Sacred Places Fall 2010 | Page 10

EXEMPLARY PROJECTS AT SACRED PLACES (cont.) and other relatives who suddenly find themselves caring for their children’s children. Although G.A.P. offered reading and crafts for younger children and sports activities for teens, Brown expressed concern that teenagers with more artistic inclinations did not have an outlet or a focus; Art Sanctuary established the North Stars program to provide that outlet. Since its beginning, more than 125 teens have been transformed by the program, including all six of Eileen Brown’s grandchildren, as well as many other G.A.P. youth. This year, Brown once again sat in the audience, proudly watching her two youngest grandchildren, Rasheeda and Tyann, perform in the African dance numbers. While her granddaughters grin and glow after strutting on stage, Eileen Brown knows that North Stars’ true value comes from the program’s less glamorous moments. The gradual mastery of difficult dance steps and the steady presence of North Stars’ instructors, all accomplished artists in their own right, are what will make a lasting difference in the teens’ lives. “It builds up their self esteem,” she says. “They do better in school.” Cary notes that shyer kids sometimes gain confidence at North Stars and then become so involved in student council or theatre at their schools, they no longer have time for the program. “Sometimes we’re victims of our own success,” she jokes. Susan Seifert’s research supports these observations. Social Impact of the Arts has demonstrated that neighborhoods with thriving community arts programs experience lower truancy and delinquency rates. Church of the Advocate makes a fitting home for organizations like Art Sanctuary and G.A.P., which are part of a buzzing hive of community services at the church, including a soup kitchen and clothes cupboard based in the neo-Gothic National Historic Landmark. While its ample campus and cavernous interior support Art Sanctuary’s practical needs for storage, rehearsal and performance space, the church’s activist history is also a source of heady inspiration. As the site of the city’s Black Power Conference in 1968 and of the Episcopal Church’s first ordination of women in 1974, the Church of the Advocate resonates with the significant contributions it has made — not just to Philadelphia, but also to the world. As Cary says, “People get that we’re righteous if we’re at the Advocate.” 9 • Sacred Places • www.sacredplaces.org • Fall 2010 And though Art Sanctuary moved its offices to South Philadelphia this spring in order to further its commitment to build bridges to other neighborhoods and communities, the Advocate remains Art Sanctuary’s true home, where North Stars kids build confidence as they learn to play guitar and dance, and where renowned artists like Charles Fuller tell inner-city youth their own stories of struggle and triumph. “Our groundedness comes from our relationship with the church,” says Tarana Burke, Art Sanctuary’s managing director. “We will always be a part of the church.” An Emerging Project: Arts in Sacred Places Partners knows anecdotally and from broad research that congregations host a variety of artistic and cultural programs. Yet, in order to encourage more connections between sacred places and those in the arts community who need space, the patterns, dynamic, and opportunities of these arts activities must be understood. Currently, there is little known about the sustainability of performing arts activities in sacred places, the capacity for more intensive use, and the tools and resources that would be useful to bring arts groups and congregations together in mutually beneficial, sustainable space-sharing arrangements. With funding from the Barra Foundation, Partners’ new Community-Based Arts in Sacred Places aims to gather and analyze data on congregation-hosted arts programs in Center City Philadelphia, and to use that data to create effective tools and technical assistance that encourage a greater number of venues for dance, music, and theater, and to pilot a matching service that will connect churches that have space to offer with arts groups in need of space. This intensive, individualized process will go beyond a simple database by helping both the congregations and the arts organizations to establish strong, long-term space-sharing relationships in Philadelphia neighborhoods.