark new ones, and catalyze potent partnerships across disciplines.
The 2019 Arts Summit, “The Human Journey: Creating the Story of US”, will explore how we define and shape our world through the stories we tell (and the ones we don't). How can storytelling reframe our world view — shift/expand what we think is possible? How do more inclusive and diverse stories — stories beyond the dominant narrative — help build a more equitable society? How can radical listening foster empathy and “stitch” together the tears in our social fabric? Through a series of long conversations, performances, discussions, breakout sessions, and presentations, we will broadly explore story as an art, a tool, and a strategy for moving us forward.
The Human Journey: Creating the Story of Us
Arts Summit 2020 Schedule
Arts Summit 2018: An Illustrated Story
Arts Summit is a day of inspiration and transformation, with thought leaders and artists from across disciplines sharing their stories and ideas, and asking some of the most important and provocative questions of our day. These speakers – and all of the guests who committed to creating change – are our heroes. This illustrated story synthesizes the most powerful messages and moments of Arts Summit 2018.
Participants
Savannah Barrett
Savannah Barrett is the Program Director for Art of the Rural, the Project lead for the Rural Generation initiative, and co-founder of the Kentucky Rural-Urban Exchange. She serves as Lead Advisor for the Bush Foundation Community Creativity Cohort II, on the board of the Center for Performance and Civic Practice and the Robert Gard Foundation, as well as many national and local advisory boards, including The Art of Community: Rural S.C., the EmcArts' Community Innovation Lab, and the Ford Foundation's Southern Cultural Scan. She has widely published essays and interviews and presented her work at conferences internationally. She holds a Masters of Arts Management from the University of Oregon, and is an alumnus of the Ali Scholars Program at the University of Louisville and the Kentucky Governor's School for the Arts. Savannah was raised in Grayson Springs, Kentucky, where she co-founded a local arts agency in high school and now stewards seven acres of her homeplace. She is a twelfth-generation Kentuckian and lives in Louisville's Southend with her partner and their daughter.
Amy K. Bormet
Amy K. Bormet is an in-demand pianist, vocalist, and composer. The quintet from her debut album, Striking, was featured as part of the Mary Lou Williams Jazz Festival at the Kennedy Center. As an advocate for women in music, Amy created the in 2011 and continues to serve as executive director. One of Amy K Bormet's latest projects, Ephemera, is a platform for her new art songs with improvisation. Ephemera performed a two-week tour of Sweden. Along with her performance career, Ms. Bormet is a prolific composer frequently combining improvisation with concert music. Recently Amy composed several pieces for the Capital City Symphony and her jazz ensemble, and premiered a concert of new works for string quartet and her jazz piano trio at the Smithsonian American Art Museum.
Emily Eagen
Emily Eagen is a singer, instrumentalist, songwriter, and teaching artist in the NYC area. Emily is a teaching artist for Carnegie Hall's community engagement programs, most notably with the Lullaby Project, where she facilitates songwriting workshops for parents and helps lead workshops to train Lullaby artists around the country. In 2018, Emily presented a workshop at the fourth International Teaching Artist Convention (ITAC) and was a recipient of a two-year teaching artist fellowship from the Jubilation Foundation. As a singer, Emily primarily performs new music: she is a member of the M6: Meredith Monk, Third Generation, and recently toured as part of a vocal trio with the Bang on a Can All-Stars, performing Steel Hammer by Julia Wolfe. She is a doctoral candidate at the Graduate Center of the City University of New York, studying performance and vocal pedagogy across genres. Currently, Emily is working on an album of original songs for both children and adults, combining singing with ukulele and her skills as a two-time International Whistling Champion.
Stephanie Foo
helped create Snap Judgment. Her work has also been featured on podcasts like Reply All and 99% Invisible. She led the creation of a revolutionary audio sharing app, Shortcut, and produced an Emmy-winning video short for TAL. She's currently working on a book that is part science, part memoir about Complex PTSD.
