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Jackie Battenfield: Head Start for Artists - simple ways you can prepare for life after school

Jackie Battenfield
March 29, 2016
5:00AM - 7:00AM
141 Sullivant Hall

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Add to Calendar 2016-03-29 05:00:00 2016-03-29 07:00:00 Jackie Battenfield: Head Start for Artists - simple ways you can prepare for life after school Time: 9 a.m. Event Host: Barnett Center for Integrated Arts and Enterprise Short Description: This workshop will highlight 10 important ways you can prepare for a career in the arts right now. As we discuss each item, Jackie wants to especially hear your questions and concerns so we can begin to demystify some of the challenges you may face pursing a professional life. The Department of Art, Arts Initiative, Barnett Center for Integrated Arts and Enterprise, and Professor Sergio Soave’s Marketplace Empowerment for Artists Grant supported by  the Emily Hall Tremaine Foundation, welcome artist, author and professor Jackie Battennfield.This workshop will highlight 10 important ways you can prepare for a career in the arts right now. As each item is discussed, Jackie wants to especially hear your questions and concerns so we can begin to demystify some of the challenges you may face pursing a professional life.Free and open to all.RSVP for the workshopJackie Battenfield is an artist who is known nationally for her luminous paintings and prints of natural forces. For over twenty-five years, she has made a living from her art and is a popular motivational speaker on the challenges of sustaining a successful career in the visual arts. Battenfield teaches professional practices at the School of Arts, Columbia University and for the Creative Capital Foundation. Battenfield is the author of The Artist's Guide: How to Make a Living Doing What You Love, Da Capo Press, 2009, now in it’s sixth printing. The Emily Hall Tremaine Foundation (EHTF) is a family foundation established in 1986 by Emily Hall Tremaine.  Based in Connecticut, the Foundation seeks to promote innovative solutions to basic and enduring problems in the United States through grantmaking programs related to art, environment, and learning disabilities.  In addition to annual grantmaking, the Foundation also hosts periodic convenings of non-profit organizations, government agencies and other stakeholders to facilitate collaboration among sectors to achieve common goals. 141 Sullivant Hall College of Arts and Sciences asccomm@osu.edu America/New_York public
Time: 9 a.m.
Event Host: Barnett Center for Integrated Arts and Enterprise
Short Description: This workshop will highlight 10 important ways you can prepare for a career in the arts right now. As we discuss each item, Jackie wants to especially hear your questions and concerns so we can begin to demystify some of the challenges you may face pursing a professional life.


The Department of Art, Arts Initiative, Barnett Center for Integrated Arts and Enterprise, and Professor Sergio Soave’s Marketplace Empowerment for Artists Grant supported by  the Emily Hall Tremaine Foundation, welcome artist, author and professor Jackie Battennfield.

This workshop will highlight 10 important ways you can prepare for a career in the arts right now. As each item is discussed, Jackie wants to especially hear your questions and concerns so we can begin to demystify some of the challenges you may face pursing a professional life.

Free and open to all.

RSVP for the workshop

Jackie Battenfield is an artist who is known nationally for her luminous paintings and prints of natural forces. For over twenty-five years, she has made a living from her art and is a popular motivational speaker on the challenges of sustaining a successful career in the visual arts. Battenfield teaches professional practices at the School of Arts, Columbia University and for the Creative Capital Foundation. Battenfield is the author of The Artist's Guide: How to Make a Living Doing What You Love, Da Capo Press, 2009, now in it’s sixth printing. 

The Emily Hall Tremaine Foundation (EHTF) is a family foundation established in 1986 by Emily Hall Tremaine.  Based in Connecticut, the Foundation seeks to promote innovative solutions to basic and enduring problems in the United States through grantmaking programs related to art, environment, and learning disabilities.  In addition to annual grantmaking, the Foundation also hosts periodic convenings of non-profit organizations, government agencies and other stakeholders to facilitate collaboration among sectors to achieve common goals.

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