Skip to main content
Home

Main navigation

  • About
    • What We Do
    • Our Founder
    • History
    • Staff
    • Governance
    • Panelists
    • Financials
    • News
  • Grant opportunities
    • For Artists
    • Jerome Hill Artist Fellowship
    • Film Production & Mentorship
    • Jerome@Camargo
    • For Organizations
    • Arts Organization Grants
    • Seeding, Field-building, Ecosystem Development
  • Grantees
    • Artists
    • Jerome Hill Artist Fellows
    • Film Grantees
    • Jerome@Camargo Grantees
    • Organizations
    • Arts Organization Grantees
    • And More
    • All Past Grantees
  • Investing Our Values
  • Contact
Menu

Search

Secondary menu

  • for grantees
 

Past
Grantees

Kayla Farrish, Spectacle, BAAD!/Pepatián Dance Your Future, 2018.

3
inCombined Artistic Fields
893
inDance
34
inFilm and Video
1,354
inFilm/Video & New Media
720
inLiterature
3
inMedia
298
inMisc
606
inMulti-disciplinary
711
inMusic
9
inTechnology Centered Arts
997
inTheater
1,073
inVisual Arts
1
inVisual Arts, Multi-disciplinary

Miriam Karmel

2008
Literature
Minnesota
Travel and Study
$1,275
MIRIAM KARMEL, Minneapolis, Minnesota, will travel to the American Jewish Historical Society, New York City, to conduct research on the Jewish Agricultural and Aid Society and its support for Jewish farm families settling in Minnesota in the early 1900s. Karmel hopes to discover material for a novel that she is planning to write about one of those farm families.
Literature

Haleakala, Inc. / The Kitchen

2008
Multi-disciplinary
New York City
General Program
$15,000
Jerome Directors authorized a grant of $15,000 to THE KITCHEN, New York City, in support of commissions for emerging creative artists. Founded in 1971, The Kitchen is a performance and exhibition space dedicated to supporting new work by innovative artists working within and across the fields of music, dance, theater, video and film, digital art and literature. It is known for its commitment to experimental new work and for providing instrumental support during the early years of artists' careers. The Kitchen will offer commissions to several emerging artists engaged in challenging, experimental practices and working in a broad spectrum of disciplines and media. These artists' works are then produced by The Kitchen.
Multi-disciplinary

Tou SaiKo Lee

2008
Literature
Minnesota
Travel and Study
$5,000
TOU SAIKO LEE, St. Paul, Minnesota, will travel with his grandmother to Thailand to capture the essence of the traditional art form of Kwv Txiaj, improvised or memorized chanted poetry. This will inform his spoken word practice. He seeks to work with his grandmother to understand the cultural roots of his Hmong identity so that they can continue to perform together and improve their collaborative work. They will work with a recognized practitioner of the art form, Joua Lee.
Literature

Young Jean Lee's Theater Company

2008
Theater
New York City
General Program
$12,000
THE FIELD, New York City, acting as fiscal sponsor for YOUNG JEAN LEE'S THEATER COMPANY, received $12,000 in support of the creation and production of a new work, The Shipment, which is designed to be a hip-hop African-American identity-politics show written and directed by a Korean-American, Young Jean Lee. The work is an uneasy exploration of ethnic appropriation that juxtaposes the spectacle of hip-hop virtuosity framed by genuine cultural cluelessness. It will have the feel of a show trying to destroy itself from within, offering up aesthetic maneuvers and narrative turns and ideas that are called into question and disrupted the moment everyone starts feeling sure of themselves. Her intent is to take apart the issues of appropriation and the realities and myths of representations of race.
Theater

Erik Levine

2008
Film/Video & New Media
New York City
New York City Film and Video
$10,000
Support was awarded to ERIK LEVINE for Cocker, an experimental film about the perception and meaning of cultural masculinity and values as seen through the ritual and history of cockfighting. Shot primarily in Puerto Rico, Cocker will focus on the atmosphere and attitudes of the participants engaged in a controversial competition with deep cultural roots. According to Levine, cockfighting has by some accounts the largest global viewing audience in the world, second only to soccer. It illustrates the collective dualities and ambiguities deeply held within us. It is outlawed in some countries, and celebrated in others. In a complex world wherein opposing viewpoints and beliefs are held as the basis for certain moral and ethical convictions, this piece will abstract and magnify our societal fascination with combat and death in visually rich images that evoke the complexities and deeply held masculine traits of demarcation, competition, power, custom and culture. Cocker will be harsher than Levine's earlier films, as it observes how men seek self-esteem and pride through a sport whose days may well be numbered in a world increasingly sensitive to animal rights.
Film/Video & New Media