Vijay Gupta
Vijay Gupta is a violinist and social justice advocate. An esteemed performer, communicator, educator and citizen-artist, Gupta is a leading advocate for the role of the arts and music to heal, inspire, provoke change, and foster social connection. Gupta is the founder and Artistic Director of Street Symphony, a non-profit organization providing musical engagement, dialogue and teaching artistry for homeless and incarcerated communities in Los Angeles. Vijay Gupta is a 2018 John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Fellow. A passionate and dedicated educator, Gupta serves on the faculty of the Colburn School and the Longy School of Music. Gupta also serves on the board of directors of the DC-based national arts advocacy organization Americans for the Arts, as well as Los Angeles's beloved 24th STreet Theatre. Vijay Gupta made his solo debut with the Israel Philharmonic Orchestra under the baton of Zubin Mehta at age 11, and has been an acclaimed international performer since the age of 8. Gupta joined the Los Angeles Philharmonic at age 19.
Thanks Joey (Joseph Hamoui)
Thanks Joey is a music producer & independent multimedia arts label owner from Brooklyn, New York by way of Orlando, Florida. Born to Syrian immigrants & having a classical Arabic musician as a grandfather set the palette for what Thanks Joey would be exposed to growing up: Fairouz, Om Kalthoum, Abdel-Halim Hafez with a little bit of Jay Z, BIGGIE SMALLS, Nas etc. Thanks Joey released his first his first instrumental album inspired by the works of Khalil Gibran entitled "On Beats" in 2018. He also produced the 2018 album "UNIKO" by long-time friend and collaborator, NIKO IS, which was released in collaboration with Talib Kweli & featured artists from around the world including Curren$y, Tego Calderón, HAIKAISS, & more. He is currently working on multiple projects set to be released on his multimedia arts label, Colours Of The Culture in the near future. www.itsColours.com
Dave Isay
Dave Isay is the president and founder of StoryCorps and the recipient of numerous broadcasting honors, including a MacArthur "Genius" Fellowship and multiple Peabody Awards. In 2003, Dave founded StoryCorps, a nonprofit organization, whose mission is to preserve and share humanity's stories in order to build connections between people and create a more just and compassionate world. To date StoryCorps, has given over 500,000 Americans the chance to record interviews about their lives, pass wisdom from one generation to the next, and leave a legacy for the future. It is the largest single collection of human voices ever gathered.
Mic Jordan
Mic Jordan, a hip-hop artist and an enrolled member of the Turtle Mountain Band of Ojibwe Tribe in Belcourt, ND, where music heavily influenced his childhood. In addition to his own musical endeavors, Mic serves as a Turnaround artist for the President's Committee on the Arts and Humanities. He speaks directly to youth about the issues of alcoholism, and suicide. He shares his life story and how he overcame adversity with the power of music. As a musician, Mic Jordan indigenizes hip-hop, bending the genre to tell his story in an honest way that reflects the positive values of his traditional culture.
Eric Liu
Eric Liu is the co-founder and CEO of Citizen University, which works to build a culture of powerful and responsible citizenship in the United States. He also directs the Aspen Institute's Citizenship & American Identity Program. He is the author of several books, including The Accidental Asian: Notes of a Native Speaker; The Gardens of Democracy (co-authored with Nick Hanauer); You're More Powerful Than You Think: A Citizen's Guide to Making Change Happen; and his most recent, Become America: Civic Sermons on Love, Responsibility, and Democracy. Liu served as a White House speechwriter for President Bill Clinton and later as the President's deputy domestic policy adviser. He and his family live in Seattle.
De Nichols
De Nichols is a designer, social entrepreneur, and keynote lecturer who mobilizes young creative change makers through the production of interactive experiences, digital media, and social initiatives . Based in St. Louis, MO, De is the Principal of Design & Social Practice Civic Creatives, a design and strategy collective she founded in 2015 to help cities more boldly develop creative solutions for the civic and social challenges they face. As a national keynote presenter and lecturer, De champions the power of design and storytelling to inspire and equip audiences to spark creative social change across their communities. Because of her leadership, Nichols has been deemed as a national Ideas that Matter recipient, a two-time Clinton Global Initiative innovator, and a St. Louis Visionary for her community impact. She additionally is a 2017/18 Citizen Artist Fellow of the John F. Kennedy Center for Performing Arts and a 2018 Artist Fellow with the Regional Arts Commission in St. Louis, MO.
