Tuesday, November 23, 2010

American Masterpieces Grant Changes to Great Work(s)

The Maine Arts Commission’s largest project grant, which assists professional Maine arts organizations with annual operating budgets of $500,000 or greater, has a new name and a new focus!

Starting on November 23, the former American Masterpieces grant program with be called Great Work(s). With a maximum grant award of $20,000, Great Work(s) will now focus on the presentation of new or originally interpreted work, offering assistance to Maine’s largest arts organizations to commission large performance pieces or curate major exhibitions. Projects must continue to be highly visible and show evidence of significant planning to ensure broad public and audience involvement.
Winslow Homer, Sharpshooter, Oil on Canvas

You can read about recent recipients of this grant in the online edition of the Maine Arts Magazine. One of these recipients was the Portland Museum of Art. The museum was funded as they marked the centennial of Winslow Homer's death. The exhibit, Winslow Homer and the Poetics of Place , was part of a year-long offering at the museum which collectively brought 150,000 visitors through its doors, 83 percent of which were non-Maine residents.

Full guidelines of the Great Work(s)grant are available on MaineArts.com.

Bookmark and Share

Friday, November 19, 2010

Cultural Facilities Grant Reintroduced

Nonprofit arts organizations are an essential part of Maine’s economy. A recent study of a small portion of Maine’s museums showed that $148 million was generated in sales from these alone each year, and that $7.5 million was generated in tax revenue.

To make sure this essential sector of Maine’s economy is able to accommodate their patrons, the Maine Arts Commission is reintroducing its Cultural Facilities grant for a small window of time. The deadline for applications is January 13, 2011; the maximum grant award is $5,000 and the full guidelines are available at MaineArts.com.
Funded through the New Century Community program, as part of a citizen bond allocated to the seven member organizations of the Maine Cultural Affairs Council, this grant program will offer several one-time grants for new capital projects and renovations, as well as technology projects and/or improvements. The Maine Arts Commission will provide funding for: new construction, repairs or renovations of existing facilities owned and operated by a nonprofit Maine arts organization, or repair, upgrade, or replacement of capital technology equipment for a facility operated by a nonprofit Maine arts organization.

This program was last offered in 2009 and this year’s grant awards will represent the final dispersal of the agency’s facilities funds. In the past the Cultural Facilities grant funded projects at the Haystack Mountain School of Craft’s to assist their plans to upgrade assisted listening equipment and lighting in the school's ADA accessible public Gateway Auditorium. Support was also provided for ADA restroom upgrades to Maine State Ballet’s building on Route One in Falmouth.

Projects do not need to address an ADA upgrade specifically during this round. However, as this year marks the 20th anniversary of the signing of the Americans with Disabilities Act, priority will be given to organizations that have completed the development of an ADA/504 plan (http://www.arts.gov/about/504Workbook.html) working toward accessibility. For more information about 504 plans, please contact Keith Ludden, accessibility coordinator, 207/287-2713, keith.ludden@maine.gov, Nextalk ID: keith.ludden.

For more information about the grant itself, contact Kathy Ann Shaw, senior grants associate, at 207/287-2750, or through e-mail at kathy.shaw@maine.gov.

Bookmark and Share

Thursday, November 18, 2010

The 2010 American Folk Festival Ends Year in the Black


The American Folk Festival reported to the Bangor City Council Business and Economic Development committee that it is projecting a positive financial ending to the 2010 fiscal year.

Board chair Maria Baeza reported that the organization had in 2010: successfully reduced Festival expenses, paid all of its bills and financial commitments for the year, and at the same time produced an event that continues to provide the high-quality artistic experience that audiences have come to expect. She also shared that because of these measures, the festival is well positioned financially for 2011.

“The success of the 2010 Festival is a result of a community coming together to do what needed to be done to ensure that this signature event continues for years to come. The community support is immensely gratifying, especially considering the ongoing economic pressure that Maine is experiencing,” said Festival Chair Maria Baeza in a statement. “We have received a strong message from Festival stakeholders: the American Folk Festival is a unique event worth supporting, and worth keeping admission-free.”

Back in January, organizers embarked upon a dramatic effort for the 2010 Festival, focused on decreasing costs and increasing public education about the cost of the Festival and the need for public support.

For more information about the 2010 or 2011 American Folk Festival on the Bangor Waterfront, please visit www.americanfolkfestival.com or contact the American Folk Festival at 40 Harlow Street, Bangor, Maine 04401, 207/992-2630.


Bookmark and Share

Wednesday, November 17, 2010

Student Artists Honored at Blaine House

Emily Howell, Grade 12, Times Square
Emily with First Lady Karen Baldacci at the Blaine House Wedneday.

Augusta, ME – Young artists from schools across the state of Maine visited the Blaine House today where they met Maine’s first lady and received recognition for their participation in an art exhibition that will hang in the capitol complex through the end of January 2011.

Thirty students from schools that include Lubec Consolidated School, Fort Fairfield Elementary School, Bucksport High School, and Freeport Middle School were honored for their part in the Maine Youth Excellence in Art program. These young artists, whose work will brighten Maine’s corridors of power and oversee a change in administration, received certificates of excellence from First Lady Karen Baldacci honoring their achievement.

