Oregon Children's Theatre Dec/Nov | Page 34

B A R RY JO H N S O N FROM THE EDITOR-AT-LARGE PORTLAND CLASSIC. Arts for ... Or for All? As top colleges wage an arts infrastructure arms race, can publicly-accessible arts keep pace? PORTLAND CONTEMPORARY. Those of us who care deeply about the arts are always worrying about their future, mostly because the attention the culture at large pays them seems to be shrinking. The arts signal seems weak compared to the vast noise in the culture, and the noise is getting louder. Except maybe in one place — university campuses. Are the arts heading back to school? We have both national and local evidence that maybe that’s the case. Harvard University recently completed the renovation/expansion of the Harvard Art Museums, a six-year project that involved a design by eminent “starchitect” Renzo Piano and $350 million. Or $400 million. The reports differ and at that level, $50 million, give or take, is an accounting matter among friends. PORTLAND’S FINEST REAL ESTATE. 503 242 9000 834 SW St Clair Avenue, Suite 103, Portland, Oregon 97205 www.laurieholland.com 18 ARTSLANDIA AT THE PERFORMANCE MARCH | APRIL Are the arts heading back to school? We have both national and local evidence that maybe that’s the case. Harvard isn’t the only university to splurge on the arts. The New York Times noted several examples in an article about what it called the “Arts Race” at elite universities, star [