Ryan O'Connell
Ryan O'Connell is a television writer who has written for shows like Awkward, Will & Grace, and Special, which he created, starred, and wrote all the episodes for. He lives in Los Angeles with his boyfriend and their overpriced candles.
Betsy Levy Paluck
Betsy Levy Paluck is Professor in the Department of Psychology and in the Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs at Princeton University. She also serves as the Deputy Director of the Kahneman-Treisman Center for Behavioral Science and Policy at Princeton University.
J. Period
Hailed as a "music guru" by Rolling Stone and called "the most creative mixtape producer of all-time" by music icon Questlove, J.PERIOD is a master craftsman: a musical storyteller whose work connects cultures, eras and styles. J.PERIOD's resume boasts collaborations with GRAMMY® winners The Roots, Nas, Q-Tip, Kanye West, Common, Mary J. Blige, John Legend and Pulitzer Prize-winning Playwright Lin-Manuel Miranda on the Billboard #1 and RIAA-certified Gold album, The Hamilton Mixtape. His extensive roster of collaborators, combined with a visionary approach to musical storytelling, has earned comparisons to both DJ Khaled and Ken Burns. In 2018, it also earned J.PERIOD an appointment as a founding member of ²ÝÝ®ÊÓƵÃâ·Ñ°æapp Hip Hop Culture Council. "Make no mistake," says DJ Booth, "as to the power of J.PERIOD's impact and influence on hip hop culture." As a composer, J.PERIOD's work has been featured in film and TV (American Gangster, NBA Inside Stuff, The Doctor), earning an EMMY®. He also works as Tour DJ for artists including Black Thought, The Roots, Lauryn Hill, and Q-Tip.
Nigel Poor
Nigel Poor is a visual artist whose work explores the various ways people make a mark and leave behind evidence of their existence. Her work has been shown at: San Jose Museum of Art, Institute of Contemporary Art, San Jose, Friends of Photography, SF Camerawork, San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, the San Diego Museum of Contemporary Art, Museum of Photographic Arts, San Diego, Corcoran Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C. and the Haines Gallery in San Francisco and can be found in the collections of SFMOMA, the M.H. deYoung Museum, San Diego Museum of Contemporary Art and Corcoran Gallery of Art. She received her BA from Bennington College and her MFA from Massachusetts College of Art and is a Professor at CSU Sacramento. Nigel is the co-creator, co-producer and co-host of the prison based podcast Ear Hustle.
Jason Reynolds
Jason Reynolds is a New York Times bestselling author, a Newbery Award Honoree, a Printz Award Honoree, National Book Award Honoree, a Kirkus Award winner, a two time Walter Dean Myers Award winner, an NAACP Image Award Winner, and the recipient of multiple Coretta Scott King honors. Reynolds was named the American Booksellers Association's 2017 and 2018 spokesperson for Indies First, and served as the national spokesperson for the 2018 celebration of School Library Month in April 2018, sponsored by the American Association of School Librarians (AASL). Jason's many works of fiction include When I Was the Greatest, Boy in the Black Suit, All American Boys (cowritten with Brendan Kiely), As Brave As You, For Every One, Miles Morales: Spider Man, the Track series (Ghost, Patina, Sunny, and Lu), and Long Way Down, which received both a Newbery Honor and a Printz Honor. He is on faculty at Lesley University, for the Writing for Young People MFA Program and lives in Washington, DC. You can find his ramblings at JasonWritesBooks.com.
Julie Shapiro
Julie Shapiro (@jatomic) is the executive producer of PRX's Radiotopia podcast network, and of the Ear Hustle podcast. From 2014-15, Julie was the executive producer of the Australian Broadcasting Corporation / Radio National's (RN) Creative Audio Unit. In 2000 she co-founded the Third Coast International Audio Festival, where as artistic director she shaped the Festival's creative trajectory and nurtured a robust international listening culture.
