Wyoming Arts Council Receives $20,000 Grant from the Wyoming Community Foundation for Creative Aging Training in Partnership with the Wyoming State Library and Lifetime Arts
The Wyoming Arts Council is pleased to announce the receipt of a $20,000 grant from the Wyoming Community Foundation’s McMurry Library Endowment Fund. Through a partnership between the Wyoming Arts Council, the Wyoming State Library and Lifetime Arts, the grant funds will be used to provide training and coaching to teaching artists and librarians throughout the state where they will learn innovative direct programming for older adults. “We are excited to bring librarians and artists together in an effort to share our strengths so that all library patrons can benefit from these programs,” says State Librarian Jamie Markus.
As with the rest of the country, Wyoming has a growing community of elder adults. One effective way to address adverse health effects associated with aging is with intentional arts engagement. This field is referred to as Creative Aging. “There is a growing consensus among both healthcare professionals and arts administrators about the positive health outcomes associated with Creative Aging programs for our elders,” says Josh Chrysler, Folklorist and Health & Wellness Specialist at the Wyoming Arts Council. “These funds will allow us to train Wyoming artists and traditional cultural practitioners to use their creative practice to improve the overall health and wellness of the elders in our communities.”
“Lifetime Arts is pleased to collaborate with this important cross-sector alliance to advance Creative Aging in Wyoming. We are looking forward to providing resources and guidance to librarians and teaching artists to help develop, deliver and sustain arts education for older adults throughout the State’s libraries. Creative Aging programming embraces older adults as learners, expands the impact of teaching artists and provides community organizations with a positive and creative approach to programming. Importantly, this project provides an innovative model for cross-sector alliances for states across the country,” says Maura O’Malley, CEO and Co-Founder of Lifetime Arts.
Lifetime Arts is a nationally recognized nonprofit transforming the way our society understands and experiences aging through the arts. Since 2008, we have been at the forefront of the creative aging movement—an evidence-based practice that combines arts participation with social engagement to foster healthy aging. Our team has trained over 11,000 professionals and supported the launch of more than 1,000 programs across 44 states. Together with a network of more than 6,000 partners, we are working to combat isolation, challenge ageism, and celebrate lifelong creativity. By bridging vision and action, we embed creative aging practices into public health, cultural policy, and aging services—ensuring that creativity is recognized as essential to well-being at every stage of life.
“Lifetime Arts is pleased to collaborate with this important cross-sector alliance to advance Creative Aging in Wyoming. We are looking forward to providing resources and guidance to librarians and teaching artists to help develop, deliver and sustain arts education for older adults throughout the State’s libraries. Creative Aging programming embraces older adults as learners, expands the impact of teaching artists and provides community organizations with a positive and creative approach to programming. Importantly, this project provides an innovative model for cross-sector alliances for states across the country,” says Maura O’Malley, CEO and Co-Founder of Lifetime Arts.
For more information or to learn how to get involved, please contact Taylor Craig at the Wyoming Arts Council at taylor.craig@wyo.gov or 307-274-6673.
Note: The training is now tentatively scheduled for 2021. More details will be announced soon.
Fields
Arts Agency (formerly Arts Council), Library