Wishes Granted
Linklater's film society, AISD among Austin winners of $485,000 in grants
The National Endowments for the Arts and Humanities (NEA/NEH) announced thousands of grants nationwide on January 14, and 19 were in Austin. Funds went to supporting the Richard Linklater-founded Austin Film Society, an effort in the Austin Independent School District, and a new production by choral group Conspirare.
The NEA and NEH are independent federal agencies, meaning that they're government agencies that operate outside of the federal executive branch. They are major funders of the arts, museums, and other cultural organizations; this wave of funding totaled about $59.4 million.
Most the awards came from the NEA. They are as follows, organized into categories for ease of reading:
Literary
- $20,000 to American Short Fiction to publish and promote its magazine.
Film
- $30,000 to the Austin Film Festival, Inc. to support its Writers Conference and On Story Project.
- $35,000 to the Austin Film Society for staff salaries.
- $10,000 to Cine Las Americas (CLA) for the Cine Las Americas International Film Festival.
Creative education & leadership
- $100,000 to the Austin Independent School District (AISD) for the Creative Learning Initiative.
- $30,000 to Creative Action for a multidisciplinary creative youth development program.
- $20,000 to Hispanic Alliance for the Performing Arts (a.k.a. Austin Soundwaves) for teaching artist fees and staff salaries within a youth program.
- $20,000 to Mexic-Arte for various purposes including salaries, artist fees, residencies, and new murals.
- $40,000 to the Museum of Human Achievement for programming, facilities, and exhibitions for artists to learn creative technology skills.
Visual arts
- $35,000 to the Center for Women & Their Work for series of solo exhibitions for women artists in their early or mid-careers.
- $10,000 to Latinitas for public mosaics honoring Black and Latina community leaders in East Austin.
Music
- $50,000 toConspirare, Inc. for the world premiere of a work for choir and chamber ensemble by composer Derrick Skye.
- $10,000 to African drum ensemble Lannaya for community dance and drumming workshops.
- $10,000 to Rancho Alegre Radio for the Rancho Alegre Conjunto Music Festival.
- $30,000 to Visions In Rhythm (aka Tapestry Dance Company) for the Soul to Sole festival, an event for tap dance.
Theater/comedy
- $10,000 to Texas Comedies for touring musical theater performances highlighting tour stop's histories.
- $25,000 to Zachary Scott Theatre Center for a production of "American Mariachi" by José Cruz González.
“The NEA is proud to continue our nearly 60 years of supporting the efforts of organizations and artists that help to shape our country’s vibrant arts sector and communities of all types across our nation,” said NEA Chair Maria Rosario Jackson, PhD. in a press release. “It is inspiring to see the wide range of creative projects taking place—those that address our past and help us consider our future, integrate arts and culture in new ways into our lives and communities, and provide powerful opportunities for people throughout our nation to come together through a shared arts experience.”
The NEH awarded two grant to recipients in Austin: both are writers affiliated with the University of Texas who are conducting research in order to write books.
It awarded $60,000 to Joshua Frens-String for a project called "Latin America, the United States, and the Roots of a Global Green Revolution, 1880–1980." Frens-String's book will explore "scientific and agricultural exchanges between Chile and the United States during the twentieth century’s Green Revolution."
It also awarded $35,000 to Samuel Graham for "Spectacular Specimens: A Global Study of Cadaverous Rhetorics at Anatomical Museums." Graham's book looks into how medical and anatomical museum curators "educate, entertain, and inspire visitors."
There are plenty of other grants spread across Texas including 20 in Houston, nine in Dallas, seven in San Antonio, and three in Fort Worth, plus others in smaller cities.