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MN Arts Rise and Respond

Donation links to MN arts organizations mobilizing community support and creative interventions

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Past
Grantees

Kayla Farrish, Spectacle, BAAD!/Pepatián Dance Your Future, 2018.

895
inDance
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inFilm
721
inLiterature
298
inMisc
612
inMulti-disciplinary
712
inMusic
12
inTechnology Centered Arts
999
inTheater
1,077
inVisual Arts

Red Eye Theater

2009
Multi-disciplinary
Minnesota
General Program
$29,400
RED EYE THEATER, Minneapolis, Minnesota, received $29,400 in support of New Works 4 Weeks, Works-in-Progress, Isolated Acts and Critical Core programs serving emerging artists. Red Eye embraces the process of discovery, serving as an alternative multidisciplinary laboratory that supports the development and production of new work. The Works-in-Progress program emphasizes the creative process as it concerns conceptual development and staging. Up to five artists or teams, selected through an open call, are supported in developing new work. The culmination of the process is public Works-in-Progress performances in the festival New Works 4 Weeks, a multidisciplinary festival that links the performance components of Works-in-Progress and Isolated Acts, a curated series in which artists develop fully mounted work for public presentation and critical exposure. Red Eye looks for emerging artists who show evidence of a clear vision, an idiosyncratic personal perspective and a concept or idea large enough to benefit from an extended developmental period and flexible enough to incorporate what is discovered in the process. The developmental programs share joint feedback sessions through the Critical Core program.
Multi-disciplinary

Rhizome.org

2009
Film
New York City
General Program
$13,500
RHIZOME, New York City, received $13,500 in support of the Commissions Program. The mission or Rhizome is to support the creation, presentation and preservation of contemporary art that engages new technologies in significant ways. It supports art that takes emerging technology as a tool, produces it as an object, and reflects on its social and cultural resonance. Rhizome is dedicated to nurturing artists working in emerging media whose relevance in culture grows daily. The Commissions Program, launched in 2001, supports the creation and presentation of new media art. An annual open call solicits more than 400 applications, which are reviewed by an independent jury. Commissions range from $1,000 to $5,000. Jerome support is directed toward commissions for emerging artists based in Minnesota and/or New York City.
Film

Roulette Intermedium, Inc.

2009
Music
New York City
General Program
$39,600
ROULETTE INTERMEDIUM, New York City, received $39,600 in support of the Contemporary Music Series and the Jerome Commissioning Program. Roulettes purpose is to provide opportunities for innovative composers, musicians, sound artists, and interdisciplinary collaborators to present their work in accessible, appropriate, and professional productions. The Contemporary Music Series presents and promotes new work by emerging artists at the outset of their professional careers. The Series is a major steppingstone for young artists making their first professional statements. The Jerome Commissioning Program awards $4,000 commissions to four emerging composers for the creation of new works. The Program identifies and supports young artists of promise whose explorations have the potential to make valuable contributions to the development of contemporary music.
Music

The James Sewell Ballet / Ballet Works, Inc.

2009
Dance
Minnesota
General Program
$10,800
The JAMES SEWELL BALLET, Minneapolis, Minnesota, received $10,800 in support of the participation of emerging choreographers in the 2009-10 Ballet Works Project. The mission of the Ballet is to create and perform works that connect artists with audiences and to advance contemporary ballet. The eight-dancer chamber ensemble, operating under the direction of choreographer James Sewell, is known for a broad and surprising range performance work. The Ballet Works Project encompasses the creation of new choreographic works by Sewell, invited established choreographers, and emerging choreographers. Jerome funding is directed toward the participation of emerging choreographers in the Project, including the creation and fully staged productions of new works. The Project gives choreographers liberal room to experiment and push movement boundaries.
Dance

Jennifer Shyu

2009
Music
New York City
Travel and Study
$4,600
JENNIFER SHYU, composer, vocalist and multi-instrumentalist residing in Bronx, New York, will travel to Dili, East Timor, and throughout West Timor, to research and document Timorese music focusing on the ritual music and dance of the Wehali Settlement. She is also investigating the transmutation of fado music from the Portuguese colonization of East Timor.
Music

Aamera Siddiqui

2009
Theater
Minnesota
Travel and Study
$4,760
Playwright AAMERA SIDDIQUI, St. Paul, Minnesota, will travel to Mumbai, India, to participate in the 8th Women Playwrights International (WPI) Conference. Siddiqui is invested in the conference's aim to explore new emerging relationships among nation states, cultures, races, languages, religions and faiths with special reference to liberty and tolerance. She expects to return from this conference with increased knowledge, a deeper understanding of her craft, renewed energy to create, and more meaningful ingredients to add to her work.
Theater

Rosemary Sindt

2009
Film
Minnesota
Minnesota Film Production
$8,500
A grant was awarded to ROSEMARY SINDT, Minneapolis, Minnesota, in support of Love-Life, a film that is a poem, a love song, and an image journey to elucidate faith, hope, and connectedness. The characters in the film are Rosemary Sindt, the films director, producer, and poet laureate, who endeavors to recreate the images of her poems and the emotions of her life; and Chris Thomas, the cinematographer, editor, image voyager and experimental rule breaker. Love-Life is a tale of the quest for the sacred and spiritual that is available in the everyday; beauty waiting to be recognized, captured and kept. The film appears in broad strokes of watercolor. With her moviemaker eyes wide open, the filmmaker will explore the concept of love in the physical and ethereal world.
Film

