Arts Council of York County 2022 - 2023 Annual Report

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ANNUAL REPORT 2022-2023

As the country came out of the worldwide pandemic in our 2022-23 fiscal year (July 1 – June 30), the Arts Council of York County remained committed to our mission of creating programming that encourages education and economic development through unique art experiences that help make York County a regional arts destination.

We returned to a pre-COVID slate of program activities, but with inflation bringing higher prices coupled with reduced public funding from the state (pandemic emergency funds), county (redirection of Hospitality Tax funding) and city (greater competition for funding from sports tourism events), and lower levels of event sponsorships and private donations, we relied on our reserve funds as we began to reenvision the Arts Council’s future in an ever evolving landscape.

The good news is that York County and the City of Rock Hill—where our offices, galleries, and artist studios are located—are growing, and so is the hunger for more arts programming. In the last several years, we’ve seen the rise of new arts nonprofits such as the Rock Hill Symphony Orchestra, the Women’s Art Initiative, the One Word Poetry Festival, Don’t Sweat It, Inc., and the new Arts Center at Fountain Park joining longtime performing groups like the Rock Hill Theatre, Showtime Theatre Company, Ballet of York County, York County Choral Society, and more. As this growth adds to our region’s quality of life, we must ensure that our region’s arts funding infrastructure keeps pace with the times.

It is our vision to create a THRIVING , DIVERSE , & VIBRANT arts community in York County.
Family Storytelling with Joyce Morrow Jones Ag + Art Tour of York County “New Ruins” by Jordan Fowler Dalton Gallery Exhibit Blues & Jazz Festival

SIGNATURE PROGRAMMING:

The annual Blues & Jazz Festival returned to its usual timeslot in October, holding singular concerts in Clover and Baxter Village and expanding Rock Hill’s Old Town Crawl across Dave Lyle Boulevard to the Warehouses on White and into University Center. Thirteen performing acts helped us reach audiences numbering more than 1,200. The Underexposed Film Festival yc returned to in-person programming after a two-year hiatus, as we bid farewell to longtime festival director Karen Collins after a ten-year stint. We presented 66 short films from 20+ countries, including an Oscar nominee, and partnered with the York County Library and The Mercantile, as well as Winthrop University’s College of Visual and Performing Arts. The annual Ag + Art Tour York County highlighted 27 farms and tour sites with 80+ artisans that attracted thousands of visitors during the second weekend in June.

Monthly showcases of art and music in Old Town’s business venues were rebranded to become First Fridays Rock Hill, as we invite visitors to enjoy South Carolina’s first Cultural District . The Arts Council’s Annual Gala raised much needed funds while taking a crowd of 200 back to the 1980’s and the era of Miami Vice. The Dalton Gallery hosted five major solo or group exhibitions, including a two-week residency by Joyce Morrow Jones of Cleveland, with several class and workshop activities in making corn husk dolls and floral crowns in partnership with the Clinton ConNEXTion, the Emmett Scott Center, the York County Library, FARMacy Community Farm Stop, and The Mercantile. Additional exhibitions included the annual ACYC Members Show, the Teachers’ Choice Youth Art Exhibit, and Vernon Grant’s Santas to coincide with ChristmasVille.

SERVICES:

The Arts Council continued to rent studios at affordable rates to more than two dozen artists, while also renting the spaces at the Center for the Arts and Tom S. Gettys Center for performances by community arts groups, as well as private occasions such as weddings, reunions, proms, and fundraising events. On the education front, we provided art classes for the community and exhibition opportunities for students at local schools.

The Arts Council’s Small Grants Program supported 31 projects by individual artists or small nonprofits throughout York County by dispensing nearly $30,000 in grants in partnership with the South Carolina Arts Commission. From free family concerts, murals, and art supplies to artist fees and travel costs, for 20 years this grants program has funded quality projects and programs that promote artistic excellence while being accessible to diverse community-wide audiences. At the end of this fiscal year, the South Carolina Arts Commission, which has provided half the funds for the program throughout its existence, will sunset its funding. For the upcoming 2023-24 fiscal year, the Small Grants Program will be on pause as we look to replace those funds.

PARTNERSHIPS:

The Arts Council provides its expertise and knowledge of the professional arts world to York County through the involvement of staff in a variety of community endeavors in collaboration with organizations such as the Arts Center at Fountain Park , the Rock Hill Economic Development Corp., ChristmasVille, the Rock Hill Poet Laureate Committee, the Women’s Art Initiative, the Freedom Walkway, Clemson Extension, Visit York County, Winthrop University, Town of Fort Mill, and Clinton College, among others.

“ACYC Members Show” Dalton Gallery Exhibit Miami Vice Annual Fundraising Gala Vernon Grant Mural Display

2021-2022 INCOME

2021-2022 EXPENSES

*does not include $36,091 in depreciation

COUNTRIES 4 STATES 28 PEOPLE

56,730 Events produced or funded by ACYC in 2022.

CITIES 156

2022 EVENT ATTENDANCE
22.8% 16.1% 14.9% 11.8% 8.2% 5.8% 4.1% 16.3% 46.6% 22.8% 16.4% 6.7% 3.9% 3.5% Programming $184,843 Administration $ 90,254 Operations $ 64,922 Facility $ 26,592 Small Grants $ 15,645 Marketing $ 14,064 $396,320*
Artist Studio & Facility Rentals $ 94,045 Annual Campaign $ 66,212 Programming: $ 61,421 Ticket Sales, Fees, Sponsorships Annual Gala $ 48,700 Grants $ 33,624 Accommodations Tax Grants $ 23,724 Miscellaneous $ 16,853 Endowment Interest ( $ 6,217) Pandemic-Related Funding SC Arts Emergency Relief Grant $ 30,000 PPP Loan (Forgiven) $ 37,000 $405,362

2022-2023 EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE President

Erica Smith, Rock Hill Symphony Orchestra

Vice President

Dr. Brad Sabelli, Arts Advocate, Educator, Artist Secretary

Michael B. Smith, Morton & Gettys Treasurer

Hali Christopher, Westminster Catawba Christian School

2022-2023 BOARD MEMBERS

Josiah Blevins, RevenFlo

Rebecca Bridges, House of Drennan

Stephen Crotts, Independent Artist

Michelle DiEduardo, Community Volunteer

Matthew L. Dosch, Comporium

Eric D. Eaddy, Atrium Health

Angelo Geter, Rock Hill Poet Laureate

Erika Hogan, New Attitude Performing Arts Center

Kirk H. Irwin, Friday Arts Project

Dr. John Jones, Jr., Rock Hill School District 3

Gerry King, Independent Artist

Jessica Little, Founders Federal Credit Union

Alison Mallard, York County Voter Registration and Elections Office

Gale Y. Teaster, Community Volunteer

Robert Wildman, Winthrop University

Suzie Wright, Community Volunteer

ACYC

STAFF

Lori Robishaw, Executive Director

Melanie Cooper, Director of Programming & Marketing

Barbara McDougald, Office Manager

Devann Gardner, Gallery Manager

Brenda Floyd, Financial Consultant

Christina Melchiorre, Gallery Attendant

CENTER FOR THE ARTS

121 East Main Street | Rock Hill, SC 29730

TOM S. GETTYS CENTER

201 East Main Street | Rock Hill, SC 29730

PHONE (803) 328-2787

YORKCOUNTYARTS.ORG

Underexposed Film Festival yc Artist Talk at Emmett Scott Center “Dialing Out” by Dylan Bannister Perimeter Gallery Exhibit “Dogwood Blossom” by Timothy Werrell Rear of Center for the Arts
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