Kalup Linzy

2008
Film/Video & New Media
New York City
New York City Film and Video
$7,000
KALUP LINZY received funding for an experimental narrative short called Notes From a Limerent. Wikipedia defines Limerent as an involuntary cognitive and emotional state in which a person feels an intense romantic desire for another person (the limerent object). This somewhat offbeat film is inspired by the 2006 Hollywood feature Notes on a Scandal in which Barbara Covett (Judy Dench) teaches history at a comprehensive school in London, England. A lonely old spinster, Barbara's primary relationship is with herself by means of a diary that she compulsively keeps-the only intimate relationship in her life. Limerent will tell the story of a novelist who is in love with his best friend, a drifter, who is dating a photographer. The novelist, who is the film's narrator, and is referred to as Man 3, documents his feelings in a journal, which are also notes for his next novel. In desperation, he resorts to the practice of black magic to gain the romantic love of the drifter. This unorthodox new work was largely motivated by what Kalup Linzy views as a lack of appreciation of Lesbian/Gay/Bisexual/Transgender R&B and Hip-Hop artists in American culture.
Film/Video & New Media

The Loft Literary Center

2008
Literature
Minnesota
General Program
$49,000
THE LOFT LITERARY CENTER, Minneapolis, Minnesota, received $49,000 in support of the Mentor Series. Founded in 1974, The Loft Literary Center fosters a writing community, supports the artistic development of writers and builds an audience for literature. Since 1979, the Jerome Foundation has supported the Mentor Series, a vehicle for emerging Minnesota writers to work in a small group setting with nationally recognized writers, and to be mentored by those writers in ways ranging from review of their work to providing inspiration and examples for the writing life. Twelve emerging Minnesota-based writers (four in poetry, four in fiction and four in creative nonfiction) are selected to work intensively with six nationally acclaimed writers (two in each genre). The Series encompasses small groups and individual sessions, public readings, master classes and workshops.
Literature

Xeng Lor

2008
Film/Video & New Media
Minnesota
Travel and Study
$4,700
XENG LOR, Brooklyn Park, Minnesota, will study the history of gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender people in Hmong villages and cities in Laos and Thailand. Lor has videotaped interviews with Hmong gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender people in the Upper Midwest and California. He now wishes to expand that investigation to understand what happened to GLBT Hmong in Laos and Thailand 30 to 60 years ago and what happens to them now. Did they ever marry? How did they live their lives in Laos and Thailand? He hopes to gather enough information through field research and taped conversations to move forward on his concept for a documentary film.
Film/Video & New Media

Mary Losure

2008
Literature
Minnesota
Travel and Study
$4,870
MARY LOSURE, St. Paul, Minnesota, will travel to France to inform her writing of a book of creative nonfiction for young adults, A Life So Strange, The Story of a Wild Boy. Her research will focus on Victor of Aveyron, a wild boy discovered in the forests of southern France in 1797. He survived in the woods, alone and naked, for most of his childhood. She will retrace the path of the wild boy's wanderings and photograph sites.
Literature

The Lower East Side Printshop, Inc.

2008
Visual Arts
New York City
General Program
$34,000
The LOWER EAST SIDE PRINTSHOP, New York City, received a two-year grant of $34,000 in support of Keyholder and Special Editions Residencies for emerging artists. The Printshop supports contemporary artists by enabling them to create new work in the printmaking medium. Its facility serves as a laboratory for experimentation and exploration. Jerome support allows emerging artists to participate in two residency programs within the Printshop's Artist Workspace Program. The Keyholder Program places emerging artists in a professional, productive and stimulating studio environment over a period of one year and enables them to grow artistically. Artists receive free 24-your studio access and a range of exposure and career services. Jerome support is also directed to the Special Editions Residencies, which provide emerging visual artists opportunities to collaborate with master printers on new bodies of work over six-month periods.
Visual Arts

