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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
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12
inTechnology Centered Arts
999
inTheater
1,077
inVisual Arts

Aparna Ramaswamy

2005
Dance
Minnesota
General Program
$9,000
The Directors approved a grant of $9,000 for RAGAMALA MUSIC AND DANCE THEATER, Minneapolis, Minnesota, as fiscal agent for APARNA RAMASWAMY, in support of the creation and production of new works. Ragamala Music and Dance Theater presents classical and contemporary/collaborative work based in Bharatanatyam, the ancient classical dance of southern India. Aparna Ramaswamy, choreographer and dancer with the company, will create two new works, Aathma and Flying Horses. Aathma is an exploration of the works of 13th century Persian poet Jelaluddin Rumi. This evening-length work will interweave Bharatanatyam and abstract and narrative dance. Flying Horses will be created to a musical work by Mu Daiko Artistic Director Rick Shiomi, contrasting and juxtaposing two culturally-based art forms, Japanese Taiko and Bharatanatyam.
Dance

Repertorio Español

2005
Theater
New York City
General Program
$36,000
The Directors authorized a two-year grant of $36,000 to REPERTORIO ESPAOL, New York City, in support of the development of new works by emerging playwrights. Repertorio seeks to present, in rotating repertory, the finest Spanish-language theatre. Jerome dollars will be directed toward the Voces Nuevas program, which provides opportunities to emerging Hispanic playwrights to present their work and pursue artistic goals through readings and full productions of new work. The Desarrollo component adds mentor directors for playwrights to fully develop the potential of the writer and the script.
Theater

Rhizome.org

2005
Film
New York City
General Program
$30,000
Jerome Foundation Directors authorized a two-year grant of $30,000 to RHIZOME.ORG, New York City, in support of its Commissioning Program. Rhizome.org is an online platform for the global new media art community. Its programs include commissions, e-mail forums, publications and a web-based archive of artwork and text. These support the creation, presentation, discussion and preservation of contemporary art that uses new technologies in significant ways. The Commissioning Program provides new media artists with opportunities to realize new works and receive financial support for their projects. Rhizome.org provides competitively selected artists with financial assistance and a platform for institutional support and access.
Film

Yoruba Richen

2005
Film
New York City
New York City Film Production
$21,500
YORUBA RICHEN received a grant for Promised Land, a feature-length documentary that examines post-apartheid South Africa's efforts to bring about racial reconciliation through land redistribution. The film follows one black community in South Africa as it attempts to reclaim land from which it was forcibly evicted 40 years ago. By following the efforts of one indigenous black tribe to reclaim its land, Promised Land shows how one country is attempting to redress its violent colonial past in order to sustain its current fragile peace.
Film

Roulette Intermedium, Inc.

2005
Music
New York City
General Program
$40,000
ROULETTE INTERMEDIUM, New York City, received a two-year grant of $40,000 in support of the Emerging Composer Commissioning Program. Roulette Intermedium offers over 50 concerts each year, paying fees, commissioning new work, providing publicity, offering production and recording facilities, and initiating recording and distribution programs. Launched in 1997, the Jerome Emerging Composer Commissioning Program has awarded 28 commissions of $4,000 each to emerging experimental composers. The commissions are made through a nominating process, using new music practitioners as curators. The focus is on young composers coming from a variety of musical backgrounds and ethnic cultures, who are generally interested in each other's instruments and techniques. The effect of the commissions is bolstered by Roulette's presentation of the commissioned pieces, forums for the artists to bring their works to the public. The commissions give the artists the liberty and the mandate to make a piece with a sustained structural intention, which can withstand a certain scrutiny and the focused listening experience that a Roulette concert provides.
Music

S.A.S.E.: The Write Place

2005
Literature
Minnesota
General Program
$49,500
S.A.S.E.: THE WRITE PLACE, Minneapolis, Minnesota, received a grant of $49,500 in support of the S.A.S.E./Jerome Fellowship for Writers, the Verve Fellowships, and Writer-to-Writer Mentorships. S.A.S.E. supports writing that aims for the highest literary standards while beating with the pulse of the people that it seeks to reach. The S.A.S.E./Jerome Fellowships have made it possible for writers to study with master teachers, travel to learn from writers in distant countries, bring work to publication, read and present their work, and subsidize writing time. The purpose of the Fellowships is to provide emerging writers with financial assistance, professional encouragement, and recognition. The Verve Fellowship Program for Spoken Word artists offers five fellowships of up to $3,000 to artists, who have used the subsidies to produce CDs, tour to promote their work, expand the range of performance opportunities, and develop new pieces. The Writer-to-Writer Mentorships provide individualized learning experiences for emerging writers. Mentors work with small groups of writers over a semester, which includes at least six group sessions in addition to one-on-one sessions between each writer and his/her mentor.
Literature

