The art of promoting the arts
The clarinet, an MBA from Wharton and acting have served David Colley
well. After only four years as a resident in Newport Beach, Colley,
40, has brought together those parts of his background to serve as
chairman of the Newport Beach Arts Commission.
The commission is a seven-member, appointed city board with job
duties including giving city officials advice about public art and
sponsoring summer concerts. Colley acknowledged that Newport Beach is
“conservative” when it comes to the arts, but he does see it as a
city with a great appreciation for the arts.
So, his commission, which Colley said includes people with skills
in sculpting, painting, administrating and educating, works to bring
Newport residents new ways to enjoy the arts. It also promotes art,
with grant programs, among children and seniors and in the city’s
neighborhoods.
Shakespeare By the Sea, for instance, was a recent commission
success. On Aug. 7 and Aug. 8, the commission sponsored free
performances of “Richard III” and “The Two Gentlemen of Verona” at
Grant Howald Park. The popularity of that event has grown over three
years, Colley said.
Colley seemed proud of the weekend performances but didn’t stop
there. He also touted the series of summer concerts that the
commission sponsors, along with other arts ideas the commission is
bouncing around.
Ideas on the horizon to enhance the arts include public art
competitions and maybe even a city building dedicated to the arts. Of
course, in a time of tightening government budgets, particularly in
the arts, Colley had no guarantees.
The Pilot’s Ryan Carter sat down with Colley to talk about the
arts in Newport Beach.
How successful have the Shakespeare By the Sea performances been?
How did they start performing here?
We started it three years ago. Shakespeare by the Sea is a company
out of San Pedro, and they contacted us, among other cities, trying
to build their schedule up. It was kind of a Los Angeles
County-based, or focused, organization that hadn’t really made it
this far south. At the same time we were looking at opportunities to
spread the arts greater in terms of free events in the city. So, it
kind of seemed like a good match. So, we started with just one
performance, which to our surprise drew about 700 people to Grant
Howald Park. And we decided to do it again last year. We had
somewhere in the neighborhood of 2,000 people come out to
performances last weekend, across both of the shows.
The company has told us we are their biggest site, that we have
the biggest audience that they bring to their organization.
That makes us feel we’re bringing something to the city that
people really want. The Arts Commission, with the help of its
foundation, is responsible for sponsoring it, bringing it and
fostering it.
Will it be back next year?
We definitely plan on having it back next year.
What is the artistic climate in Newport Beach like right now? Is
there a hot genre, or kind of art that is flourishing?
I’m not sure there really is one. It’s a pretty conservative city
compared to some places that have some pretty radical downtown areas,
like Santa Ana, which has put in an Artists Village, which has some
galleries that are kind of out-there. I would say we’re a little
closer in alignment to maybe Laguna Beach -- you know, an older,
established beach city. You’ll see a lot of nautical-themed stuff,
beach scenes, pastels, water colors. It’s a beautiful environment and
city, so there have been a lot of people who want to go out and
capture that.
So, I’m not sure it’s a real edgy town when it comes to art, but
certainly it’s a kind of art-appreciative kind of town.
What are some challenges for art in the Newport Beach area? What
would you, a leader in terms of the arts in this city, like to see
more of artistically?
I think we’d like to see a little more of everything we’ve kind of
started continued to the next level. For example, things in the fine
and visual arts. We have a couple of exhibitions, which the
commission sponsors directly, for the artist to have an opportunity
to have their work shown, juried and exhibited. We have galleries in
town, and we want to kind of further the artists’ outreach into those
areas. We had a brochure we did earlier this year. That was the first
time anybody tried to catalog the arts in Newport Beach. One of the
other things we do is offer grants, to award them to civic
organizations to benefit citizens of Newport Beach directly. Most of
those are education areas.
The arts have been significantly reduced in schools, and we’re
passionate about that in terms of making sure those kids get the same
kind of exposure that we did. So, those grants benefit Newport Beach
specifically. We’d like to increase the budget for that and make sure
more of that kind of thing happens. In performing arts, we’ve got not
only Shakespeare, but we’ve got these concerts in the park that we’ve
done. On all of these fronts we’d like to see more of that.
We also have public art, and we talk about opportunities for that
in the future.
Why is youngsters’ participation in the arts important?
I’m not the educator, but from my observation of successful
people, many of them have been exposed to the arts in a significant
way, at an early age. And it kind of helps make them a well-rounded
person.
Is there enough emphasis on the arts, in this area or in the
state?
I don’t think it’s endemic to Newport Beach as a community, I
think we might be more art-aware than a lot of communities. But
certainly as a state and a country we’re really in a time of reduced
funding. It’s unfortunately an easy line to cut in the budget.
Have state budget cuts in the arts affected Newport Beach at all?
Probably only indirectly. The state sponsors organizations such as
something called Arts Orange County, which is the Orange
County-based, arts-support organization, and their budget has
diminished their ability to support other smaller organizations out
there. But it hasn’t really affected our current budget from the city
in a significant way.
It’s the luxury of living in a city of Newport Beach. I never feel
that burden in that way. The fact that we even have an arts
commission, and as supportive as the city is, is a good thing. We
also have a foundation that in the long-run can raise additional
money for things that perhaps the city can’t fund. Because of our
residential base, we have options that some cities don’t have.
Tell me about the Arts Commission. What is its goal or mission?
The Arts Commission, with its seven members, is one of several
bodies appointed by the City Council. It has a three-fold mission.
One is to advise the City Council on anything having to do with the
arts, aesthetically, any project proposed to the city that has an
arts-related theme on it. It could be a proposal for a public piece
of art. It could be advice on aesthetic design of ash trays. It could
be anything having to do with signage color.
We also provide organizations with funding through a grant
process. And third is providing these events in the city.
What kind of budget does it work on?
Small. Infinitesimal, compared to the budget for everything else.
Could you put a ballpark on it?
We get a budget of $40,000 a year to do the grants. We have one
staff member, so we also have a small budget for that.
What motivated you to be on the Arts Commission?
I have an arts background personally. I was a clarinetist as a kid
-- played that all the way to college and then got into acting. I
grew up right outside of Washington, D.C., in Virginia, and my dad
worked for the federal government for 40 years. His hobby was
politics. So, I have a lot of depth of knowledge of that side of the
world, along with being a businessman. With the intersection of those
three things, I decided to get more involved in the civic affairs of
Newport Beach.
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