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Apr. 17th Earn Money for CATA by Clicking

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What if Community Access to the Arts earned a donation every time you searched the Internet? Or how about if a percentage of every purchase you made online went to support our cause? Well, now it can!

GoodSearch.com is a Yahoo-powered search engine that donates half its advertising revenue, about a penny per search, to the charities its users designate. Use it just as you would any search engine, get quality search results from Yahoo, and watch the donations add up!

GoodShop.com is an online shopping mall which donates up to 30 percent of each purchase to your favorite cause! Hundreds of great stores including Amazon, Target, and eBay have teamed up with GoodShop and every time you place an order, you’ll be supporting your favorite cause.

And if you download the GoodSearch toolbar, our cause will earn money every time you shop and search online – even if you forget to go to GoodShop or GoodSearch first! Add the Community Access to the Arts – CATA (Great Barrington) toolbar.

P.S. CATA’s web site has been updated with a new look, a blog feature, and more video clips. If you like our site, check out our web designers, Chelsea DeSantis and Andrew Liebchen of Deelux!

Nov. 8th Annual Appeal 2010

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Dear Friends,

Community Access to the Arts’ 18th program year has begun! The 2010-2011 theme, “Going Places,” is an invitation to explore the unexpected as we travel with our participants, our faculty artists, and you, our celebrators and supporters. It’s as much about the journey as the destination this year.

We are grateful for all of the ways you show your support for CATA, and especially appreciate all of you who have continued to support CATA even in leaner times. As the headlines challenge us more intensely, our unique model for creative social change, uniting people across all boundaries and celebrating every individual for their abilities and for what they contribute grows more relevant.

Together we’ve drawn an extensive artistic map for CATA over these 17 years, and thanks to your support we have proudly welcomed any interested participant, regardless of their financial capacity. As programs and services to people with disabilities suffer deeper and deeper cuts, our work becomes more essential to their quality of life. If you have witnessed our work, then you know how deeply connected the joy of creative expression is to all of us.

Your gift of any amount keeps our mission open to all. We invite your renewed support, and if you are new to CATA, welcome you to become part of this joyful journey.

With deep appreciation,

Sandy Newman, Executive Director
John J. Whalan, Board President

Download the PDF of our printed appeal and newsletter filled with color photographs, CATA news and important dates.

How to make a donation: Donate through PayPal, or download our donation form and send along with check or credit card information to: Community Access to the Arts, 40 Railroad Street, Suite 6, Great Barrington, MA 01230.

Sep. 9th CATA Featured in Berkshire Living

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Excerpt from an article by Amanda Rae Busch for Berkshire Living:

Clichés, smeeshays. Sticks & Stones mirrors, crafted by creative people with disabilities at Great Barrington’s Community Access to the Arts under the guidance of faculty artist and Cut It Out twig furnishings founder Janice Shields, are guaranteed to elicit double-takes. Made of sticks collected in Stockbridge, Mass., and polished river stones, the organic adornments send a mighty message.

16- by 18-inch frames about $125 at the Berkshire Botanical Garden Shop, Routes 102 & 183, Stockbridge, Mass., 413.298.3926; Campo de’ Fiori, 1815 N. Main St./Route 7, Sheffield, Mass., 413. 413.528.1857; Evergreen Fine American Crafts, 291 Main St., Great Barrington, Mass., 413.528.0511; Community Access to the Arts, 40 Railroad St., Great Barrington, Mass., 413.528.5485; Cut It Out by Janice Shields, 413.298.0677.

Aug. 9th Annual Art Show a Hit

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Many thanks to The Advocate, Berkshires Week, and iberkshires.com for their articles about our I AM A PART OF ART exhibit and poetry reading. We appreciate all those who came out to support CATA’s poets and visual artists – 120 people in all! Guest reader, Donald Platt, was thoroughly engaging and charming and CATA’s poets delighted in hearing their poems read aloud and the wonderful applause following. Michael Platt, Donald’s brother and a participant in CATA’s visual arts workshops, presented Donald with one of his paintings, beautifully framed by Pat Hogan, CATA’s visual arts faculty who doubles as the framer and hanger of the exhibit. Ten paintings were sold, along with over $900 worth of CATAdirect jewelry, notecards and accessories. And everyone enjoyed the refreshments provided by Canyon Ranch, thanks to Linda & Reggie Cooper. Special thanks to the Greenagers for planting the little garden outside of the gallery. We were delighted to be on the air with Dan Schilling of WSBS that morning, and that Dan found time after work to come see the show. If you missed the opening, don’t forget the studio is open Monday through Friday, 9am-5pm, and weekends by appointment.

Aug. 9th Grant Update

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CATA continues to apply for grants to support a variety of program offerings. We’re very grateful to have received the following recent grant awards: $3,664 from the City of Pittsfield for workshops, $4,000 from Berkshire Life Charitable Foundation for school programs, and $3,500 from George & Carol Minkoff for a 60-second public service announcement film to be shown in local theatres.