The Maine Youth Excellence in Art program was developed by Maine’s First Lady, working with the Maine Arts Commission, the Maine Alliance for Arts Education and the Maine Art Education Association. In the last five years this program has given young artists from Maine’s 818 public and private K-12 schools an opportunity to have their artwork exhibited in Augusta. To date, over 500 student works have been shown in the state capital.
Jonah Paris, Grade 8, September

“There is an immense amount of talent in our schools and showcasing student art is a wonderful way to create a vibrant space for our citizens and visitors to enjoy,” said Maine’s First Lady. “Everyone is thrilled to see the display of artworks created by our young artists.”

Visitors interested in seeing the works can find them located in the north and south corridors of the Burton M. Cross Office Building, the Education and Cultural Affairs Committee room, the Health and Human Services Committee room, the Governor’s Reception Area, the Office of the Speaker of the House, and the Blaine House. This is an ongoing exhibit and the next group of artwork will be put on display in early February 2011.

To access a digital gallery of the exhibition please visit MaineArts.com.
McKenna Robinson, Grade 2, Symmetrical Butterfly

All Arts in the Capitol events are free and open to the public. Visitors who require special accommodations are encouraged to call ahead. These exhibitions are a component of the Maine Arts Commission’s ongoing Arts in Education program. More information about the Maine Youth Excellence in Art program or other arts in education programs and grant opportunities managed by the Maine Arts Commission can be found at www.MaineArts.com.

Bookmark and Share

Tuesday, November 16, 2010

Grand Opening at Lucid Stage

Lucid Stage announces its grand opening with a celebration that is free and open to the public. The event starts at 6pm with a ribbon cutting/wine bar and is followed at 7pm with a variety show including short performances by artists who will be featured in future Lucid Stage events, including: Naya’s Trance bellydance, Harlan Baker, Martin Steingesser and Judy Tierney, Celebration Barn, Carolyn Gage, The Amazing Steelgraves, Michael Parent, AIRE Theater, Michael Lane Trautman, and Mad Horse Theater!

Lucid Stage is a multi-use venue for the many artists and groups in the Portland area. They provide performance and rehearsal space for artists of various genres, classroom and community event space, summer camp and educational programs, and visual art gallery space.

The mission of Lucid is to foster the creation and enjoyment of the arts, and to provide our community with a setting to further promote and encourage the arts.

Lucid Stage
29 Baxter Boulevard
Portland, Maine 04101
207) 899-3993 (office)
lucidstage.com


Bookmark and Share

Monday, November 15, 2010

Schoodic Call To Artists!

Schoodic International Sculpture Symposium is a biennial event that brings together artists, visitors, and communities to create a Public Sculpture Collection in eastern Maine. Symposia last 6-weeks, from late July to early September. Artists from around the world are selected through a juried process to participate. Visitors can watch the sculptors work and see them create their sculptures. The finished pieces are placed at public sites in Maine communities. The next symposia is scheduled for 2011.

The Schoodic International Sculpture Symposium is currently accepting applications from interested artists. If you want to apply you can download the application here:

http://www.schoodicsculpture.org/pdfs/SISS_application_2011.pdf

To learn more you can go to the Schoodic website.
Bookmark and Share

Friday, November 12, 2010

Maine High School Students Create Holiday Ornaments for National Christmas Tree in Washington, DC.


With funding support from the Maine Arts Commission and the Peaks Island Fund, six high school students and two professional artists from Peaks Island worked this week to create ornaments representing Maine for the National Christmas Tree in Washington, DC.

Students from Peaks Island who attend Portland High School and Waynflete School had a unique opportunity to team up with professional artists Cole Caswell and Jessica George in their studio on Peaks Island to produce 26 ornaments that will be delivered to the nation’s capital next week in time to adorn the National Christmas Tree. The tree will be officially lit by President Barack Obama in early December.

Hannah Rindlaub, one of the student artists working on the project was enthusiastic about the work. “It’s cool to have an opportunity to represent our island, our state and our country all in one. It’s been fun to make art about place with a group that is tied together by place.”

As one of our country’s oldest holiday traditions, the National Christmas Tree Lighting began on Christmas Eve in 1923, when President Calvin Coolidge lit a Christmas tree in front of 3,000 spectators on the Ellipse. Since 1923, each succeeding president has carried on the tradition; however, the celebration has now evolved into a month-long event, presented by the National Park Foundation in partnership with the National Park Service.

This year the National Park Service requested that state arts agencies coordinate local efforts and the Maine Arts Commission selected artists Cole Caswell and Jessica George to head the project. “We selected Cole and Jessica because their process of art making is infused with a deep connection to sense of place,” said the Maine Arts Commission’s Arts in Education Associate John Holdridge. “This and the fact that they are both accomplished teachers in the art department at Southern Maine Community College made them ideal candidates to take the lead.”

After signing on to lead the project the artists received 26 six-inch plastic globes from the National Park Service and quickly set about gathering high school students to create the work to be sent to Washington. “When we started Jess and I had a short discussion where we each came up with an idea,” said artist Cole Caswell. “We presented our ideas to the students as a starting place and told them they were free to bend, morph, reject, or otherwise work with our ideas to create their own. It was a really exciting collaborative process.”