Lower Manhattan Cultural Council

2008
Visual Arts
New York City
General Program
$22,540
The LOWER MANHATTAN CULTURAL COUNCIL, New York City, received $22,540 in support of artists' stipends for emerging artists from New York City and/or Minnesota in the 2008-09 Workspace Artist Residency Program. The Council is a leading arts presenter, advocate and service provider to artists and arts groups. It fosters the city's vibrant creative sector by providing essential resources and collaborative opportunities to the downtown community. The Workspace Artist Residency Program provides emerging artists with free access to studio spaces, a shared community area, stipends and significant career-building and professional development opportunities. The Workspace program addresses the critical need for affordable workspace; makes use of vacant and under-utilized real estate property downtown; and builds an environment for artists from various disciplines to learn from each other, create new work and access career-building resources. Annual open calls produce applications that are reviewed by independent selection panels.
Visual Arts

Daniel Lundquist

2008
Film/Video & New Media
Minnesota
Minnesota Film and Video
$15,000
DANIEL LUNDQUIST received support for Filled in Blank, a ten-minute animated film on the subject of personal responsibility. The film looks at a man in his last day of life as he takes a look back on various self-created events that not only changed him but also shaped many of the elements surrounding him, and thus defined the person he became. He discovers that he and he alone, is responsible for his actions and feelings. Lundquist, the maker of this film, believes that in a world where so many people are looking to blame others for their problems, it is often our failure to look inward that results in the consequences we suffer.
Film/Video & New Media

S. Catrin Magnusson

2008
Film/Video & New Media
Minnesota
Minnesota Film and Video
$10,000
A grant was awarded to CATRIN MAGNUSSON for Becoming George, a seven-minute narrative short about a farmer who buys a lilac shirt that helps him emerge from his protective shell and connect with the world. The film is based on a poem by Leo Dangel called Farming in a Lilac Shirt. Magnusson was drawn to the poem due to its strong message of belonging to a place or home. The farmer in the poem has lost his wife and the security she brought him. His lilac shirt helps to redefine and challenge him as he etches a new place for himself in his surrounding community.
Film/Video & New Media

Ashley Makar

2008
Literature
New York City
Travel and Study
$1,880
ASHLEY MAKAR, Brooklyn, New York will travel to Israel to investigate the Sudanese refugee crisis. She will visit a refugee outreach organization and a kibbutz where displaced Sudanese have been placed. The research will contribute to a creative nonfiction book that turns ethnographic research into empathetic narrative.
Literature

Adam McKinney

2008
Dance
New York City
Travel and Study
$3,410
ADAM MCKINNEY, New York City, will travel to Israel to continue exploring the connections among dance, movement, and healing with Ethiopian-Israeli communities. McKinney is the co-founder of DNA WORKS, an organization dedicated to furthering artistic expression and dialogue, focusing on issues of identity, culture, class and heritage. McKinney pursues the use of dance and movement as healing catalysts toward systemic change in communities where social and political violence have prevailed.
Dance

Meet The Composer

2008
Music
New York City
General Program
$19,600
MEET THE COMPOSER, New York City, received $19,600 in support of the Creative Connections program, dedicated to supporting composers' active participation in performances of their work. Meet The Composer fosters the creation, performance, dissemination and appreciation of music by contemporary composers. Creative Connections makes grants of $250 to $5,000, which enable composers to participate in activities connected with performances of their work, thus building audiences for new music. Activities may include participation in rehearsals, coaching performers, discussions with audiences, workshops and interactive presentations. Jerome support is restricted to emerging composers based in New York City and Minnesota.
Music

