Friday, February 21, 2020

NHSCA FY2021 Grant Opportunities & Upcoming Events

Traditional Arts Apprenticeship Grants help communities preserve their cultural heritage through the learning and passing on of traditional arts and folklife – including crafts, music, dance, and foodways - so that future generations can continue to benefit from them. Apprenticeship grants fund a master traditional artist to teach a qualified apprentice in one-to-one sessions over a period of six to ten months. Traditional arts and folklife are passed down from one generation to the next within communities through observation, conversation, imitation and practice. They represent a sense of beauty, skills, knowledge and community values refined over generations and are an important part of our living cultural heritage. Deadline: July 10, 2020

Traditional Arts & Folklife Listing is a directory of traditional artists, community scholars, and folklorists who are available for performances, demonstrations, workshops, and other community-based presentations in New Hampshire. The Heritage & Traditional Arts Program provides this service both as a resource for arts organizations, museums, community groups, schools, and other groups that want to include traditional arts and artists in their programs and for artists who wish to present their traditions in community settings. The Listing provides contact information, areas of specialty, and types of presentations artists can offer. Deadline: Rolling
 
*NEW for FY2021 -  Folklife and Traditional Arts Project Grants (FTAP) support both ongoing and new projects that focus on presenting, cultivating, documenting, and preserving folklife and traditional arts in New Hampshire. The goals of this funding category are to promote a deeper appreciation for and a better understanding of folklife traditions and traditional arts so that they continue to be a meaningful and visible part of our community life, support and nurture traditional artists so that they can continue to preserve these living traditions, and document the variety of folklife traditions and traditional arts so that future generations may continue to benefit from them.  Deadline: July 17, 2020
 
Artist in Residence (AIR) Grants fund artist residencies that bring juried teaching artists into classrooms and public schools to support creative learning and skills development in the arts. AIR grants funded by the State Arts Council are intended to show best practices for this work and can support residencies in a variety of arts disciplines. Deadline: April 3, 2020

Youth Arts Project Grants fund high-quality arts and cultural programs that encourage creativity, develop new arts skills and foster success for young people. Recognizing that opportunities to experience and engage in the arts, such as music, dance, theater, visual arts, crafts, photography and creative writing, may be limited in classrooms, this grant provides funding for artists to work directly with young people. The overall goal of this grant category is to afford all young people opportunities to engage in the arts so that they can develop creative problem solving skills, positive forms of personal expression, and become more engaged in their communities through the arts. Deadline: March 27, 2020

 
*NEW for FY2021Arts for Community Engagement Grants (formerly General Project Grants for Community Engagement) support community enrichment and public benefit by providing access to high quality arts performances, activities, and programs presented by community-based organizations, Main Street programs, and municipalities. This grant category supports a wide range of activities including performances, concerts, exhibits, workshops, community arts programming, and collaborative public art projects that engage the arts and artists for the benefit of New Hampshire residents and communities. Deadline: July 17, 2020


ARTS Conservation License Plate Grants fund projects that conserve publicly owned artworks that contribute to the state's cultural heritage, conserve or maintain artistic elements of publicly owned facilities that serve as sites for arts programming, improve public access to significant artwork or arts documents, and make historic cultural facilities and the arts programming that takes place in them, more accessible to the public.
Letter of Intent Deadline: May 8, 2020
Grant Application Deadline: June 19, 2020
 
 
Arts in Health Project Grants respond to the Arts Council’s recognition that arts and culture facilitate the physical, cognitive, and socio-emotional aspects of individual healing, and that when applied to public health, promote healthy environments and policies in communities by promoting empathy, awareness, and social cohesion through shared narrative and aesthetic experiences.
*New for FY2021 Two tracks are available for this category: Health and Healing and Public Health. Deadline: May 1, 2020
 
*NEW for FY2021 – In order to provide broad and fair distribution of grant funds, organizations and/or schools may RECEIVE ONE grant in the following categories: Artist in Residence Grant (AIR), Arts for Community Engagement Grants, Folklife and Traditional Arts Project Grants, Youth Arts Project Grant (YAP).  Current Public Value Partnership (Operating Grant) recipients are eligible to apply for an Arts in Health grant.
 
