I am inclined to consider the National Endowment for the Arts of the 1960s and ’70s as a mythical creature. For my generation and the one coming up, the NEA is little more than a castrated, sacrificial animal that the Republican Party trots out to the altar anytime the national budget comes under review. But while the money is gone, a surviving legacy of that era is the creation of artist-run initiatives. These days, such projects are mostly seeded by what Christine Wong Yap calls strategic optimism—aspiration coupled with a directed, pragmatic plan. It also suggests defiance in the face of financial reality, which, as Art Practical and Open Space will broach May 12 in the third part of “Shop Talk,” can be grim for artists. But in this issue, we cover two new Bay Area spaces (the People’s Gallery and The Popular Workshop); and it is sunny outside. Defiance, it is. Enjoy—PM