Friday, February 24, 2012

Five Students Selected to Move Forward from Northern Final

Five more students are moving on to the Maine State Final of Poetry Out Loud.

After another amazing competition at the Northern Regional Final, Makaela Reinke from George Stevens Academy; Bethanie Brown from Waterville Sr. High School; Brianna Houseman from Searsport District High School; Joshua Elwood from Bangor High School, and Eloise Harnett from Gardiner Area High School will go on to the state final in Lewiston on March 23.

These five students came were chosen from among 17 school champions competing at the Grand Theater in Ellsworth. They competed through three rounds of live poetry recitation to be among the ten students who will recite in front of live television cameras on March 23 at Bates College.

The Maine Arts Commission wishes to thank the staff of the Grand Theatre, MPBN for their support, and most importantly all of the students that took part. We of course wish to thank all of the supporting teachers, parents and well wishers that came to the event to make it such an enjoyable afternoon.

News regarding the state final will appear shortly.


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Thursday, February 23, 2012

The Maine Arts Commission Offers Free Accessibility Workshops



Accessibility Matters!


Did you know that new guidelines for compliance with the Americans with Disabilities Act go into effect in March? Do you know how these changes will affect your organization? Do you know where you can go for more information on these guidelines?

The Maine Arts Commission has all the answers you need and the agency is heading out on the road, with a team of experts, to share this information with cultural venues and community organizations in Maine.

Sixteen percent of Maine residents report some type of disability, and that is a large, untapped audience. New guidelines for compliance with the Americans with Disabilities Act go into effect in March, and the Maine Arts Commission is gearing up to prepare local arts organizations to meet compliance standards. The agency will conduct three accessibility compliance workshops in Portland on March 27, Camden on March 30 and in Bangor on April 27.

The workshops are free to attend and will include information on programmatic compliance as well as issues related to architectural and sensory barrier removal. They will be led by Maine Arts Commission Accessibility Coordinator Keith Ludden, who will be joined by Architect Jill Johanning, and Independent Living Specialist Jeremy Libby from Alpha One Independent Living Center, Aisha Hixon, Community Outreach Coordinator for the Iris Network, and Elissa Moran, Director of the Maine Center on Deafness. Johanning and Libby will discuss architectural barriers and solutions. Moran will discuss accommodations for persons with hearing impairments, and Hixon will discuss accommodations for persons with low vision.

These workshops are expected to attract a great deal of interest and we encourage you to sign up today. To register, follow this link

For more information, contact Keith Ludden, Accessibility Coordinator , 207/287-2713,keith.ludden@maine.gov NexTalk ID: keith.ludden, TTY: 207/877-3878.

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Wednesday, February 22, 2012

UMF Interns


The University of Maine at Farmington has a new initiative to develop opportunities for students in the Partnership for Civic Advancement. The program is intended to better organize and support community engagement activities for UMF students using "Quality of Place" as an organizing concept. The program focuses on a number action areas including sustainable tourism, landscape stewardship, local foods and arts and culture.

If your organization would like to offer a UMF student an internship opportunity (either this summer or during the fall semester), please go to the website and see if you qualify to be a Community Sponsor. You can also post your internship opportunity on the UMF website.

More information about the program can be found at: http://pca.umf.maine.edu/

Information about being a Community Sponsor is at: http://pca.umf.maine.edu/for-community-sponsors/

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Friday, February 17, 2012

WERU Radio to Air CCED Discussion

The agency Policy and Program Director will join a conversation today on WERU radio that will discuss the agency's CCED grant. This is our major $50,000 community development grant which has a letter of intent deadline next week. Listen at 10:00 am this morning to learn more: http://weru.org/listen/live-streaming

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Friday, February 10, 2012

Free Artist Workshop at Portland Gallery This Friday

Donna McNeil, Arts Policy and Program Director for the Maine Art Commission will provide a workshop for Maine artists at the Constellation Gallery in Portland this Friday.

Donna will explain what the agency provides in terms of programs, support and grant support. Donna will spend the most time discussing the grant offerings from the agency including the Good Idea Grant, Arts Visibility Grant, Innovation Production Grant and the Individual Artist Fellowship grant. Additionally, she will discuss how artists can work successfully with communities through our Artists in Maine Communities Grant as well as in education settings through our SMART (schools make art relevant today) grant.

Donna will not only discuss the particulars of the grants, but will offer a printer on electronic portfolios, what selection panels are looking for in submissions, how best to write a resume, letter of interest, artists' statement. She will also discuss Maine's Percent for Art program, how artists can translate smaller scale work into suitable pubic art projects and maneuver through the community and the committee hurtles. All information will be delivered with an eye toward enabling artists to be adept at any grant application, museum or gallery relationship, or public art competition.

