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The majority of outside financial support for the arts comes from the private sector, foundations and endowments -- from influential Kansas Citians with knowledge of art economics. Some art aficionados, such as Dick Belger, CEO of Belger Cartage and secretary of the John and Maxine Belger Family Foundation, and Myra Morgan, deputy director of the UMKC-Belger Arts Center, also have foresight -- a deeper understanding of how the creative process is valuable not only to artists but to businessmen and politicians as well as everyday people.
"We believe that, as time goes on, we're all going to have to be a lot smarter and creative in the way we approach problems," says Belger. "As we've looked at a specific artist's work over a period of time, it becomes clear that creativity is a problem-solving process. And theoretically, if it's a process, then at least parts of it can be learned and taught." And not just to other artists. Belger says society puts too much emphasis on producing and has become risk averse. "That's what's wrong with our political process," he says. "No one wants to fail; everyone wants to succeed." As a result, progress stops.
One way the UMKC-Belger Arts Center hopes to induce an atmosphere of risk-taking is by acquiring and exhibiting an expansive body of artwork produced over many years by prominent artists like Jasper Johns, Robert Stackhouse and Renee Stout (to name only a few). Another is by developing technically equipped workshops where visiting artists can open dialogue with other artists and experts in fields such as literature, music and science, for example. Belger, Morgan and others hope that one of these workshops will be a collaboration between the Center and the National Council on Education for the Ceramic Arts, which held its annual conference in Kansas City in March.
While he was in town, NCECA president Steve Reynolds approached Belger to discuss the possibility of creating an international exchange. He envisioned ceramic artists from countries such as Korea, Hungary, Denmark, Norway and France, and from Eastern Europe, coming to Kansas City. "What Myra and Dick have done is given us 6,400 square feet of raw space, and so we have to determine how we will begin to outfit it with the uses we have defined internationally," Reynolds says. "Kansas City could not be a better location for the exchange, due to the impact the Kansas City Art Institute has had on thinking, [in addition to] the collection at the Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art and local venues like Leedy-Volkous Gallery and Red Star Studios. Everyone benefits if we can put this together and make this happen." Reynolds intends to dedicate the next two years toward that end.
Belger agrees. Besides being a centrally located city with a booming arts scene, Kansas City boasts a wealth of scholars, entrepreneurs and corporate executives who would also benefit from a thoughtful interchange of ideas and cultures. Belger says the Center would try to help develop an exchange any way it could.