Carla Sheffield
The murder of my son not only changed my life forever but it changed my perspective on the criminal justice system. The rise of police brutality and the justifications by their superiors only makes a bad situation worse. The discriminatory practice by the cops and courts need to change...my mission is is twofold retrain and license officers while; bridging the gap between police and people in the black community.
Fay Victor
"She's essentially invented her own hybrid of song and spoken word, a scat style for today's avant-garde." –Giovanni Russonello, The New York Times.
Brooklyn, NY-based sound artist/composer Fay Victor hones a unique vision for the vocalist's role in jazz and improvised music regarding repertoire, improvisation and composition. Her 'everything is everything' aesthetic permeates her work in performance where a standard can lead to a free improvisation or an outburst...and back again. In over a 20 year span, Victor has released 9 albums as a leader to critical acclaim as well as seminal sideperson projects with leaders such as Anthony Braxton, Roswell Rudd, Nicole Mitchell, William Parker and Marc Ribot. Victor's most recent release as a leader is Wet Robots (ESP Disk, July 2018) with her latest group, SoundNoiseFUNK, featuring Joe Morris (guitar), Sam Newsome (sop. saxophone) & Reggie Nicholson (drums). Wet Robots has received 4.5 stars in Downbeat Magazine and placed #4 in the Jazz Vocal Category for NPR's Jazz Critic's Poll 2018 (in a tie with Kurt Elling)
Earlonne Woods
Earlonne Woods was born and raised in South Central Los Angeles. At 17 he was sent to prison for kidnap/robbery of a drug dealer and sentenced to 10 years. He served 6 years three months and was paroled in 1995. Still engaging in criminal activity In 1997, he was arrested and sentenced to 31-years-to-life for an alleged attempted second degree robbery under California's Three Strikes Law. While incarcerated this time, he received his GED, attended Coastline Community College and completed many vocational trade programs. In November 2018, California Governor Jerry Brown Commuted Earlonne's sentence after 21 years of incarceration. Upon his release, Earlonne was hired by PRX as a full-time producer for Ear Hustle a podcast he co-host and co-created while in prison.
Save the date!
The 2020 Kennedy Center Arts Summit is April 20, 2020. More info coming soon!
2020-2021 Citizen Artists Fellows
Major support is provided by
Kennedy Center Education
The Vice President of Education is generously endowed by the
Generous support for educational programs at the Kennedy Center is provided by the U.S. Department of Education.
Gifts and grants to educational programs at the Kennedy Center are provided by The Paul M. Angell Family Foundation; Bank of America; Capital One; The Morris and Gwendolyn Cafritz Foundation; Carnegie Corporation of New York; The Ednah Root Foundation; Harman Family Foundation; William R. Kenan, Jr. Charitable Trust; the Kimsey Endowment; The Kiplinger Foundation; Laird Norton Family Foundation; Lois and Richard England Family Foundation; Dr. Gary Mather and Ms. Christina Co Mather; The Markow Totevy Foundation; Dr. Gerald and Paula McNichols Foundation; The Morningstar Foundation; Myra and Leura Younker Endowment Fund; The Irene Pollin Audience Development and Community Engagement Initiatives;
Prince Charitable Trusts; Dr. Deborah Rose and Dr. Jan A. J. Stolwijk; Rosemary Kennedy Education Fund; The Embassy of the United Arab Emirates; The Victory Foundation; The Volgenau Foundation; Volkswagen Group of America; Jackie Washington; GRoW @ Annenberg and Gregory Annenberg Weingarten and Family; Wells Fargo; and generous contributors to the Abe Fortas Memorial Fund and by a major gift to the fund from the late Carolyn E. Agger, widow of Abe Fortas. Additional support is provided by the National Committee for the Performing Arts..
The content of these programs may have been developed under a grant from the U.S. Department of Education but does not necessarily represent the policy of the U.S. Department of Education. You should not assume endorsement by the federal government.