Sacred Places Summer 2012 | Page 9

UPDATE on Partners: Making Homes for the Arts in Sacred Places The 2012 Knight Arts Challenge Philadelphia winners gathered to celebrate at a recognition ceremony held at the Philadelphia Museum of Art last April. Partners’ President Bob Jaeger is on the far left in the back row. Photo courtesy of the Knight Foundation. The Arts in Sacred Places (AiSP) program has been working hard all winter long: a dance rehearsal space, a theatre office, exploration of a new arts center, a training program and a new Manual of Best Practices have all been on the program’s front burner. Grant News In late April, Partners received a $180,000 grant from the John S. and James L. Knight Foundation, as part of its Knight Arts Challenge, to start the nation’s first Theatrical Design Center. Since the award is a matching grant, the total project cost will be $360,000, making it Partners’ largest AiSP endeavor to date! The Theatrical Design Center was selected from over 1200 total applications, and Partners is honored to have received one of the larger awards. More importantly, this project could completely transform a diminishing congregation into a buzzing center of design creation and collaboration Training The training has begun! It launched in Philadelphia with 55 people from arts groups and congregations attending the introductory meeting. The excitement in the room was palpable, and four hours raced by, filled with conversation about mission, vision, and values that are shared by both arts groups and congregations alike. The conclusion was fairly obvious but validating – not only was our research regarding the feasibility of this idea spot on, but also both communities hunger for these partnerships. In mid-April Partners’ Chicago office launched the same program and our hopes are very high for similar enthusiasm. New Partnerships It goes without saying that dance troupes need plenty of floor space and ceiling height, but when Partners learned that JUNK, a Philadelphia-based dance company, was also interested in doing aerial work, Shiloh Baptist Church seemed like the perfect backdrop for their creative endeavors. Shiloh’s Sunday School auditorium is over 3,500 square feet and more than 35feet high with four floor-to-ceiling windows that make overhead lights unnecessary on any sunny day. JUNK and Shiloh recently signed a year-long lease that will hopefully be renewed for many years to come. Shiloh Baptist has also been the savior for an arts groups that was being pushed out of its office space. Back in February, Brat Productions, a small theatre company in Philadelphia, PA, was told that it had to vacate its office by April, giving it two months to find a new home. Desperate for assistance, Brat contacted Partners. Since Brat was getting its office at a belowmarket rate, it didn’t have a lot to put toward rent for a new office space. Partners brought them to Shiloh Baptist to meet with Reverend Edward Sparkman and Sacred Places • Summer 2012 • 8