The workshop is free and you can sign up by visiting the Constellation Gallery’s Facebook event page. http://www.facebook.com/events/227274130697563/ and click join to register. Space is limited and registration is on a first come and first serve basis. Email gallery@constellationart.com or call Tatia DiChiara at 207-272-8464 to register.



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Thursday, February 9, 2012

Five Students Selected to Move Forward from Southern Final

In an astonishing competition yesterday at the City Theatre in Biddeford, five students were selected from among 24 to move onto the state finals of Poetry Out Loud.

Students from high schools in the southern part of Maine competed through three rounds of live poetry recitation yesterday in the hopes of becoming one of the ten students who will recite in front of live television cameras on March 23 at Bates College.

Amidst staggering recitals five students moved to the top of the judges score sheets and were selected to move onto the state finals. Avery Laderer, Boothbay Regional High School; Ellyn Touchette, Gorham High School; Kiana Sawyer, Portland High School; Monica Frempong, Morse High School; and Tyler O’Brien, Merriconeag Waldorf High School were the successful students.

The Maine Arts Commission wishes to thank the staff of the City Theatre, our emcee Joshua Bodwell, MPBN for their support and most importantly all of the students that took part. We of course wish to thank all of the supporting teachers, parents and well wishers that came to the event yesterday to make it such an enjoyable afternoon.

We look forward to the northern final at the Grand in Ellsworth on Wednesday, February 15. We hope to see you there.





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Wednesday, February 8, 2012

Public Art Unveiled at USM


Mark Wethli, Painter, Sculptor and Bowdoin College professor was celebrated Friday by a standing room only crowd at the Muskie Center on the USM campus in Portland. Wethli has just unveiled his large installation Civitas in the forum of the Wishcamper Center. The sculpture is a distillation of Lorenzetti’s “the Effects of Good Government” a fresco in the city hall of Sienna, Italy. The sculpture is indeed an “effect of good government” -- one of the many pieces of public art, including Wethli’s Civitas companion piece Locus in the entry of the Glickman Library, installed throughout the state of Maine through the Percent for Art program administered by the Maine Arts Commission.
Here are Mark Wethli’s remarks at the event:

...I’m honored to be here today, and more than honored that the University of Southern Maine has commissioned me to add not one but two works of public art to its campus; the one we see here in the Nichol Forum of the Wishcamper Center, and it’s companion piece, Locus, located next door at the Osher Map Library.

Long before I moved to Maine in 1985, the name and reputation of Edmund Muskie were among my earliest impressions of the Pine Tree State. The values reflected in Ed Muskie’s character and distinguished record of public service as Maine’s Governor, a US Senator, and Secretary of State are embodied in this building and its programs. One of my chief ambitions for this piece was to make it a worthy reflection of the values he stood for and the mission of the Muskie School of Public Service. I’m honored to have my work associated with his legacy.

Likewise, the Osher Map Library is an incredible gift to the people of Maine, and the world, a treasure trove for researchers, the general public, and not least of all, map lovers such as me. It is truly one of the gems of Maine’s intellectual and cultural life. My goal for Locus was to likewise create a public artwork that would honor this extraordinary archive.
_________

When the artist Mark Rothko was asked why there weren’t any figures in his paintings--just large fields of color—he answered by saying that you’re the figure. Long before I heard it put that way, I had the same ambition for my own work. As a public artist I want my work to set the stage for the life going on around it, to create a dynamic visual field in which people can engage their own thoughts and impressions, their lives, and one another. I hope to make visitors here more aware of the space around them and their place within it, of the meaning and purpose of being here, of what brought them here, of what they hope to achieve here, and to return that experience to the world at large.

Both Civitas and Locus greet us as we arrive, and each of them is hard to miss when we walk through the door. Like the homes and storefronts we walk by on a daily basis, I designed each of them to be a part of the landscape of their environment; to provide a lively backdrop to the
activities going on around them.

My ambition for each of these pieces is to create a space that actively places every viewer in the foreground of the events and activities that happen here.
__________

Having two works of public art in such close proximity to one another also gave me a unique opportunity to relate them in some way. While each piece speaks to the unique nature and purpose of its site, they likewise share certain formal similarities that bear comparison. The basic design of Civitas also appears in Locus, but refigured from a low-relief, three-dimensional construction to lines on a two-dimensional surface.

Locus’s abstract language—a network of lines reminiscent of roadways, air and sea routes, lines of latitude and longitude, and GPS satellite connections, superimposed on the silhouette of Buckminster Fuller’s innovative Dymaxion map (which also appears on the façade of the
Osher Library building)—is meant to pay homage to the history and language of cartography.

