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    Home » Arizona Commission on the Arts and Arizona Community Foundation Announce Partnership
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    Arizona Commission on the Arts and Arizona Community Foundation Announce Partnership

    September 19, 2018No Comments
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    logo_arizonacommunityfoundationAdditional Investments in Arizona Artists

    Phoenix AZ (September 19, 2018) – The Arizona Community Foundation (ACF) and the Arizona Commission on the Arts announced today a joint effort to support Arizona artists, including additional funding from the recently established Newton and Betty Rosenzweig Fund for the Arts, an endowment held at ACF.

    This public-philanthropic partnership strategically pairs the Arizona Community Foundation’s resources and collaborative practices with the Arts Commission’s statewide reach and artist-services infrastructure to serve a common goal: to invest in artists, supporting the work they do as innovators and creative contributors to Arizona’s future. Through an assessment that was done to review the funding landscape, the conclusion was there was a need for greater support at the individual artist level and that guided the focus for these new investments.

    “Arizona is home to many artists who lead with creativity, resourcefulness, and ingenuity. The Rosenzweig Fund has provided ACF with a great opportunity to encourage and support their work,” said Steve Seleznow, President and CEO of the Arizona Community Foundation. “This partnership also deepens our collaboration with the Arizona Commission on the Arts, given the strength of their artist programs and our shared values related to statewide support.”

    This funding will be accessible to Arizona artists through two grant programs administered by the Arizona Commission on the Arts: the established Artist Research & Development Grant and a new program to debut in early 2019.

    The Artist Research and Development Grants provide up to $5,000 in funding support to Arizona artists. These grants are awarded through a competitive review process based on the strength of the artist’s vision and craft, the integrity and feasibility of their process, and the potential for impact on the artist’s own practice and on their community, as defined by the artist. Artists working in any discipline and at any stage in their career are eligible to apply.

    Thanks to ACF’s investment, the Arts Commission will double the average number of grants awarded annually through this program from 15 to 30. ACF is matching dollar-for-dollar the state funding allocated to this program.

    “We are grateful for ACF’s partnership enabling us to steward monies from the Rosenzweig Fund,” said Jaime Dempsey, Executive Director of the Arts Commission. “This partnership materialized as the Arts Commission is analyzing its services and resource-distribution, asking ourselves in every case, is this process accessible? Is it equitable? Is it responsive to the people who live here?”

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    Dempsey continued, “In examining artist grants data, we recognized that artists of color and artists living in rural communities were underrepresented in the applicant pool when compared to Arizona’s statewide demographics. With this in mind, we engaged in a major renovation of the Artist Research and Development Grant application and review process.”

    To guide the renovation, the Arts Commission enlisted a neutral facilitator to conduct focus groups and interviews with artists of color, artists from rural communities, artists working in diverse creative disciplines, and former applicants to the program. All involved were compensated for the time they spent providing feedback and consulting on revisions, and these artists will remain as a part of an advisory cohort as changes are implemented.

    Changes include a streamlined two-stage application process, fresh review criteria meant to honor a variety of artistic approaches and training, and the opportunity for applicants to describe proposals in writing or through video or audio recordings.

    The revised grant will launch on September 13, 2018, and applications will be accepted through November 9, 2018. In-person information sessions, co-designed with artists, will be held in locations across the state and will be accessible for online/virtual participation.

    In January 2019, with support from ACF and its Newton and Betty Rosenzweig Fund for the Arts, the Arts Commission will pilot a new grant program supporting Arizona artists’ capacity to work and thrive. Grants of up to $1,500 will be available to support artists’ ability to take advantage of specific entrepreneurial and career-development opportunities.

    “This partnership between ACF and the Arts Commission makes good sense for the arts in Arizona. ACF wanted to encourage greater diversity and inclusion through listening, engagement, and process innovation, and the Arts Commission was proactively working on the same objectives,” said Steve Seleznow. “Together we aim to ensure that more Arizonans have access to arts and culture, and we believe this public-philanthropic partnership can enhance our state’s creative capacity for years to come.”

    Arizona artists are invited to visit https://azarts.gov/ for updates and additional information.

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    The Symbolism of Jan. 6

    By Tommy Acosta
    Don’t mess with symbols. Just ask author Dan Brown’s character Robert Landon. The worth of symbols cannot be measured. Symbols make the world-go-round. Symbols carry the weight of a thousand words and meanings. Symbols represent reality boiled down to the bone. Symbols evoke profound emotions and memories—at a very primal level of our being—often without our making rational or conscious connections. They fuel our imagination. Symbols enable us to access aspects of our existence that cannot be accessed in any other way. Symbols are used in all facets of human endeavor. One can only feel sorry for those who cannot comprehend the government’s response to the breech of the capital on January 6, with many, even pundits, claiming it was only a peaceful occupation. Regardless if one sees January 6 as a full-scale riot/insurrection or simply patriotic Americans demonstrating as is their right, the fact is the individuals involved went against a symbol, and this could not be allowed or go unpunished. Read more→
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