Skip to main content
Home

Main navigation

  • About
    • What We Do
    • Our Founder
    • History
    • Staff
    • Governance
    • Panelists
    • Financials
    • News
  • Grant opportunities
    • For Artists
    • Jerome Hill Artist Fellowship
    • Film Production & Mentorship
    • Jerome@Camargo
    • For Organizations
    • Arts Organization Grants
    • Seeding, Field-building, Ecosystem Development
  • Grantees
    • Artists
    • Jerome Hill Artist Fellows
    • Film Grantees
    • Jerome@Camargo Grantees
    • Organizations
    • Arts Organization Grantees
    • And More
    • All Past Grantees
  • Investing Our Values
  • Contact
Menu

Search

Secondary menu

  • for grantees
 

Past
Grantees

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

3
inCombined Artistic Fields
886
inDance
27
inFilm and Video
1,354
inFilm/Video & New Media
713
inLiterature
3
inMedia
298
inMisc
606
inMulti-disciplinary
704
inMusic
6
inTechnology Centered Arts
990
inTheater
1,066
inVisual Arts
1
inVisual Arts, Multi-disciplinary

Art in General

2003
Visual Arts
New York City
General Program
$38,000
ART IN GENERAL, New York City, received a two-year grant of $38,000 in support of the participation of emerging artists in the Exhibition Program and the provision of services to artists. Art in General provides a laboratory environment for the creation and presentation of new work, and serves as a forum for artists and audiences to explore the creative process. Through exhibitions, residencies, educational programs, public events, and publications, it offers opportunities to encounter new ways of thinking about contemporary art, and to exchange ideas across cultures and artistic disciplines. Its open submission policy and curatorial practice are designed to encourage a broad representation of emerging artists. Jerome support emphasizes services to emerging artists from New York City and Minnesota.
Visual Arts

Art in General

2003
Visual Arts
New York City
General Program
$18,000
ART IN GENERAL, New York City, received $18,000 for the Jerome Residency Program. Art in General provides a laboratory environment for the creation and presentation of new work, and serves as a forum for artists and audiences to explore the creative process through exhibitions, residencies, educational programs, public events and publications. The organizations submission policies and curatorial practices are designed to encourage a broad representation of emerging artists. In 1997, the Jerome Foundation provided support for a pilot program, which sponsored a two-month residency for a Minnesota artist at Art in General. The success of that pilot led to further support in subsequent years. The program is designed to enrich each artists creative process and professional development through opportunities to create new work on site and to interact with the larger New York arts community. During the residency, the artist installs a work in a 1,000 sq. ft. gallery. Visitors are encouraged to view the work-in-progress. Art in General draws upon a large network of professional contacts to make appropriate introductions, and to facilitate meetings with critics, dealers, curators and other artists. A brochure documenting the residency and including a critical essay about the work is published. The selection process is based on nominations from individuals in Minnesota and curatorial review by Art in General.
Visual Arts

Artists Space

2003
Visual Arts
New York City
General Program
$18,000
A grant of $18,000 was made to ARTISTS SPACE, New York City, in support of the participation of emerging New York City and Minnesota artists in the 2002-03 exhibition season. Artists Space supports and presents interdisciplinary work in the visual arts, including film and video, electronic media, architecture and design. Its exhibitions present new art and new artists. It also encourages experimentation, diversity and dialogue in contemporary arts practice; and fosters an appreciation for the vital and dynamic role that artists play in communities. Half of the grant commitment is restricted to artists stipends.
Visual Arts

Bang on a Can

2003
Music
New York City
General Program
$18,000
BANG ON A CAN, New York City, received $18,000 in support of three commissions to emerging composers within the 2003-04 People's Commissioning Fund. Bang on a Can brings innovative and adventurous music to broad and diverse audiences. Its resident ensemble, the Bang on a Can All-Stars, performs a repertoire that reflects a multiplicity of musical genres and traditions. Launched in 1997, the People's Commissioning Fund offers opportunities to composers to create music for and work with the Bang on a Can All-Stars. Jerome dollars contribute to a pooled fund, which supports new music commissions. Composers are selected for commissions in several ways including invitations, referrals, and open call review of scores. Once compositions are completed, the All-Stars rehearse the works with the composers in attendance, and then premiere the composition in an annual Commissioning Fund concert.
Music

Olive Bieringa

2003
Film/Video & New Media
Minnesota
Minnesota Film and Video
$10,000
OLIVE BIERINGA & OTTO RAMSTAD, Minneapolis, MN, received support for Bodycartography Minnesota, a multidimensional dance video work that focuses on Minnesotas rural, urban and wilderness landscapes. They will create a series of short dance videos for outdoor projections alongside live performance events in rural and urban areas across the state.
Film/Video & New Media

