Herberger Institute is the largest comprehensive design and arts college in the country, a cultural village of 6,000 students, staff and faculty who come together at ASU to expand their skills and learn what it means to be artists and designers. But Herberger Institute is also a laboratory space where field partners in a wide range of sectors gather to consider the role of art and design in an increasingly complicated world. The arts and cultural sector is rapidly changing due to audience demographics, technology and cultural consumption patterns. For our Institute to remain relevant, we must engage in broader issues of the field that impact how arts and design are shifting and evolving.
The National Accelerator for Cultural Innovation is the Institute’s engine for coordinating, administrating and leveraging our national work and making sure that we create long-term impact and visibility in the broader cultural field. The Accelerator’s mission is to identify people and practices that demonstrate the power of art, design and culture to advance public good and create more equitable communities. The Accelerator is designed to elevate and scale important innovations and innovators in arts and culture by creating powerful learning modules and tools via ASU’s global education tech platforms, connecting artists and policy actors from other sectors in use-inspired research and policy, building public media around powerful stories and exemplars and routing this all back to our students, so that they learn to leverage their skills in new and powerful ways.
2018-19 was dedicated to designing and building this powerful new model. We assembled a national leadership team, led by Jen Cole. And, in its inaugural year, the Accelerator launched several key partnerships and on-going programs that advance and demonstrate how artists and designers are working powerfully at the intersection of social change.
Under the Accelerator, with investment from the National Endowment for the Arts, Herberger Institute established the Practices for Change fellowship. The fellowship is rooted in the belief that creative practices have the ability to radically transform non-arts sectors such as health, transportation, planning, justice and the environment.