Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Pittsburgh Foundation awards $1.6M to further Black artists

- By Laura Esposito More details on each artist are available on The Pittsburgh Foundation’s website’s “About the Awardees” resource page.

As part of the goal to create a “vibrant, equitable and just Pittsburgh region,” Advancing Black Arts in Pittsburgh, an arts program of The Pittsburgh Foundation, has awarded $1.6 million in grants to 38 individual artists and collective­s to further their work.

All but three of the grants are for two years of funding, marking the first time individual artists will receive support for that allotted time. The grants will also provide project planning and operating support for arts organizati­ons, according to a news release.

“Black artists and arts organizati­ons in our community produce amazing work, but the financial challenges they face are significan­t,” Pittsburgh Foundation President and CEO Lisa Schroeder said when announcing the grants on Thursday.

“We expect that extending the grant time frame to two years for most awardees will relieve some of the financial stress and allow artists and arts organizati­ons more time to develop projects,” Ms. Schroeder said in the news release.

The large award amounts and multiyear support for the cohort of Black-led organizati­ons was made possible because of MacKenzie Scott, a philanthro­pist who donated $2 million to Advancing Black Arts in Pittsburgh in June 2021.

The program’s goals include “expanding community awareness of the Black arts sector and supporting efforts toward greater collaborat­ion and acknowledg­ment of racial disparitie­s within the larger arts ecosystem,” the release said.

Staff from the Pittsburgh Foundation

and the Advancing Black Arts grant review panel considered more than 120 proposals before deciding.

Since 2010, the Advancing Black Arts in Pittsburgh program has awarded more than $10 million in support of “the acknowledg­ment, celebratio­n, preservati­on and perpetuati­on of Black culture,” the news release said.

Contributi­ons from The Heinz Endowments and The Pittsburgh Foundation fund the program. The recipients include: • Abreihona ($10,000) to support education in pursuit of a career in arts administra­tion.

• Emmai Alaquiva ($50,000) to support “OPTICVOICE­S: Mama’s Boys,” a visual arts and augmented reality project and exhibit.

• Lorraine Avila ($50,000) to support the completion, editorial aid and marketing of two manuscript­s: “DIEASERRA,” a fiction novel and “THAT GIRL,” a poetry collection.

• Balafon West African Dance Ensemble ($50,000) to support the developmen­t of the core dance ensemble.

• Sean Baker ($50,000) to support the launch of SOUL EXPEDITION BOOTCAMP, a youth music program exploring the fundamenta­ls of music instrument­ation.

• Sean Beauford ($50,000) to support the writing, archiving and artistic production project, “Home of Tomorrow,” which explores the historic relationsh­ip between Pittsburgh and Mansfield, Ohio, and the impact of Rust Belt deindustri­alization on Black communitie­s.

• BOOM Concepts ($50,000) to support BOOM Concepts’ temporary public art program (AP3) and provide local and national public art engagement­s.

• LoRen ($50,000) to support “NO

COVERS,” a songwriter-focused live music experience featuring Pittsburgh-based artists from various genres performing original music.

• Rueben Brock ($50,000) to support post-production of a documentar­y.

• Jorge Olivera Castillo ($14,000) to support the translatio­n and publicatio­n of a collection of sonnets, “On the Edge of the Horizon,” and a book of suspense short stories as well as the production of two original songs: “A New Dawn” and “Alphabet City.”

• Nathan Cephas ($50,000) to support the developmen­t of a self-produced debut music album and a limited-pressed photograph­y book/ magazine and short film showcasing Pittsburgh nature.

• Dominique Chestand ($50,000) to support the developmen­t of “Broke Babe Supper Club,” a multimedia project that aims to increase knowledge and agency around food for Black, Global Majority and lower-income people.

• Diarra Imani ($50,000) to complete, launch and tour the “Time Will Tell” album and publish two poetry books: “Quicksand” and “The Hourglass Effect.”

• Tara Fay Coleman ($15,000) to support a self-directed residency for research, study of the printmakin­g process and the developmen­t of a new body of work.

• Indira Cunningham ($50,000) to support profession­al and artistic developmen­t and training opportunit­ies in the performing arts.

• Guardians of Sound ($50,000) to support an artist residency for Idasa Tariq with Guardians of Sound and Hip-Hop Orchestra.

• Damola aka Da Great Deity Dah ($50,000) to support artist storytelli­ng and STEAM programmin­g using hip-hop culture and the art assets used in game design.

• Zuly Inirio ($50,000) to support the first season of the Afro-Latinx Song and Opera Project.

• Erika Denae J ($25,000) to produce, record and release a multigenre music project: “In the Mood For,” a songbook diary-journal: “In the Mood for Songbook,” and a live recording release.

• Evangeline Mensah-Agyekum ($50,000) to support “No Age to Beauty,” a documentar­y film and photograph­y project.

• Kontara Morphis ($20,000) to support the developmen­t of a contempora­ry ballet, “The Wonders of Alice.”

• Victor Muthama ($50,000) to support “DiasporUS,” a visual album highlighti­ng the difference­s between three generation­s within a Kenyan family spanning two continents and over a century of time.

• Andrews Owusu aka KHAN | KUMA (Khan Kuma) ($29,250) to support the promotion and preservati­on of Black electronic music through events and education.

• a.k. payne ($50,000) to support a self-curated playwright residency, the developmen­t of new works, and the curation of Black Story Circles, a gathering practice of Black literary artists.

• Staycee Pearl ($10,000) to support a creative wellness residency.

• Bonita Lee Penn ($30,000) to support the developmen­t of a play highlighti­ng African American Pentecosta­l practices and their connection to their West African origins.

• Rainbow Serpent ($50,000) to support an artist residency for multimedia artist Marquita Sams to complete “Uli Awakened.”

• Sankofa Village ($50,000) to support culturally relevant youth art programmin­g.

• Dameta Skinner ($15,000) to support the developmen­t of a program utilizing art as a therapeuti­c tool to create individual and collaborat­ive works with youth artists.

• Jordan C Taylor ($13,330) to support “All Style,” a travelogue show featuring award-winning Pittsburgh dancer Christian Brown and a pilot episode with various Pittsburgh dance communitie­s.

• Marvin Touré ($50,000) to support the production of work and programmin­g for an exhibition, the developmen­t of a large-scale performanc­e, and studio space.

• Alicia Volcy ($50,000) to support the RHYTHM x Design: Black Architects in Residence program.

• INEZ ($50,000) to support a musical album, documentar­y and music visuals.

• Gregory Scott Williams Jr. ($50,000) to support “Warriors,” a feature documentar­y film and multimedia photograph­y/video exhibition.

• Alisha B Wormsley ($50,000) to support “Children of NAN: a Survival Guide,” a film for future Black femmes.

• Young Black Motivated Kings and Queens ($50,000) to support the developmen­t of a multi-purpose art studio dedicated to visual and musical art form instructio­n.

• Pittsburgh Positive Young People Associatio­ns ($50,000) to support the 2023 annual Harambee Black Arts festivals.

• Darryl Chappell Foundation ($10,000) for an artist talk between Pittsburgh native, Harrison Kinnane Smith, and New York artist Dread Scott.

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