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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

Alison Klayman

2011
Film/Video & New Media
New York City
New York City Film and Video
$16,000
ALISON KLAYMAN received $16,000 for Ai Weiwei: Never Sorry, a documentary about Chinese artist and dissident Ai Weiwei. Controversial, creative and fiercely outspoken, Ai Weiwei is thought by many to be Chinas preeminent contemporary artist and its most public critic. Born into Chinas revolutionary intelligentsia, Ai Weiweis biography often parallels the course of modern Chinese history, and his current activities as an artist and activist provide penetrating insights into the social impact of Chinas rapid economic and political ascent. In China, Ai is alternately heralded as Ai Shen (Ai God) by his more than 68,000 Twitter followers, and vilified by elites for his dogged criticism of governmental corruption and human rights abuses. The contemporary art world celebrates his brilliant conceptual sculptures and installations, most recently exhibited in the Turbine Hall at Londons Tate Modern, as well as his architectural works including his role as design consultant on the 2008 Beijing Birds Nest Olympic Stadium. Ai Weiwei: Never Sorry begins in 2008 at the cusp of Ais international renown as an artist and activist. It continues through 2009 and 2010 as Ai becomes more and more engaged in defying oppressive government practices and policies in China. The film ends at the Tate Modern in 2011, where Ai WeiWei and his son walk amongst a sea of porcelain sunflower seeds that symbolize the sum of Ais past efforts and his hope for the future, the power of mass connection and mass participation.
Film/Video & New Media

Joshua Koury

2011
Film/Video & New Media
New York City
New York City Film and Video
$10,000
JOSH KOURY & MYLES KANE were awarded a grant for The Making of Planet X (working title), a feature-length documentary that follows the making of an amateur sci-fi film called Planet X, which begins hundreds of years into the future. An ill-fated spacecraft falls victim to corporate espionage, leaving it stranded in the far reaches of the outer solar system. Alien combatants surround the crew of research scientists and move in. This is the setup for Eric Swain and Troy Berniers newest film, Planet X. Their attempt to bring this epic fantasy to life is wildly inventive and utterly bizarre. They are truly fascinated by the transcendent nature of movie-making itself, where their dreams of being space travelers, charming leading men, and even successful filmmakers, are all quite possible. Eric and Troy embody a specific balance of naivety, grand intention, and shortcomings, which allow them to transcend their faults and become a poignant and entertaining reflection of their sci-fi influences. This documentary tracks these true-life scientists-turned-amateur filmmakers during the three years leading up to the release of their largest and most intense production to date.
Film/Video & New Media

Aaron Landsman

2011
Multi-disciplinary
New York City
General Program
$6,000
HERE ARTS CENTER, New York City, as fiscal sponsor for theatre artist AARON LANDSMAN, Brooklyn, New York, received $6,000 in support of the development and production of City Council Meeting. The mission of HERE is to build a community that nurtures career artists as they create innovative hybrid live performance in theatre, dance, music, puppetry, media, and visual art. Aaron Landsman, as part of the HERE Artist Residency Program (HARP), is developing City Council Meeting, a participatory multi-media performance event for six performers using compositional techniques and concepts from experimental theater and visual art-based performance. The finished piece will take the form of a theatricalized local government meeting, consisting of scripted and improvised interactions among performers and viewers, webcast live each night, with viewers able to participate online as well as in person. City Council Meeting is performed participatory democracy.
Multi-disciplinary

