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Passing on the News to you all: |  | 
USC Annenberg seeks journalists, designers and developers for Getty Arts Journalism Fellowship 
 Contact:  Arianna Sikorski, USC, 213-740-1899 or Melissa Abraham (310)440-6861
 |  |  | The
 fellowship, which will be held Nov. 8-18, 2012, seeks to assemble an 
all-star team of arts journalists committed to using their skills to 
imagine and create new and innovative ways of reporting on arts and 
culture. Most costs are covered by the fellowship, including air travel,
 hotel, transportation within the city and most meals.
LOS ANGELES, June 12, 2012 -- The USC Annenberg School for Communication and Journalism  announced this week that applications for the 11th annual USC Annenberg/Getty Arts Journalism Program , which will operate as a 15-member pop-up newsroom in Los Angeles, are now being accepted.
National and international arts journalists, web designers and developers are welcome to apply.
 
 Applications are due July 24, 2012 click here to apply.
 
 The
 USC Annenberg/Getty Fellowship will be built around creating 
next-generation reporting tools for arts journalism. The fellowship, 
funded by The Getty Foundation, plans to design, develop and 
build this new project over the course of 11 days in a pop-up newsroom 
called Engine30. The program is looking for fellows who fit into one or more of these categories:
 
 
Engine30 is the latest in a series of experimental arts journalism projects 
dedicated to rethinking the ways journalists report on the arts. Engine28 was a pop-up newsroom with 40 journalists who produced 100+ stories around two theater festivals in one week. Engine29
 sent 28 arts journalists to explore gaming, crowd-sourcing, community 
engagement, slow journalism, meta-data, distributed storytelling, 
incremental journalism and social media as tools for covering the arts. Engine30 will build on the lessons of Engine28 and Engine29 and focus on creating a series of stories told in innovative ways.ARTS JOURNALISTS who
 are committed to finding and telling stories in new ways, thinking 
about journalism as a dynamic system and process rather than a product, 
as well as those who care about finding better ways to engage with 
audiences.DESIGNERS who
 are committed to thinking imaginatively about information architecture,
 user interaction, story-telling and visualization of multi-level data 
with design that is intuitive, simple and fun to use.DEVELOPERS who are committed to imaginatively finding, adapting and integrating existing tools into Engine30 with a focus on ideas/intent behind what is developed rather than specific ways to realize them. 
 
“We
 have discovered that bringing groups of talented people together and 
having them work side-by-side inventing something new is tremendously 
creative and fulfilling,”said Sasha Anawalt, who will direct the 2012 USC Annenberg/Getty Arts Journalism Program. “Each of the fellows chosen for Engine30
 will bring some skill or way of thinking that will challenge and help 
the team. The sparks of these collaborations will expand our collective 
thinking about arts coverage.” Joining Founding Director Anawalt will be Douglas McLennan, director of the newly-created USC Annenberg Center for Arts, Media & Audience, and the project architect for Engine30. Also part of the programming team is Edward Lifson, a frequent NPR arts and culture reporter. 
 
“We think of this project as ‘360-degree’ or ‘liquid’ journalism,” said McLennan,
 “How do you build stories that have context and depth and that engage 
people where they live? This is an opportunity to assemble a team that 
will go about creating stories in multi-dimensions.”The only 
program of its kind in the United States, the USC Annenberg/Getty Arts 
Journalism Program underscores the importance of arts journalists 
covering the arts ecosystem as a whole. The fellowship emphasizes the 
societal value of arts coverage and strengthening a global arts 
journalism network while working collaboratively toward making the arts 
accessible to all. 
 
“The Getty Foundation is delighted to once 
again collaborate with USC Annenberg and to support these special arts 
journalism fellowships. In a fast-changing world, it is critical that 
the fellowship program continues to evolve and seeks to establish a new 
standard of excellence in arts and cultural coverage,” said Getty 
Foundation Director Deborah Marrow. The Getty Foundation
 fulfills the philanthropic mission of the Getty Trust by supporting 
individuals and institutions committed to advancing the understanding 
and preservation of the visual arts locally and throughout the world. 
Through strategic grants and programs, the Foundation strengthens art 
history as a global discipline, promotes the interdisciplinary practice 
of conservation, increases access to museum and archival collections, 
and develops current and future leaders in the visual arts. The 
Foundation carries out its work in collaboration with the J. Paul Getty 
Museum, the Getty Research Institute, and the Getty Conservation 
Institute to ensure that the Getty programs achieve maximum impact. 
Additional information.
 
 
 
About the USC Annenberg School for Communication and Journalism
Located in Los Angeles at the University of Southern California , the Annenberg School for Communication and Journalism 
 is a national leader in education and scholarship in the fields of 
communication, journalism, public diplomacy and public relations. With 
an enrollment of more than 2,200 students, USC Annenberg offers 
doctoral, master's and bachelor's degree programs, as well as continuing
 development programs for working professionals across a broad scope of 
academic inquiry. The school's comprehensive curriculum emphasizes the 
core skills of leadership, innovation, service and entrepreneurship and 
draws upon the resources of a networked university located in the media 
capital of the world.  |  | 
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