Duncan Skiles

2009
Film
New York City
New York City Film Production
$10,000
DUNCAN SKILES AND MASIE COCHRAN were awarded support for a feature-length documentary titled Still Life. The subject of this documentary, Frank Newmyer, is an evangelical taxidermist whose glory days are behind him as he struggles to create the crowning work of his career. According to filmmakers Skiles and Cochran, there is a cultural backlash against taxidermists in the country. Starting from its earliest stages, taxidermy, outside of the museum, was stigmatized and banished to backrooms, basements, and dusty attics. The cultural backlash against taxidermists is not surprising. Taxidermy is unsettling, first because the process is grisly, but also because it blurs the line between life and death. Dead things that mysteriously come to life-zombies, vampires, ghosts-are frightening. A dead animal posed to look alive embodies the idea of the living dead. However, at the same time, the need to preserve an animal that was lost or destroyed gets at something essentially human. Taxidermy charms death to a halt, if only to suspend it in an eerie half-life. For Frank Newmyer, the subject of Still Life, taxidermy is not a reminder of death-it's an affirmation of life.
Film

William Slichter

2009
Film
Minnesota
Minnesota Film Production
$10,000
WILLIAM SLICHTER, Minneapolis, Minnesota, received support for The Feathered Ogre, a narrative short based on an Italian folk tale by Italo Calvino, and reinterpreted by Slichter as a modern satire. It will integrate live action with surreal animated paintings to deliver a story of art and political fantasy. The work is centered on a man who seeks a feather from an ogre to heal a king. The man ultimately gains the ogre's wisdom from acquaintances he makes as he sets out on a journey pursuing the feather. The film contains classic themes such as the triumph of good over evil, where the wicked are punished and the brave hero is rewarded for his courageous good deeds with wealth and marriage to a beautiful girl. This revised version of the original story will emerge as a collision of imagery from modern environmental calamities and themes of social injustice, framed against a 12th century Italian story, characters and landscape.
Film

The Soap Factory

2009
Visual Arts
Minnesota
General Program
$21,600
THE SOAP FACTORY, Minneapolis Minnesota, received $21,600 in support of the participation of emerging artists in the 2009 Exhibition Program. The Soap Factory is dedicated to the production, presentation and promotion of emerging contemporary practice across the visual arts. It presents four or five exhibitions each season. By maintaining an open structure and involving guest curators, The Soap Factory ensures that no single aesthetic dominates its vision, thereby providing an outlet for a multiplicity of voices and a democratic programming vision. The Soap Factory presents exhibitions, film and video installations and screenings, performance and theater events, dance, live music and spoken word, functioning as a multimedia space for cutting-edge artistic endeavors.
Visual Arts

Travis Spangler, Aki Shibata, Kathleen Maloney, and Marcus Young

2009
Visual Arts
Minnesota
Travel and Study
$5,000
TRAVIS SPANGLER, AKI SHIBATA, KATHLEEN MALONEY AND MARCUS YOUNG, St. Paul, Minnesota, constitute Grace MN, an artists' collective and behavioral art studio whose work centers on the internal and civic life, creating personal practice and collective experiences. The collective will travel to Thich Nhat Hanh's Blue Cliff Monastery, New York, and to New York City. The Monastery will be a retreat for meditation, research and development of collective practices. In New York City, the collective will do further research and development for an ongoing work of public dancing titled Don't You Feel It Too?
Visual Arts

STREB Lab for Action Mechanics

2009
Multi-disciplinary
New York City
General Program
$20,580
STREB (Ringside), Brooklyn, New York, received $20,580 in support of the Emerging Artist Commissioning Program, which was piloted one year ago with support from Jerome Foundation. STREB supports and presents the work of choreographer Elizabeth Streb while bringing the audience and community into the artistic process. Since 1979, Streb has developed a lexicon of action, a way of moving that investigates and deconstructs many notions about dance. The company's home, the STREB LAB FOR ACTION MECHANICS (SLAM), is an open-access venue that models a new kind of artist-driven community institution. The purpose of the Emerging Artist Commissioning Program is to capitalize on the resources distinct to SLAM to inform and inspire new and creative experiments by emerging artists. There is an open call for applications, which are reviewed by company members and Elizabeth Streb, who makes the final selections. Artists are given residencies, six months in length, with opportunities to showcase work throughout and at the conclusion of the residencies.
Multi-disciplinary