Penny Lane

2011
Film/Video & New Media
New York City
New York City Film and Video
$25,000
PENNY LANE & BRIAN L. FRYE received a grant for a feature-length documentary, OUR NIXON. Throughout Richard Nixons presidency, three of his top White House aides obsessively documented their experiences with cheap Super 8 movie cameras. This unique visual record, created by H.R. Haldeman, John Ehrlichman and Dwight Chapin, was seized by the FBI during the Watergate investigation, then filed away and forgotten. OUR NIXON presents those home movies for the first time, to create an intimate and complex portrait of the Nixon presidency from its idealistic beginning to its tragic end. The film is structured as a tragedy, driven by dramatic irony. The story unfolds through the points of view of the three aides, with over 30 hours of footage from 1969 to 1972. They filmed big events: the Apollo moon landing, antiwar demonstrations, the Republican National Convention, Tricia Nixons White House wedding and Nixons world-changing trip to China. But the primary story arc is provided through interviews with the three men themselves, Haldeman, Ehrlichman and Chapin. In these interviews, collected through intensive archival research, they explain why they served Nixon and how they were let down, betrayed and ruined by him. These interviews put into sharp relief the heartbreaking navet of their home movies, and echo the experience of a great many Americans who supported Nixon only to be betrayed by him in the end.
Film/Video & New Media

Shaun El C. Leonardo

2011
Visual Arts
New York City
Travel and Study
$5,000
SHAUN EL C. LEONARDO, performance artist, Astoria, New York, will travel to San Diego, California, and Guanajuato, Mexico, to attend a special training session in movement to inform his performance. Leonardos work explores the confusion, desperation and, often times, failure people experience when attempting to either locate themselves within popular cultures or aspire to unattainable ideals.
Visual Arts

Paul Linden

2011
Visual Arts
Minnesota
Travel and Study
$5,000
PAUL LINDEN, sculptor and installation artist, Minneapolis, Minnesota, will travel to Insjn and Ume, Sweden, to study with two internationally acclaimed Swedish traditional wood carvers and take a course(s) at the Sterglntan College of Handcrafts, learning techniques of Swedish folk craft. This opportunity will allow Linden to develop his knowledge and skill at wood carving using hand tools.
Visual Arts

Lower Manhattan Cultural Council

2011
Visual Arts
New York City
General Program
$46,000
The LOWER MANHATTAN CULTURAL COUNCIL, New York City, received a two-year grant of $46,000 in support of the participation of emerging New York City literary and visual artists in the 2010-11 and 2011-12 Workspace program. Through progressive cultural planning, innovative artist residency programs, a multitude of funding and training opportunities, and the presentation of many free events in the visual and performing arts, the Council takes an integrated approach to enriching New York Citys creative capital. Its signature artist residency program, Workspace, offers nine months of free access to individual studios for talented, emerging artists selected through an annual open call process. Workspace provides up to thirty emerging visual artists and writers the space, time, and resources to develop new work. Workspace utilizes an open plan studio structure to foster community among its artists in residence. In addition to studio space, artists are given stipends for materials and supplies, valuable opportunities to network within the arts community, and access to additional resources and services to help strengthen their careers.
Visual Arts

Abbey Luck

2011
Film/Video & New Media
New York City
New York City Film and Video
$5,000
ABBEY LUCK was awarded support for The Observer, an animated short about an alien mind that mutates information as it is interpreted and physically manifests data as an infectious disease. The accumulation of data is shown through the point of view of the alien. The creature travels on a rotating landscape. She stops periodically to observe the behavior of alien microorganisms by touching pools of light with her single eye. In these circles are microcosms of organisms whose behavior illustrates different aspects of life, such as reproduction, evolution, communication and competition. The Observer begins simply as a wanderer, with no purpose in mind. However, as she increases the amount of information in her head, she begins to put together a picture of her surroundings. Her illumination is illustrated with a visual symbol system unique to her alien race. She translates the information into an esoteric language that manifests as a gelatinous liquid in her clear, bulbous head. Eventually, she travels back to her community of creatures and disseminates the information by releasing the liquid onto a large pool of light. The idea of the film is that information is subject to mutation during interpretation by the observer, and can be spread to others like a virus. This abstract depiction of meme contagion blurs the borders between information and infection.
Film/Video & New Media

