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AgitArte

“Art is an attempt to bring order to chaos,” Stephen Sondheim once said. But the Puerto Rican radical theater group AgitArte has been acting on that premise for quite some time, disrupting, agitating with theater as their base.

Art as a weapon has been the artistic mantra for puppeteer Jorge Diaz Ortiz and Sugeily Rodríguez Lebrón and their fellow members of this radical group of artists and cultural organizers that envisions decolonization for Puerto Rico through the mobilizing of their cultural and artistic projects. Since their start in Lynn, Massachussetts, with luggage on their backs, the troupe has countered the dominant journalistic discourse with its narrative.

They have tackled the island’s “illegal debt,” the orders of the mandated “Junta” that rules the island’s finances, and what is viewed as the “episodes of Boricua genocide” that they narrate through performances, visual art and their music. The elements of nature included in their name advance their commitment, and their ground-up philosophy.

Yosemite Renaissance 37

International Deadline: December 31, 2021 – If you are an artist inspired by Yosemite and the California Sierra Nevada, this is a fabulous opportunity to share your vision! Traveling exhibit, cash awards…

Member Spotlight: The Opportunity Fund

During the months of December 2021 and January 2022, GIA’s photo banner features work supported by The Opportunity Fund.

This is the text The Opportunity Fund submitted for this Spotlight:

The Opportunity Fund is a Pittsburgh-based private foundation that awards grants to small to midsize arts organizations, and organizations and initiatives that advance social and economic justice.

2021 marked an expansion of people involved in the Opportunity Fund with yvette shipman (Program Officer/Repair) joining Tiffany Wilhelm (Program Officer/Operations) and Jake Goodman (Executive Director) on the small staff team, as well as four community members joining the two family members that have been part of the foundation since its inception in 2015. Our commitments to racial justice in 2020 resulted in more multi-year general operating support grants to Black-led arts organizations and the allocation $50,000 in initial seed money to establish a fund by Black people for Black people. As a result, yvette shipman assembled the Opportunity Fund Innovation Ventures (OFIV) Community Advisors: a discipline-broad, experience-rich, intergenerational team of Black contributors. Lessons learned and shared by the OFIV Community Advisors challenge traditional grant funding process to expand both its processes and its imagination. Many of the recommended innovations will play out in a significantly larger funding area in 2022 focused on Black women. We were also grateful to partner with our fierce colleagues at The Pittsburgh Foundation to support a new funding program for artists–the Exposure Artist Program that explicitly supports artists’ creative practice (rather than projects), gives multi-year unrestricted support to artists, and does not require artists to submit a budget with their application.

Opportunity Fund is proud to be a member of GIA since 2017 and excited to share these images and information about some of the arts entities in Pittsburgh that we are honored to support. The artistry, creativity, and transformation that these artists and cultural workers bring to this region, and beyond, inspires us deeply.

You can also visit The Opportunity Fund’s photo gallery on GIA’s Photo Credits page.

Artists as Workers, A New Report

Autonomy, an independent think tank, published recently a report about ‘artist as-worker’ in the UK, emphasizing notions of “artistic labour, and highlighting the sector’s interaction with wider trends, such as the gig economy and marketization in education.”

Covid did not produce precarity, exploitation and inequality in the art world out of thin air. Rather, it exposed, amplified and accentuated a set of pervasive trends that have long characterized the labour conditions of artistic workers in the UK. All too often, these have gone under appreciated, under-explored – insufficiently criticized – by those both within and outside the industry. Artistic labour seems to be easily forgotten.

Read here.

Stratford Festival’s 2022 season announced

It’s an understatement to say that the past two years flew by—few of us have lived through social conditions and constraints such as these, and it has made the time just rush. But 2022 is a month away, and with it comes the announcements of new seasons and exhibitions across institutions. And the Stratford Festival’s 2022 season is looking bright and full for the largest classic repertory theatre in North America.

 

The Stratford Festival’s 2022 season brings with it a wealth of other celebrations for the theatre institution. Not only will it be the first time that audiences will return to the theatre proper in almost three years, but it is also the 70th season for the company. On top of this, the year will bring the grand opening of the company’s new Tom Patterson Theatre, a stunning new riverside construction honouring the man who first founded the Stratford Shakespearean Festival of Canada.

 

The company has indicated that a new beginning is the theme for this year’s season, and Artistic Director Antoni Cimolino stating of it:

 

“The plays in the 2022 season contain not only new beginnings but the difficult moral and ethical decisions a new journey entails. What is the best way to start again? How can we avoid the traps of the past? In an imperfect world, what is good?”

 

 Cimolino stated they “want [audiences’] return to be everything they hope for. We want them to feel safe, of course, but we also want to fill the void left by the absence of live theatre and communal activities.” With so many false starts for many theatre companies looking to operate again over the past year and necessary modifications—such as this past year’s outdoor season for the Stratford—an urge to revitalize makes a lot of sense.

 

Across the theme of new beginnings, Stratford has selected a vibrant array of works. Some shows for Stratford Festival’s 2022 season include classic musical Chicago, with protagonist Roxie Hart aiming for a start as a singer and winding up with her first kill; the iconic tragedy of betrayal and an inverted life that is Hamlet; the meta-follow up of new play Hamlet-911 centred around actor Guinness Menzies landing his dream role at Stratford; and 1939, another world premiere that shows students of a 1939 residential school in Ontario being given the task of performing Shakespeare for the English monarchy, finding ways to subvert the narrow colonial constructs around it.

 

With the Stratford Festival’s season announcement, it’s hard not to feel drained from the whiplash of the past two years and expectant of what’s to come. And the idea of major arts institutions being able to once again operate in a strong capacity within their communities is certainly something to be hopeful for. Even if there is still a ways to go until theatres are back in full force, it does finally start to seem that we can look forward to a new beginning. 

A Call for Collage Art and Constructions

U.S. National Deadline: January 9, 2022 – Bristol Art Museum is seeking Collage & Constructions that express the idea of putting life back together as we reorganize & adjust our daily routines in the new normal…

iStock Creative Inclusion Grants

International Deadline: December 6, 2021 – IStock Inclusion Grants (4) are dedicated to promoting the work of emerging creative artists seeking to draw attention to, and depict, underrepresented communities…

Right of Return USA Fellowship

U.S. National Deadline: January 14, 2022 – The Right of Return project welcomes submissions from formerly incarcerated artists working in all disciplines to challenge mass incarceration. $20,000 grants, retreats…