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Category Archives: Call for Artists

ICYMI: NDN Collective Celebrates Indigenous Peoples’ Day By Uplifting indigenous Power Building Through Art, Voter Engagement and Landback

“On Indigenous Peoples’ Day, NDN Collective took part in several events to celebrate and uplift the brilliance and resilience of Indigenous Peoples – participating in Indigenous Peoples’ Day Phoenix Fest in Arizona, the Grantmakers in the Arts Conference in New York and opening up pre-sale opportunities for the inaugural issue of the LANDBACK Magazine.”

“We came as guests onto the lands of the Lenape, Munsee, Shinnecock, Wappinger & Canarsie Peoples. And while the place now known as the City of New York does not yet officially recognize Indigenous Peoples’ Day, and still honors a colonizer with a full blown Columbus Day parade, the Peoples of this land remain steadfast in their resistance and resilience,” said Gaby Strong, NDN Foundation Managing Director. “We shared our similar struggles and our collective energy as part of the LandBack movement.”

“If we’re fighting for the liberation of our people, then I’m going to use every single tactic available to me in that fight. If I have the ability to cast a vote to influence who I am sitting across the table with, then hell yeah I’m going to use that power, because I’m all about any means necessary – whether it be voting, taking it to the streets, buying land or occupying land,” said Nick Tilsen, NDN Collective President and CEO.

Read the full article here.

Stan Douglas dissects lens and memory in “Revealing Narratives”

The intersection of photography and computer-generated images was perhaps one of the quickest encounters of the modern form as well as one of the most troubling. Photography, in a reductive matter of speaking, captures a shot of reality—an object, a person, a place, a time—but computer generation, inherently a contrived endeavour, can more and more powerfully influence and fabricate this display of reality. In Stan Douglas’ Revealing Narratives series, he has easily and captivatingly toyed with time at a casual glance and dug deep into the layers of both mediums upon inspection.

 

Stan Douglas is a Vancouver artist of world renown, his work presented from the MoMa to the National Gallery of Canada, presented from Centre Pompidou to the Haus der Kunst. Through his examination across mediums and cultural, and social facets, Douglas is driven by a “fascination with the mechanic of representation.” Purportedly inspired by the legendary theatre artist Samuel Beckett, his work is a simple but striking mirror of the fallacies and failings of modern life.

 

Revealing Narratives, a presentation by Montréal VR and digital art keystone Phi Centre currently on view at the Art Gallery of Nova Scotia, combines Douglas’ two series Disco Angola and Penn Station’s Half Century. The former sees works in which Douglas inhabits the role of a photojournalist in the 70s covering both the fight of Angola for independent against Portugal as well as the rise of disco. From the attention to detail in all outfits and objects to even the dates contained at the end of image titles, at first glance, these images all do genuinely appear to document the ages they depict. If it weren’t for just how crisp and vibrant the works are, it would be near impossible to tell without context.

 

The pieces across Disco Angola  are particularly striking in their uses of colour, from the vibrant outfits of disco partiers (Two Friends, 1975, 2012) to the depictions of soldiers in training out in the light of day (Capoeira, 1974, 2012) to the near-median of the two spheres through decidedly hip styling in front of the backdrop of intense military motivation (A Luta Continua, 1974, 2012). The relationship between these two tandem events through a singular narrative lens highlights both of their roles as a form of rebellion—against political oppression in Angola and against the bigotry and suppression faced by the queer and BIPOC fuelled disco movement—and join these distanced movements through occupation of the same space.

 

Stan Douglas, A Luta Continua, 1974, 2012. Courtesy of the artist, Victoria Miro and David Zwirner.

 

The other half of Revealing Narratives in Penn Station’s Half Century shows the former hub of travel as “a place in perpetual (re)presentation.” A commission of New York City’s Public Art Fund and Empire State Development, these works give testament to the grandeur of the architecture of this historic space as well as the varying roles it occupied across its own history. There’s a cinematic quality to the presentation, which plays into Douglas’ own intentions and discussions on how the layers of spaces as seen in public depictions—film, as a prime example—are an indelible layer on how one understands a space.