“There’s something about presenting your ideas in a group that makes it easier to respond because everyone is offering something,” said artist Jessica George. “Through a group process we made a community created symbol that speaks for more than one person. It’s collectively created imagery.”

As the process of collective art making blurred the lines between professional and student artist, the eight individuals in the studio set to work defining and creating their project. Creative energy moved from the kitchen, to the living room, to the paint room, to the laptop, to the beach and to the net cutting station. In the end the globes served as canvasses and containers for images and collections representing what it means to live in Maine through the eyes of island youth.

I feel like Washington is waiting for some lighthouses and moose,” said student Hannah Rindlaub. Her fellow student artists, Maria DeMichele and Neala Broderick, quickly followed as if speaking as one, “This is what we see every day. Lighthouses are how other people see Maine, but this is how we see Maine.”

Another aspect of Maine culture that came to the fore during this creative endeavor was the ability to involve all segments of a community through the creative process. This is evidenced in the source of the fishing net to which all of the ornaments have been fastened. “One of the lobsterman on the island told us about this place on the mainland called the desert,” said Cole Caswell. “It’s a place where all the local fishermen can spread out their football field sized nets for repair. There’s a mountain of scraps from the repairs and that’s where we got the net for the project. Hopefully the Park Service will respect our request to drape the net over the state tree but we’ll see about that.”


Bookmark and Share

Saturday, November 6, 2010

Explore Maine's Artwalks


Downtowns across Maine are brought to life on a regular basis through artwalks. These events invite visitors to experience the richness and depth of the state’s artistic treasures through all disciplines. Each town offers something slightly different, but all guarantee a great deal of enjoyment as friends and families meet, unwind, dine and enjoy the arts that are at the very heart of their communities.

There are several artwalks throughout Maine in the coming weeks and the outline for those can be found below.

November 5:
Portland,
Belfast,
Rockland
Presque Isle

November 12:
Brunswick & Topsham

November 19:
Bangor
Freeport

November 26:
Biddeford

December 3:
Open studios and galleries as part of Arts Downtown & All Around in Bath, Brunswick, Topsham, Bowdoinham and Harpswell.
Gardiner
Portland,
Belfast,
Rockland
Presque Isle


Bookmark and Share

Friday, November 5, 2010

New Search for Maine Historic Theater Scenery


A new statewide search for historic painted scenery is now underway in Maine. These local treasures were created between 1890 and about 1940, the heyday of vaudeville, and are still to be found in town halls, grange halls, opera houses and community theaters. They often contain richly painted drapery, countryside, or street scenes. They are usually “roll drops” on wooden or metal rollers and they often feature advertisements for local businesses such as dairies, piano movers, car dealers and beauty parlors. With the arrival of movies and then television, the use of town halls and grange halls as cultural centers declined, and after WWII, the tradition of creating painted roll drops simply disappeared. However, much of the historic scenery remains either on stage or in storage, sometimes in good condition but more often neglected, torn and very dirty.

Many of the same itinerant painters and scenic studios that created scenery in Maine also sold scenery in New Hampshire and Vermont, where 185 pieces have been found through a similar search.

In Maine, more than a dozen historic scenes have been stabilized by Curtains Without Borders, a team of conservators who developed their survey and conservation skills in Vermont. The Gardiner Library, the Granges in Benton and Windsor, and the Searsport Town Hall are examples where restored scenery is now on display.

This search is a joint project of Curtains Without Borders and Maine Preservation, which supports local efforts to preserve and revive the buildings that house historic scenery. Funding has been provided by the National Trust for Historic Preservation and the Maine Community Foundation. Another partner in this effort to locate and document Maine’s historic scenery is the Maine State Grange. For more information and to contribute any information, please call Christine Hadsel at 802-598-5867 or email: curtainswithoutborders@gmail.com.

Bookmark and Share

Thursday, November 4, 2010

Maine Film Festival Focuses on Disability

An article in the Bowdoin Orient last week focused on "Living Outside the Lines" a film festival about disability. This film series continues until November 17 at Frontier Cafe in Brunswick.



You can find details of this event at the vsaMaine website.


Bookmark and Share

Maine's Poetry Out Loud Champion Interviewed in Washington

Staff members of the Maine Arts Commission are preparing for the sixth year of Poetry Out Loud in Maine. This national poetry recitation contest is presented through a partnership with the National Endowment for the Arts and the Poetry Foundation.

More schools have signed up for this year's contest than for any previous year, and as final preparations are being made, it is nice to share a success story from our state champion from the previous two years.

William Whitham, from Bangor High School, was recently asked to recite poetry in Washington, DC., as part of the National Book Festival. William was interviewed during this event. You can access this interview below.



There are still some places left for those interested in this year's contest. For more information on the program please visit http://poetryoutloud.org/ Maine teachers wishing to sign their school up for the competition should e-mail John Holdridge at the Maine Arts Commission at john.holdridge@maine.gov. Please put “POL” in the subject heading of your e-mail.

Bookmark and Share