Month: March 2023

APAC Presentation

TAPintoAsbury Park

Your Neighborhood News Online - By Alissa Deleo

Asbury Park Arts Council to host presentation about proposed Arts and Culture plan March 30 at 6 p.m. at the Asbury Park Library


ASBURY PARK, NJ — A public presentation on the city’s proposed Arts and Culture plan will be made by the Asbury Park Arts Council on Thursday, March 30, at 6 p.m. at the Asbury Park Public Library, located at 500 First Ave.

Details about the plan, the arts council’s findings and its major recommendations for the community will be discussed.

The Asbury Park Arts and Culture Plan is an endeavor undertaken by the city in conjunction with the Asbury Park Arts Council, Monmouth Arts, the Monmouth County Department of Planning and the New Jersey State Council of the Arts.

All funding for the arts and culture plan is being provided by Monmouth Arts and Monmouth County’s COVID-19 Recovery Grant Program for non-profit organizations.

Throughout the past eight months, its planning process has been guided by a steering committee comprised of representatives from the city council, the planning and zoning boards, the department of planning and redevelopment, the Asbury Park Arts Council, Monmouth County Department of Planning and New Jersey State Council on the Arts.

During this period, the steering committee received regular updates on the research, data gathering and community engagement opportunities of the planning team, with the community being consistently involved in the creation of the plan.

The City Council unanimously approved a resolution referring the Arts and Culture Plan to the planning board for review and adoption as an amendment to the city’s master plan during its March 22 meeting.


Sonic Mass

Sonic Mass: An Audio Visual Experience to benefit the Trinity Church's well being Program.

Presented by Light Brigaide Collective Luminous Abstract Society

April 1st, 2023 – 6pm
Trinity Church, Asbury Park

Suggested Donation $20
Live Sets From:

  • SOMA (Album Release)
  • meteor meteor
  • Jerry Kaba
  • Mr. Hideyoshi B2B Toadofsky
  • DJ Spicy Brown

And immersive projection Mapping from:

  • Movemebrightly Lightshow
  • Midi Lizard
  • Jupiter Liquid Lightshow
  • DR. For Science


Arts & Culture Plan Presented to City of Asbury Park Council

TriCityNews

Local weekly paper covering regional news and events covers the Arts & Culture Plan presented to the AP City Council

A Potential to Multiply the Cultural Power of Our City


Independent Asbury Park Arts Council Leads The Initiative - TriCity News March 16, 2023



ASBURY PARK — A group of some of the most effective arts and cultural leaders in the city are moving forward with the creation of an Arts and Culture plan for Asbury Park.

This plan has the potential to multiply the cultural power of our city. Funded by a recent county grant, the Asbury Park Arts Council (APAC) — an independent 501(c)(3) non-profit organization — put together the draft plan and presented it to the City Council just before our deadline.

The next step is referral to the Planning Board, who’d then adopt the Arts and Culture Plan as an amendment to the city’s master plan. That would give it legal authority. Before that, however, APAC will provide a public presentation of the draft plan at the Asbury Park Public Library on March 30 at 6 pm. The Planning Board would have their own public hearings on the plan.

This newspaper understands the value of this project. A detailed Arts and Cul-ture Plan can lead to more grant awards. It becomes a guide for policy deci-sions, including zoning decisions. The plan identifies various underutilized as-sets and determines how the city can maximize their effectiveness for the arts. And the plan makes recommendations for arts and culture activities in various parts of the city, which may have different needs to serve.
“The Asbury Park Arts Council (APAC) works to support, advocate and pro-mote arts-centric initiatives, businesses and development,” states the group’s mission statement. “Our primary goal is to ensure the arts are considered in municipal policy-making via the creation and implementation of an Arts and Culture plan within the Asbury Park Master Plan.”
The Arts Council compiled a ton of data to develop the draft plan. A survey it developed was answered by 153 people. Twenty-three interviews were conduct-ed with leading policymakers and arts stakeholders. Five focus groups were conducted, along with one public open house.

The information gathering led to some important results. For example, 48 per-cent of survey respondents indicated that the cost of arts events and programs limit their participation. Another finding was that 71 percent of survey respon-dents indicated they don’t learn about arts activities in time. (Sounds like the city government should start advertising all the offerings in the triCityNews!)

