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Category Archives: Call for Artists

Member Spotlight: Ana & Adeline Foundation

For the month of June, GIA’s photo banner features work supported by Ana & Adeline Foundation.

This is the text Ana & Adeline Foundation submitted for this Spotlight:

Ana & Adeline Foundation is the active expression of artist Jana Napoli’s commitment to the vital role of the arts in human development and social justice. In 1988, Jana founded Young Aspirations/Young Artists – YAYA – a nonprofit design program for New Orleans youth.

YAYA has worked with thousands of artists, primarily Black teenagers with an eagerness to explore their creativity. Jana later established Ana & Adeline Foundation to complement YAYA with resources that support adult YAYA alumni. In 2015, the foundation launched scholarships, individual grants and professional development opportunities for alumni who represent a diversity of ages, career statuses, and disciplines in visual arts and design. During the pandemic, the foundation provided emergency relief grants – a total of $120,000 to 52 artists. Ana & Adeline Foundation is committed to the livelihood of artists and strives to support their unique circumstances and creative journeys.

More than three decades in the making, the YAYA community has a deep sense of how art connects them to one another. As Ana & Adeline Foundation reimagines our future, we work with artist Rondell Crier, who began serving as our inaugural Arts Leadership Fellow in 2019.

“Through a socially engaged artist identity, I practice visual art, serve in leadership, and work hands-on with community to transform lives and disrupt unjust systems. As a fellow, I create platforms that engage our community in participatory design and shared decision-making. Listening to the community’s voice is not just important, but critical in developing appropriate systems of social change. The foundation has traditionally valued artist input and recently opened more channels for shared decision-making at the leadership level. This is where change truly matters. What better way to manifest equity than to first look internally? Who created our systems? How can we create better systems – with community? Who are the experts? And how can artists support these endeavors?”

YAYA alumnus Rondell Crier was YAYA’s Creative Director 2001-2012. He lives in Chattanooga, Tennessee where he launched Studio Everything and continues to make art.

Ana & Adeline Foundation joined Grantmakers in the Arts in 2014.

You can also visit Ana & Adeline Foundation’s photo gallery on GIA’s Photo Credits page.

Image: Jourdan Barnes, Union, 2021 Photography, digital collage Jourdan Barnes is a scholarship recipient and grantee. He studied Fine Art and Psychology at Xavier University where he received his BA. He is an alumnus of the Joan Mitchell Center AIR program and has work that has been a part of Photoville Festival. Jourdan Barnes’s work aims to amplify the voices of Black people and their experiences. He is showing at Stella Jones Gallery in New Orleans and is a Content Creator for Cultura Creative.

Stratford’s ‘Othello’ grips with a fraught, familiar world

As it moves closer to the opening of Stratford Festival’s 2021 season, the North American mecca of Shakespearean theatre is continuing to connect with their audiences through a weekly free livestream of productions contained in their STRATFEST@HOME catalogue. Fans get to vote between three different titles that fall under some banner of similarity across the Bard’s repertoire, and that show is streamed live from their YouTube channel. This past week saw the company’s 2019 production of Othello, a gripping and poignantly relevant take on the legendary tale of machinations.

 

Directed for stage by Nigel Shawn Williams and film by Barry Avrich, the most immediate choice evident of this production is a thoroughly modern setting for their Venice. With costuming that mixes very sleek and sharp formal style with timely military garb, as well as a series of ambient soundscapes that combine with elements of trip-hop and electronica, the original world of these character’s is supplanted expertly. It takes the action of this ever-tense play and frames it in very accessible trappings.

 

Michael Blake smoulders as the titular paragon of stoicism, Othello. The confident gravity he exudes is a weighty balance to the chaotic world that revolves around him, and against the racist paranoia, hatred, and jealousy lobbed at him by other men throughout, this stoicism is a bittersweet display of grace for issues that still plague the world over. Blake and Amelia Sargisson show off an enviable love and devotion as Othello and Desdemona, enchanted and fully smitten with one another as they navigate their new marriage with one another. Sarigsson beams with a headstrong loyalty and optimism that holds so much more depth than the self-professed “obedience” the character brings up.

 

Gordon S. Miller as Iago. Photography by David Hou.

