|
10 Great Towns for Working Artists
Kim Hall Art Calendar, March, 2008
www.artcalendar.com
Are you looking for a change of scenery, a community filled with
artists selling their wares in a quaint main street district, a place
where you could affordably live just a few steps away from lively art
festivals, cultural attractions and theater? Then there’s good news for
you.
Dozens of small towns and cities across the country have instituted
artist relocation programs to encourage professional artists to move and
open businesses. Many offer low-interest loans, grants,
reasonably-priced mixed-use properties (meaning you could live, work and
open a gallery in the same building), tax benefits, marketing assistance
or other incentives specifically tailored for working artists. These
places recognize that professional artists are small business owners who
can help restore once-thriving communities, sometimes by creating jobs
for other locals, sometimes by just adding to the cultural flavor of
their revitalization plans and events.
Before you pick up your business and family, and head to the land of
milk and honey, though, be sure to do your research. It’s likely you’ll
still need to market your work outside of your new home to make a
living. And cheaper properties are going to need some renovation work,
probably more than what will be covered by the financial incentives the
communities are offering.
Here are some of our favorite places, from communities just starting
their programs, to a few that have been flourishing for years and are
still seeking newcomers. Many of the Web sites listed below will show
you which properties are available for sale. Otherwise, a quick trip to
Realtor.com can help you get a better idea of the cost of properties
available in a particular community:
 |
|
Glasstown Arts District, Millville, New Jersey
|
|
1. Millville, New Jersey
Glasstown Arts District
What makes it special: Designated by the National Trust
for Historic Preservation as a Main Street Community in 2004, the
Glasstown Arts District has been thriving for more than eight years.
With affordable, mixed-use properties featuring period architecture,
monthly art walks, a large public art center with gallery and studio
spaces, and lots of cultural activities, this river town of 26,000 is an
energetic place to call home.
What it offers: The town’s annual marketing budget
clocks in at just over $300,000, bringing in a lot of tourists. Plus, if
you purchase a mixed-use property in the Glasstown Arts District, you
can get a facade grant of up to $10,000 (1:1 match) to improve the front
of your home. While many Main Street Communities offer such grants for
businesses in their districts, it’s the mixed-use designation that makes
Millville unique among grant programs.
Web:
http://glasstownartsdistrict.com
Contact: Marianne Lods, Executive Director, Millville Development
Corporation, 1-800-887-4957,
Marianne@glasstownartsdistrict.com
 |
|
Haynie's Corner, Evansville, Indiana
|
|
2. Evansville, Indiana
Haynie’s Corner
What makes it special: More than a century old and once
a focal point of Evansville, Haynie’s Corner plays host to the largest
arts festival in the tri-state area, drawing 5,000 to 6,000 tourists
annually. While Evansville is home to more than 120,000 residents,
Haynie’s Corner is an artistic treasure in the region. The artist
relocation program, which began in 2006, is already attracting writers,
artists and musicians. One of the most exciting neighborhood projects
today is the restoration of the c. 1913 Alhambra Movie Theater, which
will become a mixed-use community center where, in addition to movies,
visitors can see plays, musical performances, piano and dance recitals,
and more. With an organic foods grocery store, coffee house,
award-winning public library, museum and a quiet street filled with
trees and mixed-use property featuring Victorian architecture, Haynie’s
Corner appeals to contemporary artists looking to live in a place where
they can turn back the clock.
What it offers: Evansville is offering what are
known as forgivable mortgages, up to $5,000 for exterior renovations of
properties, or up to $25,000 subsidy for building a new home in the
area. A forgivable mortgage is basically a loan you don’t have to pay
back, as long as you stay in the property you buy as a primary residence
for a certain number of years, in this case, five. Properties in the
neighborhood are affordable, with many in need of TLC between $10,000
and $100,000.
Web:
www.hayniescornerartsdistrict.org
Contact: Lana Abel, 812-436-7823 ext. 4,
lana@hayniescornerartsdistrict.org
|
|
| Rising Sun, Indiana |
|
3. Rising Sun, Indiana
What makes it special: Rising Sun wants its artists
to succeed, so it hosts a number of art business workshops in the town
regularly, including one March 14 through 16 by Art Calendar’s own
Contributing Writer Eric Maisel. A naturally beautiful river town with
the kind of scenery anyone would want to paint, Rising Sun has been
attracting artists and other creative people since the relocation
program began six years ago. And with a cozy population of 2,500 and a
location less than an hour from big cities like Cincinnati, Ohio, this
is the perfect small town with a passion for professional art training,
and close connections to great markets.
