Utah’s First Creative Aging Festival Sparks a Statewide Movement

Jacqueline DuMontOctober 15, 2025

Musician, gerontologist, and creative aging advocate Emily Christensen shares how Utah’s first-ever Creative Aging Festival transformed a statewide network into a joyful celebration of art, aging, and community.

A group of older adults move their hands and legs while using chairs.

A Creative Spark—and a Whole Lot of HeART!

When Utah-based musician and gerontologist Emily Christensen began bringing together local artists and organizations to discuss creative aging, she had no idea it would grow into a two-week festival spanning the entire state.

“We had in place a Utah Creative Aging Coalition that started before COVID,” Emily recalled. “It consisted of teaching artists, older adult organizations, and arts organizations—basically everyone who plays a role in creative aging.”

The pandemic temporarily halted their work, but when the group reconvened, the energy was electric. “We just had a meeting to say, here we all are, here’s a cause we believe in—what can we do to further it?” With three clear goals—to expand creative aging programs, strengthen statewide networks, and shift perceptions of aging—the idea for a festival took root. That spark became Kaleidoscope: Aging with the Creative Spirit, Utah’s first statewide Creative Aging Festival, held August 30th-September 13th and celebrating creativity, connection, and community across the state.

Inspired by Ireland, Made for Utah

As Emily began researching models for what this could look like, she found unexpected inspiration from across the Atlantic. “I started looking around at Creative Aging Festivals and found one in Ireland that’s a month-long event throughout the country,” she said. “I thought—that’s such a great idea! Utah’s about the same size geographically, so why not model ours on that?” 

This seed of an idea—nurtured by strong regional partnerships with the Utah Division of Arts & Museums, the Commission on Aging, the Utah Museum of Fine Arts, and others—gave the festival solid ground to thrive and grow.

Two older adult women sit on stools and drum.
Credit: Lansia Wann, Utah Division of Arts and Museums

A Celebration Backed By Collaboration

A group of older and middle-aged adults play guitar on stage.
Credit: Lansia Wann, Utah Division of Arts and Museums

When asked how Lifetime Arts’ consulting shaped the festival, Emily didn’t hesitate. “In being a grantor [via a sub-award]*, and by coming out several times to provide training for people in Utah, they helped us build this army of teaching artists,” she said.

That foundation was critical. Years of collaboration through Lifetime Arts’ training programs and curriculum guidance gave Utah the structure it needed to make creative aging flourish.

A close-up of an older woman banging on drums with sticks.
Credit: Lansia Wann, Utah Division of Arts and Museums

Lifetime Arts’ consulting process also helped shape the strategy and scale of the festival:

  • Clarifying the model: ensuring high-quality, instructional arts experiences, not casual drop-ins.
  • Statewide reach: helping Utah’s coalition build partnerships outside Salt Lake City.
  • Messaging: moving beyond the “senior center” model to embrace advertising, community outreach, and arts-based recruitment.

The Numbers: Proof That the Movement Has Momentum

For a first-year effort, the results were nothing short of inspiring. “Everything was full to overflowing,” Emily laughed. “It was really encouraging—proof that people want this kind of programming.”

Emily shared early data from the coalition’s research partnership with The University of Utah, where a gerontology professor is leading a full evaluation study:

Rewriting the Story of Aging: A Movement Just Getting Started

Three older adults smile, laugh, and cheer.
Two older women smile and create a collage.
An older man looks at the camera while playing guitar. A group of older adults play guitar in the background.

Credit: Lansia Wann, Utah Division of Arts and Museums

As the festival unfolded, Emily witnessed the true power of creative aging—people rediscovering themselves through art, community, and connection.

When people participate in these programs. They find a renewed sense of purpose. They see aging not as an ending, but as a creative evolution.

Emily Christensen, Musician and Gerontologist

From concerts and classes to shared laughter and new friendships, the Utah Creative Aging Festival became more than a calendar of events—it became a cultural shift. “We wanted to include the whole state—not just a Salt Lake City thing,” Emily added. “This is about belonging. Every county, every artist, every older adult deserves to be part of it.”

Now, as the inaugural festival wraps up its first year, Emily’s already dreaming ahead. “This is just the beginning,” she said. “We’re building something that will last—a tradition that honors creativity at every age and reminds us that getting older is something to celebrate.”

This festival was part of the Creative Aging in the West initiative, a two-year initiative designed to build a regional coalition to ensure that older adults across Wyoming, Utah, Nevada, Montana, and Idaho have meaningful opportunities to connect, learn, and thrive through the arts. Read our latest blog to learn more about the project’s impact and connect with us today to grow creative aging across YOUR state.

*Grant funds dispersed from Lifetime Arts were a subaward from the larger project grant supporting Creative Aging in the West.

About Emily Christensen

Headshot of Emily Christensen.

Emily Christensen is a gerontologist and music therapist working as the Arts and Aging Coordinator for Jewish Family Service of Utah. In this role she facilitates the Gleeful Choir (a chorus for people with dementia and their caregivers) and the Exploring Creativity program, a weekly online art education class for adults 55+. Emily coordinates the Utah Creative Aging Coalition, a state-wide organization bringing together teaching artists, arts organizations and older-adult serving organizations to promote Creative Aging in Utah. Additionally, Emily is the owner of Crescendo Music Therapy, where she and her team provide music therapy services to hospice agencies across Utah. She lives in Ogden Utah, where she revels in music, art, gardening and exploring Utah’s amazing wilderness.

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Art Forms

Dance, Performing Arts, Performing Arts > Theatre, Visual Arts

Audience

Arts and Community Orgnizations

Year

2025

Fields

Aging Services, Arts Agency (formerly Arts Council), Arts Organization, Government Agency, Government Agency > State

Focuses

Accessibility, Arts + Health, Intergenerational, Partnerships, Rural

Services

Consulting, Partnerships, Project

Strategic Priority

Creative Aging Access

 

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