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Organization

Since 1972, Northwest Folklife has been helping Puget Sound residents share the music, dance and traditional arts of their ethnic and cultural communities. 

Northwest Folklife's EIN is 91-1311548
Northwest Folklife's UBI is 600-587-528

Mission

Northwest Folklife creates opportunities for individuals and communities of the Pacific Northwest to celebrate, share and sustain the vitality of folk, ethnic and traditional arts for present and future generations. Northwest Folklife carries out its mission in a variety of ways, most notably through the annual production of the free Northwest Folklife Festival.

Northwest Folklife describes its core values as follows:

  • Northwest Folklife believes that the arts revitalize people and communities. Northwest Folklife is dedicated to the preservation of cultural heritage and its continued growth and development.
  • Northwest Folklife understands that everyone is a bearer of folk arts and that it is as important to participate in the arts as it is to observe them.
  • Northwest Folklife encourages communities to share their cultural arts believing that interaction with new audiences enriches the community as much as the audience. When people share aspects of their culture, opportunities are created to dissolve misunderstandings, break down stereotypes and increase respect for one another.
  • Northwest Folklife relies on the diverse communities of the Pacific Northwest to inspire programs. Northwest Folklife collaborates with these communities to develop public presentations of their culture.
Northwest Folklife is recognized by the IRS as a tax-exempt 501(c)3 corporation. It is registered with the Secretary of State of the State of Washington.

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Northwest Folklife Programs
Northwest Folklife's programs have developed directly out of the needs of the communities with which we work. They can be found in schools, public housing communities and community centers. They are designed to enhance the understanding and importance of our cultural heritage. Traditional arts express cultural identity and provide a tool to help understand community diversity. The scope of our programs includes: Northwest Folklife Festival, Northwest Folklife Recordings, Education Programs, Folklore Research and Consulting Services.

Northwest Folklife Festival, held over Memorial Day weekend, is one of the largest, varied and most vibrant free folklife celebrations in North America. Produced by Northwest Folklife and Seattle Center, it hosts more than 7,000 participants, 27 stages and venues, roughly 1000 performances, and an audience of approximately 250,000 at the 74-acre Seattle Center. Participants immerse themselves in four days of music and dance performances, visual arts and folklore exhibits, symposia, workshops, craft and cooking demonstrations and films.

Education Programs of Northwest Folklife bring the folk arts to children, their families, and the professionals who serve them. The folk arts are an essential aspect of passing on cultural values. These programs teach individuals ways of engaging in, responding to, and understanding the world around us.

Folklife in the Schools is a comprehensive folk arts service for schools, educators, and communities offering classes, curricula, assembly programs, and teacher training services from culture bearers and master artists from a wide range of traditions. You can find the Folklife in the Schools Artist Roster here.

Consulting Services are designed to enhance understanding about the important role of ethnic, folk, and traditional arts in our community and to bring our knowledge of diversity and community issues to businesses, schools, communities, organizations, festivals and individuals. Northwest Folklife draws on its extensive network of community leaders, educators, artists and specialists in the field for these services.

Folklore Research and Projects consists of fieldwork and planning within a diverse group of local ethnic communities. We meet with community leaders and advisory committees to identify folk art masters, community rituals, and group capabilities and to devise ways in which that community can promote an understanding of itself within the region. The outcome can take any number of forms including workshops, concerts, exhibits, tours and special events. Northwest Folklife has received grants from the National Endowment for the Arts, the National Endowment for the Humanities, the Lila Wallace - Reader's Digest Fund, Washington State Arts Commission, Washington Commission for the Humanities, King County Arts Commission, Seattle Arts Commission, foundations and companies such as Boeing and SAFECO for its work with many regional ethnic communities.

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Northwest Folklife Recordings developed out of 25 years of recording special concerts at the Festival, from folklorists working in the field and from the renowned Ethnomusicology Archives of the University of Washington.

The label features singular chronicles such as Washington Fiddlers (Volume I and II) - a compilation of artists from the Northwest old-time fiddle community; Ki Ho'Alu - Seattle Style Hawai'ian Slack Key Guitar - the introduction of this popular Hawai'ian hybrid into mainstream music from their Festival performances; and Say a Song - Joe Heaney. The legendary Irish musician is the debut subject of Northwest Archives, a new label of selected recordings from the University of Washington collection.

