Sustaining Creative Aging

We’ve all worked on projects where the momentum fades over time. Lifetime Arts wants to help you sustain the great work you’ve started.  

Explore Our Sustainability Tools & Services:

participants in a workshop at a training in Boston

LAUNCHING FALL 2024!

Join The Creative Aging Collaborative (The Co-Lab), our new interactive community space for program staff, teaching artists, and administrators who have attended Lifetime Arts’ Creative Aging Foundations Training. Continue learning, networking, and improving your practice with real talk, advice, insights, and stories of inspiration from fellow Co-Lab members, guest speakers, and Lifetime Arts staff.

Led by creative aging experts with more than 15 years of creative aging fundraising and advocacy experience, this seminar will provide your team with practical tools and advice for growing and sustaining creative aging. We will review the most current data and trends in the field that support creative aging across sectors and discuss specific strategies for integrating creative aging into your budgeting, strategic planning, partnership development, and fundraising to maximize success.

Strategic Consulting

One of Lifetime Art’s greatest strengths is coming alongside an organization, network, or agency to lay a strategic framework for their creative aging efforts. Our breadth of experience in establishing cross sector partnerships and launching pilot programming means that we have insight into every kind of challenge or opportunity that might arise. Oftentimes, the cost for our services can be written into grant applications for new projects. We can support you with the following and more!:

  • Strategic planning
  • Convenings for state and local partners
  • Project management
  • Partnership development strategies
  • Fundraising strategies
  • Grant proposal development

Consulting packages are custom designed to meet your needs, based on a standard hourly rate.

Are you looking for one of our Creative Aging Training Courses for Teaching Artists or Program Staff?