Penn State has a new incubator. It’s not for business start-ups or tech transfer ventures. It’s for artists.
The Arts and Design Research Incubator, or ADRI, was established in 2014 to support projects within the College of Arts and Architecture, with an eye toward launching them onto a bigger stage.
“The idea is to embed projects for about two years and get them into the river of larger funding,” says Andy Belser, professor of theatre and director of ADRI. “We’re not the place to have projects that just sit down within Penn State and stay here. This is really looking out into the world. Getting pieces out is the idea.”
The first four embedded projects, now wrapping up, have already produced several installation works and public presentations and a play that has been performed (to very good reviews) in New York.
The ADRI provided space in which to work, promotion for performances and exhibitions, and modest funding for equipment and travel.
“Seed money is a huge problem in the arts,” says Belser. A grant of $10,000, which would barely get a science project off the ground, can make all the difference in the world to a project in the arts. “We’re a step along the way,” he says. “A really important step.”
Hatching a planThe incubator grew out of discussions between Belser and Andrew Schulz, associate dean for research in the College of Arts and Architecture, who both arrived at Penn State in the fall of 2013 eager to find new ways to encourage research in the college. They looked closely at interdisciplinary labs at Harvard, Stanford, and MIT that bring artists together with thinkers and creators in a wide range of other fields.
"We consider ALL the creative inquiry we do to be part of the research enterprise."