The formal language of Civitas—a dance of architecturally inspired forms that are meant to suggest both conflict and harmony—is meant to evoke the ideal process of civic life, community building, and the common good.

Just as map-making renders the three-dimensional world in two dimensions and public policy projects abstract principles into real life, so do Locus and Civitas represent and symbolize these processes through their structure and design.

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Tuesday, February 7, 2012

Looking for a Director, Maine Film Office

Date Closed to Applications: February 17, 2012
Salary: $43,513.60-$59,113.60/Annually

This is professional services work of a managerial nature in managing and directing all activities of the Maine Film Office. Responsibilities include developing and implementing strategies to promote Maine as a location for film and video production, expanding opportunities and creating business-friendly environment for production industry, developing and administering a budget, and support of the Maine Film Commission. Supervision is exercised over administrative support staff. Work is performed under limited supervision.

KNOWLEDGES, SKILLS, AND ABILITIES REQUIRED:
• Knowledge of the film and video production industry.
• Knowledge of marketing principles, practices, and techniques.
• Knowledge of modern management principles, practices, and techniques.
• Knowledge of budgetary practices and procedures.
• Knowledge of the legislative process.
• Ability to communicate effectively orally and in writing.
• Ability to establish and maintain effective working relationships.
• Ability to supervise and manage the work of interns, contract workers, and volunteers.

MINIMUM QUALIFICATIONS:
An eight (8) year combination of education, training, and/or experience providing knowledge of the film and video production industry, as well as marketing principles and practices. Experience must include managerial and/or administrative responsibilities.

If you are interested please forward a direct hire application form available at the General Government Service Center in Augusta, all Maine Career Center Offices, and on the General Government Service Center web page at www.maine.gov/fps/opportunities. The completed application must be submitted along with a resume, cover letter by the closing date to: Julie Cotnoir, Personnel Officer, General Government Service Center, 74 State House Station, Augusta, Maine 04333-0074, Telephone (207) 624-7417.


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Monday, February 6, 2012

Apply to the Monhegan Artists’ Residency!

David Higgins' "Harbor View" was taken during the photographer's 2005 residency.

Applications are being accepted for the Monhegan Artists’ Residency for emerging Maine artists. This summer, the program will provide five-week residencies on Monhegan Island for two Maine-based visual artists.

The residency program provides living quarters and separate studio space at Fish and Maine plus a $500 stipend. The 2012 residencies run May 26 through June 30 and Sept. 1 through Oct. 6. Only Maine residents are eligible to apply.

The program is aimed at visual artists working in painting, drawing, printmaking, photography, sculpture or the digital arts. An important goal of the program is to enhance the careers of serious artists who have yet to gain wide recognition. Quality of work is the primary criterion for selection. Previous artist residents include Sarah Knock, David Little, Marguerite Robichaux, Karen Adrienne, Lynn Travis, Joe Kievitt and Alina Gallo.

A jury of art professionals will select the artists. This year’s judges are Michael Shaughnessy, sculptor and professor of art at University of Southern Maine; Portland gallerist June Fitzpatrick; and Daniel Fuller, director of the Institute of Contemporary Art at the Maine College of Art.

The application deadline is March 16 (postmarked). For guidelines, a history of the program and a list of past residents, visit http://monheganartistsresidency.org/
Applicants will be notified by March 30 of the jury’s decision.

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Sunday, February 5, 2012

Poetry Out Loud Regional Finals Begin Wednesday


The Maine Arts Commission is proud to be working with our friends at MPBN this year to present Poetry Out Loud. This poetry recitation competition begins with around 9,000 students competing in Maine’s high schools and ends with the selection of one student who represents Maine in the national final in Washington DC.

We are now down to 44 finalists representing Maine schools statewide. To find 10 students to compete in a live televised state final we begin the first of two regional finals Wednesday, February 8 at 4:00 pm at the City Theatre in Biddeford. This event is free to attend. Show up and cheer on your favorite southern high school.

Listed below are the students competing in Wednesday’s regional final along with the name of the high school which they are representing:

Dillon Fox - Lisbon High School
Ian Andolsek - Cape Elizabeth High School
Isabella Maria Leon - Mt. Ararat High School
Kiana Sawyer - Portland High School
Dylan Chestnutt - Waynflete School
Grace Gilbert - North Yarmouth Academy
Ellyn Touchette - Gorham High School
Julia Cornell - Catherine McAuley High School
Kenyon Fraser - Oak Hill High School
Kaitlin Henderson - Deering High School
Austin Weigle - Kennebunk High School
Anna Lynn McKee - Greely High School
Iris San Giovanni - South Portland High School
Marina Affo - Lewiston High School
Jennifer Supinski - Sanford High School
Ellen E. Tuttle - St. Dominic Academy
Abby Scanlon - Berwick Academy
Tyler O'Brien - Merriconeag Waldorf High School
Hannah Grassman - Falmouth High School
Matthew J. LaMourie II - Yarmouth High
Reed Gordon - Biddeford High School
Avery Laderer - Boothbay Region High School
Candace Fowler - Scarborough High School
Monica Frempong - Morse High School


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Friday, February 3, 2012

Communities Encouraged to Apply for Economic Development Grant

The Maine Arts Commission announces that letters of interest for their $50,000 Creative Communities = Economic Development (CCED) grant are due February 24, 2012.

