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Wisconsin Arts Board Awards Artist and Community Collaboration
Grants to 14 Artists
Fourteen
Wisconsin artists and their non profit partners will receive grants for
innovative community arts projects that address areas such as community arts
development, arts education, youth oriented projects, access, and cultural
heritage/preservation from the Wisconsin Arts Board as a part of its 2006
Artist and Community Collaboration Grant program. This statewide program
provides grants of up to $3,000 in order to encourage more collaborative
projects between artists and their communities.
The
Wisconsin Arts Board received 26 applications from artists and community based
organizations throughout the state. Awards were determined by a panel of arts
professionals, based on three criteria: the artist’s ability to complete the
project proposed on time; the project’s active involvement of the community
in a meaningful way (beyond serving as an audience); and the completed
project’s inclusion of a public presentation/exhibition. Priority was given
to projects which promote artistic excellence and create new work in
underserved communities. Panelists recommended the 14 applicants to members of
the Wisconsin Arts Board for its final approval.
The
Artist and Community Collaboration Grant program offers grants to Wisconsin
artists who initiate a partnership project with a community organization. The grants will be offered again in the Autumn of 2006.
More information is available at www.artsboard.wisconsin.gov/static/accgrant.htm. Artists may also call the Wisconsin Arts Board at 608/266-0190 or send
an email to artsboard@wisconsin.gov
to include their name on the electronic mailing list (e-mail) to automatically
receive notice of deadlines.
FY2006
ACCG Recipients
- Terry Daulton/North Lakeland
Discovery Center—Mercer
The artist will create and conduct a
workshop bringing together northern artists, educators and scientists around
the topic of climate change.
- Roberto Rivera/Imagine
a Child’s Capacity—Madison
As part of an
all-school assembly, the artist will use rap, poetry, music, dance, and
storytelling to communicate the absolute importance of confronting reality and
not escaping from it. The post assembly workshops will further explore the
themes expressed in the assembly and will encourage youth to embrace their
uniqueness, become socially responsible, and exercise critical thinking skills.
- Bill
Grover/Independent Living, Inc.—Verona
Working with older adult residents of McKee Park Apartments in
Fitchburg and other interested community members, the artist will create and
site an outdoor sculpture on the grounds of this residence.
- Kent R.
Youngstrom/Central Wisconsin Children’s Museum—Stevens Point
The project will involve working with the Central Wisconsin Children’s Museum (CWCM) to create a unique, collaborative Sand Art Community
Mural.
- Sharon L.
Kilfoy/Wil-Mar Neighborhood Center—Madison
The project will consist of an artist-in-residency at Wil-Mar Neighborhood Center during the
months of January and February. During this residency, all members of the community will
be invited to participate in old fashioned sewing-bees—opportunities to share in the actual construction of the
works of art.
- Alisha R. Dall’Osto/Artworks for Milwaukee—Milwaukee
In the 2006 summer session, the artist will lead apprentices ages 14-21
through the process of designing and creating a mural for a community garden sponsored by Walnut Way Conservation
Corp.
- Scott A.
Pauli/Atwood Community Center—Madison
The artist will work with high school students as they conceive, design,
and hand screen-print posters to promote teen-related, local events.
- Mark
Brueggeman/Central Wisconsin Symphony Orchestra—Amherst Junction
The artist will work with the Central Wisconsin Symphony Orchestra
(CWSO), creating a series of oil paintings inspired by Mussorgsky’s Pictures at
an Exhibition. He will create ten paintings (4' in one direction, some
horizontal and some vertical) corresponding to the ten movements excluding the
Promenades.
- Armando P. Gallegos/Walker’s Point Center for the Arts—Milwaukee
This project involves artists painting portraits of community members on
flat wood panels then attaching them to boarded up windows located throughout the
Walker’s Point neighborhood.
The goal of this project involves the combination of community members, institutions, and a diverse group of
artists working within the community to create a reflection of the neighborhood residents bringing the community
together.
- Lori B. Vance/Golda Meir School—Milwaukee
The
artist will collaborate with Golda Meir School for the Gifted and Talented, a
public elementary school in the City of Milwaukee,
to build upon the creation of the memorial, "The Remembrance Tree; A
Project for Peace," which was created to honor children who had died from
acts of violence. This
multi-disciplinary arts project will build leadership from the gifted and
talented students, focusing on peaceful conflict resolution, further
reinforcing their ongoing commitment to the work of non-violence.
- Jennifer L.
Edge/Monroe Arts Center—Monroe
The Shakespeare Project is a 14 week theater project created to
engage teens in dialoging about the tough issues of abuse and violence in our
culture and in our own lives.
- Marcus Nickel/South Central Federation of Labor—Madison
This project will involve the creation of a design for a brand new mural
based on Madison’s long and varied labor history. It will be
designed utilizing the input and suggestions of community members who have
lived this history. Neighborhood residents and others will be able to observe and
participate in the process, which will culminate with a series of public presentations including guest lectures on
labor history and the history of community murals.
- Betty Salamun/Benedict Center Women’s Project—Milwaukee
DanceCircus and The Benedict Center will present a concert
performance of the GIVING VOICE Series building on the stories and triumphs of
the women referred to The Benedict Center’s Women’s
Program by the Court and/or Department of Corrections.
- Erin L. O’Brien/River Alliance of Wisconsin—Madison
This
singer-songwriter will begin a two-year collaboration with the River Alliance
of Wisconsin, a statewide non-profit river and
watershed conservation organization. The
artist will encourage water protection advocates across the state to share
stories, poetry and readings about their inspirations and motivations for their
involvement in local water protection
work. From the contributions of
project participants, she will develop a collection of original songs about
peoples’
connections to Wisconsin’s waters and the issues that threaten those waters. She will use the presentation of these songs to heighten the awareness
of water conservation issues and to renew and expand individual and community
commitment to water protection work.
Contact: Mark Fraire, 608/264-8191
Date Posted: 1/19/06
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