"This article
appears courtesy of the New York Foundation
for the Arts (NYFA). For additional
information about NYFA, please visit
www.nyfa.org or email
nyfaweb@nyfa.org" By
Bill Rauch
All art is community-based. Whether it’s
a multi-million-dollar commercial venture or
a neighborhood youth project, all art is
rooted in community.
So how as artists do we take
responsibility for the ways in which our
work is connected to our communities?
Consciously or not, we are constantly
addressing three questions with our artistic
work: What’s being communicated? Who’s doing
the communicating? To whom is it being
communicated? Different artists begin to
answer these questions in a different order.
At Cornerstone Theater Company, for
instance, we always start with the audience
or the “to whom” (our collaborating
community); from there, we build who’s doing
the communicating (selecting the artists),
and finally, what’s being communicated
(artistic content). But whatever the order
in which they are approached, artists
ultimately have to answer all three
questions.
But let’s back up for a
moment and define community. Or rather,
let’s acknowledge that the first step in
building a work of art in collaboration with
a community is to define that community. As
individuals, our identities are almost
infinitely complex and fluid, and at any
given moment we may choose to self-identify
with communities different from the ones
with which others identify us. And yet, an
artist defining a community is starting with
the notion of something shared by a group of
people: perhaps the geographic boundaries of
a town or neighborhood, perhaps a shared
ethnicity or language, or perhaps even
something as deliberately random as a shared
birthday.
The impetus behind a project
may come from a member of the community or
from an outside artist, or from an
individual who is both a professional artist
and a community member. Wherever the initial
idea comes from, however, the project will
have the best chances of success through the
building of strong partnerships. All
communities have cohesion but also
divisions. The artist’s job is often to
reach out to multiple constituencies, to
collaborate with as many sectors of the
community as possible.
Respect is the single most
important principle in creating a work of
art in collaboration with a community. A
professional artist working in a community
setting brings a valuable set of art-making
skills and past experience as an art-maker.
A community participant brings to the table
the equally valuable asset of life
experience as a member of that community.
For the project to flourish, the artist must
recognize the value of what the community
offers, respecting the needs, issues, and
traditions of the community as embodied in
its members.
Respect is best manifested
through listening: not mere politely-nodding
listening, but hardcore, deep, “I’m willing
to rethink my entire way of looking at the
world” listening. As you listen, remember
that each encounter with a member of your
collaborating community, however unlikely a
collaborator on the surface, may carry the
key that unlocks the heart of your
artwork—and often, in the process, changes
your life.
A few questions and practical
steps in building a work of art with a
community:
Why does the project need to
exist? Is there a burning community issue or
need? Who are the stakeholders in the
question at hand? What are the multiple
contexts, including the historical context?
Keep your process open enough to be
surprised and to reverse the expectations
you start with.
Identify a community liaison
or, better yet, a group of community
advisors that represent the diversity within
the community you want represented in your
project. Meet with them on a regular basis,
keeping them informed, and seeking their
input at every stage of the project’s life.
Seek unlikely alliances.
Meet with members of the
community to learn what’s at stake for
community members, and ultimately to develop
the content of your artwork. Judith Baca of
Social & Public Art Resource Center in
Venice, California, has a useful principle
in her community-based mural-making: the
community has final responsibility for
content, while the artist has final
responsibility for the aesthetic form in
which that content is communicated.
One-on-one interviews, story circles, and
workshops are possible ways to interact. Set
clear guidelines and boundaries about
ownership of material that is generated so
that no one feels taken advantage of.
Spend as much time in the
community as you possibly can, not only
through formal meetings for your project,
but also informally. Walk the streets,
attend religious services, eat in the
restaurants. Go where people gather, share,
and listen. Food is a great way to bring
people together.
If you are creating with
members of the community who are
nonprofessional or first-time artists,
recognize and respect the many pressures
that your collaborators will be balancing
along with their participation in your art,
including school, work, and family. Time
management is often the single biggest
challenge in working with community
collaborators.
Seek partnerships with other
artists or groups of artists, when
appropriate. A cross-disciplinary approach
may deepen your efforts.
Share the work with an
audience that is community-based. Don’t
“create and run.” Once the artwork is
created, what will be left behind? Are there
skills that can be imparted through the
process? What about capacity-building,
materials, or other resources? How can you
maximize the chances that more art will be
created in this community?
Perhaps you see divisions
within a community and want to help build
bridges across those differences. Perhaps
you want to celebrate the lives of ordinary
citizens. Perhaps you want to challenge
certain accepted values. Perhaps you simply
want to start with a blank canvas and begin
to explore from scratch with a group of
fellow human beings. Whatever your starting
point, community collaboration is a journey
that will take you to unexpected and deeply
rewarding places. In my experience, it is
always hard and always worth it. As artists,
we have the ongoing opportunity to set an
example about how to remake the world. Let’s
get to work.
Bibliography
Boal, Augusto. Theatre of
the Oppressed. Trans. Charles A. and
Maria-Odilia Leal McBride. New York: Theatre
Communications Group, 1985.
General theory/practice of theater that
resists social dominance. Related, but not
necessarily exclusive to, community-based
arts.
Broyles-Gonzalez, Yvonne.
El Teatro Campesino: Theater in the Chicano
Movement. Austin: University of Texas
Press, 1994.
Though somewhat academic and focused on a
particular company, Broyles-Gonzalez’s book
is a useful history of this important
ensemble movement.