BIGMANARTS / Lawrence Goldhuber

2003
Multi-disciplinary
New York City
General Program
$8,000
A grant of $8,000 was awarded to the NEW YORK FOUNDATION FOR THE ARTS, New York City, as fiscal agent for choreographer LAWRENCE GOLDHUBER. Goldhuber, a former member of the Bill T. Jones/Arnie Zane Dance Company, began presenting his own choreography in 1993. Jerome funding will support the creation of KNEED: The Life and Times of Barry Goldhubris, which continues the exploration of body image and self-acceptance in a culture that loathes fat and difference. It will be a humorous dance-theater work set in a cinematic landscape, with film projected on three sides of the performance space to create the impression that the performer is immersed in a constantly shifting environment. The intensive visual imagery will take the audience from flying through galaxies to inside the mind of the performer, using dance, song, spoken word, and elaborate giant costumes.
Multi-disciplinary

Cave Canem Foundation

2003
Literature
New York City
General Program
$17,000
Jerome Foundation Directors authorized a grant of $17,000 to CAVE CANEM, New York City, in support of a summer retreat and poetry workshops. Cave Canem offers emerging African American poets opportunities to improve and strengthen their work and advance their careers. It seeks to deliver the very best in poetic instruction to a group of writers under-represented in professional level writing workshops. Its summer retreat is a week-long immersion in writing and critique for participants who develop their work with prominent faculty writers and teachers. Poetry workshops in New York City are structured around an organizing theme as a context for writing exercises, creation of new work and careful critique of the work generated. Cave Canems activities also include workshops in other locations, public readings, a poetry prize, publication of an anthology, and master classes.
Literature

Chen Dance Center / H.T. Chen & Dancers

2003
Dance
New York City
General Program
$20,000
A two-year grant of $20,000 was authorized for the H.T. DANCE COMPANY/MULBERRY STREET THEATER, New York City, in support of the dance series Ear to the Ground. This program supports emerging Asian American choreographers creating innovative works. The series is interested in artists committed to exploring their cultural ancestry through commissioned projects. Selected artists receive production assistance, commissioning fees, rehearsal space, and technical assistance.
Dance

The Cherry Lane Alternative Theatre

2003
Theater
New York City
General Program
$26,000
CHERRY LANE THEATRE, New York City, received a grant of $26,000 in support of its Mentor Project, which engages emerging playwrights (fellows) in one-on-one working relationships with accomplished mentor dramatists for an entire theater season. The mentors help the fellows refine their writing skills and scripts as each moves toward the final phase of the processa three-week workshop production. The grant will support stipends to the fellows and to the mentors as well as related costs involved in developing and producing the plays.
Theater

Seoungho Cho

2003
Film/Video & New Media
New York City
New York City Film and Video
$10,000
SEOUNGHO CHO received funding for Wind Project, an experimental video that conveys the simultaneous banality and grandeur of our existence, as experiences that are exceedingly familiar are transformed into the fantastic. Time becomes distorted as water ebbs and flows in a continuum that never comes to a conclusion.
Film/Video & New Media

Gabri Christa / DanzAisa

2003
Dance
New York City
General Program
$10,000
A grant of $10,000 was awarded to DANZAISA, Staten Island, New York, in support of the creation of new work by choreographer Gabri Christa. Funding will support a new piece titled Ri-Te-S of the Americas, an evening-length work inspired, in part, by a novel authored by Cuban writer Alejo Carpentier. Christa will also take another look at The Rite of Spring, by Stravinsky, as well as the rites of contemporary city people. Shell create new out of old, reinventing and referring to recent and distant histories, and to Western and non-Western traditions.
Dance

Clubbed Thumb, Inc.

2003
Theater
New York City
General Program
$8,000
A grant of $8,000 was authorized for CLUBBED THUMB, New York City, in support of the production of new works by emerging playwrights during the 2003 festival of new plays, titled Homeland Insecurity. Clubbed Thumbs mission is to develop and produce new strange, funny and provocative plays by living American writers. It is particularly interested in providing opportunities for women in the theater, and to increasing and improving the quality of roles for women in dramatic literature. The Festival will present seven new plays by emerging playwrights, including one full production run, two short runs and four readings.
Theater

John Colburn

2003
Literature
Minnesota
Travel and Study
$5,000
Storyteller and teacher JOHN COLBURN will spend eight-days at Atlantic College in Wales attending the Beyond the Border International Storytelling Festival at St. Donats Art Centre. He will gain insight from the best storytellers available at this internationally recognized event on how to construct, pace, and perform an oral narrative. Colburn will also visit the nearby birthplace of Dylan Thomas, an influential literary figure for him, in Swansea.
Literature

Grisha Coleman

2003
Multi-disciplinary
New York City
General Program
$8,000
The NEW YORK FOUNDATION FOR THE ARTS, New York City, acting as fiscal agent for GRISHA COLEMAN, received $8,000 for the production of two performance-installation segments of Faster Than a Speeding Bullet. Coleman, a composer, performer, choreographer, writer, and director, is the founder and artistic coordinator of the music performance group Hot Mouth. Faster Than a Speeding Bullet, developed last summer during a residency at the Banff Centre for the Arts, is an intermedia performance event that investigates the effects of an increasingly fast paced technological world on contemporary reality. Its envisioned as a series of modular, site-specific installations, each one referencing a natural habitat. Through conceptual dialogues with artists and scientists, Coleman is creating movement-based performance, integrated with technology and presented within these installations. She hopes to immerse audiences in an alternative reality. Technology is positioned in this project as the intermediary that joins ecology and movement and sound performance. Shes working collaboratively with an ecologist, an information architect, an electroacoustic sound designer/programmer, and a writer.
Multi-disciplinary