 

Each of these collections gives a sense of connection across time, merging our own context of all-too-manipulated imagery and power of representing the past, present, and future with the classic view of photojournalism as the scribe of time, cementing moments as well as telling the story of history by choosing what was captured—a time before constant capturing of everything, everywhere. Revealing Narratives sits somewhere between documentation and reconstruction, Douglas having found the intersections of contexts and mediums, and posits what photography means for us and our own record of our world.

Moai of Easter Island damaged in potential arson incident

Unfortunately, there is no safeguarding the artistic icons of our planet from accidents or human malice, no matter the stature. A fire occurring on October 3rd has resulted in what has been described as “irreparable damage” to the moai statues of Easter Island. While none seem to have been destroyed in the blaze, the incident has certainly left its mark on the faces of some—with more damage than the eye can see.

 

The wildfire began near the island’s Rano Raraku volcano before spreading down to the surrounding areas. The fire ended up covering 148 acres of land (approximately 148 football fields worth of space to contextualize), charring much of the island’s face and endangering the Unesco World Heritage Site the moai are situated upon. While the area has been cordoned off and is still being inspected for the extent of the damage, it is apparently believed that this may well be a purposeful act of arson.

 

Though at first glance the damage to the moai appear to be surface level through charring and accumulation of soot, experts say it could be much worse than it seems for the iconic statues. With their exposure to such high heat, it is likely that there could’ve formed cracks on their interior from the temperature change. This would severely endanger the stability of the moai with little to be done to rectify it.

 

The moai, often referred to as the Easter Island heads, were created by the indigenous Polynesian tribe of the Rapa Nui over five centuries ago. While their purpose was unknown to modern historians for many years, it is now believed that they were created and positioned in relation to the presence of freshwater springs across the island. Standing as high as ten metres tall—with unfinished ones that aimed to be twice as tall—these strikingly stoic figures represent deified ancestors of the Rapa Nui and, despite many only being aware of the heads, represent whole bodies created from solidified volcanic ash.

 

Time will tell what the extent of the damages will be to the moai. We’ve certainly seen miracles happen through concerted effort and funding from the world to maintain global historical sites in the wake of disasters. What also remains is whether this action was intentional, and if so, to what aim.

Toronto’s Nuit Blanche returns after three years

The tradition of Nuit Blanche—or whatever your particular area may call the events—across cities is always one of buzz and mystique. Long gone are the days when the majority of holidays themselves were dusk to dawn affairs of celebration, entertainment, and spectacle. But in this particular way, art is given this deep and focused honour. After three years of absence, Toronto’s Nuit Blanche returned to the city at its largest scope to date.

 

For the uninitiated, Nuit Blanche (French for “white night”) is a form of annual nighttime art festival. It sees city streets themselves turn into veritable galleries by hosting a plethora of installation pieces—sculpture, performance art, anything truly—as well as many of the city’s arts institutions having free admission throughout the night. It’s an interesting way to bring art and the public closer, removing some of the many modern barriers between the two.

 

Led by artistic director Dr. Julie Nagam, Toronto’s Nuit Blanche held the conceptual theme of “The Space Between Us” this year. The festival’s statement explains: 

 

“People are the heart of their communities. This curatorial theme focuses on the connections to urban, polar and Pacific landscapes, revealing the space between us as a potential site for sharing knowledge. People have always commingled with different communities and nations – to build new spaces and families that shift their relationships and connections to each other and to place.

People disrupt and transform space, making meaningful connections with communities and places. The global crisis of displaced people brings communities together to stand up for humanity and support each other. Now, more than ever, it reminds us of our willingness to connect when our future is linked to the collaboration between cultures, knowledge, nations and practices.”

 

With over 150 projects spread out across the Greater Toronto Area, it was the most extensive Nuit Blanche for the city to date. From Eugene Paunil’s eerie A God Amongst Us, depicting an avian-human deity casually holding space amongst civilians, to Nike Onile’s The Dinner Table, an expansive and ethereal take on the communal eating space, the perspectives on space are varied and surprising. What does seem to ring true across many of the works is the refocus we have on shared space in our new context, and both the exaltation of that relationship with each other and what lay between us.

