Future Arts has created a multitude of programs to engage our Creative Economy, placing artists at the forefront of interdisciplinary creative thought leadership. Below are surveys we have studied to build our programs based on community needs. Join us!
Investing in creative skills and understanding their role in the wider economy is more important now than ever. With technological advances like automation and artificial intelligence gaining momentum and investment, it is equally important to invest in jobs that humans are uniquely qualified to do. Our focus is on fields that center creativity, the human experience, and the creation and preservation of culture.
-City of Seattle Creative Economy Report 2019
Tech-centered artists are admirably poised to grapple with larger societal and sectoral challenges—whether engaging with audiences during the COVID-19 pandemic or responding to calls for greater equity and inclusion in the arts and technology fields. They can be invaluable partners for policymakers, educators, and practitioners in arts and non-arts sectors alike.
“I think what’s really important right now is understanding that the technologies around us are not these systems or black boxes that we have to just operate within, that you can pull them apart and question them and make your own things.” —Lauren Lee McCarthy, creator of p5.js and Processing Foundation board member
-Tech as Art: Supporting Artists Who Use Technology as a Creative Medium| National Endowment for the Arts, June 2021
What types of engagements are you interested in?
Note: These will be customized to your team needs.
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