2nd Edition

Arts Management

By Derrick Chong Copyright 2010
    268 Pages
    by Routledge

    264 Pages
    by Routledge

    The second edition of Arts Management has been thoroughly revised to provide an updated, comprehensive overview of this fast-changing subject. Arts managers and students alike are offered a lively, sophisticated insight into the artistic, managerial and social responsibilities necessary for those working in the field.

    With new cases studies and several new chapters, Derrick Chong takes an interdisciplinary approach in examining some of the main impulses informing discussions on the management of arts and cultural organizations. These are highly charged debates, since arts managers are expected to reconcile managerial, economic and aesthetic objectives. Topics include:

    • arts and the State, with reference to the instrumentalism of the arts and culture
    • business and the arts
    • ownership and control of arts organizations
    • arts consumption and consumers, including audience development and arts marketing
    • managing for excellence and artistic integrity
    • financial investing in the arts, namely fine arts funds and theatre angels
    • philosophies of philanthropy

    Incorporating a deliberately diverse range of sources, Arts Management is essential reading for students on arts management courses and provides valuable insights for managers already facing the management challenges of this field.

    Preface  1. Introduction to Arts Management  Section 1: Institutional Partners  2. Arts and the State  3. Business and the Arts  Section 2: Relationships with Stakeholders  4. Ownership and Management of Arts Organizations  5. Arts Consumption and Consumers  6. Managing for Excellence and Artistic Integrity  Section 3: Wealth and the Economy  7. Financial Investing in the Arts  8. Globalization and the Art World

    Biography

    Derrick Chong is Senior Lecturer in Management at Royal Holloway, University of London, UK. He is the author of Arts Management (Routledge, 2002) and co-author of The Art Business with Iain Robertson (Routledge, 2008).