The Arts Council also did an inventory of what our 1.75 square mile city offers. The group counted 180 creators and contributors; 80 venues, places and facilities for arts and culture; and 60 regular events and programs. That’s pretty wild.

Those figures also confirm what we’ve always said about our tiny city — based on its size and population, we are indeed a powerful center for arts and culture. (And the data of the Arts Council doesn’t even measure Asbury Park’s impact on the areas around it in terms of building the arts and culture. That makes the city even more powerful.)

For example, compare the Asbury Park Arts Council’s data for Asbury Park to Austin, Texas. Austin has 965,000 people compared to 15,000 for Asbury Park. That’s 65 times as many people. Multiplying what Asbury offers by 65 to com-pare to Austin gives these result: 11,700 creators and contributors; 480 ven-ues, places and facilities for arts and culture; and 3,900 regular events and programs.

How impressive is that? The data shows how remarkable Asbury Park remains in terms of its cultural power and influence.

Implementing an Arts and Culture plan as a matter of law by including it in the master plan will multiply and preserve all this. For example, the draft plan lists several action items, two of which are particularly noteworthy: establishing a funding stream for arts and culture, and a community culture center.

The funding stream can be a modest dedicated art tax that taxpayers probably wouldn’t even notice, but could generate a low six figure revenue for art. Deputy Mayor Amy Quinn is for that, and we predict one day relatively soon it will be on the ballot for voter approval. The community culture center may indeed come about once it’s recognized as a city-wide priority as per the Arts and Culture plan.

Also noteworthy is who’s doing all this. It’s a great representation of several of our city’s arts leaders.

Here’s the Asbury Park Arts Council board: Parlor Gallery owner Jenn Hampton, former ShowRoom owner Mike Sodano, Paul McEvily from Interfaith Neighbors, Paranormal Books owner Kathy Kelly, attorney and arts activist Bob Ellis, and Carrie Turner, formerly the General Manager of Madison Marquette’s boardwalk project. Turner also serves as acting Executive Director and coordinated the development of the APAC’s plan. Another recognized talent local to Asbury Park — planner Eric Galipo, who grew up in the city — served as the planning professional working with Turner to lead the development of the plan.


On The Sewage Plant? Where Else?

TriCityNews

Local weekly paper covering regional news and events covers how more public art is coming in Summer 2023.


More Public Art Coming to Asbury Treatment Facility This Summer


Independent Asbury Park Arts Council Leads The Initiative - TriCity News March 16, 2023


ASBURY PARK — We love only in Asbury Park moments.

And a great one is the painting of public art on a most interesting city build-ing:
Our sewage treatment plant!

You got to love it. Last year, nine artists painted colorful murals on this most essential of facilities. Over 50 artists answered the request for proposals. The murals face south, and they are striking.
Only in Asbury Park!

This year, the city’s Public Arts Commission will coordinate the painting of more murals on the sewage plant, this time on four panels facing east toward the ocean. The Request for Proposals is expected to be made available this month. Like last year, artists will be paid $1,000 for their work. The tentative timeline is to get the murals painted in May.
“The sewage plant murals really opened the public’s eyes to the possible,” said Public Arts Commission member Mike Sodano.
“The historic wastewater treatment facility is one of a few municipally-owned buildings available for City-sponsored projects and its highly visible location on the beachfront makes it ideal for a public art installation,” he said.

Another Public Arts Commission member, Jenn Hampton of Parlor Gallery on Cookman Avenue, enjoyed seeing the interaction of people with the murals — this is on a sewage plant, remember.

Of particular joy was watching brides get photos there.

“I love seeing brides taking a picture in front of the murals at the sewage plant, and they don’t care what’s going on behind there,” said Hampton. “I really like this story of the sewage plant.”

Members of the Asbury Park Public Arts Commission are Michele Alonso, Matt Daniels, Mary Eileen Fouratt, Jenn Hampton, Shana LaBranche, Mal-colm Navias, Amy Quinn, Marilyn Schlossbach, Angie Sugrim, Michael Soda-no and Charles Trott.