Mark Conway

2003
Literature
Minnesota
Travel and Study
$5,000
MARK CONWAY, a poet and editor from Avon, Minnesota, will travel for one month in Italy. He has published a collection of poems about his stillborn older brother, an explanation of the world to his brother who never experienced life. On this trip, he will move through Italy as if he is an observer of his brother, who is living Conway's life, as a means of trying to understand him. Conway seeks to create a gap between memory and the imagination, to create a narrative or form that tricks him into seeing his own life from another perspective. After three weeks of writing, he will connect with poet Marie Howe, former winner of the National Poetry Series and a professor of creative writing at Sarah Lawrence, and work with her on developing his manuscript.
Literature

Council on Foundations

2003
Misc
Other
General Program
$9,440
Jerome Foundation renewed its annual membership inThe COUNCIL ON FOUNDATIONS, Washington, D.C., and provided a grant in general operating support. The Council is a national membership organization that serves the public good by promoting and enhancing responsibilities and effective philanthropy.
Misc

Creative Time, Inc.

2003
Multi-disciplinary
New York City
General Program
$12,000
Jerome Foundation Directors authorized a grant of $12,000 to CREATIVE TIME, New York City, in support of emerging artists' fees for the development and production of new works. Creative Time assists artists in the creation and placement of work outside the confines of the studio and the gallery in order to enliven public spaces and enrich everyday experiences. Artists are heralded as key contributors to a healthy and democratic society. Jerome Foundation dollars enable Creative Time to subsidize the creation and placement of public works by emerging artists. In 2004, that will involve a multi-artist program in Times Square and Coney Island. In its current programming season, Creative Time is launching over 13 major projects that will engage a good number of emerging artists.
Multi-disciplinary

Sean Curran Company

2003
Dance
New York City
General Program
$10,000
SEN CURRAN COMPANY, New York City, received a grant of $10,000 in support of the creation of Art Song Dance. The company was formed in 1997 by Sen Curran to promote the development of the contemporary dance form and the education of the general public through innovative performance, informative lectures and educational workshops. Jerome funding will support Art Song Dance, a collaboration between Curran and contemporary composer Ricky Ian Gordon. A period piece set in the 1920s, Art Song Dance will respond to six songs from Gordons collection Bright Eyed Joys. The songs are written in dance forms; for example, tango and polka. The lyrics are taken from writers such as Langston Hughes, Dorothy Parker and James Agee. Currans choreographic process is fed by the poetry of the lyrics. Each of the six songs will be choreographed for a featured dancer who will be supported by a chorus of the remaining five dancers.
Dance

Nathan Currier

2003
Music
New York City
General Program
$15,000
The Jerome Foundation Directors made a $15,000 grant to the NEW YORK FOUNDATION FOR THE ARTS, New York City, as fiscal agent for composer NATHAN CURRIER. These dollars will be used to support the performance of Curriers Gaian Variations, by the Brooklyn Philharmonic in April of 2004. The piece is an expression through music, text, projections and limited staging of the Gaia Hypothesis, initiated in the early 1970s by British scientist James Lovelock. It asserts, in its most simplified expression, that the earth itself is a living organism. Curriers composition will be divided into three acts, encompassing instrumental sections as well as vocal settings of words by Lovelock and Loren Eiseley.
Music

Dance Council Movement Theater

2003
Dance
New York City
General Program
$11,000
DANCE COUNCIL MOVEMENT THEATER, Brooklyn, New York, received a grant of $11,000 to support the creation and production of new work by choreographer Alyce Finwall. Funding will be directed to an evening-length project titled A. Pathos, a work for six dancers. Continuing with the theatricality and contemporary movement ideas that have become Finwalls signature style, this modern ballet will utilize intense, physical movement inspired by her ballet and gymnastic training, along with a dramatic sense of staging.
Dance

Pagination

  • First page « First
  • Previous page ‹‹
  • …
  • Page 137
  • Page 138
  • Current page 139
  • Page 140
  • Page 141
  • …
  • Next page ››
  • Last page Last »

Stay in Touch

Learn about grant opportunities, announcements & more.

  • Home
  • Events
  • Logos
  • Accessibility

550 Vandalia Street, Suite 109, St. Paul, MN 55114 · 651.224.9431 · [email protected]
© 2025 Jerome Foundation · Privacy policy

  • About
    • What We Do
    • Our Founder
    • History
    • Staff
    • Governance
    • Panelists
    • Financials
    • News
  • Grant opportunities
    • For Artists
    • Jerome Hill Artist Fellowship
    • Film Production & Mentorship
    • Jerome@Camargo
    • For Organizations
    • Arts Organization Grants
    • Seeding, Field-building, Ecosystem Development
  • Grantees
    • Artists
    • Jerome Hill Artist Fellows
    • Film Grantees
    • Jerome@Camargo Grantees
    • Organizations
    • Arts Organization Grantees
    • And More
    • All Past Grantees
  • Investing Our Values
  • Contact