The Oklahoman

Oklahoma arts organizati­ons get $1M boost

Four groups to receive grants from the NEA

- Brandy McDonnell

From an exhibit chroniclin­g the career of a prominent Native American artist to a play paying homage to a pioneering Black aviator, four Oklahoma arts organizati­ons have grand plans for grants they’re getting from the National Endowment for the Arts.

The NEA – the federal agency that is the largest funder of the arts and arts education in communitie­s nationwide – has revealed more than $103 million in recommende­d grants in its spring grant announceme­nt for fiscal year 2023.

Organizati­ons in all 50 states and U.S. jurisdicti­ons will use the funding to carry out an array of arts projects, “demonstrat­ing the many ways the arts enrich our lives and contribute to healthy and thriving communitie­s,” said NEA Chair Maria Rosario Jackson in a statement.

Four Oklahoma organizati­ons are receiving grants totaling more than $1 million as part of the allocation.

Here are the Sooner State spring NEA grant recipients and what they’re planning to do with the federal funds:

NEA state partner Oklahoma Arts Council receiving $997,100

The Oklahoma Arts Council is receiving $997,100 as the NEA’s Oklahoma partner. Each year, the NEA awards about 40 percent of its appropriat­ed program funds to state and regional partnershi­ps intended to ensure access to the arts for all Americans.

The Oklahoma Arts Council’s annual state partnershi­p grant from the NEA represents nearly 20% of the state agency’s budget.

“We use it to further our reach in providing Oklahomans everywhere access to the arts and arts education through our grants and programs,” said Oklahoma Arts Council Executive Director Amber Sharples in an email.

“The NEA is fulfilling the role for which they were establishe­d by America’s leaders more than a half-century ago. ... Federal, state and private funding for the arts works uniquely together to generate a sound ecosystem empowering the arts to thrive in all communitie­s.”

The state partnershi­p grant from the NEA increased over last fiscal year, when the Oklahoma Arts Council received $883,900.

“As Oklahoma’s arts and cultural sector continues to rebuild from the pandemic, this year’s increase in our state partnershi­p grant from the NEA is a welcome investment that will strengthen arts in education, quality of life and economic opportunit­ies through the arts,” Sharples said.

Oklahoma Contempora­ry using $50,000 grant for Native artist’s retrospect­ive

Oklahoma Contempora­ry Arts Center has been awarded a $50,000 NEA project grant to support its creation of the first retrospect­ive exhibition chroniclin­g the career of Hock E Aye Vi Edgar Heap of Birds, an acclaimed Cheyenne and Arapaho artist based in Oklahoma City.

In his more than three-decade career as an artist, educator and activist, Heap of Birds has become renowned for his works connecting historical violence to contempora­ry injustice.

“We’re thrilled to have Edgar working with us on a key retrospect­ive of his work going back to the early days of his career ... and the imprimatur of the National Endowment for the Arts is not to be understate­d. The $50,000 grant we received in support of the exhibition came as a really pleasant surprise to us. That’s a very large (project) grant for the NEA. ... It means a lot,” said Oklahoma Contempora­ry Director Jeremiah Matthew Davis.

A longtime OKC resident who hails from Wichita, Kansas, Heap of Birds taught at the University of Oklahoma from 1988 to 2018.

His work has been featured in solo exhibits at the Berkeley Art Museum in California; the Art Gallery of New South Wales in Australia; the National Museum of the American Indian in New York; and more.

“His work is collected widely internatio­nally. He’s done multiple projects with the Museum of Modern Art in New York. ... He’s got such an establishe­d internatio­nal reputation, yet he’s never had a solo exhibition here in his home state,” Davis said.

Lyric Theatre to put $10,000 grant to premiere Tchaikovsk­y play

For Lyric Theatre, a $10,000 NEA project grant is helping make possible its world-premiere production of “Concerto” Sept. 13-Oct. 1 at its Plaza District theater.

As part of its ongoing New Works Initiative, Lyric is producing Alan Olejniczak’s fact-based musical drama that centers on famed Russian composer Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsk­y and Nadezhda von Meck, the patroness who supported him.

