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File #: 81269    Version: 1 Name: Honoring the 50th Anniversary of the Madison Arts Commission
Type: Resolution Status: Passed
File created: 12/13/2023 In control: COMMON COUNCIL
On agenda: 1/9/2024 Final action: 1/9/2024
Enactment date: 1/11/2024 Enactment #: RES-24-00001
Title: Honoring the 50th Anniversary of the Madison Arts Commission
Sponsors: Marsha A. Rummel, Satya V. Rhodes-Conway, Juliana R. Bennett, Nikki Conklin, Jael Currie, John W. Duncan, Tag Evers, Derek Field, Yannette Figueroa Cole, MGR Govindarajan, Barbara Harrington-McKinney, Isadore Knox Jr., Amani Latimer Burris, Sabrina V. Madison, Dina Nina Martinez-Rutherford, Charles Myadze, Kristen Slack, Bill Tishler, Michael E. Verveer, Regina M. Vidaver, Nasra Wehelie
Attachments: 1. Providing for a Cultural Affairs Committee original.JPG
Fiscal Note
No City appropriation required.
Title
Honoring the 50th Anniversary of the Madison Arts Commission
Body
WHEREAS, on January 8, 1974, the Common Council passed Resolution #25-838, File ID #5324-73, providing for a Cultural Affairs Committee to coordinate and advise the Common Council in matters relating to cultural affairs in the City of Madison; and,

WHEREAS, in 2024, the Madison Arts Commission (MAC)-- formerly called the Madison Cultural Affairs Committee, Madison Committee for the Arts, and CitiArts -- celebrates 50 years of integrating, supporting, and advancing arts and culture as an essential part of life in Madison; and,

WHEREAS, through MAC, the City helps sustain our creative sector by providing funding and other resources to support thousands of artists and arts organizations who provide the art, music, cultural programs, events, and arts education that make Madison distinct; and,

WHEREAS, over the last five decades MAC has served as the City’s cultural representative for community initiatives and entities wishing to advance cultural goals, such as the creation of the Civic Center and subsequent Overture Center, the Madison Public Library’s effort to establish the Bubbler program, and partnering with Madison Metropolitan School District and others to create Any Given Child Madison (AGCM); and,

WHEREAS, in 1977, Madison became one of the first municipalities to have a Poet Laureate in the United States and, in 2008, the Madison Arts Commission assumed responsibility for the Poet Laureate Program, broadening its impact through programs such as Bus Lines, Poetry in Sidewalks, and the Youth Poet Laureate Program; and,

WHEREAS, the establishment of Art in Public Places (AIPP) in 1990 formalized the City’s public art program and affirmed the City’s commitment to consult with residents to develop site-specific public art projects Citywide throughout every Madison neighborhood; and,

WHEREAS, in 2001, the City created a “Public Art Fra...

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