August 14, 2017

2017 Detroit Knight Arts Challenge finalists announced

Musicians, poets, even a video game maker are among the 63 finalists for the 2017 Detroit Knight Arts Challenge sponsored by the John S. and James L. Knight Foundation.

“We asked artists, organizations and businesses for their best ideas to inspire and advance Detroit,” Victoria Rogers, vice president for arts at Knight Foundation said in a statement. “The quality of the responses, as reflected in these 63 finalists, showcases the incredible creativity in this community.”

The Arts Challenge is designed to provide not only artistic inspiration to Detroiters but also to provide a way for artists to connect with one another. The finalists are competing for a share of $3 million in grants.

Winners will be announced at ceremony October 25 and at knightarts.org

The finalists are: 

a.gen.cyTo create an advertising agency that markets critical thinking and curiosity instead of consumerism by creating posters, billboards, social media and video that bring art into people’s lives.

 

Allied Media Projects: To destigmatize and spark a dialogue about the future of riding public transit by commissioning the creators of “Riding with Aunt DDOT,” a documentary photography and video series on commuting, to curate an exhibition at the Allied Media Conference. 

Arab American National Museum: To showcase films that present the depth of Arab and Arab-American culture by expanding the museum’s annual film festival.

Arts League of Michigan: To bring Detroit’s jazz tradition to new generations with The Gathering, a jazz orchestra comprised of seasoned musicians playing with up-and-coming young adults.

Ava Ansari: To push the bounds of online participation to create moments of joy through the world’s first telepresence music festival, REMOTE, which provides real-time encounters between performers and fans across continents and time zones.

Ayinde Fondren: To foster the African art of stilt dancing through a pilot summer program where children will learn the form’s history, choreography and how to make their own costumes.

Bryce Detroit: To work with Detroit’s music luminaries to create an Afrofuturist children’s music album that promotes positive cultural identity and community values.

Caribbean Mardi Gras Productions: To bring the community together through pop-up parades where participants learn to create Carnival costumes and masks.

Carrie Morris Arts Production (CMAP): To protect a formerly vacant lot as a community resource by creating a 210-foot structure that is a sculpture, children’s playscape and fence system.

 

Cass Corridor Films: To highlight the art, people and influence of the Cass Corridor, Detroit’s first avant-garde movement, in a full-length documentary that interviews surviving artists.

Charles H. Wright Museum of African American History: To explore how Detroiters might build a better future by presenting “Salt City,” an Afrofuturistic dance theater production shaped by the city’s cultural imagination and possibilities.

Cinema Lamont: To bring together cinephiles and the city’s Mexican community with a film festival of award-winning contemporary Mexican cinema.

Coalition On Temporary Shelter (COTS): To use the power of art to transform lives through a workshop where low-income mothers create maps of their lives to move them toward self-sufficiency and to have a filmmaker tell the story of the process.

Creative Arts Collective: To celebrate jazz in Detroit and the organization’s 40th year of presenting avant-garde jazz concerts at the Detroit Institute of Arts by commissioning new works for a concert series.

D.Cipher: To help musicians grow their careers in Detroit by sharing professional development, career opportunities and knowledge through training. 

Darkroom Detroit: To connect the youth of Detroit and Kabul through art with a photo exchange in which each learn to take digital photos, then swap them virtually to provide appreciation of stories from the other side of the world.

Detroit Symphony Orchestra: To give Detroiters the ability to enjoy beautiful music in their community with the Mobile Maxcast, a mobile billboard truck that broadcasts “Live from Orchestra Hall” in parks and community centers.

Detroit-Windsor Dance Academy: To create a dialogue of music and movement by bringing together secular and liturgical dancers for a combined performance.

Detroit Youth Volume: To help young violinists work with cutting-edge music technology by having classically trained musicians learn to play the electric violin and perform in a recital with LED costumes and light art.

Dunya Mikhail: To show Detroit through the eyes of poets by working with writers to create a piece about communities within the city, based on the Mikhail’s autobiographical poem “Baghdad in Detroit”.

Eason Block Club One: To enliven the city of Highland Park through the arts by working with residents and artists to create murals in high-traffic areas.

Eno Laget: To repurpose billboards as cultural assets by having them promote community well-being and a more general cultural shift that values people over profit.

Facing Change: Documenting Detroit: To tell the story of Detroit through photographs by expanding an emerging photographer fellowship that embeds photographers in communities and provides them with training, mentors and a place to exhibit their work.

Feedom Freedom Growers: To provide an artful space for neighbors to connect by beautifying a unique space next to Feedom Freedom Garden in Fox Creek.

Garage Cultural: To provide teens with a platform for sharing opinions on community issues - the Communication Art Brigade - which will teach them about music composition and recording, news production, radio scripting and broadcasting.

Ghana ThinkTank: To bring Islamic art into people’s lives by using intricately cut aluminum sculptures to form a Moroccan-style riad, or courtyard, for the public in Detroit’s North End.

Global Detroit: To build community through the arts by using digital storytelling and photography to explore dynamics of race, national origin and equity in Detroit, then bringing immigrants and African-Americans together for dialogue and exchange.

Great Lakes Chamber Music Festival: To celebrate Detroit artists past and present by commissioning a new chamber music piece inspired by a seminal painting in the Charles H. Wright Museum of African American History’s collection and bringing together senior and emerging musicians to perform in 2018, the 100th anniversary of Wright’s birth.

Hacienda Mexican Foods: To transform public spaces in Southwest Detroit into a representation of the community’s identity and hopes with a 10-day mural-creating blitz and arts festival.

Hannan Foundation: To transform a senior center through the arts by offering an artist-in-residence program for older creatives who will offer workshops, in addition to creating a digital makerspace to stimulate new thinking.