John Menick

2008
Film/Video & New Media
New York City
New York City Film and Video
$10,000
JOHN MENICK received support for Paris Syndrome, a short, experimental, cinematic essay analyzing the cultural implications of travel-related mental illness. In the fall of 2006, several U.S. and U.K. newspapers ran stories concerning psychological breakdowns experienced by Japanese citizens traveling in Paris, France. In an average of a dozen cases a year, Japanese travelers would undergo extreme depression and cultural rejection, sometimes culminating in hallucinations and traumatic shock. According to these articles, it was Professor Hiroaki Ota, a Japanese psychiatrist living in France, who was the first to identify this condition as Paris Syndrome. Journalists located the syndrome's origins in the cultural differences between France and Japan. Japanese travelers often held idealistic views of Paris, mostly concerning culturally specific expectations of service industry customs, societal manners, and urban hygiene. When Paris did not live up to these expectations, a small group of travelers would descend into depression, then into psychosis, requiring medical treatment. The cultural shock has been so regular that, as reported by the BBC, the Japanese embassy created a 24-hour hotline for those suffering from the syndrome. Paris Syndrome places the disorder within an ongoing history of cross-cultural relations; the emergence of a global tourist industry; and the creation of psychiatric schools of thought devoted to inter-cultural relations. This and related syndromes are subject to critical debates concerning cultural stereotyping.
Film/Video & New Media

Minnesota Center for Book Arts

2008
Multi-disciplinary
Minnesota
General Program
$43,000
The MINNESOTA CENTER FOR BOOK ARTS, Minneapolis, Minnesota, received a two-year grant of $43,000 in support of the Jerome Book Arts Mentorship and Fellowship Programs. The Center is dedicated to nurturing artists engaged in creative expression through the book form, celebrating and preserving the traditional arts of bookmaking, and showcasing the book in all its contexts. The first year of the grant will support mentorships for emerging artists to work with more experienced artists to create new book works. There is an open call and independent panel review to select the participating artists, who receive support and services for one year. In the second year, fellowship artists will be chosen by an independent jury reviewing submissions in response to an open call. The fellowships will support the creation of new works over a one-year period. Both years culminate in exhibitions featuring works completed by the artists.
Multi-disciplinary

Minnesota Council on Foundations

2008
Misc
Minnesota
General Program
$6,750
The MINNESOTA COUNCIL ON FOUNDATIONS, Minneapolis, Minnesota, received $7,250, $6,750 in general support of its 2008 program and $500 as a membership commitment. The mission of the Council is to strengthen and expand philanthropy. Its vision is to inspire grantmakers to achieve, individually and collectively, the highest standards of purpose and action. Jerome Foundation joins approximately 170 other members who support the Council's wide range of educational and professional developmental programs for member grantmakers. The Council also provides information about philanthropy and the grantmaking process to nonprofit organizations, the media, government officials, the general public and potential donors.
Misc

Minnesota Historical Society

2008
Misc
Minnesota
General Program
$55,000
In conjunction with grant commitments from the Northwest Area and Grotto Foundations, the Jerome Foundation made a two-year grant of $55,000 to the MINNESOTA HISTORICAL SOCIETY, St. Paul, Minnesota, to enable it to process, preserve and promote the James J. Hill, Louis W. Hill and Maud Van Cortlandt Taylor Hill Papers. The Historical Society will create a vibrant website presence for the Papers, which contain some 12,000 cubic feet of records, and promote their usage. This is an unusual grant commitment for the Jerome Foundation, a one-time award to support access to papers of Jerome Hill's grandfather, father and mother. Jerome Hill is the founder of the Jerome Foundation. Jerome Hill's Papers are also in the collection of the Minnesota Historical Society.
Misc

Pagination

  • First page « First
  • Previous page ‹‹
  • …
  • Page 106
  • Page 107
  • Current page 108
  • Page 109
  • Page 110
  • …
  • Next page ››
  • Last page Last »

Stay in Touch

Learn about grant opportunities, announcements & more.

  • Home
  • Events
  • Logos
  • Accessibility

550 Vandalia Street, Suite 109, St. Paul, MN 55114 · 651.224.9431 · info@jeromefdn.org
© 2025 Jerome Foundation · Privacy policy

  • About
    • What We Do
    • Our Founder
    • History
    • Staff
    • Governance
    • Panelists
    • Financials
    • News
  • Grant opportunities
    • For Artists
    • Jerome Hill Artist Fellowship
    • Film Production & Mentorship
    • Jerome@Camargo
    • For Organizations
    • Arts Organization Grants
    • Seeding, Field-building, Ecosystem Development
  • Grantees
    • Artists
    • Jerome Hill Artist Fellows
    • Film Grantees
    • Jerome@Camargo Grantees
    • Organizations
    • Arts Organization Grantees
    • And More
    • All Past Grantees
  • Investing Our Values
  • Contact