 

Nuit Blanche is a valuable tradition in urban environments. With such a distinct lack of artfulness in many of our public spaces, it’s hard sometimes to remember that our cities hold the potential for beauty and connection. Toronto’s Nuit Blanche has returned with a keen focus on this fact and has even begun an online archive as a reminder of all the beauty that has been brought to its city streets, and is keeping its presence felt with over thirty-five projects extended for viewing.

What We’re Reading: “You Can’t Eat Prestige”: Brooklyn Museum Workers Demand Better Wages

“On the evening of Thursday, September 28, dozens of Brooklyn Museum union workers lined the institution’s grand entrance, chanting ‘overworked and underpaid’ and ‘ancient art, not ancient wages.’ Visitors to the museum’s Open House, an event celebrating the revamped Asian and Islamic art galleries, streamed in through different entrances in an attempt to circumvent the protestors,” said Elaine Velie for Hyperallergic.

“Employees at the Brooklyn Museum officially unionized in August 2021 and began contract negotiations with museum leadership in January of this year. While the two parties have reached tentative agreements on some non-economic issues, they have yet to come to terms on healthcare and wages.”

“The day before their protest, the union announced that they had filed an Unfair Labor Practices charge against the museum with the National Board of Labor Relations, which oversaw their 2021 election into United Auto Workers (UAW) Local 2110. UAW Local 2110 represents employees at a score of other other cultural institutions, including the Whitney, the Dia Art Foundation, and the New Museum.”

“A museum spokesperson told Hyperallergic that although they cannot comment on the specifics of the ongoing negotiations, the museum has proposed a 9% average wage increase. UAW emphasized that this 9% figure is an average and would leave more than half of the union’s workers with only a 3% raise. This increase would fall far below the sky-high inflation rate — calculated at 8.3% from August 2021 to August 2022.

“‘We remain committed to partnering with our staff to achieve an agreement that advances our commitments to wage equity,’ a Brooklyn Museum spokesperson said in a statement. ‘The museum recently approved a FY2023 operating budget that dedicates nearly $4M in new investments in wage and benefit improvements for all employees,’ they added, a result of a ‘comprehensive wage equity project.'”

Read the full article here.

ICYMI: NPN’s Next Iteration of Racial Justice Work

“On July 21, 2022, NPN’s Board of Directors voted to support the launch and an initial three years of the Department of Racial Justice and Movement Building: a new programmatic arc of work for NPN. Sage Crump, who has led NPN’s Leveraging a Network for Equity (LANE) initiative, will become the department’s first director. Under her guidance, NPN will work intentionally in the realm of systemic change and movement building by engaging the question ‘What’s possible in our sector when we are in ideological alignment, deep learning, relationship building, and practice together?'”

“This department continues and expands the work started within LANE, which focused on the development and wellbeing of arts organizations of color and rural arts organizations to build healthy, self-determined infrastructure. Engaging this work for nearly a decade has helped us understand the insidious ways racial capitalism and white supremacy infiltrates even the most intimate spaces of our institutions and has produced an incredible amount of learning through lived experience. The Department of Racial Justice and Movement Building will work to integrate this learning throughout NPN’s staff, Network, aligned artists, Board, and strategic partnerships both within the arts sectors and within the larger movement for racial justice.”

“If you are reading this, you are likely part of a circle of humans trying to figure out the levers that will transform society through our work as artists and cultural workers in every part of our ecosystem. This new department is NPN’s way of inviting us all to do this with deeper intention and interconnectedness.”

Learn more here.

What We’re Reading: A Proclamation on National Arts And Humanities Month, 2022

“Today, September 30, President Biden issued a proclamation designating October 2022 as National Arts and Humanities Month in celebration of the significance of the arts, humanities, and museum and library services to our nation.”

“The Proclamation includes the announcement of a new Executive Order which seeks to integrate the arts, humanities, and museum and library services into policies, programs, and partnerships throughout the Federal government to tackle the greatest challenges of our time. It also includes a directive to reestablish the President’s Committee for the Arts and the Humanities, which is planned for the coming months.”