But Jenn Hampton is the commission members most involved in public art in-stallations. Aside from serving on the city’s Public Arts Commission — which approves all murals on buildings in Asbury Park — she’s also on the board of the independent non-profit Asbury Park Arts Council. The Council works in conjunction with the city and other stakeholders to promote arts and culture in Asbury Park. Our other Asbury story this week’s chronicles its role in imple-menting an Arts and Culture plan in Asbury Park.

Hampton is also responsible for curating the murals of the hugely popular Wooden Walls project on the boardwalk, produced in conjunction with board-walk redeveloper Madison Marquette. Madison authorized her, and funded, the installation by One site was at the Sunset Avenue pavilion north of Convention Hall and the other was in the Casino site and on the steam plant next door. The project also featured public art installations in the Casino walkway. People were constantly photographing the murals and installations, whether the art itself, or as back-ground for selfies or just photos of people in front of them.
The murals were likely the most Instagrammed sites in Asbury Park, sent out to the rest of the world via social media — and bringing even more attention to our city as an arts leader.

“I am always trying to find projects to fill our City with art and probably driving the City crazy with all my big ideas,” Hampton said. artists of murals on undeveloped pavilions and buildings on both ends of the boardwalk.


Asbury Park Arts & Culture Plan

PUBLIC MEETING

Save the Date 3/30/23


Asbury Park Arts Council is hosting an upcoming open public meeting for the Arts & Culture Plan.

The details:

Asbury Park Arts & Culture Plan
Public Meeting
Thursday, March 30th
6pm
Asbury Park Library -500 1st Ave, Asbury Park, 07712


Arts and Culture Plan proposed to be included in city’s master plan

TAPintoAsbury Park

Your Neighborhood News Online - By Alissa Deleo

A public presentation of the plan’s major recommendations will take place March 30 at 6 p.m. at the Asbury Park Library


ASBURY PARK, NJ — An arts and culture plan may soon become a key component included within the city’s master plan after an update about its development was made by Eric Galipo during a recent city council meeting.

Galipo, who is a professional planner and urban designer representing the city and the Asbury Park Arts Council, asked the council to consider a resolution of referral to the planning board for review and adoption, which they determined will be voted on at the March 22 city council meeting. If the council approves the resolution, it will then come before the planning board in April for review and once again for eventual adoption in May.

At the meeting, Galipo briefly introduced the plan, including recent research, findings and recommendations from an anonymous survey about the status of the arts and potential future developments in the city which began last August.

Sign Up for FREE Asbury Park Newsletter
Get local news you can trust in your inbox.
subscriber@example.com

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.
A public presentation of the plan’s major recommendations will be made on Thursday, March 30, at 6 p.m. at the Asbury Park Public Library, located at 500 First Ave.

The Asbury Park Arts and Culture Plan is an endeavor undertaken by the city in conjunction with the Asbury Park Arts Council, Monmouth Arts, the Monmouth County Department of Planning and the New Jersey State Council of the Arts.

Galipo’s role is to provide professional arts and cultural planning services through his firm Francis Cauffman Architects (FCA), which is a multidisciplinary planning and design firm with offices in Philadelphia, New York and Orlando.

The firm has completed arts and culture plans for municipalities and institutions, including the St. Louis Garment District Master Plan, The Salt Lake City Arts & Culture Plan, the City of Ocala Arts and Public Places Plan and is currently in the process of developing a public art master plan for the City of Hoboken.

“Arts and culture plans can be powerful tools for cities and communities to foster community cohesion and civic pride, identify gaps and opportunities in the city’s cultural landscape. It’s a way to leverage arts and culture as generators of economic development and employment growth and to enhance the quality of life of residents through community-based arts and recreational activities,” Galipo said.

All funding for the arts and culture plan is being provided by Monmouth Arts and Monmouth County’s COVID-19 Recovery Grant Program for non-profit organizations.

During Galipo’s presentation, he further addressed the question of why an arts and culture plan is necessary for Asbury Park. “The 2017 city master plan defined a vision for the city as a place with a thriving arts community, a year-round economy, expanded community facilities and an outstanding quality of life,” Galipo explained.

“There was also a specific recommendation that the city would complete an arts and culture master plan that would inventory the arts and cultural assets of the city and identify areas most suitable for arts and culture as well as the uses, programs and actions necessary to support arts and culture in the city,” he added.

