The Idea Fund will host a celebratory reception for the twelve Round 9 grant recipients at 6:30 p.m., Jan. 24, at Aurora Picture Show.
Each artist or collaborative will talk about their project concept and plans in a PechaKucha-style presentation. This reception is open to the public, and food and drink will be served.
GRANT RECIPIENTS AND PROJECTS:
STIMULUS ($7,000)
Artist Lending Library by Nick Barbee
A.L.L. provides a service to artists and fosters art appreciation. A.L.L. was designed to broaden and diversify art collecting by significantly reducing the cost of bringing original art into the home. The economic threshold to collecting prevents artists from connecting to an audience. Patrons typically invest thousands of dollars into purchasing, displaying, and insuring art. While this model has its benefits, it also leads to art becoming a symbol of status and wealth. By removing the economic hurdle of purchasing, we foster a community of new art patrons.
She Speaks by Hannah Bonner
The past 14 months has put many local events before a global audience. Not least of these events was the in-custody death of Sandra Bland, a graduate of Prairie View A&M, as she left the gates of the campus. Since the day of that tragic event, members of The Shout have been building a bridge of support for the students of that campus. It has been impossible to ignore the power of the stories, and artistic expressions that emerge from young women and men on the campus. From theater performances to poetry to music, to the newly emerging hip-hop dance crew, the students have been processing their grief, trauma and reactions through art. Much of this art, however, has gone unseen beyond the boundaries of their town. Two performances will be held, one in Harris County and one in Prairie View, in order to amplify these students' into an audience that they do not currently have access to influence.
CATALYST ($4,000)
Paraspace Books - Textu(r)al Response: A Lecture and Workshop Series by Sara Balabanlilar and Sarah Rodriguez
Textu(r)al Response will consist of five textu(r)al response workshops/book club/intermedia think tank; four lectures, hosted by future-minded artists/thinkers; and two multi-media zines produced by Paraspace. Each workshop will take the form of a new way to approach each sense: touch, taste, sound, sight, and smell. Through these workshops, we hope to create a community conversation surrounding personal experiences in an embodiment, and what a future body could or would hope to look like or be. How do we walk through the world, and how will we, so to speak. Continuing on that theme, the four lectures we have in mind will be strongly geared toward interdisciplinary action - lead by groups such as Metropolarity, a queer sci-fi oriented press that focuses on all aspects of 'world-building' in an attempt to create a cohesive vision of the future. Lastly, the founders of Paraspace Books would like to create two multi-platform, digital zines that will function as an easily distributable guidebook to our philosophies as a project, as well as information and readings that are and will be valuable in the past, present, and future.
DAMN GXRL by EQ Collective (Jessica Fuquay, Anna Garza, Miriam Hamkin, Mary Walenta, and Muna Javaid)
DAMN GXRL is a quarterly zine by and for Houston-area women, queer and non-binary folks showcasing their achievements within visual art, music, activism, and other spheres in which these groups are historically marginalized and underrepresented. Intentionally broad In Focus, DAMN GXRL aims to be a publication that fosters cross-pollination between different artistic and social practices.
SPARK ($1,000)
Second Death by Felipe Steinberg
In Houston, you can find wood utility poles rotting as they lay horizontally on sidewalks near where they were originally in use. The authorities claim that the high cost of transportation and the little landscape "damage" the poles cause, is the reason why they don't remove them. As a form of mummification and preservation, Felipe Steinberg will treat and varnish the wood professionally of one of the lying utility poles, located at Milam Street on the right side sidewalk between Berry Street and Holman Street. This project will create a discussion on everyday life, places, conditions and situations; discuss the circulation of materials and re-signification of forms; and interact with the urban landscape as a space of reconciliation and reflection.
Uneasy Houston by Eric Pearce
Uneasy Houston is about getting artworks to people the uneasy way, hand screen-printed, addressed and stamped and sent as postcards via the U.S. Mail. From the beginning, Eric Pearce will not only print his own designs but invite artist friends to participate by designing and working in the shop to screen print their postcards.
RESEARCH & DEVELOPMENT FUNDS ($1,000)
EgunStories by Felicia Johnson
EgunStories is an experimental narrative video project combined with a series of public "passion" plays that explore the magic of storytelling combined with the mystical continuity of the ancestors. Shot in Houston in historical locations on HD video, the pieces will feature artists, writers, and activists telling their ancestors' stories of redemption, peace, love, and laughter. The video pieces will accompany a series of live performances in urban garden settings by the artist collective House of Ire', which is also featured in the documentary performing a choreopoem entitled, "I Be."
Contemporary Casta Portraiture: Nuestra "Calidad" by Delilah M. Montoya
Following the 1825-Mexican Revolution, Mexico adopted a persona centered on mixed-race/ mestizo-identity. By embracing a collective identity of multiplicity (albeit still preferential to Spanish origins), Mexican leaders hoped to unify the populace and foster national pride. Nearly two centuries later the impact of this movement still resonates, as the majority of Mexicans and Central Americans identify as mestizo. By contrast, a 2015 a Pew Research survey found that only 6.9% of Americans identified as multiracial. This stark difference is indicative of a widely held black-and-white perspective in the United States, complicated by institutionalized racism and pervasive colonialist attitudes. It is this site of contestation, myth, and erased history where Delilah Montoya locates the series Contemporary Casta Portraiture: Nuestra "Calidad." Her photographic portraits and accompanying DNA analysis provide insights for both sitter and viewer on the instability of identity and the means through which we are inclined to construct our own histories.
The Idea Fund is a re-granting program administered by a partnership of DiverseWorks, Aurora Picture Show and Project Row Houses and funded by The Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts. The Idea Fund supports individual artists, curators, collectives, collaboratives or partnerships in the greater Houston area. Grant recipients receive funding for projects that exemplify unconventional, interventionist, conceptual, entrepreneurial, participatory, or guerrilla artistic practices. Grants are competitive and awarded by a panel of arts professionals and artists. For more information, visit www.TheIdeaFund.org.
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