Also on the Archives label:
Recordando a Venezuela by Rafael Angel y los Hermanos Aparicios
and Under the Earth Tones: Ambient Didgeridoo Meditations by the Didgeri Dudes with Stuart Dempster.

For more information about Northwest Folklife, please email, call or write:

Northwest Folklife
305 Harrison Street
Seattle WA 98109-4623
Phone: 206-684-7300

 

HISTORY

The organization now known as "Northwest Folklife" was created informally in 1971 as a joint project between the Seattle Folklore Society, the National Park Service, the National Folklife Festival Association and the City of Seattle, to produce a festival of traditional and ethnic arts in Seattle as a part of a program of the National Park Service for urban outreach, being coordinated by the National Folk Festival Association (now the National Council for the Traditional Arts). The first festival was produced over Memorial Day weekend, May, 1972, by the Seattle Folklore Society with a $6,000 grant from the City of Seattle, and the contribution of the facilities of the Seattle Center, the site of the 1962 World's Fair which had become an agency of the City of Seattle and a major Seattle urban park. The concept was to provide a high quality public forum where the traditional and ethnic communities and artists of the Northwest Region of the National Park Service (Alaska, Washington, Oregon, Idaho, and Western Montana) could present their music and dance performances and crafts. The theme was presenting what people "make for their own use and do for their own entertainment." All performers were asked to contribute their participation in an event with no admission charge as an opportunity for community celebration and sharing. The first Festival presented over 300 performers to a large, enthusiastic audience over the three day weekend, and was perceived as a successful and needed addition to Northwest arts programs. The promoters of the Festival and the Seattle Center decided to make it an annual event.

The Northwest Regional Folklife Festival Association was incorporated in January, 1973, as a Washington non-profit corporation to conduct the annual "Northwest Regional Folklife Festival." It had a Board of Directors composed of representatives from the Seattle Folklife Society, National Park Service, and City of Seattle, who were designated a certain number of Board positions each, and a number of additional Board members representing traditional and ethnic arts groups in the Northwest. In 1981, the Festival hired its first full-time staff member. Until then, the Festival had been produced primarily by a volunteer staff with a Festival Director hired on a part time basis. Until 1984, the Festival was produced by the Seattle Folklore Society, which had tax-exempt status and experience. In 1984, the organization was reincorporated as "Northwest Folklife Festival" under a charter qualifying for federal tax exempt status. Tax exempt status was obtained in 1986. Northwest Folklife then took over full production responsibilities for the Festival.

Starting in the early 1980's, the organization, now with a full-time staff, began expanding the scope of its activities beyond simply producing the Northwest Folklife Festival. In recognition of this broadening of scope, the name of the organization was changed to "Northwest Folklife."

During the 1980's additional staff were hired on a seasonal basis to handle programming, vendors, and public relations. Staff made significant improvements in both the administrative and artistic management of the Festival, bringing in new sponsors, starting the "Friends of Folklife" program, and initiating an organized outreach to include members of an increasingly diverse regional population in the organization's programs. Activities were expanded to include participation in festivals in other parts of the Northwest, helping other communities with traditional and ethnic arts programs, sponsoring year around traditional and ethnic arts events, developing the most extensive database of traditional and ethnic artists in the Pacific Northwest, and becoming the most visible advocate of traditional and ethnic arts in the region.

Today, the four-day Festival attracts an audience of about 250,000 visitors and has over 7,000 volunteer performers and 1,300 volunteers. Northwest Folklife employs a year-round staff of 14.

There is no question that the Festival has stimulated interest and activity in traditional arts in the Northwest. It has become a major focal point for many traditional and ethnic performing groups and communities. Since the first Festival, many other smaller but similar festivals have been conducted throughout the Northwest by civic organizations, ethnic communities, and governmental recreational agencies, many with assistance from Northwest Folklife. All of these events have focused attention on the traditional and ethnic resources of the area and, more importantly, have introduced many people to traditional arts activities they can do themselves. Keeping in mind that the performers and participants volunteer their participation and that the Festival now has about three times the performance venues it had in 1972, in 1994, it had to turn away more performers than it presented at the first Festival in 1972 just for a lack of space!

In 1999, Northwest Folklife was selected as a Local Legacy by the Library of Congress in celebration of its 200th Anniversary. A record of the organization's proud history is now a part of the national memory!

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