What it offers: Rising Sun is of the few places
offering a monthly artists’ stipend ($100 a month, offered through a
juried process).
Web:
http://enjoyrisingsun.com
Contact: Sherry Timms, 1-888-776-4786
 |
|
| Berea, Kentucky |
|
4. Berea, Kentucky
What makes it special: Known as The Folk Arts and
Crafts Capital of Kentucky,” Berea has a rich folk arts heritage dating
all the way back to the 1800s. Founded around a college that admitted
African-Americans and women into the school as early as 1855, this
forward-thinking community boasts more than 40 craftspersons and gallery
owners. From glass blowers, to weavers, to furniture-makers and more,
many of whom offer demonstrations or workshops regularly, artists from
this Appalachian community attract lots of tourists on a regular basis.
What it offers: In addition to aggressive marketing
efforts, Berea also offers a renowned reputation as an art community, a
location just off I-75 (one the major north-south routes in the
country), and a history of diversity, as well as a future focused on
sustainability. Further, students who are accepted to Berea College pay
no tuition. Instead, they have work programs, about 10 percent of which
involve learning the folk art trades popular in the town. The liberal
arts college does not accept top-tier students who would be able to get
scholarship and financial aid to attend other colleges, but rather good
students who can’t afford to go to another school.
Web:
www.berea.com (for the school,
www.berea.edu )
Contact: Berea Tourism Center, 800-598-5263,
kycraftcap@berea.com
 |
|
Village of the Arts, Bradenton, Florida
|
|
5. Bradenton, Florida
Village of the Arts
What makes it special: Celebrating its seventh
birthday, the Village of the Arts, with help of the city, a handful of
artists and the Village’s nonprofit organization, the Artists’ Guild of
Manatee, set out to create a community where artists of all disciplines
could live and work. Forty artists later, the Village is well on its
way. With monthly art walks that fill the streets with art lovers, loads
of special events, outdoor movie nights, gourmet food and a location
just minutes from the beach, this is the Gulf Coast’s largest artist
community in one of Florida’s most culturally-rich areas. Attracting a
variety of artists, including those middle agers in the midst of career
changes to fine arts, this focused arts district is full of burgeoning
and established artists who passionately support one another’s careers.
What it offers: The city is providing artists who
purchase property in specific areas of the district with up to $10,000
in matching renovation grants (1:1 match). There are also a variety of
properties available with designated
mixed-use zoning.
Web:
www.villageofthearts.com
Contact: 941-747-8056 or
villageofthearts@gmail.com . To reach city, e-mail
mike.kennedy@cityofbradenton.com .
 |
|
Chatanooga, Tennessee
|
|
6. Chattanooga, Tennessee
What makes it special: Chattanooga invites artists
of all disciplines, from graphic artists and interior designers, to
sculptors, writers and musicians, to relocate to the “Scenic City,” a
place that was flourishing with the arts well before the Arts Move
program was instituted just two years ago. The program has already
welcomed 25 new artists into permanent residences in Phases I and II,
and has just announced a call for Phase III. Featuring internationally
recognized artists as well as up-and-comers, Chattanooga has a thriving
art scene in a great location, just two hours from Atlanta, Georgia and
two hours from Nashville. Add to that mixed-use zoning, industrial
property at an affordable price and more than 30 art and culture
organizations, including symphonies, museums and theater, and this is
one waterfront community where a passionate working artist can really
plant his feet.
What it offers: Artists purchasing property in
qualifying neighborhoods can receive a $15,000, five-year forgivable
mortgage.
Web:
http://artsmove.org
Contact: ArtsMove, c/o CreateHere,
info@artsmove.org , or 423-648-2195
 |
|
Paducah, Kentucky
|
|
7. Paducah, Kentucky
What makes it special: Think about artist towns, and
one of the first ones that cometo mind is Paducah. With more than 50
artists living, working and selling their creations, this small town
features a fantastic cost of living, mixed-use properties, lots of art
events, a performing arts theater, an art center, a community theater
and the charm of the south. It’s not just about the business, but the
camraderie of Paducah, with its pot luck dinners, study groups and artsy
atmosphere, that makes it a special
place to live.
What it offers: Besides a central location and the
support of other professional artists, Paducah offers a $2,500
reimbursement for any design or renovation costs involved with the
purchase of one of their charming properties, plus 100 percent financing
for the purchase and rehabilitation of an existing structure or the
building of a new structure. If you’re building, there are even free
lots available for new construction.
