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Monthly Archives:February 2021

Member Spotlight: Richmond Memorial Health Foundation

For the month of February, GIA’s photo banner features work supported by Richmond Memorial Health Foundation.

This is the text Kendra Jones, Director for Health Equity, Arts and Culture & Accountant, submitted for this Spotlight:

Richmond Memorial Health Foundation (RMHF) joined Grantmakers in the Arts in 2016 with the inception of its Health Equity and Arts (HEArts) program. HEArts began by funding artists to engage community members to imagine a future where health inequities do not exist. We are still funding imagination, but HEArts has evolved with an emphasis on impact, healing, and change.

What is most exciting to me about the evolution of HEArts and changes at RMHF is our commitment to supporting Black and Brown communities. RMHF is making this group a priority going forward, not only because they have been disproportionally affected by COVID-19 and racism, but also because they have been historically underfunded by philanthropy.

Some immediate steps we are taking to live into this commitment to support Black and Brown communities includes:

  • Prioritizing funding for Black and Brown artists and organizations led by people of color
  • Supporting shared learning opportunities with racial equity trainings for all
  • Creating a new initiative, Grassroots Capacity Building, that supports grassroots organizations led by Black and Brown leaders by providing financial, intellectual and social capital
  • Creating a new fellowship, Health Equity Action Leadership (HEAL), as a neighborhood-based leadership development program that seeks to improve the social determinants of health through policy change with nonprofit leaders and residents in Black and Brown communities.

Richmond Memorial Health Foundation joined Grantmakers in the Arts in 2016.

You can also visit Richmond Memorial Health Foundation’s photo gallery on GIA’s Photo Credits page.

The creative team behind Freedom Constellations: Dreaming of a World Without Youth Prisons stands in front of their mural on the premiere day. From left to right: Natasha Kovacs (CodeVA instructor), Jakson (youth technologist), Zach Mulcahey (CodeVA instructor), Iyana (youth muralist), Ta’Dreama (youth muralist), Valerie Slater (RISE for Youth), Khai (youth muralist), Cory Jones (RISE for Youth), Kayla (youth muralist), Gina Lyles (Performing Statistics), Maggie Smith (CodeVA), Mark Strandquist (Performing Statistics). The mural was funded, in part, by RMHF. Image: Courtesy: Richmond Memorial Health Foundation

Montreal artist Junko manifests creatures from repurposed garbage

The city of Montreal is no stranger to public sculptures. Home to an eclectic collection of statues that are dotted across the map of the entire city, it’s hard to pick a walking path through the downtown area or Old Montreal that doesn’t pass by at least one eye-catching sculpture. Recently, some new sculptures have been popping up along the city’s snowy streets, and their creator refers to them as “glorified littering.” These eerie and interesting new forms are the creations of an artist under the pseudonym Junko, and as their creator’s name implies, they are composed of junk.

 

Junko began to publicly share his pieces at the end of December 2020 via his Instagram account. His first published post was on December 27th and showed off what was apparently his first endeavour into repurposing garbage as sculpting materials. “Working on this sculpture gave me a sense of purpose,” Junko states on the post. “As well as opened my eyes to the potential of creating sculptures from junk.”

 

Much of Junko’s work appear to take animal-like forms as well as feeling distinctly mechanical; the artificial skeletons of some long forgotten creatures. Car parts, bike frames, toy pieces, and all sorts of detritus make for materials in the artist’s sculptures- and sometimes even real animal bones. And while some appear to be small enough to easily pick up, others stand easily over ten feet tall and loom ominously and beautifully in the environments they have been placed in.

 

With the mixture of natural forms and unnatural ingredients, Junko’s creations meld interestingly into all sorts of city spots. They seem as at home in a desolate stretch of snow and trees as they do beneath the concrete of an overpass. The reception to his sculptures has generally been positive, if a bit quizzical, but it is certainly not too out of place to find such creative public pieces in areas such as the Mile End in Montreal, where several of his creations reside.

 

While apparently not authorized public pieces, Junko’s works are all still standing currently. The artist states that his work can’t necessarily be classified as vandalism as they are essentially “an organized pile of trash.” The works clearly take a lot of work and gumption to install, but with the city of Montreal still in a lockdown due to rising numbers of COVID-19 cases, there is perhaps no better an opportunity to undertake such an endeavour.

 

Junko’s work has a decidedly Montreal feel to it. It’s experimental but understandable, strange but familiar, natural and urban. The creatures he has crafted seem at home in the city they lumber in. And with spring somewhere on the horizon, here’s hoping that more of these litter critters will be waking from hibernation soon.