Saint John's University

2005
Visual Arts
Minnesota
General Program
$54,000
SAINT JOHN'S UNIVERSITY, Collegeville, Minnesota, received a two-year grant of $54,000 in support of the Emerging Artist Program at the Saint John's Pottery. The Pottery utilizes Japanese techniques and incorporates indigenous materials. Since 1984, under the direction of Richard Bresnahan, the Pottery has supported a residency program for emerging artists to expand their creative abilities and to study and use indigenous materials. The competitively selected artists have 24-hour a day, seven-day a week access to the Studio with unlimited use of materials. The artists receive stipends and room and board. They often return to campus to participate in an annual kiln firing. Emerging artists who live in Minnesota and New York City are eligible.
Visual Arts

Saratoga International Theater Institute

2005
Multi-disciplinary
New York City
General Program
$10,000
SITI COMPANY, New York City, received $10,000 in support of the 2006 Associates New Work Series. SITI is an ensemble-based theater company led by Anne Bogart. Its mission is to create bold new productions, to perform and tour those works nationally and internationally, to train together consistently, to develop theater professionals and students, and to create opportunities for artistic dialogue and cultural exchange. The goal of the Associates program is to nurture the next generation of theater artists by facilitating the creation and presentation of new works in an atmosphere of artistic dialogue and exchange. In 2006, the Associates New Work Series will serve six emerging theater artists by supporting works-in-progress performances of new works initiated by these artists, assigning Company members as mentors for the artists, providing performance and rehearsal space in the SITI Studio, offering stipends and budgets to cover artists' fees and production expenses, and dedicating a series producer to supervise development and production matters.
Multi-disciplinary

Savage Aural Hotbed

2005
Music
Minnesota
General Program
$8,000
The SOUTHERN THEATER, Minneapolis, Minnesota, as fiscal agent for SAVAGE AURAL HOTBED, received $8,000 in support of the creation and production of the new work The Rate of Mass Displacement is Momentum at the Southern Theater. The Southern presents alternative performances by artists responding to contemporary issues and life situations from the perspectives of the varied cultural communities in the Twin Cities. Savage Aural Hotbed is an ensemble of four composer-musicians who create highly percussive music and sound experiences using found objects, industrial machines, and musical instruments. The composer-performers are Mark Black, William Melton, Stuart DeVaan and Dean Hawthorne. The changing urban landscape, which includes building and destruction, is the basis for this new work. Savage Aural Hotbed envisions a symphony of steel, the rhythmic cadence of pile drivers accompanied by pulsing, droning engines and whining motors, with beeping back-up signals providing counterpoint.
Music

SculptureCenter

2005
Visual Arts
New York City
General Program
$10,000
SCULPTURECENTER, Long Island City, received $10,000 in support of the 2005-06 In Practice program. SculptureCenter is dedicated to experimental and innovative developments in contemporary sculpture. It commissions new work and presents exhibits by emerging and established, national and international artists. In Practice is an ongoing project series that encourages emerging artists to consider any area of the Center as a potential site and to experiment with the exhibition format in terms of the presentation and lifespan of the work. In Practice presents newly commissioned projects by emerging artists and artist teams selected primarily through an open call for proposals. Artists receive honoraria as well as production stipends. SculptureCenter promotes and documents all work.
Visual Arts

Karen Sherman

2005
Dance
Minnesota
General Program
$9,000
THE SOUTHERN THEATER, Minneapolis, Minnesota, acting as fiscal agent for choreographer KAREN SHERMAN, received a grant of $9,000 in support of the creation and production of new work. The Southern presents alternative performances by artists working at the grassroots of the Twin Cities varied cultural, political, and economic communities. Choreographer Karen Sherman will create an evening-length dance/performance work that addresses the intersection of environment, terrain, the body, and memory through the specific lens of Midwestern weather, landscape, and culture. The working title is Tiny Town. This grant will support the creation and public showings of sections as work-in-progress. The final version of the piece will be produced in late 2006 or early 2007.
Dance

Skewed Visions Performance Company

2005
Theater
Minnesota
General Program
$12,500
SKEWED VISIONS, Minneapolis, Minnesota, received a grant of $12,500 in support of the creation and production of a three-part site-specific work. This performance company specializes in works engaging in and engaged by their physical environments. It uses interdisciplinary approaches to create strongly visual works, seeking modes of seeing or conceiving that deviate from the linear. Jerome subsidy is directed toward Days and Nights, which includes three segments: The Hidden Room, A Quiet Ambition, and Time For Bed. They explore landscapes of myth and meaning, and are linked by the use of a common space-the Witch's Hat Water Tower in the Prospect Park Neighborhood of Minneapolis. Written and directed by Glgn Kayim, The Hidden Room is based on the life and art of Jewish/Ukrainian artist/author and Holocaust victim Bruno Schultz. Charles Campbell, collaborating with performance artist Cherri Macht, will develop A Quiet Ambition as an imagistic exploration of personal and social alienation as manifested in contemporary society. Time For Bed, created and directed by Sean Kelley-Pegg, is a cyclic, continuous film work about a watcher and the watcher's imagination.
Theater

Smack Mellon Studios

2005
Visual Arts
New York City
General Program
$14,000
SMACK MELLON STUDIOS, Brooklyn, New York, nurtures and supports emerging, under-recognized mid-career, and women artists in the creation and exhibition of new work. It provides exhibition opportunities, studio workspace, and access to equipment and technical assistance for the realization of ambitious projects. Jerome support of $14,000 is directed to the Exhibition Program, and within it, group and solo shows featuring the works of emerging artists. The 2005 program begins with an expansive exhibition of drawings by 17 artists. In the fall, the organization celebrates its new location at 92 Plymouth Street with installations created specifically for that space.
Visual Arts