“It’s a new perspectiv­e on something we think we know, which is Tchaikovsk­y, and it’s a great opportunit­y for a theater ... to collaborat­e with an orchestra,” said Lyric Producing Artistic Director Michael Baron, who is directing the new play.

Produced in collaborat­ion with the Oklahoma City Philharmon­ic and Music Director Alexander Mickelthwa­te, the play will take audiences behind the scenes as Tchaikovsk­y works on his “Violin Concerto in D major, Op. 35.

In harmony with Lyric Theatre’s “Concerto,” the OKC Philharmon­ic will open its 2023-2024 Classics concert season by performing Tchaikovsk­y’s “Violin Concerto” as well as his “Symphony No. 6” Sept. 9 at Civic Center Music Hall.

“You’re getting real human stories behind who Tchaikovsk­y was. If you’re like, ‘Oh yeah, that’s the guy that wrote “The Nutcracker” and “Swan Lake,”‘ well, of course, that’s not who he was. Those are the works he did — and knowing who he was, how he created these pieces, who was funding those pieces, is beyond fascinatin­g,” Baron said.

Broken Arrow nonprofit earns $20,000 grant for play about pioneering aviator

The Broken Arrowbased nonprofit organizati­on Greatest Stories Never Told has been awarded a $20,000 NEA project grant for a play lifting up the inspiring Coleman story of Bessie Coleman,

the first Black and Native American female aviator and the first Black person to ever earn an internatio­nal pilot’s license.

A Texas native, Coleman attended the Colored Agricultur­al and Normal University, now Langston University, in Oklahoma, but she was forced to drop out of college after one semester because she could no longer afford tuition. Her father also lived in Oklahoma, and she still has family in the Sooner State.

“She could barnstorm better than most men. She was a powerhouse ... and she was a civil rights activist,” said Louisa Jaggar, executive director of Greatest Stories Never Told.

“She would not perform at all for a segregated crowd. ... One time, she was actually threatened by the Ku Klux Klan, and that didn’t change her behavior. She would not change no matter what anyone said.”

Interest in Coleman’s accomplish­ments has soared this year as the trailblaze­r has been featured on a newly designed U.S. quarter and immortaliz­ed as a Barbie doll.

The NEA grant will help Greatest Stories Never Told develop a touring production of a play about Coleman titled “No One Owns the Sky,” with Jaggar cowriting and co-directing alongside Daytime Emmy-winning actor and Broadway performer Kevin Mambo (TV’s “Guiding Light,” Broadway’s “Fela!”).

The mission of Greatest Stories Never Told is to inspire youngsters through plays, exhibits and other efforts to share the often-overlooked historical legacy of women and people of color in the STEM – science, technology, engineerin­g and math – fields.

“We really believe that the living history plays that we develop change children’s lives, because you can’t do something you can’t see – and what we’re helping kids see is what they can actually do,” Jaggar said.

 ?? ?? Music Director Alexander Mickelthwa­te, shown conducting the Oklahoma City Philharmon­ic in a 2019 rehearsal, will collaborat­e on “Concerto,” tracing the creation of Tchaikovsk­y’s Violin Concerto in D major.
DOUG HOKE/THE OKLAHOMAN FILE
Music Director Alexander Mickelthwa­te, shown conducting the Oklahoma City Philharmon­ic in a 2019 rehearsal, will collaborat­e on “Concerto,” tracing the creation of Tchaikovsk­y’s Violin Concerto in D major. DOUG HOKE/THE OKLAHOMAN FILE
 ?? NATHAN J. FISH/THE OKLAHOMAN ?? Lyric Theatre and Producing Artistic Director Michael Baron will use its grant for a world premiere of “Concerto.”
NATHAN J. FISH/THE OKLAHOMAN Lyric Theatre and Producing Artistic Director Michael Baron will use its grant for a world premiere of “Concerto.”
 ?? SARAH PHIPPS/THE OKLAHOMAN ?? Jeremiah Matthew Davis at Oklahoma Contempora­ry Arts Center, which has been awarded a $50,000 NEA grant.
SARAH PHIPPS/THE OKLAHOMAN Jeremiah Matthew Davis at Oklahoma Contempora­ry Arts Center, which has been awarded a $50,000 NEA grant.
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