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Kristine Kilmartin had recently married
Pawtucket Rep. Peter Kilmartin and had only lived in Pawtucket
for only a few months. The Smithfield native was driving through
Slater Memorial Park in early January 1999 with her new husband
when she asked why didn't the City take more advantage of its
green space. Kristine wondered why the City couldn't do something
like the Scituate Arts Festival in the City's 209-acre park. The
Kilmartin's turned to Mayor James E. Doyle with the idea of creating
an arts festival. After a month of meetings, discussion and planning
the City created an 18-person committee to plan Convergence Pawtucket
'99.
It had been more than
a decade since the Providence Parks Department kicked off its
first Convergence Festival in 1989.
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Peter & Kristine Kilmartin |
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Meanwhile Providence's Convergence
XII would expand the arts festival Statewide by tying together
other community festivals held throughout Rhode Island. Pawtucket's
Planning Committee, co-chaired by the Kilmartin's, created its
own festival in June 1999, tying into Providence Convergence,
"with a local flavor." Most of the committee members
were city officials, civic leaders, local business owners and
a few local artists. The Blackstone Valley Tourism Council donated
staff time for six months to oversee the planning, logistics and
implementation of the programming.
Since its inception,
Pawtucket's Arts Festival has created a citywide showcase of visual
and performing arts, interactive workshops, music theater and
dance performances. Where else could you enjoy a wide variety
of music from the Rhode Island Philharmonic Pop Orchestra, Duke
Robillard Blues Band, Planet Groove, Blackstone Valley Heritage
Series, or watch the Big Nazzo Puppets, and the dragonboat races?
Not to mention one-of-a kind art exhibits, attend the Everett
Dance Theatre and the Sandra Gamm-Feinstein Theatre performances,
meet writers and filmmakers at a film festival, and much, much
more. And where else could your children learn the art of making
glass, raku pottery or carving stone and wood. Or even have the
opportunity to create scarecrows or puppets. Only in the City
of Pawtucket if you had attended one of our art festivals.
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Audience
at Pops Festival in Slater Park |
Over the last four years,
the Arts Festival has donated four permanent sculptures to the
City, too.
The Art Festival's budget
has grown in five years, initially set at $20,000 in 1999, to
the 2003 budget of $96,156 ($57,184 is allocated to programming). Only a handful of sponsors
helped the City to fund its Arts Festival in 1999. But the support
and excitement in the business community continues to grow. In
2003, more than 214 local businesses gave over $70,000, including
an additional $100,000 worth of in-kind donations, supported our
biggest Arts Festival.
Attendance to Pawtucket's
Art Festival has grown too, over the last five years. Probably
our 1999 Arts Festival attracted a few thousand attendees. Last
year we saw more than 30,000 come to Pawtucket to participate
in one of the events.
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Dragonboat Races |
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Specifically, our first
opening gala, held in the City library in 1999 attracted about
35 people. Last year more than 1,000 people came to this opening
event held at the Blackstone Valley Visitors Center. Crowds at
the dragonboat races have steadily increased too - from 2,000
at the first race, to over 15,000 last year. Over 6,000 people
attended the Rhode Island Philharmonic Pop Orchestra Concert in
Slater Park. We expect this number to dramatically increase this
year, especially with word of mouth advertising that is now taking
place.
The steady growth of
participating artists, corporate sponsors, volunteers and attendees
over the last five years indicates a quality program, well managed,
and has become a permanent fixture in the community.
Pawtucket's Art Festival
has awakened a new pride in our community, and continues to stimulate
our creative energies, along with having an economic impact on
the City as well. |