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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

Richard Wiebe

2019
Film/Video & New Media
Minnesota
Jerome Hill Artist Fellowship
$40,000

Richard Wiebe’s (he/him) award-winning work has screened widely at international film festivals including IFF Rotterdam, Media City, Cannes Cinéfondation, FIDMarseille, Festival du nouveau cinéma Montreal, UnionDocs Center for Documentary Art, Ann Arbor Film Festival, and several others. He is the recipient of grants from the Princess Grace Foundation and the Minnesota State Arts Board. Richard teaches courses in sound design, screenwriting, and the art of the short at Hamline University and FilmNorth. He is the Experimental Cinema programmer for the Minneapolis/Saint Paul International Film Festival (MSPIFF) and a member of the collective Cellular Cinema.

 

Fellowship Statement

My current project-in-progress is a feature-length experimental documentary focusing on World War I cameraman Leon Caverly, the first official war cinematographer of the United States military. Using Caverly’s pro-war cinematography found in the National Archives, I will fashion an anti-war film. Caverly shot the film 100 years ago, I will edit and do the sound design. This constraint-based collaboration with Caverly will also include materials from early American cinema, television, and other archival sources, alongside contemporary footage I have shot. Ultimately, this project will result in a de-stratified history of American militarism from the canons of the Confederacy at the Siege of Petersburg to depictions of unrest today. World War I propaganda, where cinematic propaganda first blossomed, is the center that holds it all together.

Film/Video & New Media
Wiebe Headshot

Nia Witherspoon

2019
Theater
New York City
Jerome Hill Artist Fellowship
$40,000

Nia O. Witherspoon (she/her) is a black queer writer/director, vocalist/composer, and cultural worker. Described as “especially fascinating” by Backstage Magazine, and named in Phoenix’s “Top 100” Artists, Witherspoon’s work creates contemporary ritual-space grounded in African Diaspora sensibilities to speak to the issues of our times. Currently in residence at Brooklyn Arts Exchange, Witherspoon has received New York Theatre Workshop’s (NYTW) 2050 Playwriting/Directing Fellowship, BRIC’s Premiere Residency, Astraea Foundation’s Global Arts Fund Grant, Brooklyn Arts Fund (BAC), Downtown Urban Theatre Festival’s “Audience Award,” Lambda Literary’s Emerging Playwriting Fellowship, and a Mellon Dissertation Fellowship. Her works, including The Messiah Complex, YOUMINE, and SHE have been developed or featured at BRIC, HERE, NYTW, National Black Theatre, BAAD, Dixon Place, The Fire This Time Festival, and Movement Research. Witherspoon holds a PhD from Stanford University, and is currently a Playwright-in-Residence at University of Massachusetts (Amherst). She has works commissioned in the 2019-20 season by The Shed, Playwright’s Realm, La Mama ETC, and JACK.

 

Fellowship Statement

I am a concept-driven artist invested in creating spaces where black/queer/trans/female folks, and, more largely people of color, are able to be seen in their full humanity, and their full divinity. This means that while contemporary tragedy and inter-generational trauma often trigger a project’s inception, ultimately, I aim for my works to place my communities in a context that far exceeds the 500-years of colonial time and instead to find the palimpsest of wisdom in liberation. Freedom is not something I have achieved yet, but it is something I feel pulled uncontrollably toward. I am working to cultivate freedom in myself, in my works, and in my collaborators, by any means necessary. I am also learning that freedom is very much about surrender to the imperfect, and so I try to create spaces (from plays to rituals to rehearsal rooms) where vulnerability is the most valuable currency.

I am deeply inspired by the resonance inside of dissonance—particularly in reparation of the sacred/secular binary. I am also invested in the concepts of layering and unfolding, as the nature of diaspora is palimpsestic, cyclical, and always in motion. In The Dark Girl Chronicles, Yoruba divination scripture lives alongside verbatim investigation-room testimony, court transcripts, and Cardi B to unearth the stories of black women warriors against state violence. I am excited by the potential of theatre to allow us to see what we would otherwise not see—the moonlit vision—the “magic eye” that offers a window the Great Mystery. In The Messiah Complex, the nightclub has permission to become the ritual ground and sacred cemetery. A heteronormative Black Panther has permission to love a transwoman. And his transmasculine child has permission to become the Messiah, leading the next generation of the black liberation struggle.

Photo by  Zavé Martohardjono.

Theater
Locks pulled over to one side, multi-colored necklace made of West-African cloth buttons, black tank top, fuschia lipstick, and smiling golden brown face.