The Soap Factory

2005
Visual Arts
Minnesota
General Program
$22,000
NO NAME EXHIBITIONS @ THE SOAP FACTORY, Minneapolis, Minnesota, supports and exhibits the work of emerging visual artists; enhances the public's understanding of and appreciation for artistic expression; and fosters strength and vitality in the arts, cultural and educational communities of the Twin Cities. It occupies an expansive former soap factory and presents four group shows, nine project rooms and six video installation rooms each season. Jerome support of $22,000 was approved for the participation of emerging artists in the exhibition program. The 2005 group exhibitions include Gigantic, a show of art that overwhelms; Art Shanties, a winter show of ice houses and an expanded summer version including a sauna installation; and Afrofuturism, an examination of Black artists' works in the context of the future rather than the past.
Visual Arts

Soho Repertory Theatre, Inc.

2005
Theater
New York City
General Program
$20,000
SOHO REPERTORY THEATRE, New York City, develops unconventional plays, cultivating new work from first impulse through fully mounted productions. A Jerome Foundation grant of $20,000 over two years was authorized to support artists' fees across a spectrum of play development activities. Development activities include research and development, commissions, staged workshops, and a Writer/Director Lab. Jerome support is directed to emerging playwrights based in New York City and/or Minnesota.
Theater

RoseAnne Spradlin Dance

2005
Dance
New York City
General Program
$9,000
With THE FIELD, New York City, as fiscal sponsor, the Jerome Foundation Directors approved a grant of $9,000 to support ROSEANNE SPRADLIN DANCE. Spradlin's choreographic mission is to awaken audiences to a fuller experience of the body in motion, and to bring audience members into a closer intimacy with themselves. Pay Color, a dance to be premiered this December, constitutes a section of an evening-length work to be completed in 2006. The impetus for Pay Color is to explore the heightening of sensory intake-smell, touch, sound, site and motion-to the point that the experience begins to resemble an altered state of reality. Subjects are made more critically aware of the intense beauty of the world and the inborn rights of human beings while also being exposed to the damage and pain caused by human nature.
Dance

Textile Center of Minnesota

2005
Visual Arts
Minnesota
General Program
$16,000
Jerome Directors authorized a grant of $16,000 to the TEXTILE CENTER, Minneapolis, Minnesota, in support of several programs and services dedicated to emerging artists. The Textile Center promotes excellence in fiber art and preserves textile traditions. Its facility, which opened in 1994, includes a textile gallery and shop, an auditorium and classroom space, a textile library, a dye lab and office space. Jerome dollars are directed toward the exhibition series, which includes a significant number of emerging artists; workshops offered by master visiting artists; access to the dye lab; and related programs and services.
Visual Arts

Thirteen / WNET New York

2005
Film
New York City
General Program
$25,000
THIRTEEN/WNET NEW YORK, New York City, received a grant of $25,000 in support of stipends for emerging filmmakers whose works are broadcast in Reel New York. This series maintains a position on the cutting edge of the creative film scene, providing a broadcast forum for narrative shorts, documentaries, experimental films, animation and other projects. Reel New York is broadcast twice each week for eight weeks, and has, since inception, presented 205 independent productions. An accompanying web site highlights film and video features, and includes interviews and taped introductions to the films by the filmmakers, a festival calendar, photos, and a list of resources for independent video/filmmakers.
Film

Borough of Manhattan Community College Performing Arts Center, Inc.

2005
Multi-disciplinary
New York City
General Program
$8,000
The TRIBECA PERFORMING ARTS CENTER, New York City, received $8,000 in support of its Artists in Residence Program. The TRIBECA Performing Arts Center presents an eclectic mix of theater, music and dance by a variety of artists, many of whom are emerging. The Artists in Residence Program is an ongoing effort to bring emerging New York City-based artists-composers, lyricists, choreographers, directors and writers-together for a year to develop projects that are shared with audiences in an annual Work and Show Festival. Each artist receives a year of rehearsal space via a residency; a stipend to support rehearsal and development; design, production and administrative support; and publicized presentations of works-in-progress.
Multi-disciplinary

Triple Candie

2005
Visual Arts
New York City
General Program
$8,000
TRIPLE CANDIE, Harlem, New York, supports the creation and presentation of new work by artists who are under recognized in New York City and who work in unconventional ways. It assists artists in securing the resources they need to create new, ambitious projects; and promotes diversity in the art world by working with artists from a variety of cultural backgrounds. To date, it has mounted 33 exhibitions featuring the art work of 140 artists for an audience of more than 15,000 people. Jerome funding of $8,000 will be directed to the exhibitions in its Project Space of works by three New York City-based emerging artists. Selected by the internationally celebrated artist Nari Ward, the artists will create ambitious new work that takes into consideration the architectural characteristics of the Project Space.
Visual Arts

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