“This year the nation’s cultural agencies—the Institute of Museum and Library Services (IMLS), the National Endowment for the Arts (NEA), and the National Endowment for Humanities (NEH)—are joining together to celebrate National Arts and Humanities Month.”

“We take inspiration from the contributions of artists, historians, authors, entertainers, designers, philosophers, curators, scholars, filmmakers, archivists, librarians, administrators, and others who make up our creative sector and document and preserve our history. Their efforts help lift up new voices and shine a light on previously untold stories.”

“Artists and thinkers enrich our experiences by encouraging us to live artful lives, find and create pathways to connection and empathy, improve our well-being, and create and maintain the balance and beauty of the world around us.”

October Member Spotlight: Creatives Rebuild New York (CRNY)

Creatives Rebuild New York, a GIA member since 2021, is a three year, $125 million investment in the financial stability of New York State Artists and the organizations that employ them. CRNY aims to catalyze systemic change in the arts and cultural economy, recognize the value of artists’ contributions, and reshape society’s understanding of artists as workers who are vital to the health of our communities. Simply put, CRNY believes that we must move beyond valuing the artistic product and begin to value the humanity of the artist. Artists need and deserve to be paid predictable and regular incomes, and local organizations likewise deserve support to employ artists within their communities.

To that end, CRNY has supported artists and community based organizations in two ways: Guaranteed Income for Artists, providing 2,400 artists with no strings, $1,000 monthly payments for 18 consecutive months; and our Artist Employment Program, supporting artists, culture bearers, and culture makers with $65,000/year salaries and benefits for two years in partnership with community based organizations across New York State. These 2,700 artists represent a diverse array of artistic and cultural practices ranging from the performing and visual arts to oral traditions, craft, literature, and social practice and myriad approaches to collaboration.

We have also launched an ambitious data collection initiative, A Portrait of New York State Artists, to develop key research and advocacy tools. We look forward to announcing the details of our Guaranteed Income for Artists work in late October, and we encourage you to learn more about our Artist Employment Program.

You can also visit the Creatives Rebuild New York photo gallery on GIA’s Photo Credits page

New Report: Communities of Change: Traditional Arts as Enduring Social Practice in California’s Bay Area

From Alliance for California Traditional Arts: “Communities of Change discusses and interrogates definitions and terminology of the field, and describes case studies illustrating some of the larger issues and nuances inherent in this discipline, such as tradition and innovation, concepts of indigeneity, and cultural immersion as a teaching model. We list major cultural communities and related art forms across the wide band of 11 Bay Area counties, and share snapshots illustrating the contours on a county-by-county basis. Additionally, we examine some trends in Bay Area ethos of activism which have contributed to how traditional arts have been supported and undervalued in society and by the funding community. Finally, we conclude with recommendations and implications for the broader arts field and the philanthropic sector.”

“I welcome your feedback and comments and hope that this paper will foment a larger discussion recognizing community driven and embedded expressions that we know as traditional arts,” said Executive Director Amy Kitchener.

Read the full report here.

What We’re Reading: Redesigning Capacity Building: How Philanthropy Must Support Leaders of Color

“Over the years, in our roles as staff at Community Wealth Partners, we’ve spoken and worked with hundreds of Black, Indigenous, and other BIPOC nonprofit leaders. They’ve consistently told us that current capacity-building approaches often miss the mark—or worse, contribute to inequities in the sector,” said Carla Taylor, Megan Coolidgeand Lauri Valerio for Nonprofit Quarterly.

“National data reinforce the urgent need to shift capacity-building practice. A 2022 Nonprofit Finance Fund survey shows that compared to BIPOC-led nonprofits, white-led nonprofits received more unrestricted funds (15 percent more), more federal funding (14 percent), and more corporate funding (13 percent more). Meanwhile, more BIPOC leaders bring lived experience representative of the communities they serve than white leaders (39 percent more). Although funders are increasingly trying to support these nonprofits and deepen their own focus on racial equity, a Center for Effective Philanthropy survey shows that one third of interviewed nonprofit leaders said funder actions on racial equity didn’t match their rhetoric.”

“It’s time to act. It’s time to adopt capacity-building approaches that leaders of color say will actually help. Below are three basic principles to guide these efforts.”

Read the full article here.