 

And it is these wonderfully touching qualities brought to the characters that make their downfall at the schemes of Iago all the more brutal. Gordon S. Miller’s Iago is frightening, to say the least, and so much of that palpable dread that encapsulates him comes from Miller’s precision of speech and thought. Switching from conniving calculations to pleasant advising in the same breath, steeping in his own hatred towards the successful “Moor of Venice”, there are definite connections to draw between this interpretation and today’s alt-right. Iago’s sociopathic demeanour feels as fitting for a Silicone Valley billionaire as it does for any snake-like villain.

 

The players and production choices are all splendid and are intimately captured in close-ups that convey aspects that couldn’t be picked up on in the same way in-room. Every piece works towards the unified goal of this steadily churning machine of foul-play.

 

But one particular piece stands out among the rest.

 

The projection design for Stratford’s Othello is magnificently effective. With a set comprised of little more than blank, black geometric structures, this obsidian canvas is shrouded in chalky etchings of ornate Venetian line work via the projector. This alone is visually impressive and is becoming a mainstay in set and light design. But the fluidity with which these textures merge and meld, blow away as dust, flare into lightning and rain, and encircle the bodies in space is, for all intents and purposes, hypnotizing. Most strikingly, the light and projection work creates a transcendent state for the soliloquies of Iago, dragging us into his mind’s vitriolic and brilliant conspiracies. If the world revolves around Othello, the audience revolves around Iago.

 

Stratford’s Othello does what the best modern Shakespeare productions do—it takes the action of an iconic work and highlights just what makes it timeless. The exploration of issues that still pervade political and social sphere, as well as a display of all-too-amicable and all-too-familiar evil, make this production of the classic tragedy feel all to relevant. And as long as there are still messages to learn from the Bard’s works, there will still be reason to dive into beautiful productions like this.

New Fund Alert: Funding for Black, Indigenous, Latinx, and Asian American-led arts organizations

A $12.6 million regional initiative of America’s Cultural Treasures will provide new funding for Black, Indigenous, Latinx, and Asian American-led arts organizations, states the announcement.

Distributed in two phases, the funding is product of a collaboration between the McKnight, Ford, Bush and Jerome Foundations.

Read here.

New Report Alert: L.A. BIPOC arts workers make less than their white counterparts

Los Angeles arts workers BIPOC make less than their white counterparts on average, states a study recently released by the L.A. County Department of Arts and Culture with the Center for Business and Management of the Arts (CBMArts) at Claremont Graduate University, Artnet reported.

Artnet states:

On average, entry-level arts administrators in Los Angeles County earn $36,847 annually—a figure that’s higher than the $31,200 minimum wage in the area, but lower than the living wage of $40,200, according to the MIT Living Wage Calculator. BIPOC respondents from the same group reported an average income of just $32,027, while white arts workers earned $43,437, or 35 percent more.

Read here.

Frank Bowling takes over two cities

During the past ten years, Frank Bowling has finally enjoyed the recognition he deserves. Bowling, now 87, received his first retrospective at Tate Britain in 2019 and was Knighted by the Queen on her Birthday Honours List less than a year later.

While Bowling’s ascent was a long time coming, he was signed to Hauser & Wirth less than a year ago. The transatlantic gallery was quick to organize shows featuring his works and recently opened its New York and London outposts, marking the Bowling’s inaugural exhibitions. With works ranging from 1967 to 2020, ‘Frank Bowling – London / New York’ captures how one artist’s inventive approach to the physicality of paint pushed abstraction to its limits and made him one of the leading abstractionists alive today.

As the exhibition title suggests, the simultaneous shows follow Bowling’s life and career between the UK and the US over the course of half a century. Born in Guyana (then British Guiana) in 1934, the artist arrived in London in 1953 and graduated from the Royal College of Art in 1962, along with artists like David Hockney, R.B. Kitaj and Allen Jones.

Frank Bowling, Mirror, 1964–66.

While he maintained studios in both cities, London and New York, his modern contemporaries saw great acclaim in Britain. Bowling, for reasons unknown, but certainly unrelated to the merit of his work, never saw mainstream success at that time, which many now consider to be one of the greatest artistic oversights in the past century.

