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Dr. Maria Rosario Jackson-Chair National Endowment for the arts
https://www.arts.gov ^ | unknown | Unknown

Posted on 02/01/2023 5:08:56 AM PST by Beowulf9

For more than 25 years, Dr. Maria Rosario Jackson’s work has focused on understanding and elevating arts, culture, and design as critical elements of healthy communities. Her work blends social science and arts- and humanities-based approaches to comprehensive community revitalization, systems change, the dynamics of race and ethnicity, and the roles of arts and culture in communities. After confirmation by the U.S. Senate in December 2021, Dr. Jackson became the 13th chair of the National Endowment for the Arts in January 2022. With this historic appointment, Dr. Jackson is the nation’s first NEA chair to be an African American and Mexican American woman.

Dr. Jackson has a long career in strategic planning, policy research and evaluation with philanthropy, government, and nonprofit organizations. She has served as an advisor on philanthropic programs and investments at national, regional, and local foundations.

Dr. Jackson is currently on leave from Arizona State University, where she is a tenured Institute Professor in the Herberger Institute for Design and the Arts. In that role, she has led the Studio for Creativity, Place and Equitable Communities and held an appointment in the Watts College of Public Service and Community Solutions (2017-2022). For almost ten years, she also served as a senior advisor for Arts and Culture and Strategic Learning, Research and Evaluation at the Kresge Foundation.

For 18 years, Dr. Jackson worked at the Urban Institute, a Washington, DC-based national public policy research organization. While there, she was a senior research associate in the Metropolitan Housing and Communities Policy Center and the founding director of the Urban Institute’s Culture, Creativity and Communities Program.

Dr. Jackson was appointed to the National Council on the Arts by President Barack Obama in 2012 where she served until becoming chair of the NEA. Dr. Jackson was co-chair of the County of Los Angeles Cultural Equity and Inclusion Initiative and, most recently, served on the advisory boards of the Smithsonian Center for Folklife and Cultural Heritage, the Equity Center at the University of Virginia, the Strong, Prosperous and Resilient Communities Challenge (SPARCC), and L.A. Commons, an arts intermediary organization focused on bridging communities through stories and creative practice. She served on the board of directors of the Performing Arts Center of Los Angeles County (The Music Center), the Association of Arts Administration Educators, and the Alliance for California Traditional Arts.

A graduate of the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA) with a doctorate in urban planning, Dr. Jackson holds a master of public administration degree from the University of Southern California. Dr. Jackson grew up in South Los Angeles and, as a child, spent summers in her mother’s hometown of Mexico City and visited her father’s home state of Ohio. Her love of the arts stems from her parents, who encouraged Dr. Jackson and her brother to learn about the richness of their cultures through the arts. She lived in Washington, DC for 20 years and currently resides in her native Los Angeles with her husband, David K. Riddick, and in Phoenix, Arizona. She is a member of Alpha Kappa Alpha Sorority, Inc.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: arts; ethnicity; liberal; race

1 posted on 02/01/2023 5:08:56 AM PST by Beowulf9
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To: Beowulf9

National Endowment for the Arts — good example of something the taxpayers should NOT be paying for.


2 posted on 02/01/2023 5:18:32 AM PST by BenLurkin (The above is not a statement of fact. It is either opinion, or satire, or both.)
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To: Beowulf9

Don’t we have Americans of Asian or Hispanic or Irish descent who can take this job? Just asking.


3 posted on 02/01/2023 5:19:26 AM PST by wetgundog
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To: wetgundog

This is what is happening to the arts. Liberals and the government hiring the people for their politics and skin color. Government loans, grants and hires.

Check the awful art in the ‘inner cities’. It’s not pretty.


4 posted on 02/01/2023 5:23:23 AM PST by Beowulf9
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To: wetgundog

Used to work at Kmart.


5 posted on 02/01/2023 5:24:31 AM PST by Lisbon1940 (I don’t see why they would)
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To: Beowulf9
According to these liberal, never-had-a-real-job policy wonk government ticks;
arts, culture and design are critical elements of "Healthy Communities".

So, car-jackings, smash and grab robberies, organized flash-mob shop lifting, looting and home invasions
aren't considered factors when determining what a "Healthy Community" is?

6 posted on 02/01/2023 5:38:45 AM PST by red-dawg (They're going to have to pry my gasoline powered car from my cold, dead hands.)
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To: Beowulf9

Uggghhh.. There were tons like her where I worked. Everyone kissed their a&^es.

I don’t think a single one of these do-nothing appointees could pass a HS civics course...not many could speak properly

BTW... wha could she know about US ‘arts’


7 posted on 02/01/2023 6:06:39 AM PST by SMARTY (“Liberalism is totalitarianism with a human face.” Thomas Sowell)
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To: BenLurkin; Beowulf9
--- "National Endowment for the Arts — good example of something the taxpayers should NOT be paying for."

Agreed. This entity is the replica of any of the "soviet" entities, picking and choosing when a fair and free market could make better decisions without the costs passed to consumers.

So much that is now "federal" should be simply disbanded.

8 posted on 02/01/2023 6:23:53 AM PST by Worldtraveler once upon a time (Degrow government)
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To: Beowulf9
Check the awful art in the ‘inner cities’. It’s not pretty.

Whatever makes you say that?

Boston:

New Orleans:

New York City:

Newark, NJ:

9 posted on 02/01/2023 6:22:31 PM PST by Albion Wilde ("There is no good government at all & none possible."--Mark Twain)
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To: Albion Wilde

I call it Soviet art.


10 posted on 02/01/2023 6:24:39 PM PST by SamAdams76 (4,857,036 Truth | 87,716,542 Twitter)
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To: SamAdams76

What, you don’t like the Don Cheadle statue at Rockefeller Center ?


11 posted on 02/01/2023 8:27:22 PM PST by fieldmarshaldj (America Owes Anita Bryant An Enormous Apology)
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