Connecting 成人大片 and the community

Connecting 成人大片 and the community

By Deborah Melman-Clement, Senior Development Writer, Office of Advancement

February 7, 2017

Share

[Isabel Concert Hall]
With support from the Ballytobin Foundation local groups recieve support to perform at the concert hall of the Isabel Bader Centre for the Performing Arts. (University Communications) 

On a balmy spring evening, the Isabel Bader Centre for the Performing Arts came alive to the timeless strains of 18th-century European composers, and a much more recent suite by local composer John Palmer. The players, members of Orchestra Kingston and the Kingston Community Strings, allowed their surroundings to inspire them, and the audience felt it. The spontaneous standing ovation that erupted at the end of the performance was, as one audience member put it, 鈥渨ell deserved and heartfelt.鈥

This magical moment was not just a connection between performer and audience, it was also a connection between university and community. And it would not have been possible without the Ballytobin Foundation.

A private foundation created by Joan and the late Brian Tobin in 1992 to support arts and culture in Ontario, the Ballytobin Foundation found a new purpose when The Isabel opened in 2014. The newly-reimagined foundation now makes it possible for local groups to play at the lakeside concert hall by subsidizing a portion of their rental costs. 

鈥淎nyone who knows anything about the Kingston music and theatre scene knows that the best venues are now at The Isabel,鈥 says John Burge, Director of Music at the Dan School of Drama and Music and a composer whose own works have been featured on The Isabel鈥檚 stage. 鈥淭he grants from the Ballytobin Foundation mean local groups can perform in a hall that has wonderful acoustics, great equipment, and where audiences love to come. It is a superb opportunity.鈥

鈥淎 performing arts centre has its own soul, and this soul thrives when there is broad participation by artists and the community,鈥 says Tricia Baldwin, The Isabel鈥檚 Artistic Director. 

That broad participation has included performances by the Kingston Chamber Choir, Kingston Brassworks, and the Kingston Community Orchestra, among others. In early November, 17 local choirs and more than 800 performers converged on The Isabel for Choralpalooza. All of these concerts were made possible by the Ballytobin Foundation, but Dr. Burge believes they are just a beginning. 

鈥淛oan鈥檚 vision was very specific, but also flexible enough that as long as there is artistic value in what is being presented, and as long as it is being driven by someone in the community, it will get funding,鈥 he says. 鈥淣ew initiatives and innovation and things that are being tried for the first time will be looked at favourably, because that is what this kind of fund should do.鈥

鈥淪he has nourished the virtuous circle of the artistic experience that gives so much to both performers and audiences,鈥 Ms. Baldwin says. 

That circle has been good for both Queen鈥檚 and the city it calls home. 

鈥淛oan saw the concert hall as an opportunity to be larger than just a university-focused venue,鈥 says Dr. Burge. 鈥淪he understood that the arts is a great medium for breaking down barriers. Bringing community groups into what is, in a sense, a university building really helps to connect the university with the Kingston community. Borders never matter when you鈥檙e talking about the arts.鈥 

To learn more about the Ballytobin Foundation, including upcoming application deadlines, please visit .