Partnerships, programs provide space for artists to share
Emily Free Wilson was renting space in an old Helena, Mont., brick building where other artists worked when she began hosting community events and kids’ summer art camps.
“I remember my friend, a sculptor, telling me, ‘Emily, you’re running an art center!’ And I said, ‘No, I don’t want to!'” Free Wilson recalls.
Then she thought more about it: She did like sharing her space, organizing events and collaborating with other artists. So she and her husband, Matt Wilson, bought and renovated a former mortuary. In moved their company, Free Ceramics, which produces pottery notable for colorful, playful dots. Other artists – painters, a sculptor, a furniture refinisher and crafters – also moved in, lured by 90-cents-a-square-foot studio spaces.
Free Ceramics has rented its events and gallery space – with a vaulted ceiling and hardwood floors – for a square-dancing potluck fundraiser, a preschool graduation ceremony, a furniture refinishing class and more.
“It’s really important to have spaces like this in the world – places that encourage creativity and deepen that artistic spirit that people need to share,” Free Wilson says.
Unusual studio arrangements and community art centers exist nationwide to provide artists with free or reduced-cost space and a way to share their work with the public.
In Denver, the nonprofit PlatteForum hosts a single artist for two months four times a year. The artist receives free lodging, a stipend and ample studio space. In return, the artist provides open studio hours and hosts an exhibit or workshop.
The program also links artists with Denver children who are struggling in school or don’t feel they fit in.
“They’re the kids at low-performing schools who need to re-engage in school and learning and in themselves,” says Judy Anderson, an artist and PlatteForum’s artistic director, who founded the nonprofit in 2002. Collaborating with musicians, dancers, painters and poets, she hopes, will provide hope and direction for the children.
Multimedia artist Sarah Rockett of Denver said her recent PlatteForum residency allowed her to build larger- scale sculptures.
“I’ve never had the space to do so, and grew immensely from the experience,” Rockett says. “Working with the youth became the most important aspect for me. Their creative range anchored the playfulness of my work.”
A short drive from Colorado Springs, the town of Breckenridge provides artists with studio and living space in its BreckCreate program, which includes a new $10 million Breckenridge Arts District campus with studios for ceramic, glass, textile, and other local and guest artists to share their work. Artists from around the country are invited to work at this 1-acre arts campus for two to four weeks. Additionally, three small artists’ studios are available for $250 a month.
Artists from cities “love the idea of being in a mountain setting and being able to focus on their work,” says Robb Woulfe, BreckCreate’s president and CEO. Painters, printmakers, and mixed-media and fiber artists from Indiana, California, Washington and Hawaii will work in Breckenridge this summer and early fall.
The payback for Breckenridge? Woulfe and town leaders hope an expanded arts culture will establish the ski town as a year-round arts destination.
Douglas Bruce filed his suit Aug. 2, in El Paso County District Court. He said he has raised his concerns on the seven points during City Council meetings, sent his concerns to council members in writing and met with the council president, but felt he was not taken seriously.