Web:
http://paducaharts.com/
Contact: City of Paducah Planning Department,
270-444-8690,
artinfo@ci.paducah.ky.us
8. Clarksville, Missouri
What makes it special: With just 490 residents, this
quiet Mississippi-river town features 11 working artists, including
furniture- and cabinet-makers, potters, iron workers and glassblowers,
many of whom offer demonstrations and workshops to tourists coming in
from St. Louis, just 75 miles away. The last Missouri town with a
business district right on the Mississippi, Clarksville is almost out of
property, as all of the storefronts have filled up with renters, but a
few properties are still for sale.
What it offers: Low cost of living, a good tourist
market and a generally comfortable, quiet pace of life makes Clarksville
a special place for an artist trying to escape from the big city.
Web:
www.clarksvillemo.us
Contact: Submit a query online, or call the mayor’s
office, 573-242-3336
 |
|
Pawtucket, Rhode Island
|
|
9. City of Pawtucket, Rhode Island
What makes it special: A blue-collar, gritty mill
town that needed a way to revitalize itself a decade ago, Pawtucket
might just be God’s Mecca for Working Artists. In fact, the city has
been so successful in attracting and maintaining artists that it serves
as an official model for other communities planning to institute artist
relocation programs of their own. Focused on helping artists make a
living, city representatives walk new artists through the process of
purchasing, permitting and renovating a new property, and they maintain
a database of new properties on the market that would be suitable for
artists. This includes old mill space (for as little as $6 to $7 per
square foot) and commercial properties, suitable for artists’ studios.
Plus, the city has an annual fund of $25,000 to fund arts groups, and
host and advertise art events. With a local government that supports the
artists, a convenient location just off I-95 and hundreds of working
artists already established in the city of 72,000, Pawtucket is a great
location for an artist who wants a solid career footing.
What it offers: One of nine communities in Rhode
Island with state tax exemptions for working artists, Pawtucket
certifies eligible artists or galleries who get state tax sales
exemptions for original art or limited production works of art sold
within the 307-acre arts and entertainment district. The law (Rhode
Island General Law 44-30-1.1) also exempts artists in the district from
state income tax on income generated from their work. Additionally, the
city sometimes offers annual grants of up to $2,000 (more than $10,000
budgeted) for an artist or art organization who creates a piece of work,
or organizes an artistic or musical event, that primarily benefits the
City of Pawtucket and its residents.
Web:
www.pawtucketri.com
Contact: Herb Weiss, Arts and Cultural Activities,
401-728-0500 ext. 437, or
hweissri@aol.com
, or cell at 401-742-HERB.
|
|
Oil City, Pennsylvania
|
|
10. Oil City, Pennsylvania
What makes it special: The birthplace of the oil
industry and former headquarters of Standard Oil, Quaker State and
Pennzoil, this northwestern Pennsylvania town is reinventing itself into
a lively, committed arts community. With affordable Victorian homes and
mixed-use properties (many under $50,000), theater, music, a branch
campus of Clarion University, easy accessibility to art markets from
Cleveland to Buffalo, and dozens of artists who have already claimed
this small town as home, Oil City is one of the best deals on the
market.
What it offers: 100 percent fixed-rate financing up
to $150,000 on live-work space (when using First National Bank). This
includes rehab costs, and mortgage insurance is waived. $7,500 toward
down payment and closing costs on a residence through Venango County
Affordable Housing (income guidelines apply). Plus there are
opportunities for facade grants and loans, tax abatements for commercial
properties and tax breaks for certain properties in the Historic
District. Downtown studio space is available at $0.49 per square foot,
with the first three months rent free.
Web:
www.artsoilcity.com
Contact: Arts Oil City, jwheeler@csonline.net or
814-676-5303
Kim Hall is a Florida artist who serves as Art Calendar’s
Managing Editor. She can be reached at
khall@ArtCalendar.com .
Art Calendar
is the only subscription-driven, business-oriented magazine published
specifically for visual artists. We aim to connect artists with income
and exhibition opportunities, and help them build successful careers by
teaching proper art marketing techniques from art professionals. Each
month, we list art opportunities and calls to artists, including grants
and fellowships for artists, competitions, juried exhibitions, art
galleries reviewing portfolios, art festivals, artist residencies and
more.
At ArtCalendar.com
, artists can find exclusive art business tips and secrets of the trade,
as well as instructional and informational videos, profiles of
successful working artists, and insights into upcoming issues of
Art Calendar
magazine.
ArtScuttlebutt.com is the online community for
Art Calendar
and ArtCalendar.com
. Artists are invited to create a free profile at
ArtScuttlebutt.com and post an online art gallery, as well as
participate in the discussion forum and take advantage of other services
at the site.
Art Calendar, the
business magazine for visual artists
|