The exhibitions span Bowling’s early engagement with expressive figuration and pop art, all the way to his signature blend of poetry and abstraction that continues to inform his output today. Visible in his works are the influences of the English landscape painting styles of Gainsborough, Turner and Constable. Most visible is 1960’s New York and Abstract Expressionism which Bowling engaged with in the forms of bright colours and gestural improvisation.

Interestingly, Bowling would frequently start a painting in one city and finish it in the other, making his works a hybrid fusion of cities, cultures and environments. In his words, ‘I would just roll the lot up and move. And I knew that when I got to the other end, I could roll them out again and continue to work.’ Bowling’s command of light, colour, and geometry was greatly influenced by the two great bodies of water in his life: The Thames in London and the East River in New York, near to which he maintained his studios.

’Frank Bowling – London / New York’, until 30 July 2021, Hauser & Wirth New York; until 31 July 2021 Hauser & Wirth London. hauserwirth.com

New Olympia Theatre announced for 2025 in London

A vast spectrum of brick-and-mortar locations has seen their doors shutter in the past year. Galleries, performance spaces, stores—few have been spared from financial difficulties, and it has resulted in a large number of permanent closures. And especially given that it is no small feat, it comes as some surprise that a new Olympia Theatre has just been announced as in the works for London.

 

With a projected opening date of 2025, the new Olympia Theatre is a massive addition to the U.K. theatre scene. For starters, it will be the largest theatre constructed in London since the National Theatre first opened in the 1970s. The announcement of the theatre comes as part of the £1.3 billion development plan for rejuvenating the Olympia area as a world-class cultural district, a project helmed by design and architecture group Heatherwick Studios.

 

Courtesy of Haworth Tompkins.

 

The interior of the theatre will be designed by famed architectural studio Haworth Tompkins, known for their innovative work on artistic spaces and theatres. The company states: “The proposals include extensive foyer spaces spread across 7-floor levels, bars and back-of-house areas housed within the Heatherwick Studio and SPPARC designed multi-level building.” It is certain to be a grand design fitting of the Olympia rejuvenation.

 

Owning and operating the new Olympia Theatre will be Trafalgar Entertainment. Already running Trafalgar Theatre in London, Australia’s Theatre Royal Sydney, as well as the properties of HQ Theatres across the U.K., Trafalgar are clearly keen on maintaining and improving the state of theatres on an internationally relevant scale.

 

There is always a question about the importance of major regional theatres and the grand spaces that they are. The cost of maintaining them is an ongoing concern for many, let alone in a time where the world is just starting to see light at the end of the tunnel from the global pandemic. But with luck and leadership, the new Olympia Theatre is certain to become a vibrant new fixture in the bright constellation of the London theatre scene.

Shifting Power to Rethink Philanthropy

“The idea behind participatory grantmaking is both simple and powerful: What if we shifted decision-making power away from supposedly expert grantmakers and investors? What if people with lived experience had the power to devise and implement solutions to the problems they face?” write Ben Wrobel and Meg Massey in Nonprofit Quarterly.

Read here.

ICYMI: “How arts philanthropy has responded to calls for racial justice—and what comes next”

Inside Philanthropy checks in with leaders in the arts funding sector to see how the space has changed in response to calls to fight systemic racism and what remains to be done.

Eddie Torres, Grantmakers in the Arts (GIA) president & CEO, is one of the interviewees in this piece in which he mentions “Solidarity Not Charity: Arts & Culture Grantmaking in the Solidarity Economy,” a report commissioned by GIA.

Read here.

“Big philanthropy’s newest disruptor? Tiny philanthropy”: What we’re reading

In a recent article published in Generocity, Bread & Roses Community Fund and Philadelphia Black Giving Circle discuss why large grantmakers are “beginning to think like their much smaller counterparts.”

Lynette Hazelton writes:

Traditionally, big philanthropy has been organized around areas of donors’ interests, not around matters of greatest social need. And then there is tiny philanthropy. This is where like-minded individuals develop giving circles and mutual aid societies often in response to a problem, pool their money and collectively deciding who should receive.

Tiny philanthropy, as Hazelton notes, recognizes “the power imbalance and intentionally designs inclusive communities that operate in an equitable context.”

Read here.

Image: mauro mora / Unsplash