Complete coverage of the Big Canvas Confab

Dec. 6  

Over 200 artisans, politicians, civic leaders and plain old citizens who love the arts, care about culture and worry about the economy turned out on a pristine Saturday afternoon in King of Prussia to craft an action plan to improve arts and culture throughout Southeastern Pennsylvania.       

The Big Canvas Confab, a creative way to feed back citizens’ voices on those subjects to Philadelphia City Council members and Pennsylvania arts and elected officials, was the culmination of more than a dozen rounds of forums held in the region during the past six months.

Watch video of elected officials feeding back what they heard in the eight discussion groups.

The civic engagement, moderated by Harris Sokoloff of the Penn Project for Civic Engagement and Chris Satullo of WHYY, was designed to get people talking about who uses arts and culture resources, what values the arts and culture bring to the community, what barriers there are to participating, and what should be prioritized. 

Video of discussion groups 


The focus of Saturday’s roundtable discussions was four approaches to a regional arts plan, each of which was derived during fall forums that continued the discussions held during the summer. These were:

1. Extend the Arts Experience
2. Nurture Children's Future
3. Build the Creative Economy
4. Foster Quality of Community

The Big Canvas team - that is you! - will continue pushing this conversation forward with regional stakeholders in the coming months.

Complete video coverage of the conference will be posted as soon as possible. For more information check out www.greatexpectationsnow.com

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I'm the founder and president of Blue-Eyed Muse, an educational and consulting firm for individuals and businesses invoved in the new wave of the handcraft movement. Our mission is 1) foster “right livelihood” for fine craft and indie craft artists, 2) improve the standard of living for arts and craft industry professionals by helping them succeed in business, 3) increase access to studio training for craft artisans, 4) create opportunities for community for craft entrepreneurs, and 5) promote handcrafts as objects that enrich the human spirit. I'd like to help create a crafters community corridor from Philadelphia to Wilmington, beginning with indie salons hosted by craft artistans across the area. To get involved e-mail me at vjolson@verizon.net Val Olson