Ma-Yi Theater Company

2011
Theater
New York City
General Program
$8,000
MA-YI THEATER COMPANY, New York City, received $8,000 in support of the development and production of new works by emerging New York City-based playwrights. Ma-Yis mission is to produce challenging and forward-thinking new works for the theater by providing a nurturing home for artists where they can hone individual and collective skills, and investigate new ways of working together while engaging their communities and dialogues about the changing world. Founded in 2004, the Writers Lab is a venue for Asian American playwrights to work and receive feedback from their peers. It provides tailored support to its members and ushers plays through defined phases of development. It encourages each writer to identify and nurture a highly individual voice and aesthetic.
Theater

Mabou Mines Development Foundation

2011
Theater
New York City
General Program
$30,000
MABOU MINES, New York City, received $30,000 in support of its Suite Resident Artist Program. Mabou Mines is an artist-driven collaborative pursuing the vision of its founding artists by using fresh perspectives to re-explore classic theatrical works and create new ones. Mabou Mines is also dedicated to fostering and developing the next generation of artists through the Suite Resident Artist Program, which is open to small companies and individual artists who are interested in investigating compelling performance ideas. Suite is organized as a two-step process. In the first year, Artistic Directors of Mabou Mines serve as mentors for eight to 12 emerging artists, helping them develop their projects over a six-month period. In the second year, four former Suite artists are invited to return for more intensely focused residencies, aimed toward the creation of fully realized productions. Suite offers emerging artists the opportunity to work in residence at Mabou Mines, and receive mentoring from the Artistic Directors, stipends, rehearsal and performance space, and administrative and technical assistance. Participants attend monthly meetings, creating an artistic community through shared ideas.
Theater

Gia Marotta

2011
Theater
New York City
Travel and Study
$4,140
GIA MAROTTA, playwright, New York, New York, will travel to Rwanda to conduct research for a new, trilingual full-length play that explores the different trajectories of the AIDS epidemic in the United States and Rwanda. The trip will help her develop cultural authenticity, boldness, urgency, and humility within the play.
Theater

Andrew Martin

2011
Film/Video & New Media
Minnesota
Minnesota Film and Video
$2,300
ANDREW MARTIN received $2,300 for Canoe, a 4-minute experimental film about the dark, dismal and chaotic interactions between a man who canoes down a shallow river and the people he encounters along the way (an older couple, a young boy, a woman and two men). The film consists of only one shot that contains no on-set sound and no dialogue. The filmmaker describes this project as the lead characters personal hell, reflecting on his darkest fears of the afterlife. Will he be punished for living his life as an atheist by seeing his loved ones punished by dying over and over again?
Film/Video & New Media

Mary Mattingly

2011
Visual Arts
New York City
Travel and Study
$3,880
MARY MATTINGLY, visual artist, New York, New York, will travel to Los Angeles, San Diego/Tijuana, Yuma, Tucson, Mexicali, El Paso/Juarez, Santa Fe, San Antonio, and Brownsville/Matamoros, traveling the route of the Mexico/US borderline, from San Diego/Tijuana to Brownsville/Matamoros, to explore the effects of migration, immigration, and political and social stresses associated with competition for land, food, water, and shelter in the immediate area. Much of her work focuses on creating mobile forms and documenting obstructions that hinder movement.
Visual Arts

Kathy McTavish

2011
Music
Minnesota
General Program
$7,300
SPRINGBOARD FOR THE ARTS, St. Paul, Minnesota, on behalf of composer KATHY MCTAVISH, Duluth, Minnesota, received $7,300 in support of the development and production of a new immersive sound and video environment and performance, graffiti angel/holy fool. The mission of Springboard for the Arts is to cultivate vibrant communities by connecting artists with the skills, information, and services they need to make a living and a life. McTavish is a composer and free-improvisational cellist. In both live performance and recorded work, she blends cello, found sound, electronic effects, and abstract still-motion film to explore a synesthetic world. In graffiti angel/holy fool, she will create live, multimedia performance, cinema, and web landscapes.
Music

