Follow the man who led his community through a transformation. Read how lives and communities can be transformed through authentic arts engagement. Putting the arts into the hearts and minds of everyday people can launch both personal and city-wide positive change. This author, a forty-year community arts veteran, argues that the elitism of the fine arts, the arts relegated to the upper class, excludes the vast majority of the middle and certainly the working-class majority. The city of Hamilton, Ohio was in decline in the 1990s. A low high school graduation rate, racial unrest, a declining economy—yet city and community leaders turned to an arts-for-the-people approach. They searched for the right person to lead this effort. That person arrived in 1991. A blue-collar kid understands hard work. He also knows how to complete a task. When that kid decides to make his life in the arts, in the dichotomy of blue-collar and arts , he understands that “fine arts” will not be enough and will not be the best way to reach the ends his community hopes to achieve. He also knew that if success were to be had, the arts would have to be broadly defined as they were introduced to the public. The mission would be community excellence through the arts. Hamilton was at the threshold of the town’s bicentennial; a cultural plan increased their hope. They listened to the people and decided to build a community arts center igniting a silent rise of the arts in their town. Would this courageous—and many thought dubious—decision work? The author knew it would. This memoir by the man who was brought to town to lead this twenty-five-year journey shows how a struggling city utilized the arts to ignite the renaissance the city is now experiencing. This story of challenge, transformation, and hope is an honest and straight-forward account of what is required to lead with authenticity and achieve amazing results. “…Rick Jones shows us how this synthesis of arts and creative cities works. It’s a message we need to heed now more than ever.” –Richard Florida, author of The Rise of the Creative Class and The New Urban Crisis “Silent Rise is a prophetic story of the power of community arts. This is not about the fine arts, it is about the ability of an arts center to cross divides. It also describes the role the business leaders can play in making a real difference in the cohesion and narrative of a city. One with all the history of class and social distance most of our urban areas are faced with. This should be a lead story from the evening news and central to the promises of our public servants. The arts are not a human interest, but a vehicle of transformation. This shows how the arts, in the hands of everyday citizens, with a little help from people like Rick, can bring us together again. Read the book.” –Peter Block, author of Flawless Consulting and Community . "COVID-19 has led to a gloomand doom chorus of the death of cities. But cities will survive and willthrive, just as they have from previous pandemics and crises. A key reason liesin the revitalizing force of artists, musicians, writers, and creative people. Rick Jones shows us how this synthesis of arts and creative cities works.It's a message we need to heed now more than ever." -Richard Florida, author of The Rise of theCreative Class and The New Urban Crisis. "With all the news these days seeming to wrap around theactions of a few too-famous, too-rich, too-flawed people, it is nice toremember that each of our communities has its own heroes, the handful of true,neighbor-focused leaders who together make the world a better place. Rick Jonesis one such leader, and the story of how he got there is one that we can alllearn from." - Jeff Speck, city planner and author, Walkable City. "Rick Jones, former directorof the Fitton Center for Creative Arts in Hamilton, Ohio, has written a bookfor every arts administrator that is an example of what can be accomplished byperseverance, balanced and authentic leadership in filling a cultural void tohelp in the rebirth of a dying community.His fundraising efforts, belief in arts education and research to provethat the arts change lives---helped a community to believe in themselves. As the director of the Ohio Arts Councilduring the years he brought the Fitton Center to life and from a state agencyperspective as a funder—I watched a leader who was unbiased and balancedpatiently utilize the arts as a catalyst for the well-being of a small Midwestcommunity through the arts. There arelessons to be learned here about community development and the importance ofthe arts in our daily lives." -Wayne P. Lawson, Ph.D, Director Emeritus,Ohio Arts Council and Graduate Professor Emeritus, Arts Administration andPublic Policy, The Ohio State University. "RickJones, a self-proclaimed introvert is anything but that! Rick is an authenticvoice for the arts and the people who provi