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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

Darren Dominique Davis

2011
Music
Minnesota
Travel and Study
$3,520
DARREN DOMINQUE DAVIS, composer, Minneapolis, Minnesota, will travel to Berlin, Germany, renowned center for electronic music, to explore the electronic music scene and to immerse himself in a foreign urban environment as a means of experiencing the themes of alienation, solitude, and otherness, as inspiration for new work.
Music

Open Channels / Dixon Place

2011
Multi-disciplinary
New York City
General Program
$29,000
DIXON PLACE/OPEN CHANNELS, New York City, received $29,000 in support of the Mondo Cane! Commissioning Program and Artist-In-Residence Program for Emerging Artists. A laboratory for artists, Dixon Place is dedicated to supporting the creative process by presenting original works of theater, dance, music, puppetry, literature, and performance art at all stages of development. The Mondo Cane! Commissioning Program supports eight artists or ensembles each year for the development and presentation of new works of theater, music, dance, and performance art. The commissions are coupled with two months of rehearsal and workshop time followed by performances. The Artist-in-Residence Program provides emerging artists with opportunities to develop bold new performance and interdisciplinary collaborations over a concentrated time period. Four artists-in-residence receive stipends and free workshop space over a three-month period.
Multi-disciplinary

Open Channels / Dixon Place

2011
Multi-disciplinary
New York City
General Program
$15,000
DIXON PLACE, New York City, received $15,000 in support of the Mondo Cane! Commissioning Program and the Artist-in-Residence Program. A laboratory for performing and literary artists, Dixon Place is dedicated to supporting the creative process by presenting original works of theater, dance, music, puppetry, literature, and performance art at all stages of development. In the Mondo Cane! Commissioning Program, Dixon Place commissions individual artists and ensembles to develop and present new works, and provides two months of rehearsal and workshop time for the artists, followed by performances. The Artist in Residence Program offers emerging artists opportunities to develop bold new performance and interdisciplinary collaborations over time, culminating in workshop performances. The program encourages risk-taking in a supportive professional environment. It serves emerging artists with space and support.
Multi-disciplinary

Faye Driscoll Dance Group

2011
Dance
New York City
General Program
$8,000
THE FIELD, New York City, as fiscal sponsor for FAYE DRISCOLL DANCE GROUP, Brooklyn, New York, received $8,000 in support of the development and production of notnot (working title). Founded by artists for artists, The Field is dedicated to providing strategic services to performing artists and companies in New York City and beyond. It fosters creative exploration, stewards innovative management strategies, and helps artists reach their fullest potential. Faye Driscoll is a choreographer who investigates new forms of theatrical experience aimed to provoke feeling, stimulate the senses, and activate the mind. The new evening-length work notnot (working title) examines the tension among beauty, power, and desire. Driscoll will probe the subject of beauty as it is manifested through the ineffable promise of romantic love, as a perpetual dangling carrot, as myth, in the blurred power domain between varied cultural definitions of masculine/feminism, and as the performative aspect of inevitably dissolving selves.
Dance

Ensemble Studio Theatre

2011
Theater
New York City
General Program
$16,000
ENSEMBLE STUDIO THEATRE, New York City, received $16,000 in support of the 2011 Youngblood Program. Ensemble Studio Theatre is dedicated to creating a vibrant community for the creation, development, and production of new works to replenish the American theater repertoire. It balances a vision pairing performer and director training and investigation with an interest in developing new works by playwrights. Among its multiple program tracks, EST operates the Youngblood Program. Its current roster includes 20 playwright members representing a cross-section of some of the finest talent in that age group in the country. Playwrights are selected through an open, competitive process and may remain in the group until they turn 30. Emerging playwrights receive an array of opportunities designed to stimulate the creation of new works in a supportive peer environment, sustained by participation in a large and active membership theater with constant opportunities to see work by other artists. The backbone of Youngblood is a weekly meeting in which writers in the group convene to read new work, give feedback, and discuss the current theater scene and their place in it.
Theater

Bart Everly

2011
Film/Video & New Media
New York City
New York City Film and Video
$10,000
BART EVERLY received support for Velvet Vision, a feature-length documentary about photographer and filmmaker James Bidgood, whose iconic work of the 1960s helped define the burgeoning movement of gay photography and film. His beefcake photographs were unlike any other at the time, featuring elaborate fantasy scenarios drenched in lush, saturated color. His film Pink Narcissus was shrouded in mystery upon its release, having been credited to Kenneth Anger and Andy Warhol, among others, until the late 1980s when it was revealed that it was actually the work of one man, James Bidgood. Bidgood recently received a grant from Creative Capital to shoot a new series of gay photographs. Velvet Vision follows him in the process of shooting again as well as delving into his past as window dresser, drag artist and costume designer.
Film/Video & New Media

