Creative Nerve
Geniocity.com gets expansive
Like most humans, I rarely look forward to Mondays. But today is different: I’m happy to announce that Geniocity.com will soon get bigger and better.
A week from now, we’ll launch three new blogs that I think you’ll find fascinating as much for who writes them as for what they’re about. And who are they?
Terrence Spivey, the artistic director of Cleveland’s Karamu House, who will blog about the creative frontiers of live theater. Terrence joined Karamu, which is the oldest African-American theater in the nation, in 2003 after nearly two decades of mastering his craft in New York City. He’ll connect you with what’s developing in the real and increasingly diverse laboratories of American stage art.
Leonard Steinbach, technology consultant to American and international museums and the former CIO of the Cleveland Museum of Art. Len’s work in devising digital solutions for the artistic and administrative needs of cultural organizations gives him a unique view of innovations that make art a science and vice versa. Currently principal of Cultural Technology Strategies and a member of the faculty at Johns Hopkins University, he’ll blog about the intersections of these disciplines and others.
Seth Rosenberg, marketing consultant and writer. Rosenberg, who studied political science and economics at Tufts University and wrote op-ed pieces for the Tufts Daily, now lives and works in Manhattan. In his blog, readers will find our newest generation of adults represented by his fresh, witty and well-informed point of view on politics’ creative side.
With these exciting additions, including the recent launch of Charlie Eby’s “Media Man: Electronic and Mainstream Arts,” Geniocity.com will double its content, offering you not only a widening range of topics and perspectives, but also a glimpse of the developing links between fields you might never suspect were connected.
Please join us Monday to meet our new writers, read their blogs and enter the world of creativity, where people are doing things to change the world, not just talking about it. That’s the world Geniocity.com opens up for you.
