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Monthly Archives:February 2022

New Fund Alert! Open Society Foundations Supports Sustainability for Black Artists & Activists

“The Open Society Foundations are proud to announce their Justice Rising Awards, a new investment in leaders working towards racial justice and equality in the Black community in the United States,” according to the press release. “The 16 awardees from across the country are being recognized for their long-term contributions to advancing change in their communities, tireless commitment to civil rights, and capacity to inspire, innovate, and mobilize people despite considerable odds.”

More than a dozen Black social justice activists will be awarded $150,000 each to continue their often decades-long work for civil rights and to perhaps worry less about paying their bills. Two notable artists/activists selected as award recipients are Monica Raye Simpson — a Black, Southern, lesbian, artist/organizer and executive director of SisterSong — and Prentiss Haney — co-founder of Midwest Culture Lab as an urgent political intervention needed to center and support young artists of color as trusted communicators, organizers, and cultural strategists with the intent of increasing youth civic participation during elections.

Read more about the Justice Rising Awards and the awardees.

Doris Duke Charitable Foundation Names Creative Inflections Grant Recipients

The Doris Duke Charitable Foundation has announced nearly $1 million in grant funding through its Creative Inflections program, a first-of-its-kind initiative to support leading jazz artists and presenting organizations in innovative collaborations that enable artists to take creative risks and expand the genre’s listenership by attracting younger and more diverse audiences. Each grant of up to $200,000 supports alliances between the selected artists and institutions to explore novel, interdisciplinary approaches to the way that jazz can be delivered to the next generation of audiences. The Creative Inflections program works to position jazz artists and presenting institutions as equal partners, support risk-taking by both artists and presenters, and cultivate audiences of millennials as jazz consumers.

Learn more about the new grantees here.

Working on Mechan 11’s mohawk – one of the last major fabrication aspects of our…

Working on Mechan 11’s mohawk – one of the last major fabrication aspects of our…


Working on Mechan 11’s mohawk – one of the last major fabrication aspects of our 4th giant robot. This one is going to be something to see. We will be installing the head onto the body next weekend. Stay tuned! photo by Jason Hutchinson #anewviewcamden #cityofcamdengovernment #coopersferrypartnership #rutgers_camden #tylerfuquacreations #mechan11 #mechan9 #mechanx #mechaninc #giant robot



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Solidarity Economy in Action for Black Cultural Cooperative in Oakland

Zakiya Harris is in the process of group of co-founding BlacSpace Cooperative, organizations led by Black women in Oakland working to create a business development ecosystem to uplift the city’s Black arts community. Harris – a cultural architect who grew up in East Oakland and has worked for more than two decades on projects that explore the intersections of art, activism, and entrepreneurship – says, “We, as a collective community, recognized that we were at a critical moment, and we could leverage the opportunity of the pandemic and the uprising toward a cultural reset.”

In response to the impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic as well as the coinciding global uprising following George Floyd’s murder, BlacSpace Cooperative, is in its early stages. “There is a growing conversation nationally around the importance of reallocating funding to the artists and culture-bearers who are oftentimes overlooked, but who are at the cutting edge of cultural and economic innovation-these include groups like BIPOC, trans people, queer people, strippers and single moms,” reports April M. Short in Big News Network.com. As detailed in the 2021 Grantmakers in the Arts’ report, Solidarity Not Charity: Arts & Culture Grantmaking in the Solidarity Economy, “artists are very often the source of local solutions to the large-scale problems that many people face today-and that many more will face in the future.”

Harris says she allotted funds from work with Alameda County’s Arts Web (which Community Vision, SVCreates and the Kenneth Rainin Foundation joined forces to develop) into founding the cooperative. BlacSpace has also received funding through the Center for Cultural Innovation and the Yerba Buena Center for the Arts (YBCA)/Culture Bank. In the fall of 2021, the project transitioned into fiscal sponsorship with Haven of Hope, a Black-led fiscal organization led by Darcelle Lahr.

Read Zakiya Harris’ interview with April M. Short here.

New Toolkit to Address Structural Racism

“It is too early to determine whether the waves of protests of recent years as part of the Black Lives Matter movement will actually constitute a ‘racial reckoning’ (as the media dubbed it) or not, but awareness of the role of systemic inequality and structural racism appears to be at or near its historical peak, especially among White Americans. This means that the aperture for meaningful policy change has opened,” writes Stephen Menedian in an essay on the Othering & Belonging Institute blog. Menedian’s essay provides an overview of the new open-source, searchable repository of policy-based recommendations for addressing structural and systemic racism or advancing racial equity drawn from a vast array of published material.

The Othering & Belonging Institute scoured a vast array of materials, including books, reports, civic organizational platforms, and other sources, to compile roughly 1,000 policy recommendations in many areas where structural racism is most prevalent, including policing, criminal justice, housing, transportation, voting rights, education, and many others. “We hope this project will be useful to advocacy groups, researchers, foundations, and local, state, and federal officials who are seeking ways to address systemic racism in their communities,” the team shared in the official announcement this week.

Read the full essay here.