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Public Art for Spatial Justice to support Massachusetts Artists (US)

Open Call for African Artists AU20 “Our Africa, Our Future” Artists Residency Programme

Deadline: 19-Oct-20

New England Foundation for the Arts (NEFA) is accepting applications for the Public Art for Spatial Justice to support public art that creatively expresses and embodies a more just version of what’s possible in public.

Public Art for Spatial Justice grants supports Massachusetts artists and artistic collaborations to create public art in Massachusetts that fosters public imagination and contributes to more just futures for the public spaces and public culture.

Funding Information

Funding Criteria & Priorities

Public Art for Spatial Justice aims to fund a range of projects across Massachusetts that foster public imagination and contribute to more just futures for their public spaces and public culture.

Eligible projects will be reviewed according to the following funding criteria:

  • Artists/Artistic Collaborations share in NEFA’s values and commitment to the work of dismantling the legacies of racism, anti-Blackness, and white supremacy culture. Priority will be given to projects that:
    • Are led or co-led by artists who identify as Black, Indigenous, People of Color (BIPOC). The path to dismantling the legacies of racism and white supremacy culture includes centering BIPOC (Black Indigenous People of Color)-led creative exploration and expression in public spaces.
    • Disrupt harmful historic narratives that uphold structural inequities, decolonize and/or indigenize spaces, and/or centers BIPOC creativity, imagination, and expression in public spaces
  • Relevance: Projects creatively engage important public conversation(s) that are or need to be happening in this particular moment, in this particular place. Context is important in public artmaking.  Public spaces are not neutral. And public art made in public spaces is not neutral.
  • Integrity: Projects honor the integrity of the people, places, stories, and ideas – past, present, and future- engaged in the artmaking.  Public art practices that reduce people, places, and stories to tools for artmaking are harmful. Also, artists are collaborators and co-conspirators on this journey towards justice, not saviors.

*They recognize that feasibility may vary depending on how public health guidelines evolve during the pandemic.  They ask that artists are realistic about feasibility while acknowledging that this may change as public health guidelines change.

Eligibility Criteria

Requirements 

Application Process

Reminder: Public Art for Spatial Justice grants are taxable income to individual recipients and reportable to the IRS. Grantees will receive 1099 from NEFA if total payments exceed the minimum requirements set by the IRS within a calendar year. (Currently, the minimum requirement is $600.)

For more information, visit https://www.nefa.org/CreateSpatialJustice

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