I’ve been reading an older but interesting book called Collaboration Handbook: Creating, Sustaining, and Enjoying the Journey (Winer and Ray, Fieldstone Alliance, 1994). I ran across this piece last year through Indy’s Spirit and Place Festival, which is itself a unique gem of creative collaboration in an urban setting. It must take grand perseverance to foster ongoing collaborative work among a spectrum of humanities, religious and arts organizations. The festival’s tradition fascinates me, and it disposes me to be further interested in a new local effort to create civic synergy through public programming partnerships: the IndyTalks series.
IndyTalks began last year. The series website describes IndyTalks as “a collaboration dedicated to fostering a sense of community through respectful and creative civic dialogue.” It’s a fascinating concept: gathering a loose network of diverse organizations (educational, arts and cultural, social service, etc.) and encouraging a few organizations at a time to partner on “creative” event formats addressing a particular year-long theme (in 2011, Indy as a “Super City” for the Super Bowl). So, theoretically, a common theme and a common dedication to creative formats for civic engagement bind the series events together.
I attended last night’s series event at Christian Theological Seminary: a forum reflecting on the city’s gifts and challenges from the perspectives of relative newcomers (for a list of new-to-Indy panelists, visit the seminary’s website). Discussion ranged from public transportation needs and excellent restaurant venues to food deserts and asset-based community development.
I like that such public conversations are happening, and I like that local leaders are seeking to connect, sustain, and further these kinds of public conversations rather than allowing great civic engagement moments to remain isolated and their participants to remain disconnected. The networking of related public conversations is promising from multiple angles: marketing, organizational synergy, and participant buzz to name just a few.
If a “Super City” has abundant venues for diverse neighbors to engage each other and build relationships; and if true collaboration creates opportunities for diverse organizations to risk sharing a common long-range vision for their communities; then I think IndyTalks has the potential for inviting its participants (organizational as well as individual) into some “super” possibilities for the city we share. If you can, check out the last IndyTalks event of the year, which just so happens to be a pre-festival event for the 2011 Spirit and Place Festival: “Dressing Indianapolis” at the Indianapolis Museum of Art on Tuesday, November 1 at 7 pm. Let’s keep exploring the possibilities!