Aug. 9th CATAdirect Products in Stores Now

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This summer, you’ll find CATAdirect products in more retail locations than ever: Red Lion Inn Boutique, You are Here, Worldwide Market Square, Berkshire Botanical Garden, Campo di Fiore, The Bookloft, & Williams & Son County Store. Look for our Sticks & Stones Mirror in the September issue of Berkshire Living Home Design! We’re working on our holiday gift and card collections and hope everyone will choose CATA as the place to purchase printed holiday cards, handmade holiday cards, and 2011 Calendar cards.

Jul. 29th CATA Featured in The Advocate

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Excerpt from an article by Chris Gauthier for The Advocate:

The writer Francine Prose probably was not aware of Community Access to the Arts when she wrote “There are many rooms in the house of art,” but this encouraging statement serves as an apt designation for the 17-year-old arts program based in Great Barrington.

CATA, as the organization is lovingly referred to, is just what the name implies: an organization, a place, a group that makes the creation of art accessible to people who live with disabilities in the community. On any given day throughout the year, CATA’s participants can dive headlong into creating paintings and drawings, writing poetry, dancing, acting or nearly any form of art to their hearts’ content. And while there are some guidelines, the artwork is ultimately up to individual expression.

The 24 faculty artists, the volunteers and the staff members are simply there to teach and guide the process along.

“We teach art to individuals, just as we would to anyone else,” said Pat Hogan, a painter and framer who has worked as an art teacher with CATA for more than 10 years and who is serving as the artistic director for this year’s art show and poetry reading gala. “My job is to help the artists perform at the highest level as they possibly can.”

Jul. 29th CATA Featured in Berkshires Week

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Excerpt from an article by Laura Corona for Berkshires Week:

“I have a whole collection of poems. They tell my thoughts about what I’m doing – dancing, that I’m happy and well, when I’m happy with myself and everybody else. When I can write it, I can explain things,” Mary Huberman said.

Huberman, of Great Barrington, is one of the poets to have work showcased at the upcoming annual Community Access to the Arts (CATA) “I Am a Part of Art” art show and poetry reading, tonight from 5 to 7.

Tonight, CATA will celebrate visual artists and poets with approximately 80 pieces of artwork and 15 poems based on the theme ‘Sticks and Stones.’ “It’s the culmination of an entire year of art workshops,” said Liana Toscanini, CATA’s development and marketing director. “It gives people a chance to shine in public. It’s part of the mission of CATA to notice people’s talents and abilities as opposed to their disabilities.”

CATA is in its 18th year of using art to integrate people with disabilities into the community. Through more than 1,000 workshops in Berkshire County, CATA serves some 500 people with developmental, physical and emotional disabilities, offering classes in a wide range of visual and performing arts, from painting to juggling to yoga.

Jul. 29th CATA Featured on iBerkshires

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Excerpt from an article by Nichole Dupont for iBerkshires:

If you’re looking for a poetic pick-me-up on a rainy day, Donald Platt is not your man.

Yet despite his somber, broken tercets, the two-time winner of the Pushcart Prize and recipient of a fellowship from the National Endowment for the Arts is coming to the Berkshires to celebrate (and yes, maybe to weep). This Thursday, Platt will be the guest reader at the sixth annual Art Show and Poetry Reading hosted by CATA (Community Access to the Arts) at its headquarters on 71 Railroad St. According to CATA Executive Director Sandy Newman, having Platt read is the icing on a very hard-earned cake.

“He’s lovely and charming,” she said. “It’s an honor to have him come and read the participants’ poems and share some of his reflections. Donald will read their poetry. To have him here is sort of a gift.”

Platt will be reading 14 poems by CATA participants, including those of his younger brother (and his muse) who was born with severe Down syndrome. Like Platt’s brother, CATA participants are all adults living with disabilities. Through CATA, participants become enmeshed in visual and performing arts workshops that encourage dialogue, experimentation and, ultimately, artistic expression. According to faculty artist Pat Hogan, the faculty are given a theme every year and a few thoughts addressing that theme. Then it is theirs (and their students’) to do with what they will. This year’s theme: “Sticks and Stones.”

Jul. 28th goodWORKS Gives Back

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Sonya Mackintosh, founder and designer of smARTWORKS, Inc., believes in giving back to her community. That’s why smARTWORKS contributes to the local economy in ways specifically pertaining to animal rights, cultural organizations and health issues that are close to her.

Each season a scarf and an organization are selected and paired. 15% of the sales of that scarf will be donated to the organization. This season’s selection, Tundra and McKay (available from May – October 2010), will benefit Community Access to the Arts.

Visit smARTWORKS to learn more and make your purchase today!