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NEA Spotlight: An in-depth look at NEA-funded projects
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L.A. Theatre Works (Los Angeles, CA)
In 1988, L.A. Theatre Works (LATW) producing director Susan Loewenberg found a way to address an old artistic question of how to reach communities that don’t have ready access to the arts. Following a conversation with a local radio station and the actor Ed Asner in 1988, Loewenberg hatched an idea to record a live play and air it over the radio.
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Georgia Museum of Art (Athens, GA)
In 1946, the U.S. Department of State assembled a collection of modernist paintings to embark on a goodwill tour of Latin America and Europe, in an attempt to show the best of 1930s-40s American art to the international community.
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Arlington Arts Center (Arlington, VA)
Established in 1974 to provide studio and exhibit space for local artists, today the Arlington Arts Center (AAC) is a private, nonprofit contemporary visual arts center that supports and presents work by regional artists from Virginia and the mid-Atlantic States.
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Spotlight :: ARCHIVE
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National Endowment for the Arts · an independent federal agency
1100 Pennsylvania Avenue NW
Washington, DC 20506 |
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Highlights in NEA History features exemplary projects funded since 1965. More... |
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