Media Impact Funders

2011
Film/Video & New Media
Other
General Program
$3,000
Jerome Foundation renewed its general support of and membership in GRANTMAKERS IN FILM + ELECTRONIC MEDIA, Oakland, California, in the form of a $3,000 commitment. Grantmakers in Film + Electronic Media (GFEM), an affinity group of the Council on Foundations, is an association of grantmakers committed to advancing the field of media arts and public interest media funding. It is a resource for grantmakers who fund media content, infrastructure, and policy, and those who employ media to further their program goals. It is also a resource for funders who wish to learn more about media.
Film/Video & New Media

Milkweed Editions

2011
Literature
Minnesota
General Program
$20,000
MILKWEED EDITIONS, Minneapolis, Minnesota, received $20,000 in support of the publication of three books by emerging writers. Milkweed identifies, nurtures, and publishes transformative literature, and builds an engaged community around it. Its 2011 list includes three paperback reprints and 15 new titles, including poetry, fiction, and nonfiction. Milkweed Editions is committed to publishing emerging talent, and to developing nurturing relationships with writers. Jerome support is directed toward books by emerging authors based in New York City and Minnesota.
Literature

Jane Ramseyer Miller

2011
Music
Minnesota
Travel and Study
$1,500
JANE RAMSEYER MILLER, Artistic Director for One Voice Mixed Chorus, Saint Paul, Minnesota, will attend the 9th World Symposium on Choral Music in Argentina. Her goal is to gain exposure to new repertoire and build international relationships with choirs, conductors, and composers to strengthen her skills and resources in programming and performing cross-cultural choral music.
Music

Minneapolis College of Art and Design

2011
Visual Arts
Minnesota
General Program
$82,150
The MINNEAPOLIS COLLEGE OF ART AND DESIGN (MCAD), Minneapolis, Minnesota, received a grant of $82,150 in support of the 2011-12 MCAD/Jerome Fellowships Program. The College is an independent, accredited institution offering a four-year curriculum integrating the liberal arts into 14 professional B.F.A. degree majors in fine arts, media arts and design; a four-year B.S. degree program in Visualization; a two-year M.F.A. degree program in Visual Studies; a one-year Post-Baccalaureate certificate program; and educational opportunities for the general public through classes for all ages, online courses, and exhibition programs. Since 1981, MCAD has partnered with the Jerome Foundation to support emerging art and artists through the MCAD/Jerome Foundation Fellowships for Emerging Artists. The goal of this program is to significantly advance, artistically and critically, the work of emerging visual artists in Minnesota. Five artists are supported through grants of $10,000 each for a period of 12 months. Three visiting critics meet with the artists during the fellowship period. There are group meetings and studio visits, free enrollment in one professional development course, access to technical assistance, and a culminating exhibition with accompanying catalog. These fellowships are competitively awarded by an independent jury.
Visual Arts

Minnesota Council on Foundations

2011
Misc
Minnesota
General Program
$5,055
The Minnesota Council on Foundations, Minneapolis, Minnesota, received $5,555 in general support and as a membership for the Jerome Foundation. The Council is a regional association of grantmakers, working to strengthen and expand philanthropy and enhance the vitality of its communities. Members include private family and independent foundations, community and public foundations, and corporate foundations and giving programs. The Council advocates for giving, serves as a resource for grantmaking, and acts as a catalyst for philanthropy. Its vision is to inspire an ever-expanding community of grantmakers to achieve, both individually and collectively, the highest standards of purpose and action.
Misc

Movement Research, Inc.

2011
Dance
New York City
General Program
$25,000
MOVEMENT RESEARCH, New York City, received $25,000 to support six emerging New York City-based choreographers as they create and develop new works through the Artist-in-Residence Program. Movement Research, a laboratory for the investigation of dance and movement-based forms, values individual artists, their creative processes, and their vital roles within society. Jerome Foundation support will provide $3,000 commissions and works-in-progress presentations with performance fees, as part of the Judson Church series. The choreographers receive access to the organizations network of other programs to create personalized, integrated, and multi-faceted experiences. Artists are selected for the residency program via an open call and panel review.
Dance

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