André Zachery

2019
Dance
New York City
Jerome Hill Artist Fellowship
$40,000

André M. Zachery (he/him) is an interdisciplinary artist and founding artistic director of Brooklyn-based Renegade Performance Group (RPG). Zachery’s practice, research and community engagement artistically focuses on Black/African Diaspora cultural practices through the mediums of choreography, site-specific projects, film, digital projection, audio installations and responsive technology. He is a former Jerome Foundation supported Movement Research artist-in-residence and a 2016 New York Foundation for the Arts Fellowship/Gregory Millard Fellow in Choreography. He has served as a guest faculty artist in dance departments at Florida State University, Virginia Commonwealth University and Ohio State University. His works have received acclaimed reviews from the New York Times, Culturebot and other notable publications. RPG has presented work at Danspace Project, The Kennedy Center, Wexner Center for the Arts, Harlem Stage and the Brooklyn Museum. Zachery extensively collaborates with artists of various genres and mediums to create innovative projects that expand notions of performance and space.

 

Fellowship Statement

I am interested in dimensionality as a means to disrupt and dismantle hierarchy. Currently, my work and research in Afrofuturism reconsiders the relationship of the Black body in digital landscapes to recoding (virtual) reality. The presence, experiences and narratives of the African Diaspora are severely lacking in the field of performance and technology. For me dimensionality offers the ability to shape and form our stories, legacies, myths and sense of place with complexity and nuance in consideration to time. Moving forward, I want to find ways to actualize the conversation and theory of Black futurity into physical and material spaces.  I want people to input their information into a constructed environment where the material and physical architectures interact cohesively with supporting sonic and visual elements, exploring how Afrofuturism can be a generative mechanism to address societal issues with parity, equity and resourcefulness

Photo by Rachel Neville.

Dance
Photo of André M. Zachery - The Afrofuturism Series/Renegade Performance Group

Alliance of Artists Communities

2019
Multi-disciplinary
Other
Convenings, Research & Memberships

One-time grant of $9,000 in support of the participation of early career artists and arts organizations at the 2019 Conference in Saint Paul, Minnesota.

Multi-disciplinary

Pallavi Sharma Dixit

2019
Literature
Minnesota
Jerome Hill Artist Fellowship

Pallavi Sharma Dixit (she/her) earned a Master of Fine Arts in creative writing from the University of Massachusetts Amherst. She is the recipient of a number of grants and fellowships and has taught creative writing at the Loft Literary Center. She lives in Minneapolis with her husband and two children and is at work on a novel.

 

Fellowship Statement

I was born in India and raised in Edison, New Jersey – a Little India in America – and this history informs all my writing.

When I earned degrees in history from the University of Pennsylvania I didn’t know how I would use them, but it turns out this is how: my fiction examines Indian immigration, Thomas Edison’s work ethic, anti-Indian racism, the evolution of Indian film, and the transformation of an American suburb into an ethnic enclave.

My novel-in-progress, Edison, deals also with romance, obsession, anxiety and the pressure of the American Dream. It is influenced both by the Bollywood movies and American sitcoms I grew up on. At every turn it bears the imprint of my life.

I try not to let my process be all agony; I find the humor and amuse myself. I like when movie stars unexpectedly enter my scenes. And I like em dashes so much.

Literature
Pallavi Sharma Dixit

Peter Nelson

2019
Film/Video & New Media
Minnesota
Minnesota Film and Video
$30,000

Peter Nelson received $30,000 for Whiteness at Work, which weaves together five narratives of individuals reflecting on their whiteness. Historically, race has been viewed as a non-white issue, and the burden to understand race and racism in recent years has been overwhelmingly put on people of color. This project seeks to engage white people in a self-examination of their whiteness. Nelson will use stop motion animation and recorded interviews to reveal white perspectives, biases, and blind spots as individuals consider their roles in white privilege, white solidarity, and white fragility.

Film/Video & New Media
Peter Nelson

Twin Cities Theatres of Color Coalition (fiscal sponsor Propel Nonprofits)

2019
Theater
Minnesota
$90,000
Twin Cities Theatres of Color Coalition, also known as TCTOCC (fiscal sponsor Propel Nonprofits) received a $90,000 three-year grant ($30,000 per year) for strategic planning and capacity building. TCTOCC includes Pangea World Theater, Penumbra Theater, New Native Theatre, Teatro del Pueblo and Theater Mu.
Theater

Xiaolu Wang

2019
Film/Video & New Media
Minnesota
Minnesota Film and Video
$30,000

Xiaolu Wang received $30,000 for Wet Togetherness. The film follows the spirit of a drowned child who leads the filmmaker on a pilgrimage to dismantle their fear of water. By visiting with the humans and marine mammals who explore interdependence and collective organizing, new forms of engaging with the water and each other emerge.