The CCED grant encourages cultural, economic and governmental sectors to work together to effect community revitalization. This consortium grant is delivered to two or more nonprofit cultural organizations within a geographic community or region. Applications will be considered from communities/regions with a strong commitment to inter-sector collaboration that seeks to strengthen the cultural assets of their community. Two $50,000 grants are awarded annually.

This call follows two successful years of the CCED grant that has seen funding awarded to the communities of Biddeford and Eastport in 2011, and Belfast and Waterville in 2012. Samples of these successful grant applications as well as all other information regarding the CCED grant can be found at MaineArts.com.

The Maine Arts Commission offers the CCED grant in order to highlight Maine’s quality of place as an economic asset. The CCED grant is designed to function locally to meaningfully support dialogue and partnership between municipalities, business and the cultural sector regarding the economic development of their communities. CCED provides the cultural sector with significant funds to contribute to mutually agreed upon plans and initiatives that stimulate the local economy, strengthen the role of arts and culture, and enhance their community’s quality of place.

Successful applications will come from communities that have vibrant cultural nonprofits. The communities must be poised for growth and engaged in economic and community planning as well as development using other funding sources. They will include an active network of involved citizens including youth and elected and business leaders in a comprehensive revitalization effort.

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Thursday, February 2, 2012

Opera House Arts Receives Jazz Masters Award


The Stonington Opera House got some good news at the start of its 100th anniversary. At the January 10 celebration of the NEA Jazz Masters program, Rocco Landesman, chairman of the National Endowment for the Arts, announced that Opera House Arts at the Stonington Opera House is one of 12 organizations to receive grants totaling $135,000 to bring outstanding jazz musicians, writers, producers, and scholars to communities across the nation.

"There is no substitute for being in the presence of a great artist, and through the NEA Jazz Masters Live grants, the NEA is pleased to provide opportunities for Americans all across this country to have exactly that experience," said NEA Chairman Rocco Landesman. "Twelve exceptional organizations will be our partners this year."

Opera House Arts (OHA) applied to present 2012 Jazz Master Charlie Haden at the center of its 12th Annual Deer Isle Jazz Festival August 2-­‐4, 2012, co-­‐produced with jazz journalist Larry Blumenfeld. Bass player Haden was born in Iowa and his musical roots are in country, American folk, and gospel music, making him an excellent fit for the musical heritage of OHA’s own community as well as a wonderful extension of the Deer Isle Jazz Festival, which has in the past presented jazz masters ranging from Randy Weston to Charles Lloyd. While perhaps best known for his recordings with Ornette Coleman, Keith Jarrett, and Dewey Redman (who inaugurated the Deer Isle Jazz Festival in 2001), Haden has been the leader of his own Liberation Music Orchestra, featuring vocalist and arranger Carla Bley, since the 1970s. His newest recording, “Come Sunday,” with pianist Hank Jones is a collection of 14 pieces of church music and was released in January 2012. The Deer Isle Jazz Festival proposed to feature and honor Haden not only in concert but also in a documentary film, Ramblin’ Boy, which documents his start in country music; in a panel discussion on his musical evolution; and in a tribute set, “For Charlie: Music By and For Charlie Haden,” by Maine’s own Duncan Hardy Sextet.

For more information on the festival, please go to www.operahousearts.org.

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Wednesday, February 1, 2012

NEFA Expeditions Tour Planning & Touring Grant Deadline Feb 17.



This is just a friendly reminder that the annual deadline for Expeditions Tour Planning and Touring is February 17, 2012.

Nonprofit organizations based in New England may apply for Expeditions funding. Grants support the tour planning or touring of projects, and are awarded on a competitive basis.

Program goals include:

Support New England as a region which nurtures the planning and implementation of high quality arts projects for region-wide tourin

Broaden the range of arts projects and activities available to New England communities

Encourage thorough planning with communities to provide meaningful interaction with artists

Stimulate better collaborative opportunities in arts touring and presenting

For more information you can go to the NEFA website at http://www.nefa.org/grants_services/expeditions

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