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Word: nea (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1990-1999
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Usage:

...nice diversion: a punitive hullabaloo, casting the NEA as the patron, if not of Commies, then of blasphemers, elitists and sickos. The arts grant becomes today's version of the Welfare Queen's Cadillac. And if the NEA is trashed or even dismantled in the process, so much the better: it only shows that the post-Reagan right still has teeth...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Whose Art Is It, Anyway? | 6/4/1990 | See Source »

Last year the U.S. Government gave the NEA $171.3 million to support theater, ballet, music, photography, painting and sculpture throughout America. Compared with the arts expenditures of other countries and with the general scale of federal outlays, this is a paltry sum. In 1989 France, with less than a fourth the population of the U.S., spent $560 million on music, theater and dance alone...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Whose Art Is It, Anyway? | 6/4/1990 | See Source »

...abolitionists like Rohrabacher, isn't that the point? "If the NEA disappears, art would still prosper. If funds for the NEA are cut, the private sector will surely fill any holes and gaps that remain...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Whose Art Is It, Anyway? | 6/4/1990 | See Source »

Actually the reverse is likely. Corporate arts underwriting oscillates with the laws on tax deductions, and the NEA controversy could reduce it. In any case, corporations prefer "safe" institutional culture: Ford puts Jasper Johns in the National Gallery, Mobil puts Masterpiece Theatre...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Whose Art Is It, Anyway? | 6/4/1990 | See Source »

...NEA was not created to subsidize such big-ticket events and famous names. Its brief is diversity; it is not a ministry of culture with control over museums, theaters or operas. All it can do on $170 million a year is give seed-money grants to a wide variety of cultural projects, many of them small, marginal, obscure and quite outside the field of prestige corporate underwriting. About 85,000 of these grants, nearly 90% of them for less than $50,000 each, have been distributed since 1965. But, though seldom large, the NEA grant is a powerful magnet...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Whose Art Is It, Anyway? | 6/4/1990 | See Source »

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