Throughout the past eight months, its planning process has been guided by a steering committee comprised of representatives from the city council, the planning and zoning boards, the department of planning and redevelopment, the Asbury Park Arts Council, Monmouth County Department of Planning and New Jersey State Council on the Arts.

During this period, the steering committee has received regular updates on the research, data gathering and community engagement opportunities of the planning team, Galipo noted, adding that the community has also been consistently involved in the creation of the plan.

He explained that the planning team met with the public to learn further about their individual attitudes on arts and culture as well as what more they believe is needed in the city.

In this pursuit, the arts council received 153 responses to an online survey as of March 8 and conducted more than 20 interviews with representatives of city government and non-profit organizations, the Asbury Park school system and others working in arts and culture throughout the city.

The arts council also conducted five focus groups with local creators and producers of cultural and community activities and hosted an open house at the Blackbird Community Commons in December with more than 80 participants in attendance.

“Overall, we can identify more than 500 individual touch points gained through our participation in multiple community events where individual conversations and actual community members rounded out our understanding of the cultural landscape and the needs of the city and the community,” Galipo said.

During the study, the arts council undertook an inventory of arts and culture assets throughout the city.

“In this study, we were able to identify nearly 180 individual creators and organizations related to arts and culture as well as 80 venues, places and facilities capable of supporting arts and cultural activity and over 60 recurring programs and events that provide a strong sense of Asbury Park as a significant contributor to the regional art and cultural landscape and economy,” Galipo said.

The study examined resources available through community facilities but found that there are few spatial resources that are perceived as accessible or welcoming to the public, he added.

“The precious few community facilities that we do have are working hard to provide services, but this study has found more services and facilities are needed to fully engage the residential community, individual creative pursuits and collective activities,” Galipo said.

The study charted the frequency of all recurring programs taking place throughout the city to understand how cultural activity is distributed throughout the year.

“What we discovered is that the seasonal nature of the city has a significant impact on the level of cultural activity, with most events occurring in the warmer months of the year,” Galipo said.

The study examined the prevalence of free and public events and how this compares to that of paid and private events. Recorded data additionally concluded that while paid and private events generally continue throughout the year, almost all free and public programming offered to the community is limited to the warm season.

“This is highly indicative of a lack of high quality low-cost indoor facilities for hosting community programs in the off-season,” Galipo said.

The research charted the city’s active seasonal formal venues, which are The Stone Pony summer stage and the Fifth Avenue rooftop. The Saint, Asbury Lanes, House of Independents, and The Stone Pony are listed in the study as activity year-round indoor venues.

The study stated that 72% of the city’s indoor venue capacity is inactive, naming Convention Hall, Paramount Theatre and Savoy Theatre on Mattison Avenue, which closed in 1976.

“It cannot be understated the detrimental impact this has on the local economic and employment picture when it comes to arts and culture,” Galipo said.

Outdoor recreation beyond the beachfront, dining and live music need to be leveraged, according to the survey, which notes that historical tourism, learning and making, dance, theater and other performing arts all have significant potential for increasing Asbury Park’s share of the regional creative economy for engaging its residents and visitors creative pursuits.

Galipo added that he hopes to see collaboration and coordination between the city’s private and non-profit sectors, which he believes could help leverage spatial assets, secure funding and connect creators and audiences.

Galipo concluded the presentation by explaining four goals of the arts and culture plan, which are to augment the city’s year-round quality of life, expand the cultural production ecosystem, foster inclusion, community cohesion, well-being and lifelong learning and support tourism, creative enterprises and the cultural economy.

The plan identifies four general strategies that can contribute to meeting the goals. The first is to provide resources, facilities and programs for individual creativity, recreation and lifelong learning, while the second strategy is to align development, land use, funding and policies to support tourism and the homegrown creative economy.

“Asbury Park needs to do more in terms of modernizing its zoning code and looking for ways to include new and encourage other uses within our residential and commercial environments,” Galipo said.

The third strategy is to leverage the brand of Asbury Park as an inclusive city where creativity thrives.

“Our visual brand is inconsistent and could use some harmonization as well as provide an injection of creativity into the way we express our status as a seasonal beach community and a year-round artistic and creative community,” Galipo said.

