Charlotte Street Foundation is pleased to announce the selection of two Kansas City based generative performing artists to receive unrestricted cash Awards of $7,500 each in 2011. Selected through a competitive, two-phased process by a panel of performing arts professionals from 29 nominated artists, the recipients are composer James Mobberley and playwright/director Kyle Hatley. A public performance of the work of this year's Generative Performing Awards Fellows is planned for fall, 2011.
Since launching in 2008, the Charlotte Street Generative Performing Artist Awards have now recognized 9 Kansas City based artists creating outstanding, innovative, original work in the fields of dance, theater, music, experimental music performance, theater/performance art, and hybrid/interdisciplinary versions thereof, with a total of $58,000 in unrestricted funds distributed to these 9 artists. These Generative Performing Awards were developed as a parallel program to Charlotte Street's Visual Artist Awards, which have now supported 74 Kansas City based visual artists over 14 years, with a total of $482,500 awarded.
Through its Awards programs, Charlotte Street Foundation seeks to foster the continued creative and professional development of the selected artists, provide the means for them to further focus on and develop their work, and increase exposure for their accomplishments. In so doing, Charlotte Street seeks to contribute to the vitality of Kansas City's art community and to enhance Kansas City's desirability as a place for artists to work and live.
ABOUT THE 2011 FELLOWS:
Kyle Hatley:
The Charlotte Street Generative Performing Artist Award recognizes Kyle Hatley for his work as a playwright and director. Hatley received his degree in theatre from Rhodes College (Memphis, TN). Since moving to Kansas City from Chicago in 2008, Hatley has been a highly active participant in Kansas City's theater community. For the Kansas City Fringe Fest, he wrote and directed Watering the Grave, a blues musical retelling of the Oresteia; The Death of Cupid, a folk musical retelling of Lysistrata; and Head, which was based on the Bible story about Herod, Herodias, Salome, and John the Baptist. For Chatterbox Audio Theater, a Kansas City/Memphis-based non-profit web-based community theater project, of which Hatley is Artistic Director, he has written and directed a number of audio plays including an adult adaptation of Pinocchio, and is the recipient of the Silver Ogle Award for his original series "The Dead Girl."
Hatley is also associate artistic director of Kansas City Repertory Theatre where he has directed The Borderland, Broke-ology, and Circle Mirror Transformation. He has also directed Hamlet for TwoThirds Theatre, How Does Your Garden Grow for the Equity Showcase, and Ben Franklin's Apprentice at the Coterie Theatre. Hatley was named Best Director in Kansas City by The Pitch in 2009. He is currently working on two new plays: a new musical called People Fall, and a psychological thriller, Raise My Hand.
James Mobberley:
The work of composer James Mobberley spans many media, including orchestral and chamber music, music for film, video, theater, dance, and music that combines electronic and computer elements with live performance. The recipient of a Rome Prize and a Guggenheim Fellowship, among other honors, Mobberley is the creator of nearly 80 original compositions and arrangements, which have been performed around the world.
James Mobberley received both his BA in Music (Guitar) and his MM in Composition from the University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill, and his DMA in Composition from the Cleveland Institute of Music. From 1991-1999, he served as the Kansas City Symphony's first Composer-in-Residence. This residency was expanded to include the State Ballet of Missouri and the Paseo Academy for the Performing and Visual Arts, the local arts magnet high school, through a grant from Meet the Composer's New Residencies program for 1994-97. Other residencies include Composer-in-Residence for the "newEar" Ensemble (1999-2002), and guest residencies and workshops at the Taiwan National Symphony, the Ft. Smith Symphony, the Composers Forum of the East at Bennington College, the University of Texas at Austin, the University of Southern California, Oberlin College, Washington State University, the University of Arkansas, and Heidelberg College. Since 1999 Mobberley has held the position of Curator's Professor of Music at the University of Missouri-Kansas City.For the Generative Performing Awards, artists are nominated by the Awards Advisors and a group of Community Nominators for consideration. 2011 Community Nominators included Jeff Church, Artistic Director, The Coterie Theatre; Brad Cox, composer/musician and 2010 Charlotte Street Generative Performing Award Fellow; David Ford, multi-disciplinary artist; Cheryl Kimmi; Director, Kansas City Fringe Festival; Stephanie Roberts, creator/director/performer and 2010 Charlotte Street Generative Performing Award Fellow; Michael Joy, Director of Artistic & Educational Programs, Kansas City Friends of Alvin Ailey; Glenn North, poet/spoken word artist and 2009 Charlotte Street Generative Performing Award Fellow; and Mark Southerland, composer/musician and 2008 Generative Performing Award Fellow.
29 nominated artists submitted materials for consideration this year through a combination of online applications and work samples submitted on cd/dvd. Selection was conducted through a two-phased process, whereby the Advisors reviewed all submitted materials privately and completed ratings online through callforentry.org, then came together for a final selection meeting, and which time materials were re-reviewed and discussed, and final selections completed.
The recipients were selected based on the quality of their work and accomplishments to date, for their promise for continued creation and development as generative artists, and for the relevance of their work in relation to the broader field of contemporary art and performance.
A non-profit organization, Charlotte Street Foundation (CSF) supports and recognizes outstanding artists in Kansas City; presents, promotes, enhances, and encourages the visual and performing arts; and fosters economic development in the urban core of Kansas City, Mo. On all levels, CSF places artists at the center of its mission and has built an infrastructure that depends on and reflects their involvement. As a result, CSF continually evolves in response to artist input and in relation to the city's larger cultural ecosystem. For more about Charlotte Street Foundation and its activities, visit www.charlottestreet.org.
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