LINWOOD
J. OGLESBY
PROFESSIONAL BIOGRAPHY
Linwood
J. Oglesby became the first full-time Executive Director of the
Newark Arts Council when he was appointed to that position by
the board of directors on March 1, 1999. In this position he is
responsible for developing a comprehensive arts program for the
city of Newark that, through collaboration with arts groups, artists,
and the philanthropic community, further establishes Newark’s
position as the state’s foremost cultural center. Programs
of the Council include the ArtStart Grants Program, the Artists
Studio and Available Space Tour, and Information Services, including
the NewarkArts newsletter and its companion website, Newarkarts.org.
The Council also provides leadership on issues of cultural planning,
artists housing, and public art.
Prior
to joining the Newark Arts Council, Linwood served for four years
as Administrator of New Community Harmony House Corporation. In
the position of Administrator of the 102 unit transitional housing
facility, he was responsible for service provision in the largest
facility of its kind in New Jersey. In addition to providing housing,
the program’s objectives included working with the private
and public sectors to utilize available federal housing programs
to move homeless families from homelessness to self-sufficiency.
Mr.
Oglesby previously served as Executive Director of the American
Council for the Arts (ACA), a national arts advocacy and arts
service organization based in New York City. He was appointed
by the Board of Director of ACA to become Acting CEO, upon the
resignation of the former President and CEO in January 1994. At
ACA he oversaw the National Nancy Hanks Lecture on Arts Policy
(as The Kennedy Center in Washington, D.C.) and the national Arts
Advocacy Day at the U. S. Capitol.
From
1986 through 1991, Linwood Oglesby was the Executive Director
of the Hopkins House Association, Inc., a health and human services
agency in Alexandria, Virginia. There he developed a pre-school
for three – five year olds, created an arts education program
linking artists from the city’s Torpedo Factory Arts Center
with this community-based program, and instituted Alexandria’s
first city-wide AIDS outreach program for street populations.
The Mayor and City Manager appointed Mr. Oglesby to numerous panels
and commissions.
Mr.
Oglesby has also served as Director of Urban Arts at The Arts
Council, Inc. in Winston-Salem, N.C. and was in charge of outreach
programs and developing audiences for member groups of the Council.
Among the programs which he directed or co-directed were the Mayfest
International Festival, Carolina StreetScene, the Art-Is House
after school arts education program, visual arts exhibitions and
performing arts events. He, also, advised the Council’s
Projects Pool re-granting program.
He
has served communities regionally and nationally, as a consultant.He
has served on the boards of many organizations, including ArtPride,
NJ, the Burgdorff Cultural Center (Maplewood), the United Way
(Alexandria), the Essex County Comprehensive Emergency Assistance
System. Newark Mayor Sharpe James recently appointed him to the
city’s first Public Art Commission and he was elected by
his fellow commissioners to serve as its first Chairman. Mr. Oglesby
was appointed by Virginia Governor Gerald Baliles to the state’s
Commission on Agriculture and Consumer Affairs, a position to
which he was reappointed by Governor Douglas Wilder, representing
Virginia’s 9th congressional district.
Mr.
Oglesby holds the Master of Science degree in Social Policy from
Howard University and a Bachelor of Science degree from Virginia
Commonwealth University. He serves on the adjunct faculty of the
Seton Hall University Center for Public Service.