The fourth strategy is to transform streets, parks and public spaces to support next-level art and cultural place-making, Galipo explained, adding, “We use our city’s streets to a high degree in Asbury Park, but more can be done to make sure that they feel more balanced between the needs of people and the needs of cars.”


This government commission meets in a cutting edge art gallery

Tri City News - 2/23/23

Local weekly paper covering regional news and events covers the establishment of APAC.

Our beloved little city was destined to change from its DIY arts days two decades ago when a group of creatives pretty much could do whatever they wanted. So much of the city was vacant.

Now that an economic boom has come, that’s all gone now. Yet conformi-ty never took hold. Of course, with more money and people comes more mainstream. But Asbury Park is still holding to its promise of the most broad-minded and creative place in our region, if not in the state.

There’s so many examples of this. And here’s one of our favorites.

The Asbury Park Public Arts Commission is an agency of the city govern-ment subject to all laws and regulations. It’s made up of artists and artistic types and has its monthly meetings in Parlor Gallery, the avant garde ven-ue operated by arts leader Jenn Hampton and Jill Ricci.

TriCity just had to go and see for ourselves. This is so Asbury Park. Very cool.

Sure enough, it was probably the most fun governmental meeting we’ve ever attended. Cracked us up that they read the Open Public Meetings Act notice at the beginning — just as they do at every boring local government meeting.

But at no other local government meeting we’ve experienced has the room been filled with cardboard art. Nor has a 1980s New Wave dance club station ever been playing in the background.

Welcome to the annual reorganization meeting of the Asbury Park Public Arts Commission!

Appropriately enough, Parlor Gallery co-owner Jenn Hampton was elected Chair. Her role as an Asbury arts leader goes way back. It started as one of the brains behind the old Asbury Lanes music venue in the early years of the city’s cultural comeback.
The Public Arts Commission serves two roles: regulatory and arts promo-tion. Its regulatory function requires it to approve all outdoor art murals on buildings in Asbury Park. As for arts promotion, it does that by arranging art installations, such as the 12 acclaimed outdoor murals on the south side of the sewage treatment plant that were painted last year.

A main order of business at the Public Arts Commission meeting triCity attended was setting up another mural project at the sewage treatment plant. This time on the east side facing the ocean, with four panels avail-able. Artists will each be paid $1,000 for their work.

The tentative timeline for this new mural project is to get submissions in March, and then have the murals painted in May.
“The sewage plant murals really opened the public’s eyes to the possible,” said Public Arts Commission member Mike Sodano.

Hampton enjoyed seeing the interaction of people with the murals — on a sewage plant, remember. Of particular joy was watching brides get a photo there.

“I love seeing brides taking a picture in front of the murals at the sewage plant, and they don’t care what’s going on behind there,” said Hampton. “I really like this story of the sewage plant.”

There were other interesting arts discussions among the members. Hampton said she’d like to see the city revisit the possibility of a mural on the backside of City Hall facing the train tracks. There’s also tentative plans to have an art fair later in the year in the Springwood Avenue Park for local artists to sell their work. That’s being spearheaded by Matt Daniels, a musician and member of the Public Arts Commission.

There are various entities promoting public art in Asbury Park, aside from the city who’ll pay for the new sewage plant murals. Waterfront redeveloper Madison Mar-quette has backed Hampton on her Wooden Walls project of murals on boardwalk pavilions, as well as installations in the Casino walkway and Carousel house.
In addition, the Asbury Park Arts Council, a private non-profit entity that also pro-motes arts in the city, can apply for grants and funding that the city cannot. The Arts Council works closely with the Public Arts Commission to maximize resources for public art.

Hampton and Public Arts Commission member Michael Sodano noted that it’s a good investment to pay to get nationally and internationally known artists to the city because of the attention it generates.

“It’s very much akin to the music in Asbury Park,” Hampton said. “You have head-liners come in and you have the locals.”
Members of the Asbury Park Public Arts Commission are Michele Alonso, Matt Dan-iels, Mary Eileen Fouratt, Jenn Hampton, Shana LaBranche, Malcolm Navias, Amy Quinn, Marilyn Schlossbach, Angie Sugrim, Michael Sodano and Charles Trott.