Reid Farrington

2011
Multi-disciplinary
New York City
General Program
$9,000
FRACTURED ATLAS, New York City, serving as fiscal sponsor for independent artist REID FARRINGTON, Brooklyn, New York, received $9,000 in support of the development and production of a new work. Fractured Atlas, serving a national community of artists and arts organizations, facilitates the creation of art by offering vital support to the artists who produce it. Reid Farringtons vision for the theater is to bring the cinematic world of film to life on stage. He blends new and old techniques of staging, creates new technologies for production, and explores new aesthetic combinations of living and projected actors. Dickens: The Unparalleled Necromancer is a variation on A Christmas Carol. Dickens story has been adapted into over 70 films spanning over 100 years of cinema. Necromancer will tell that 100 years of film history by using a mash-up technique. A single line from A Christmas Carol will be interpreted through multiple actors from film history, in a cohesive order of various actors from each of the 70 films. Necromancer uses the format of a traditional Victorian magic show, based the idea of Dickens as a magician.
Multi-disciplinary

FilmNorth (formerly Independent Filmmaker Project Minnesota)

2011
Film/Video & New Media
Minnesota
General Program
$20,000
FilmNorth (formerly Independent Filmmaker Project Minnesota), St. Paul, Minnesota, received a grant of $20,000 in support of the Equipment Rental Program and ten free memberships per year, as well as the Training and Professional Development Program, including four scholarships per quarter. The mission of IFP Minnesota is to advance a vibrant and diverse community of independent film and media artists through networking, education, funding, and opportunities for showcasing work. The Equipment Access Program provides low-cost access to quality filmmaking equipment, counsel on production planning, and a digital computer lab with systems and software for video editing, web design, photography, and animation to industry standards. The Professional Development and Training Program encompasses master classes, roundtables, technology training, and business skills development.
Film/Video & New Media

Nathan Fisher

2011
Film/Video & New Media
Minnesota
Minnesota Film and Video
$10,000
NATHAN FISHER received $10,000 for Rebuilding Cold River a verite-style feature-length documentary on the United Nations-led rebuilding of Nahr al-Bared, a Lebanese city that was completely destroyed by the Lebanese Army in a 2007 war. The city was relentlessly shelled for over three months until the entire population of 31,000 civilians fled. The Lebanese Army engaged in the shelling campaign in an effort to root out a dozen or so Islamic militants accused of robbing a bank. More than four years later, Nahr al-Bared has yet to be rebuilt and most of the towns former residents, all Palestinians who were born in Lebanon but do not have Lebanese citizenship, remain scattered in overcrowded tent cities throughout the country. No state on earth considers the 31,000 displaced Palestinians its citizens, which leaves them with the only option of returning to their city to rebuild. This documentary will follow the United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees (UNRWA) as it supervises the rebuilding of Nahr al-Bared, a monumental effort that involves the construction of apartment buildings, parks, schools, doctors office, shopping centers and so much more.
Film/Video & New Media

Yance Ford

2011
Film/Video & New Media
New York City
New York City Film and Video
$20,000
A grant was awarded to YANCE FORD in support of Strong Island, a gut-wrenchingly powerful feature-length documentary that explores the murder of the directors brother in 1992, looking at the way in which race influenced the investigation into his death and the effect the murder had on his family. It is an examination of how grief plays out over time. In 1992 there were 11,175 black men murdered in America. The filmmakers brother was among them. A black 24-year-old schoolteacher, he had been arguing with a white 19-year-old mechanic about the quality of a repair job. This rather common scenario turned deadly when the mechanic retrieved a .22 caliber rifle from the shop office and shot Ms. Fords brother once in the chest. When his killer claimed self-defense, the police focused their investigation solely Ms. Fords brother. When the DA decided not to press charges against the mechanic, Fords family retreated into a devastating silence. After nearly twenty years, the filmmaker has decided that its time for the silence to end. (All three panelists described this project as one of the most powerful they have ever seen. I thought the artful subtleties of the work sample were devastating. This is a truly remarkable project that is quite possibly the most compelling Ive seen in my years at Jerome.)
Film/Video & New Media

Foundation Center

2011
Misc
New York City
General Program
$2,000
The FOUNDATION CENTER, New York City, received a grant of $2,000 in general support of its 2011 program. The Centers mission is to strengthen the social sector by advancing knowledge about philanthropy in the U.S. and around the world. Its current online database contains information on more than 2,000,000 grants and nearly 100,000 U.S. grantmakers. The Centers training, educational programs, and special events are attended by thousands of people throughout the United States every month. The Foundation Center of today is preparing for the knowledge-driven philanthropy of tomorrow. It is committed to providing grantmakers, advisors, social investors, nonprofits, and others with the kinds of data-driven tools, research, and analysis that help them maximize the allocation of their resources.
Misc

Four Way Books

2011
Literature
New York City
General Program
$13,000
FOUR WAY BOOKS, New York City, received $13,000 in support of the publication of books by two emerging poets, and promotional book tours. The independent literary press Four Way Books publishes both poetry and fiction, sponsors a residency at a writers retreat, and hosts literary events. Now entering its 17th year, Four Way Books acquires and produces important, surprising, and potent works for readers. It seeks to expand the literary audience and nurture talented adult writers, spanning a wide range of geographic, cultural, and economic backgrounds.
Literature

