Afa S. Dworkin
(Kevin Kennedy)
Sphinx Organization to create pipeline of diverse leaders in classical music
November 18, 2018
Sherri Welch
Strides made in increasing diverse representation in American orchestras but not in leadership roles
Long-term vision is to expand program to all of the performing arts
New program set to launch in January
Since the Sphinx Organization launched its educational,
touring and competition programs 22 years ago, the number of black and
Latinx musicians who hold seats in major orchestras around the country
has begun to rise.
During the same period, commissions,
tours and solo performances by musicians of color have also grown, said
Sphinx President and Artistic Director Afa Dworkin.
But diversity in the leadership ranks of classical music has not kept pace.
"When there's no role modeling ... it's hard to see a feasible path," she said.
Since the Sphinx Organization launched its educational,
touring and competition programs 22 years ago, the number of black and
Latinx musicians who hold seats in major orchestras around the country
has begun to rise.
During the same period, commissions,
tours and solo performances by musicians of color have also grown, said
Sphinx President and Artistic Director Afa Dworkin.
But diversity in the leadership ranks of classical music has not kept pace.
"When there's no role modeling ... it's hard to see a feasible path," she said.
Initially
it will work with leadership candidates in the classical music field,
but the long-term vision is to expand it to all of the performing arts,
Dworkin said.
The initiative has the potential to be transformative but can only have impact if it's embraced by the field, she said.
"For
the status quo to change, it will take a sector-wide mindset change
that not just recognizes the importance of diversity in leadership, but
beyond that seeks out candidates and intentionally prioritizes diversity
in leadership."
It's always been important that Sphinx
and its work not be about affirmative action but rather about equal
opportunity and merit, Dworkin said.
"We are better,
richer, more creative, more inclusive, more sustainable if we are
relevant. To me, relevance equals inclusivity," she said.
By the numbers
A 2016 study from the League of American
Orchestras showed a similar trend for all nonwhite musicians. The study
released in the fall 2016 reported similar, albeit rosier, findings on
overall diversity in orchestras.
The number of nonwhite
members in American orchestras increased from 3.4 percent in 1980 to
14.2 percent in 2014, according to the study, "Racial/Ethnic and Gender Diversity in the Orchestra Field."
But
the proportion of nonwhite musicians and of black and Latinx musicians
remained particularly low, and the wider orchestra field , including
conductors, executives, staff, and board members, also remained
predominantly white, according to the study.
The
proportion of Latinx musicians in American orchestras had increased to
just 2.5 percent by 2014 from 1.8 percent by 2002, according to the
study, while representation of black musicians continued to hover around
1.8 percent throughout the same period.
"When the data
is more closely examined, it is clear that the modest shifts towards
diversity that we observe have been largely driven by Asian/Pacific
Islander musicians," the study noted.
Since 2006, the percentage of top executives
from African American, Latino/Hispanic, Asian/Pacific Islander, American
Indian/Alaskan Native and other nonwhite backgrounds has fluctuated
between just 1.6 percent and 5.2 percent, according to the report.
The LEAD program
To increase diverse leadership in the industry, Sphinx is
collaborating with Stanford Thompson, a Sphinx alum and head of Play on,
Philly!, a K-12, classical music education program, and with other
national specialists in the filed to develop a two-year leadership
academy for classical musicians of color.
Thompson, a
recipient of Sphinx's Medal of Excellence, will serve as dean of the new
program and take the lead on developing the curriculum, with Sphinx
founder Aaron Dworkin, professor of arts, leadership and
entrepreneurship at the University of Michigan and the husband of Afa
Dworkin, serving as senior adviser.
Sphinx reported $7.8
million in income for 2017 and expenses totaling $5.9 million. It's
operating on a budget of just under $6 million this year.
A
$1.5 million grant from the Miami-based John S. and James L. Knight
Foundation will fund the bulk of the first five years of the Leaders in
Excellence, Arts and Diversity program.
It will be
focused on professionals in Detroit and 16 other cities where the
foundation focuses its grant support, along with other cities like New
York and Cleveland, Dworkin said. And it will seek emerging leaders
looking to advance their personal and professional growth to produce
impact in their communities and in the arts field as a whole. That could
be musicians who dream of becoming a CEO, young budding entrepreneurs
who want to make a difference in other leadership roles, such as the
young founders of small startups, or people in junior roles at
orchestras, Dworkin said.
The LEAD program is free to
participants and comes with a nominal stipend to cover travel to
educational sessions and events, lodging and meals and a $1,000 stipend
to help cover other incidentals while they take time off from jobs.
Attendance at industry conferences such as those hosted by American
Orchestras or Chamber Music America are also covered.
The LEAD curriculum is still in development, Dworkin said. It will be finalized based on who the initial cohort is.
No comments:
Post a Comment