Bill Ivey

Bill Ivey is Founding Director of the Curb Center for Art, Enterprise, and Public Policy at Vanderbilt University, an arts policy research center with offices in Nashville, Tennessee and Washington, DC.  He also directs the Center’s Washington-based program for senior government career staff, the Arts Industries Policy Forum, and serves as Senior Consultant to Leadership Music, a professional development program serving Nashville’s music community.  Ivey is a trustee of the Center for American Progress – a Washington “think-tank” -- and served as Team Leader for Arts and Humanities in the Obama-Biden Presidential Transition.  His book, Arts, Inc.: How Greed and Neglect Have Destroyed Our Cultural Rights, was published by the University of California Press in the summer of 2008.

From May, 1998 through September, 2001, Ivey served as the seventh Chairman of the National Endowment for the Arts, the U.S. federal grant-making agency.  Following years of controversy and significant reductions in NEA funding, Ivey’s leadership is credited with restoring Congressional confidence in the work of the NEA.  Ivey’s Challenge America Initiative, launched in 1999, has to date garnered more than $20 million in new Congressional appropriations for the Arts Endowment.

Prior to government service, Ivey was director of the Country Music Foundation in Nashville, Tennessee.  He was twice elected board chairman of the National Academy of Recording Arts and Sciences (NARAS) – the organization that confers the Grammy Awards -- and is past President of the American Folklore Society. 

Ivey holds degrees in History, Folklore, and Ethnomusicology, as well as honorary doctorates from the University of Michigan, Michigan Technological University, Wayne State University, and Indiana University.  He is a four-time Grammy Award nominee (Best Album Notes category), and is the author of numerous articles on U.S. cultural policy, and on folk and popular music.