The Studio Museum in Harlem

2009
Visual Arts
New York City
General Program
$12,500
THE STUDIO MUSEUM IN HARLEM, New York City, received $12,500 in support of the 2009-10 Artists-in-Residence Program. The Museum is a nexus for black artists locally, nationally, and internationally, and for work that has been inspired and influenced by black culture. It is a site for the dynamic exchange of ideas about art and society. The Artists-in-Residence Program offers three artists individual studio spaces in the Museum for 12 months, stipends of $20,000, allotments of $1,000 for materials, professional mentoring for a year, and an exhibition at the end of the residency. Each artist is paired with a curator, artist, scholar, or critic with whom they can exchange ideas and discuss their work. There are multiple opportunities for community engagement. The selection process is based on an open call for applications and a panel review.
Visual Arts

Textile Center of Minnesota

2009
Visual Arts
Minnesota
General Program
$12,000
The TEXTILE CENTER, Minneapolis Minnesota, received $12,000 in support of programs and services for emerging fiber artists. The mission of the Center is to honor textile traditions and promote excellence and innovation in fiber art, broadly defined to include weaving, quilting, knitting, sewing, needlework, lace making, basketry and beading. The Center uses Jerome support strategically to provide services and programs for emerging professional artists. This encompasses exhibitions in its gallery; workshops, seminars and classes; and access to the dye lab. The workshops and seminars are designed to develop artistic, technical and professional skills.
Visual Arts

Textile Center of Minnesota

2009
Visual Arts
Minnesota
General Program
$18,000
The TEXTILE CENTER, Minneapolis, Minnesota, received $10,800 in support of programs and services for emerging Minnesota fiber artists during its 2009-10 fiscal year. The Center is a regionally-based national center for fiber art. Its mission is to honor textile traditions and promote excellence and innovation in fiber art, which encompasses a wide range of forms including weaving, quilting, knitting, sewing, dyeing, felting, needlework, lace making, basketry, and beading. Jerome dollars will be directed to the exhibition program, which features the works of emerging artists; intensive seminars and workshops for emerging professional textile artists; access to the state-of-the-art Dye Lab; and other programs and services benefiting emerging artists.
Visual Arts

Textile Center of Minnesota

2009
Visual Arts
Minnesota
General Program
$10,800
The TEXTILE CENTER, Minneapolis, Minnesota, received $10,800 in support of programs and services for emerging Minnesota fiber artists during its 2009-10 fiscal year. The Center is a regionally-based national center for fiber art. Its mission is to honor textile traditions and promote excellence and innovation in fiber art, which encompasses a wide range of forms including weaving, quilting, knitting, sewing, dyeing, felting, needlework, lace making, basketry, and beading. Jerome dollars will be directed to the exhibition program, which features the works of emerging artists; intensive seminars and workshops for emerging professional textile artists; access to the state-of-the-art Dye Lab; and other programs and services benefiting emerging artists.
Visual Arts

Christian Tomaszewski

2009
Visual Arts
New York City
Travel and Study
$3,100
Artist CHRISTIAN TOMASZEWSKI, Brooklyn, New York, will travel to the Lake Titicaca Region, Puma, Peru, to study with Uro Indians the art of creating an artificial island. The installation works that he creates explore the narrative potential of space, architecture and habitat. He is investigating the physical craft of making a functional island and the more philosophical aspect of creating one's own space or land. This trip will be an opportunity to reexamine his practice and approach to art-making.
Visual Arts

Lan Tuazon

2009
Visual Arts
New York City
Travel and Study
$4,991
Artist LAN TUAZON, Brooklyn, New York, will travel to Berlin, Prague, Paris, Palermo and Vienna to understand each city's unique features of urban planning that historically made them susceptible to riots and insurrections. Tuazon's work is about the urban landscape, how political history is written (or erased) and how social spaces modify the social life of the city. She will make observational drawing studies to inform her understanding of the life and flow of cities and to generate an ideal political and social space.
Visual Arts

Katie Ka Vang

2009
Theater
Minnesota
Travel and Study
$5,000
KATIE KA VANG, Hmong performance and spoken word artist living in St. Paul, Minnesota, will travel to Wisconsin, California, Ohio, Georgia, and North Carolina to gather interviews from Hmong Bollywood choreographers and dancers to enrich her next project Hmong Bollywood, a performance art piece in which Bollywood movies recount pivotal moments in her life. The politically exiled Hmong have extensively reworked and re-produced Bollywood movies, including Hmong dubbing of these Hindi films. Vang is interested in using this phenomenon to explore issues of identity as a second generation Hmong woman.
Theater

VocalEssence

2009
Music
Minnesota
General Program
$26,460
VOCALESSENCE, Minneapolis, Minnesota, received $26,460 in support of Essentially Choral 2009. VocalEssence explores music for the human voice, from spoken word to choral singing. It has an unwavering commitment to contemporary composers and has been recognized for its adventurous programming of contemporary music. Jerome support is directed toward Essentially Choral, a program nurturing emerging composers in the field of writing for the human voice. An annual open call for scores for developmental reading sessions designed to benefit participating composers is issued. Reading rehearsals, one-on-one and group meetings with conductor Philip Brunelle and an established composer mentor and professional development seminars make for a comprehensive immersion experience, over three days, for emerging composers.
Music

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    • And More
    • Jerome-Eligible Artists
  • Grantees
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    • Jerome Hill Artist Fellows
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    • Organizations
    • Arts Organization Grantees
    • And More
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