Franconia Sculpture Park

2011
Visual Arts
Minnesota
General Program
$70,000
FRANCONIA SCULPTURE PARK, Franconia, Minnesota, received a two-year grant of $70,000 to support the Emerging Artist Fellowship Program. Franconia offers a combination of residence, work, and exhibition space for emerging and established artists. Its mission is to foster an inspiring environment for artists to expand their skills and promote the public education of three-dimensional art. Fellowships are given to emerging artists based in Minnesota and New York City. Artists are provided with room and board, outdoor studio space, equipment, tools, staff and intern support, materials, and stipends. There is an open call with an independent panel review to select the resident artists.
Visual Arts

Franklin Art Works

2011
Visual Arts
Minnesota
General Program
$20,000
FRANKLIN ART WORKS, Minneapolis, Minnesota, received a grant of $21,000 in support of the participation of Minnesota and New York City-based emerging artists in the exhibition program. Franklin Art Works is a visual and performing arts center that has presented over 90 one-person exhibitions over the past nine years. Its purpose is to present cutting-edge work by contemporary artists, primarily based in Minnesota and New York City. Franklin Art Works celebrates the art of this time in all its complexity and diversity. Jerome support is directed toward the participation of emerging artists in the exhibition season, encompassing the Main Gallery, the Project Space, and Video Gallery. A majority of the exhibition opportunities are directed to emerging artists from the Foundation's two geographic areas, supplemented with artist talks, lectures, tours, brochures, and educational materials.
Visual Arts

Full Circle Productions

2011
Dance
New York City
General Program
$8,000
FULL CIRCLE PRODUCTIONS, Bronx, New York, received $8,000 in support of the development and production of Soul Intention. Full Circle Productions offers original programming of dance theater works, workshops, mentorships, and classes that cover all the major forms of Hip-Hop expressions. The organization operates under the artistic direction of Rokafella and Kwikstep. Soul Intention aims to show how music and dance inspire each other in the generation and development of new moves and sounds, and how audiences play a part in this creative moment on stage
Dance

David Fulmer

2011
Music
New York City
Travel and Study
DAVID FULMER, composer, violinist, and conductor, New York, New York, will travel to Oslo, Norway, to study and research Norwegian folk music and ancient instruments of Scandinavia. His specific interest in the Northern Germanic tradition includes uses of the ancient Norwegian fiddle, the Hardanger. Fulmer will compose new works based on Norwegian tunings and inspired by the artwork of Edvard Munch.
Music

Aaron Gabriel

2011
Music
Minnesota
Travel and Study
$5,000
AARON GABRIEL, composer, Minneapolis, Minnesota, will travel to Paris, France, to work with with the students, teaching artists and alumni of Ecole Jacques Lecoq in Paris learning the Lecoq technique with a focus on how music can be integrated into ensemble-created work. This study will expand his practice in integrating music into ensemble-created work for his company.
Music

Jeffrey Gibson

2011
Visual Arts
New York City
Travel and Study
$5,000
JEFFREY GIBSON, painter and installation artist, Brooklyn, New York, will travel to Winnipeg, Canada, and Pine Ridge, South Dakota, to meet with traditional artisans working with weaving, beading, embroidery, appliqu, and basketry, and learn more about these techniques from observing the artists and conversing with them about their process and purpose for making cultural objects for their communities. Gibson hopes this experience will enrich his skills and vocabulary for describing these techniques and objects, open up new ideas for his work, and make lasting connections with artisans.
Visual Arts

The Givens Foundation for African American Literature

2011
Literature
Minnesota
General Program
$18,000
The GIVENS FOUNDATION FOR AFRICAN AMERICAN LITERATURE, Minneapolis, Minnesota, received a grant of $18,000 in support of the Givens Black Writers Collaborative Retreat Program. The mission of the Givens Foundation is to enrich cultural understanding and learning through programs that advance and celebrate African American literature and writers. The Retreat Program engages ten emerging African American writers from diverse genres in an eight-month program providing mentoring and peer support, building literary community, honing literary craft, and producing new works. The Program begins with an intensive urban retreat and continues with monthly craft workshops, culminating in a performance of new work created during the year.
Literature

Graywolf Press

2011
Literature
Minnesota
General Program
$20,000
The Jerome Foundation Directors committed $20,000 to GRAYWOLF PRESS, Minneapolis, Minnesota, in support of the publication of three books by emerging authors based in New York City and Minnesota. Graywolf Press is dedicated to the creation and promotion of thoughtful and imaginative contemporary literature essential to a vital and diverse culture. Graywolf combines artistic integrity with the resources and professional capacity necessary to recognize and nurture writers and to take their work to readers eager for distinctive literature. Graywolfs commitment to new and emerging writers is a vital aspect of its nonprofit mission, ensuring that fresh literary voices have a strong outlet for their work.
Literature

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