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The Robert E. Gard Foundation is committed to helping people and their communities discover the vital role the arts play in their day-to-day lives.

 

Attend the conference:

Altering the Face and the Heart of America
The arts, our communities, and the 21st century

Lowell Center, Madison, Wisconsin
September 24-25, 2010

What the conference is: The National Endowment for the Arts makes funds available to states to showcase “American Masterpieces” in their state. The Wisconsin Arts Board declares that Wisconsin’s special “masterpiece” is community/arts development – the simultaneous, interdependent thriving of the arts and the community. Since the early 20th century, the “Wisconsin Idea” of community development has influenced life in Wisconsin, and the arts have been an important part of that development. Robert E. Gard was associated with this movement since 1945 to his death in 1992.

In 1969, he wrote The Arts in the Small Community, which linked arts development to business development, wellness and health, religion and spirituality, the environment, and more, in prose so stirring that it is still quoted today…the famous last line, “If you try, you can indeed/ Alter the face and the heart of America” brought many of us into this field! This book was seminal in rural arts development for more than 50 years. The Arts Board hopes that this symposium can challenge artists and community-builders in this century, as Gard’s work did in the last. (Text of this short book is at http://www.gardfoundation.org/windmillprojects.html.) That 2010 is the centennial of Gard’s birth, and that the University of Wisconsin-Madison will dedicate a Storytellers Memorial to Gard on September 25, are both factors in planning the symposium.

The conference is produced by the Robert Gard-Wisconsin Idea Foundation.

 

Follow the construction of the Storytellers Circle:

Muir Knoll facelift to build its storyteller’s tradition

University of Wisconsin News, April 16, 2009

by Dennis Chaptman

Thanks to gifts, including one from a foundation named for one of Wisconsin's great storytellers, the University of Wisconsin-Madison's scenic Muir Knoll will revive its historic tradition as "Story-Teller's Hill." The Robert E. Gard Foundation, in partnership with other private funders, is providing resources for a renovation of Muir Knoll, the tree-shaded knob of land on the northern edge of Bascom Hill overlooking Lake Mendota. The project's centerpiece will be the Robert E. Gard Storyteller's Circle, a gathering spot named after one of Wisconsin's prolific writers and storytellers.

Daniel Einstein, Lakeshore Nature Preserve program manager, says the project will involve removal of the old concrete aggregate benches and terrace now perched at the brow of the hill and replacing them with the circular gathering spot. A stone seating wall inscribed with some of Gard's notable quotations will enclose the circle. "This place has a long tradition of being a gathering and storytelling place, so this project is really in step with its history and with Gard's legacy," Einstein says.

The project is set to begin in late summer or early fall.

In the 1910s, the site was the location of an open-air theater. It was the gathering place for university summer-session meetings on folklore led by Charles E. Brown, an archaeologist and the State Historical Society's museum director. He shared vivid stories of local Native American people and early European-American settlers. It is fitting that Gard's name will be part of the $167,000 project, given his prodigious ability to craft and capture stories. In the years after Gard joined the UW-Madison faculty and later UW-Extension, Gard established the Wisconsin Idea Theater Conference, the Wisconsin Regional Writers Association and established the nationally known Rhinelander School of the Arts.

Maryo Gard Ewell, Gard's daughter, says the project fits perfectly with Gard's love for Wisconsin, the university and its landscape. "The Muir Knoll project would absolutely thrill my dad," she says. "It's a little parcel of land that embodies the Wisconsin Idea. And the Wisconsin Idea was his total passion. On that hill is a marriage of the visual soul of the university, conversation, inquiry, the pursuit of ideas and the Wisconsin landscape."

Gard, who died in 1992 at the age of 82, authored numerous books, many that focused on Wisconsin life and culture such as "Coming Home to Wisconsin," "Down in the Valleys: Wisconsin Back Country Lore and Humor" and "My Land, My Wisconsin: The Epic Story of the Wisconsin Farm and Farm Family from Settlement Days to the Present." Gard also wrote for the stage, authoring or co-authoring plays including "Calumet Story," "Hodag: A New Musical" and "The Freedom: A Wisconsin Comedy in Three Acts." After working as a Fulbright Research Scholar in Finland in 1959, Gard was the recipient of the gold medal of the Finnish National Theater for his work with Finnish playwrights, the Medal of the University of Helsinki and the Jubilee Medal of the nation of Finland.

As part of the project, Einstein says a concrete reservoir just east of the scenic overlook will be removed and the largely untended area will be re-landscaped to provide a new grass terrace and native plants will be added. The reservoir once served the nearby Hydraulics Laboratory — now called the Water Science and Engineering Laboratory — but has not been used in years.