United Arts Agency | UAA

Monthly Archives:March 2022

Feminist Spaces Call for Works

International Deadline: May 6, 2022 – Feminist Spaces welcomes work across genres and disciplines and invites students, faculty, and independent scholars to submit academic papers, creative writing, and art…

Up next for the DiscoBug is a safety fence that surrounds the Bug.  The trick is…

Up next for the DiscoBug is a safety fence that surrounds the Bug. The trick is…


Up next for the DiscoBug is a safety fence that surrounds the Bug. The trick is to make is substantial enough to keep people out while looking good while not obscuring the art. I think we have come up with a good plan. Stay tuned to see how we put it all together. #brilliantbaltimore #lightcity2019 #discobug #tylerfuquacreations #vw



Source

The engineer who did the calcs for the Space Plants needed a picture of them for…

The engineer who did the calcs for the Space Plants needed a picture of them for…


The engineer who did the calcs for the Space Plants needed a picture of them for an inner-office engineering contest. I threw the Cosmic Space Frog skin behind them and sent this pic to him. He thinks we are a shoe in to win. Who knows, maybe it will lead to future projects for TFC. #spaceplants #tylerfuquacreations #grummelengineering



Source

PrattMWP 9-month Ceramics Teaching Residency

International Deadline: March 28, 2022 – The Munson-Williams-Proctor Arts Institute Artists in Residence program (AIR) is an education-based residency which allows one emerging artist to live, work, and teach…

What We’re Reading: Striving for Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion in the Arts

Edirin Oputu from Temple News interviewed Linda Earle, associate graduate director in the Art History Department for the arts management MA at the Tyler School of Art and Architecture. Oputu summarized, “We spoke with her about how organizations and artists can push for greater equity, how the arts scene is developing and what needs to be done to bring about institutional change.”

Read the full interview here.

Shared Learnings: One Foundation’s Approach to Shifting Power and Funding Racial Justice

“We offer our story as one example (amongst many) of what it can look like to answer the call to fund racial justice. Five years ago, we at the Pink House Foundation (PHF)—a small family foundation based in Washington, D.C.—set out to explore what it could look like to redefine philanthropy with justice at the center,” report Hanna Mahon and Luke Newton Newton in Inside Philanthropy.

“After five years of building out our social justice giving model, we [PHF] decided that, in addition to redistributing our family wealth to support justice, we can have the greatest impact if we also redistribute the decision-making power over where that funding goes.”

Read the full interview here.