Building Back Bolder

Creating an Equitable Arts Recovery
A #SharetheLove Panel Conversation with Margie Johnson Reese and Randy Engstrom, hosted by Marcie Sillman

Intiman Theatre invites you to join us for a #SharetheLove panel conversation event: Building Back Bolder. We will be joined by national arts leader Margie Johnson Reese, recently departed Director of Seattle Office of Arts & Culture Randy Engstrom, and our host will be veteran art’s journalist Marcie Sillman. The panelists will discuss the current state of the arts and share their assessments and their hopes for the sector as a whole. How can we build back with the lessons we have learned to create a more inclusive cultural sector?

Wednesday, April 7th 2021, 5pm-6pm pacific.

Tickets are Free for Everyone. Reserve yours today to receive the Zoom link to join. Donations accepted with thanks, and will go towards our #SharetheLove campaign.

This event will be captioned. Open to all ages.

Watch ON DEMAND on the Seattle Channel

About #SharetheLove

In support of our reopening, Intiman invites you to #SharetheLove as we raise $100,000+ in 18 days from April 7-24, 2021!

#SharetheLove to support:

  • Establishing our new partnership with Seattle Central College (SCC) as the professional theatre-in-residence
  • Moving our operations to Capitol Hill 
  • Launching our new Associate of Arts degree, emphasis in Technical Theatre for Social Justice at SCC
  • Continuing our free education programs online, including STARFISH Project and South End Stories
  • Resuming production this fall at the Erickson Theatre and Broadway Performance Hall

Meet the Panelists

Margie Johnson Reese

Margie has a thirty-year portfolio as an arts advocate and arts management professional. She is an advisor to the International Council of African Museums based in Nairobi, Kenya. She is a Fellow at the Salzburg Global Institute in Salzburg, Austria and a long-time board member of Americans for the Arts. Margie served a six year tenure as Director of the Office of Cultural Affairs for the City of Dallas. After her time in Dallas, she relocated to Los Angeles to serve as the General Manager for the City of Los Angeles Department of Cultural Affairs. She held that position under three Mayoral administrations. During her time in LA she developed Music LA!, which provides quality music instruction to young people throughout the city.
Margie’s expertise as a grantmaker was tapped by the Ford Foundation to advance cultural projects in West Africa. Based in Lagos, Nigeria and serving 14 West African countries, her work centered on cultural policy development and conservation of West Africa’s tangible and intangible cultural heritage. Her leadership led to the creation of an unprecedented collaboration between the British Museum and Nigeria’s National Commission for Museums and Monuments. The partnership established an initiative to strengthen technical conservation skills of Nigerian museum professionals, and contextualized the pre-museum existence of West African objects held in the collections of the British Museum. She was the driving force that enabled the scholarly work of the late Nigerian historian Dr. Ekpo Eyo’s Masterpieces of Nigerian Art, published in 2008. Through her vision and commitment to restoring dignity to West African antiquities, she became known as the “mother of the Lagos Museum.”
Margie is a faculty member for leadership programs organized by the National Guild for Community Arts Education and the Western States Arts Federation. In addition, she is an adjunct professor at the University of North Texas and at Goucher College in their graduate schools of arts administration.

Randy Engstrom

Randy (he/him) has been a passionate advocate and organizer of cultural and community development for over 15 years.  He is currently an Adjunct Faculty at the Seattle University Arts Leadership Program and an independent consultant focused on cultural policy, organizational development and racial equity. Most recently he served as Director of the Office of Arts and Culture for the City of Seattle from 2012 to 2020 where he  expanded their investments in granting programs and Public Art, while establishing new programs and policies in arts education, cultural space affordability, and racial equity. Previously he served as the Founding Director of the Youngstown Cultural Arts Center, a multimedia/multidisciplinary community space that offers youth and community member’s access to arts, technology, and cultural resources (www.youngstownarts.org).. In 2009 Randy received the Emerging Leader Award from Americans for the Arts and was one of Puget Sound Business Journal’s 40 Under 40.

Marcie Sillman

Marcie (she/her) is a long-time friend of Intiman. In her many years as KUOW public radio’s Senior Arts and Culture Reporter, Marcie covered Intiman through its artistic and institutional evolution, filing stories about these transformations both locally and for NPR. Marcie continues to be an ardent supporter of both Intiman’s mission and its leaders and looks forward to chronicling the stories that unfold in the future.

Photo by Megan Farmer for KUOW Public Radio.