*NEW for FY2021 – Up to $7,500 with a 1:1 match for all project grant categories

  
NHSCA Grant Information Workshops 
 
NH State Council on the Arts staff will present Grant Information Workshops to provide an overview of the State Arts Council's programs and the latest information on our grants, including changes to the State Arts Council's grant guidelines for FY2021.  You can review all grant guidelines with deadlines on our website.  
 
Workshops are designed for new and former applicants.  There is no charge to attend.  Registration is required:
 
 
·         Thursday, February 20, 2020, 1:00-2:00 pm, Rochester Performance and Arts Center, 32 North Main Street, Rochester. Register for Rochester
 
·         Tuesday, February 25, 2020, 12:00-1:30 pm, NH Forest & Lands North Country Resource Center, 629B Main Street, Lancaster.  Register for Lancaster
 
·         Wednesday, March 4, 2020, 11:30 am-12:30 pm, The Library Arts Center, 58 North Main Street, Newport.
 
Register for Newport
·         Thursday, March 5, 2020, 1:00-2:00 pm, Currier Museum of Art, 150 Ash Street, Manchester.
 
Register for Manchester
 
 
 
What you will learn:
 
  • Who is eligible to apply
  • What the NHSCA funds
  • What grant programs are available and their deadlines
  • How to use the online grant system
  • The application and panel process
 


 For more information contact our office at (603) 271-2789.

Friday, February 14, 2020

NH Traditional Musicians Jane McBride Orzechowski and Sarah Bauhan perform at Governor and Executive Council Meeting

On Wednesday, February 5, attendees at the Governor & Executive Council Meeting were treated to traditional New England and French Canadian music by NH traditional musicians Jane McBride Orzechowski and Sarah Bauhan. The duo played the following tunes:
 
1. A-Z Waltz/Sarah’s Jig/Janie’s March

2. Evit Gabrielle/Richie Dwyers/Fleur de Mandragore
 

In their first piece, the duo included three tunes composed for them by their mentor and friend Bob "Mac" McQuillen ("A-Z Waltz," "Sarah's Jig," and "Janie's March"). The NH State Council on the Arts assisted in arranging their performance for the Governor and Executive Council Meeting. Please enjoy the following short snippet of their performance! 

 

Video: Jane McBride Orzechowski and Sarah Bauhan playing
A-Z Waltz at the Governor & Executive Council Meeting on
Wednesday, February 5. Video provided by Ginnie Lupi.
 

Bios:

 
Jane McBride Orzechowski is a fiddler of exemplary talent, skilled in Swedish, French Canadian, Irish, Scottish, and New England musical genres and history. Throughout her career, Jane has sought to bring new talent to these traditional music disciplines, supporting and mentoring younger performers in their quest to preserve and expand these musical works and their heritage. She has been playing the fiddle since she was a child and was inspired by attendance at the New England Folk Festival. Jane has been a member of two long-standing groups: Old New England and The Sugar River Band, where she plays with her children.  She has recorded two CDs with the Canterbury Country Dance Orchestra, one with the Sugar River Band and 4 albums with Old New England with Bob McQuillen and Deanna Stiles. In 2019, Jane was awarded the Governor's Arts Award for Folk Heritage.  
 
 
Sarah Bauhan plays Celtic and New England traditional music on flute and whistle. She was born and raised in the Monadnock Region and has strong ties to her mother's native Scotland. Sarah picked up the tin whistle at the age of 10 and within two years was performing at contra dances with Dudley Laufman’s Canterbury Country Dance Orchestra. In addition to Laufman, who is credited with a contra dance revival in southwest New Hampshire and is a 2009 National Heritage Fellow, Sarah was influenced by her godfather, Newt Tolman, a flute player and writer, and by Bob McQuillen, a musician, composer and a 2002 National Heritage Fellow. Sarah has released five solo albums, including four on her own label, Whistler's Music: "Chasing the New Moon," "Broad Waters," "Lathrop's Waltz," and "Elmwood Station." In addition to recording, Sarah performs at festivals, concerts, and dances, and has taught whistle and flute to children and adults at dance camps, in schools, and in workshops. She lives in Hancock.