community arts proposal SPW Art | ART-ACT Art | Community | Art Contest | Web School | Free Graphics
Site Intro |Agency History | Events/Activities |Screen Print Workshop | Help Us
art policy debate

Support the "Art of the T-shirt"
Invest in Proven Community Programs

Stabilize the "Art of the T-shirt". This proven community art exhibit series has a ten year history serving the Uptown, Edgewater, North Lake View communities and artists from around Chicagoland. This request is to provide start-up staff, and seed funding over the next three years to solidify our programs, establish our development office and initiate our planned venture selling artists' prints on T-shirts. It will allow us to build our web site as a Cyber Center in a community of diversity on the Internet. This request is for $225,000 ($75,000 per year) to demonstrate our programs.

Grass-roots community art organizations have taken a beating over the past twenty years as the first hit and continuously cut until few independents remain. Yet, it is in the many small community art groups and organizations that the great majority of local artists are nourished. Through these grass-roots groups, many who rarely reach out for art are introduced to it where they live. The "Art of the T-shirt" reaches these groups because our "Screen Print Workshop for Artists" connects with the artists that speak to them. ART-ACT is beginning to reach such artists on a global scale.

The "Art of the T-shirt" has collected art all summer-long hanging exhibits in public libraries, then bringing the exhibits together for a "T-shirt Art Harvest Festival" in the last weekend in September for over ten years. Youth show next to mature professionals. Artists are not only invited to participate but called on the phone and encouraged to show! Forty thousand people saw our exhibits annually in the public libraries. Three-hundred-thirty-thousand households are reached by our weekly cable TV program during the months of July through September. The website we are building has unlimited potential to reach people worldwide. We have survived the hardships but the community institution we have built is fragile. We have run an agency doing $75,000 worth of programming activity a year on a $10,000 annual budget for too long. We need support to bare bounteous fruit into the future.

The Uptown Multi-Cultural Art Center incorporated in 1987. Our purpose, to found an arts agency that could market art to support its activities, still motivates our actions. We built an art gallery on North Clark Street where the first "Art of the T-shirt" exhibit hung in 1989. Relocating in 1990 to the American Indian Center, the "Art of the T-shirt" took center stage in our programming. We explored its potential for a decade. Six years ago we constructed a screen print workshop, and two years ago began building a community computer lab to serve enormous local needs and to backup all our activities. Our cable TV show promotes the art and artists of the "Art of the T-shirt". These same programs are a foundation needed to contribute to the success of a venture we have planned since our founding. We have refined our plans over the years. It is to market the graphic prints of artists in our screen print workshop on t-shirts over the Internet.

The "Art of the T-shirt" draws artists from all around Chicago. As it grows - so grows an informal network connecting these communities. Inclusive, not exclusive - the "Art of the T-shirt" recruits the self-educated, as well as college educated artists. It is not surprising that often those expressing their cultural heritage most freely have not been extensively re-educated in institutions of the dominate culture. The accessibility of the "Art of the T-shirt", for artists to show and the public to attend, is not its only strength. Its name has potential to market artists work and provide many artists with opportunities to survive in community settings by their creativity. The imprinted t-shirt industry represents 16 billion dollars annually. This annual exhibit in the center of America, the birth place of the T-shirt, is an automatic hit once promoted properly. The result we seek is sustainable programs in related arts that serve youth, artists, and the public.

Ten years of work provides us with our identity. Eight years of exploring inexpensive shortcuts and teaching artists how to screen print their graphic work provide us with many screens of art ready to print and artists ready to license their designs for sale. We have a startup facility. Our computer lab insures we have access to the technology we need and the training facilities to teach the skills required to compete on the Internet. Our website exudes the character of our annual "Art of the T-shirt" exhibits. We are positioning it locally to be a hub for art policy discussion and as a valuable aid to those new to website design. Finally, the cable TV programming we have produced over the last three seasons is material on our artists for many projects in the future. We have the pieces. We need the string to tie it all together. Stabilizing the "Art of the T-shirt will allow us to solidify this suite of programs.

Our Board of Directors are representative of the artists exhibiting with us. We mail regularly to 460 artists who have expressed interest in our programs. Two hundred sixty-six have exhibited with us. Sixty have studied screen printing in our workshop. Our next step is to expand artists involvement in and invite ownership of the "Art of the T-shirt" so those of us who built the exhibits can focus on building our venture. This proposal requests one full-time administrator (Chris Drew - $25,000), three part-time employees (an office aid, artist/volunteer organizer, and screen print workshop lab tech - $38,000), audit and accounting costs ($3,000), and other costs (materials, mailings, phone, website, rent - $9,000). This is a total of $75,000 for each of the three years of this proposal request ($225,000).

As a result of this support an administrator will be able to work full time for us. He will have minimum help needed to maintain a professional office. The organizer will manage the volunteers, interns and artists. The Screen Print Workshop Lab Tech will train and aid artists making possible regular lab hours.

The screen print workshop tech will help train artists in basic screen print procedures and maintain the screen print workshop. Our submission of grant proposals, aided for the first time by staff support, will increase greatly. We expect to find additional support for our workshops once we gain seed support for initial staff.

In the first year we will begin work on our business plan. By year two we will seek support to test this venture. During our third year we will be raising added funds from our screen print workshop and Internet T-shirt business. Our programs will be better staffed due to our greater ability to seek funding. We will be in a position to handle year four without your support.

After three years of seed support the "Art of the T-shirt" will be run by artists. It will be expanding into new communities. Artists' information and several hundred prints will be available on-line. Our website will be averaging tens of thousands of visits per week. We will have our own domain name and be handling credit card transactions. Our computer lab will be focused on teaching basic computer skills and web site design. We will begin to be known around the world as the community art agency that dresses Chicago and the Internet in t-shirt art. These outcomes are measurable. We are ready to take the next step. Give us a boost up!


charitable tax deduction SPW Art | ART-ACT Art | Community | Art Contest | Web School | Free Graphics
Site Intro |Agency History | Events/Activities |Screen Print Workshop | Help Us