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Beyond the clichés of country and city, understanding the differences in history, programming, economic impact, staffing, board development, marketing, fundraising, community engagement, and pursuit of diversity, equity, and inclusion in relation to their rural setting can help an arts manager be ready to adapt and succeed in different regions.

Produktbeschreibung
Beyond the clichés of country and city, understanding the differences in history, programming, economic impact, staffing, board development, marketing, fundraising, community engagement, and pursuit of diversity, equity, and inclusion in relation to their rural setting can help an arts manager be ready to adapt and succeed in different regions.
Autorenporträt
David Andrew Snider is an educator, producer, administrator and a rare example of an arts leader who has successfully led arts organizations in both major urban and rural areas over the past 25 years. He is the author of Managing Arts Organizations, published by Rowman & Littlefield in January 2022, including a chapter on rural arts management titled Adapting from City Mouse to Country Mouse. David has taught arts administration at Skidmore College in Saratoga Springs, NY for seven years and previously served on the faculty of American University in Washington, DC at the graduate and undergraduate levels. In May of 2022, he presented on the differences between urban and rural arts management at the national conference of the Association for Arts Administration Educators for a national audience of educators and students, titled Adapting from City Mouse to Country Mouse: Managing the Arts in Urban and Rural Areas. Currently also the Executive & Artistic Director of the Hubbard Hall Center for the Arts and Education in Cambridge, NY, David has launched several new artistic and education programs on the campus of Hubbard Hall, greatly expanded the company's outreach to the community, and established the company's first ever major endowment fund. Prior to Hubbard Hall, David served as the Director of Artistic Programming at Arena Stage at the Mead Center for American Theater in Washington, DC, where he directed artistic programming and season planning, oversaw new work development, and commissioned a wide array of artists, including commissions to Lynn Nottage for the Pulitzer Prize winning Sweat and Lawrence Wright for Camp David. David once worked with Pulitzer Prize winning playwright Katori Hall on five plays in six days and witnessed her brilliant artistry and management first-hand. As the Producing Artistic Director and CEO of Young Playwrights' Theater, David established partnerships and developed projects with the White House, the Kennedy Center, and the Smithsonian Institution, while building nationally-recognized programs, a resident company of high profile artists, and a series of award-winning community-based projects. David received the Meyer Foundation's $100,000 Exponent Award for visionary leadership of a nonprofit, the National Arts and Humanities Youth Program Award from the President's Committee on the Arts and the Humanities, and the Hands On Greater DC Cares' Essence of Leadership Award. David is a Directing Fellow of the Drama League of New York, a past President of the League of Washington Theatres, a member of Leadership Greater Washington, and a National Arts Strategies Chief Executive Fellow. David received his MFA from New York University, Tisch School of the Arts and his BA in English Literature/Russian language from Dickinson College, magna cum laude, Phi Beta Kappa. David has taught arts management for over a decade at the graduate and undergraduate levels, first at American University and currently as a Lecturer in the Arts Administration program at Skidmore College. He resides in the village of Cambridge, NY, with his wife and children. thedavidsnider.com