Heritage Works: To explore historical, mythological and aspirational representations of the human body by bringing in choreographers to cocreate two new works with the community.

House Aquemini: To explore stories of personal transformation with Tetra, a four-show festival of theater, music, poetry and technology.

Jazz at Lincoln Center: To invite Detroiters to gather to enjoy a night of live, world-class jazz by having Micro-Concerts, free events built around Jazz at Lincoln Center’s live webstreams, in low-income neighborhoods.

Jeannette Murrell: To use photography to reimagine images of black love through a project that partners young photographers with professionals to create wheat paste murals for Detroit buildings.

Kai Cassells: To foster creative thinking by hosting youth workshops on jewelry design and other mediums. 

Kisma Jordan: To help opera broaden its range and tap the pulse of the people with “OperaSoul,” a concert experience that blends classical vocals with gospel, blues, jazz and pop.

Leesta: To create interactive media that allows girls and students of color to see themselves reflected in history by developing a video game based on the life of Detroit activist Grace Lee Boggs, in addition to creating a multimedia database of women pioneers. 

Library Street Collective: To support the city’s creative renaissance by restoring the 1970s-era public murals created to build community in the city after a period of civil unrest.

Live Coal Gallery: To bring art into neighborhoods, particularly in Brightmoor and North End/Piety Hill, through a mobile gallery space created by an artist collective out of an 18-foot car hauler.

Los Renacidos Dance Company: To build bridges in the city by expanding this company’s mission beyond performing Mexican dance to include other Latin and multicultural genres and to offer participation free of cost.

Mariachi Femenil Detroit: To flip the script on the male-dominated mariachi genre by creating a female ensemble for Detroit. 

Michigan Opera Theater: To explore the intersection of sports and art with a production of “The Summer King,” an opera based on the life of Negro League baseball star Josh Gibson, accompanied by community programs that combine baseball, music and local history while examining the city’s history of equity and inclusion.

Mosaic Youth Theatre of Detroit: To expand the presence of minorities in theater through a training program that teaches youth working backstage in carpentry, sound engineering, lighting and design.

Motor City Grounds Crew: To bring the arts more deeply into city parks by organizing concerts there of some of the city’s great musicians.

Motor City Street Dance Academy: To engage youth in the arts through a dance studio and mentorship program focused on hip-hop and breakdancing.

Motown Historical Museum: To showcase the Motown sound with Motown CARaoke, in which participants sing hits in a vintage vehicle that is the centerpiece of an expanded museum and travels to communities.

MSU Community Music School - Detroit: To explore the ethnography of jazz music in Detroit and New Orleans by partnering with the National Parks Foundation and Louis Armstrong Park to present workshops and a free concert and lecture series.

N’Namdi Center for Contemporary Art: To highlight African and French Diaspora arts, culture and cuisine with a festival that takes the form of artisan villages with handcrafted creations and food in the N’Namdi Center Midtown art campus.

Project Art: To solve two cultural challenges - providing studio space for artists and arts education for children – through a residency program at local libraries.

RDR Radio: To preserve conversations with Detroit musicians that have taken place over 23 years on the independently produced program “Acoustic Café” in an online audio archive.

Robert St. Mary: To document the city’s punk scene and its place in music history with an interactive website featuring interviews, photos and videos in addition to special vinyl record reissues and unreleased compilations.

Secret Society of Twisted Storytellers: To use the power of story to heal in a new podcast about challenges facing Detroit schools that weaves together the voices of students, teachers and parents in answering the question: What if our schools were humans in need of healing?

Signal-Return: To elevate the work of nonprofits by pairing 12 organizations with Detroit artists who will transform the organizations’ uplifting stories into art through custom letterpress posters.

Spectral Slumber: To create a refuge for those seeking a quiet alternative to mainstream nightlife with a sleepover event where participants relax in a “fort” installation immersed in live ambient music performances, video projections and soft lights. 

Street Cred Detroit Youth Crew: To spark conversations about empathy, race and police brutality by touring an interactive performance where students use virtual reality to put themselves in the shoes of a 16-year-old Detroit student who witnesses violence in her community.

Tiff Massey: To provide a place for reflection and gathering on the grounds of the Charles H. Wright Museum of African American History with a site-specific sculpture called SPRING, named for the season in which Detroit comes alive.

Travis Wright: To build community through a pop-up TV talk show on Detroit street corners that interviews everyday people and explores where community engagement meets performance art.

University of Michigan-Dearborn: To examine how Detroit’s Muslim community is transforming spaces in the city - with mosques, marketplaces and more - in a new multimedia gallery installation, book and through community conversations.

Urban Arts Collective: To empower the next generation to change their communities by having architects raised in the city’s toughest neighborhoods return to those areas to teach kids design skills that will help them change their community.

Walter Bailey Detroit Fantastic aRT Forest Project: To enhance neglected neighborhoods by creating aRT Forests, clusters of free-standing, two-sided dynamic murals in public spaces around the city.

Wayne State University, Department of Art and Art History: To explore the connection of politics and printing by publishing a book on the Detroit Print Co-op, which produced noteworthy and beautifully designed publications on leftist politics in the city.

WDET: To tell the stories of Detroit communities - from Hamtramck’s Bangladeshi dress shop owners to long-time Detroiters preserving the city’s rich blues legacy - by creating an exhibit that highlights the best of the audiovisual installations from challenge-funded project “Framed by WDET”.

Young Nation: To transform the organization’s front porch into space for cultural exchange by inviting national and international artists for short-term residencies in which they perform, display work or conduct workshops on the porch of Young Nation’s new plaza.

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