Burnham, Linda Frye and
Steven Durland, eds. Citizen Artist:
Twenty Years of Art in the Public Arena.
Gardiner, NY: Critical Press, 1998.
This collection of essays and interviews
addresses a wide range of topics relating to
public art projects. “Of the People, By the
People, For the People: The Field of
Community Performance” by Richard Owen Geer
is an especially useful introduction.
Cocke, Dudley, Harry Newman,
and Janet Salmons-Rue, eds. From the
Ground Up: Grassroots Theater in Historical
and Contemporary Perspective. Ithaca:
Cornell University, 1993. Excellent summary
of conference focusing on community-based
theater.
Cohen-Cruz, Jan. “A
Hyphenated Field: Community-Based Theater in
the USA.” New Theatre Quarterly 16.4 (2000):
364-378.
A recent, concise overview.
Cohen-Cruz, Jan, ed.
Radical Street Performance: An International
Anthology. New York: Routledge, 1998.
An extensive array of writings by scholars,
activists, performers, directors, critics,
and journalists on performance in Europe,
Africa, China, India, and both the Americas,
describing engagement with issues as diverse
as abortion, colonialism, the environment,
and homophobia, to name a few.
Kershaw, Baz. Politics of
Performance: Radical Theater as Cultural
Intervention. New York: Routledge, 1992.
Kershaw theorizes the social-change
potential of radical community-based theater
in England in the latter half of the 20th
century.
Kuftinec, Sonja. Staging
America: Cornerstone and Community-Based
Theater. Carbondale: Southern Illinois
University Press, 2003.
Includes excellent historical background on
community-based theater, along with
Cornerstone Theatre case studies and theory
around the field in general.
Lacy, Suzanne. Mapping the
Terrain: New Genre Public Art.
Washington: Bay Press, 1996.
This book is more about public art in
general than theater. It deals with the role
of the critic and the history of public art
practice in the late 20th-century United
States.
O’Brien, Mark and Craig
Little, eds. Reimagining America: The
Arts of Social Change. Santa Cruz: New
Society Publishers, 1990.
Includes a broad range of social-based art
forms, including community theater.
Rohd, Michael. Theatre for
Community, Conflict and Dialogue.
Portsmouth, NH: Heinemann Press, 1998.
The purpose of this manual is to provide a
clear look at the process and specifics
involved in the “Hope Is Vital” interactive
theater techniques. The organization is
sequential, providing a blueprint for
creating a workable plan.
www.communityarts.net
The Community Arts Network (CAN) supports
the belief that the arts are an integral
part of a healthy culture, providing both
intellectual nourishment and social benefit,
and that community-based arts provide
significant value both to communities and
artists.
Bill Rauch is artistic
director and co-founder of Cornerstone
Theater Company. He has directed over 40 of
the company’s productions, many of them
collaborations with diverse communities
within Cornerstone’s home city of Los
Angeles and across the nation.
Representative works include Steelbound, a
collaboration with former steelworkers and
Touchstone Theatre in the empty iron foundry
of the Bethlehem Steel plant in Bethlehem,
PA; The Central Ave. Chalk Circle,
the culmination of a 15-month residency in
the LA neighborhood of Watts and winner of
LA’s Ovation Award for Best Production of
the Year; and A Community Carol, an
Arena Stage mainstage production in
collaboration with communities east of the
Anacostia River. Rauch has also directed
Anthony Clarvoe’s contemporary adaptation of
The Wild Duck and Alison Carey’s
adaptation of Peter Pan at Great
Lakes Theatre Festival, a commissioned
community collaboration with residents of
New Haven on the Long Wharf Theatre
mainstage. He directed Cornerstone’s
largest-ever community collaboration, For
Here or to Go?, as a special holiday
event on the mainstage of the Mark Taper
Forum. In recent years, Rauch directed the
world premiere of Lisa Loomer’s Living
Out at the Taper, Robert Schenkkan’s
Handler, and the world premiere of Jerry
Turner’s adaptation of Ibsen’s Hedda
Gabler at the Oregon Shakespeare
Festival. He also conceived and co-directed
Medea/Macbeth/Cinderella, the
season-opening show of new artistic director
James Bundy’s tenure at Yale Repertory
Theater.
Rauch sat on the board of
Theatre Communications Group, the national
service organization for professional
nonprofit theatres, from 1992—1998 (member
of executive committee, 1996—98), and has
served as a peer panelist for the National
Endowment for the Arts, the California Arts
Council, the Los Angeles County Music and
Performing Arts Commission, The Durfee
Foundation, the Very Special Arts “Art &
Soul” Festival, and the Playwrights Center.
Rauch gave the keynote
address at Theatre Puget Sound’s inaugural
conference. In April of 1999, he testified
to the House Appropriations Subcommittee on
the NEA. In 1994, he was one of four
US-based artists chosen for the TCG
International Observership Grant to Mexico.
Rauch has lectured extensively about
community-based art and Cornerstone's
methodology, and most recently taught a
course in directing at the University of
California at Los Angeles. Rauch has won
L.A. Weekly, Garland, Drama-Logue, and
Helen Hayes awards for his direction of
Cornerstone shows, as well as having been
nominated for Emmy and Ovation awards. He
has been nominated for both the CalArts Herb
Alpert Award (twice) and the Rockefeller
Foundation’s Next Generation Network, and
was the only artist to win the inaugural
Leadership for A Changing World Award.
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