Film/Video & New Media
image from Wet Togetherness with caption stating "Maybe I don't know the depths"

Abrons Arts Center (fiscal sponsor Henry Street Settlement)

2018
Dance
New York City
Arts Organization Grants
$60,000

Abrons Arts Center (fiscal sponsor Henry Street Settlement), New York City, received a two-year grant of $60,000 for the AIRspace Residency Program in 2018–19 and 2019–20, supporting four early career New York City-based performing artists per year. The artists selected for 2018–19 are NIC Kay, Jonathan Gonzalez, Salome Asega, and Korde Tuttle.

Dance

Mike Alberti

2018
Literature
Minnesota
Travel and Study
$4,844
The artist will  travel to Leavenworth, Lawrence, Topeka, Manhattan, Strong City, El Dorado, Wichita and Republic, KS and Beatrice, NE for 25 days. Alberti will take a 25-day car trip from Minnesota to Kansas to conduct extensive research in local history in support of his first book, a historical novel tentatively titled El Dorado.
Literature

American Composers Forum

2018
Music
Minnesota
Arts Organization Grants
$160,000

American Composers Forum, St. Paul, Minnesota, received a two-year grant of $160,000 for the ACF CREATE commissioning program for Minnesota and New York City-based early career composers and the Minnesota Emerging Composers Awards for early career composers in the creation and presentation of new work in 2018 and 2019.

Music

Americans for the Arts

2018
Misc
Other
Convenings, Research & Memberships
$6,500

Americans for the Arts, Washington, DC, received a one-time grant of $6,500 in support of its 2019 National Conference, to be held in the Twin Cities. The grant includes general conference support and for scholarships for early career artists based in Minnesota or the five boroughs of New York City to attend the conference.

Misc

Anderson Center

2018
Visual Arts
Minnesota
Arts Organization Grants
$21,250

Anderson Center, Red Wing, Minnesota, received a one-year grant of $21,250 to support five residencies of early career/emerging artists from Minnesota and New York City.

Visual Arts

Brian Arnold

2018
Film/Video & New Media
Minnesota
Travel and Study
$5,000
The artist will travel to Windhoek, Tsumeb, Etosha National Park, and Seringkop farm, Namibia and Nantes, Notre-dame-des-landes, and the Zone-a-defendre (Zad), France for 33 days. Arnold plans to explore land disputes in two different cultural contexts (occupation as resistance to development in La Zone-de-Défendre, France and occupation as indigenous land reclamation near Tsumeb, Namibia) as research for a documentary on the nature of land ownership struggles.
Film/Video & New Media

ArtChangeUS (fiscal sponsor NEO Philanthropy)

2018
Misc
New York City
Convenings, Research & Memberships
$9,000

ArtChangeUS (fiscal sponsor NEO Philanthropy), New York City, received a one-time grant of $9,000 in support of early career artists’ participation and scholarships at the REMAP Twin Cities convening in 2018.

Misc

Asian American Writers’ Workshop

2018
Literature
New York City
Arts Organization Grants
$35,000

Asian American Writers’ Workshop, New York City, received a one-year grant of $35,000 for The Margins Fellowship, a publishing/fellowship program awarding stipends, publishing opportunities, and residencies to four emerging writers of Asian American descent in 2019.

Literature

Leila Awadallah

2018
Dance
Minnesota
Travel and Study
$4,341
The artist will travel to Bethlehem, Palestine for 31 days. Awadallah plans to research Arabic folk dances, the momentum and shape of Arabic calligraphy, and the movement of bodies living under occupation in Bethlehem, Palestine as research for her contemporary Arab dance and aesthetic grounding as a Palestinian American choreographer, while also making lasting connections with Arab dance and theatre organizations and family members in her ancestral village.
Dance

Baxter Street/Camera Club of New York

2018
Visual Arts
New York City
Arts Organization Grants
$40,000

Baxter Street/Camera Club of New York, New York City, received a two-year grant of $40,000 to support four early career/emerging New York City lens-based artists to develop, create, and exhibit new work in 2018–19 and 2019–20.

Visual Arts

Bronx Documentary Center

2018
Film/Video & New Media
New York City
Arts Organization Grants
$80,000

Bronx Documentary Center, Bronx, New York, received a two-year grant of $80,000 for BDC Films, providing 12 early career/emerging documentary filmmakers skills-based trainings, a stipend, access to equipment and workspace, professional development workshops, mentorship, and a public platform to share new documentary work in 2018–19 and 2019–20.

Film/Video & New Media

Bronx Museum of the Arts

2018
Visual Arts
New York City
Arts Organization Grants
$54,000

Bronx Museum of the Arts, Bronx, New York, received a two-year grant of $54,000 for the Artist in the Marketplace (AIM) program, offering 36 early career artists a free 15-week professional development seminar program, studio visits, portfolio reviews, clinics, and opportunities to meet and interact with curators and art world professionals, culminating in public presentations of new and recent work and a publication in 2018 and 2019.

Visual Arts

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