This year’s four Fellows are Allen Lowe from South Portland (performing/media arts), Claire Guyton from Lewiston (literary arts), Morrigan McCarthy from Portland (visual arts) and Richard Stanley from Southwest Harbor (traditional arts).
The fellowships reward artistic excellence, advance the careers of Maine artists and promote public awareness regarding the eminence of the creative sector in Maine. The awards are made on the sole basis of artistic excellence. Each year four Fellows are selected by expert panelists who reside outside of Maine. This year approximately 200 applications were received and one recipient was chosen for each of the following categories: performing/media arts, literary arts, visual arts and traditional arts.

“I have an ambivalent attitude toward tradition because a lot of people in the jazz world have used it as a weapon to slow the progress of the music or to work a specific aesthetic and political agenda,” Said Lowe. “On the other hand, a lack of historical awareness, which I see in local audiences, is just as problematic – it tends to lead to musical in-breeding, to the exclusion of those whose work is not immediately accessible. I can and have functioned without one, but if I had one hope for my future in Maine it would be, quite simply, for an audience.”

“I work full-time as a short story writer and as an editor and regular contributor at the literary journal Hunger Mountain,” explained Guyton. “But it’s been almost a year since anyone has actually paid me for any of that work.
This grant came along literally the same week I was frantically reading and re-reading the (very few) want ads and wondering what part-time job I might be able to pick up. As the days pass and I actually begin to believe I've been given this astonishing gift of support, I feel mainly three things: gratitude, validation, and the freedom to put away the want ads and do my job.”

“I'm thrilled and honored to have been selected as the Maine Arts Commission 2012 Visual Fellow. Maine has an incredible community of artists and I am constantly inspired by my friends and peers who live and produce work in this ever-changing and awe-inspiring landscape. This award will afford me the ability to delve deeper into my current project and take more time to understand and photograph the unique stories of the people I meet along the journey. I offer a huge thank you to the Maine Arts Commission and to my friends, family, mentors and teachers for all their love and support. Without them, I would never have the courage to create.”

“I’m continuing a family tradition begun by my ancestors and lived by my father Ralph Stanley. I build a strong, sturdy, seaworthy, sea kindly, beautiful traditional wooden boat… they are beautiful to look at on land or in the water, versatile and comfortable to use.
“During my time in my father’s shop, I learned from working on lots of different boats that were built by lots of different builders: Wilbur Morse, Charles Morse, Bobby Rich, Ronald Rich, Nevins, Herreshoff, Bob Direktor, Raymond Bunker, Hinckley and Farnham Butler, as well as my father. I learned how they did things – how they put things together, what worked and what didn’t. From each job, I’d incorporate what I learned into my new work. Even sanding bottoms you get a sense of different hull shapes: you can see what works and doesn’t, what looks good and what doesn’t.”
For a comprehensive look at all of this year’s individual artist grantees, visit www.MaineArts.com.
1 comment:
Nice to see Richard Stanley get this well-deserved award.
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