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ST. LOUIS (August 5, 2020) – The Regional Arts Commission of St. Louis (RAC), the area’s largest public funder of the arts, has distributed more than $500,000 to 586 local artists through its Artist Relief Fund. In partnership with the St. Louis Community Foundation, the RAC Artist Relief Fund supported artists whose creative practices and incomes were negatively impacted by the coronavirus crisis and its economic fallout.

Established this spring, RAC delivered critical relief by providing financial support to working artists through multiple rounds of funding. In increments of $500 and $1,000 – the grants helped artists cover life-sustaining expenses such as residential rent, mortgage lease or occupancy payments, residential utility bills, groceries and food, medical expenses not covered by insurance, child-care services, car payments or repair, insurance premium payments, and student loans, expenses or tuition.

“The devastating economic fallout of this pandemic has had a significant impact on working artists,” said Mont Levy, chair of the board of commissioners at RAC. “Because one of RAC’s primary mandates is to support individual artists, we worked quickly to establish an emergency fund in collaboration with the St. Louis Community Foundation to provide artists with valuable resources in this most dire time.”
The fund was designed to support artists whose livelihoods have been disrupted due to cancelled events, programming, contracts, or commissions in all artistic disciplines, including teaching artists who have not been able to teach during this time because of cancelled classes and school closures.

Over 73% of the recipients lost more than 75% of their income due to COVID-19. The funds were distributed to a diverse mix of artists representative of the St. Louis community. The following information is based on survey responses.

  • 36% of funding was distributed to artists who identify as Black/African American/African; 47% White/Caucasian; 12% Asian, Hispanic/Latino, Native American/American Indian/Alaskan Native, Pacific Islander/Native Hawaiian or of two or more races; and 5% preferred not to answer
  • 43% of funding was distributed to artists who identify as female; 53% male; 2% non-binary; and 2% preferred not to answer

A major fundraising success for the relief fund came in the form of the “Arts United STL” benefit concert, which included 16 arts organizations coming together for a free virtual event produced by Opera Theatre St. Louis, under the direction of St. Louis Shakespeare Festival. The virtual benefit exceeded its set goal of $250,000, bringing in more than $350,000 to RAC’s Artist Relief Fund, including gifts and commitments made during and after the May 31 broadcast.

“During ‘Arts United STL,’ the St. Louis community truly showed the compassion that this industry so desperately needs right now,” said Andrea Purnell, RAC Commissioner and host of the “Arts United STL” broadcast. “We’re thrilled to have been able to raise so much in such a short amount of time, and it’s all thanks to the St. Louisans who responded with vital support for artists across our region.”

To learn more about RAC’s response to COVID-19 and its effects on St. Louis artists and arts organizations, visit racstl.org/covid19.

Regional Arts Commission of St. Louis Announces

5th Annual ARTIST FELLOWSHIPS

10 ARTISTS – $200,000 INVESTMENT

The Regional Arts Commission of St. Louis (RAC) has awarded fellowships at $20,000 each to ten local artists totaling $200,000 as part of its annual round of Artist Fellowships. This is the fifth year that RAC has offered the Artist Fellowships.

The Artist Fellowships will allow for the development of the individual artist’s career, providing the necessary time and space to study, reflect, experiment, explore and create. These awards are not grants in the traditional sense but “fellowships” in terms of a financial endowment or investment in the careers of St. Louis artists. The RAC Artist Fellowship program is among the few multi-disciplinary fellowship programs of its kind in the United States.

The Artists Count survey conducted in 2012 by RAC and funded by the Kresge Foundation determined that one of the most pressing needs for regional artists is to receive financial support in order to pursue their art form and further their artistic careers. This finding supports RAC’s commitment to providing a financial investment in the form of artist fellowships and artist support grants that are awarded annually to St. Louis area artists.

The recipients, representing the disciplines of visual arts, theater, music, literature, craft, media arts, and design were selected from among 176 applicants after being reviewed by 26 expert readers, a community advisory committee, and RAC Commissioners.

The 10 RAC Artist Fellowship Recipients
Ellie Balk – Visual
Lamar Harris – Music
James Ibur – Craft and Traditional
Kahlil Irving – Craft and Traditional
Edward McPherson – Literature
De Nichols – Design
Kim Portnoy – Music
Justin Reed – Literature
Jacqueline Thompson – Theatre
Brett Williams – Media

If you have any questions about the Artist Fellowships, please contact James F. Anderson, Director of Grants at james@racstl.org or 314-863-5811.

About the Regional Arts Commission www.racstl.org
 The Regional Arts Commission (RAC) is at the forefront of efforts to transform St. Louis into a more vibrant, creative and economically thriving community by elevating the vitality, value and visibility of the arts. It is the largest annual funder of the arts in the region, and since its inception in 1985, RAC has awarded more than 7,000 grants totaling over $100 million to support nonprofit arts, individual artists, cultural organizations, consortiums and programs. Directed by a board of 15 commissioners appointed by the chief executives of St. Louis City and St. Louis County, RAC is a pivotal force in the continuing development and marketing of the arts in the region. Visit www.racstl.org for more information, or follow us on Facebook at Regional Arts Commission or Twitter @RACStLouis.

ARTrepreneurs: Designing Bridges for Creative Innovation
Artists Working at the Crossroads of Creativity, Science and Business

Public Showcase January 12, 2018

The 2017-2018 cohort of Artists at CIC@CET proudly announce its public showcase to take place on Friday, January 12, 2018 at 5:00pm at CIC St. Louis, 4240 Duncan Avenue at Cortex.

Since 2016, the Regional Arts Commission of St. Louis (RAC) has partnered with the Center for Emerging Technologies (CET) and CIC St. Louis (CIC@CET) on a pilot project to provide two cohorts of St. Louis artists with a unique professional development experience to gain access to a community of inventive people at the epicenter of entrepreneurship. This pilot opportunity is presented as an extension of RAC’s commitment to support the careers of artists in the St. Louis region.

The 2017-2018 Artists at CIC@CET cohort has leveraged the intersection of art, science, technology, and innovation to support their careers and identify creatively stimulating ways to interact and collaborate with the local movement of big thinkers and risk-takers working outside of the field of traditional arts and in the world of start-ups.

The 2017-18 Artists at CIC@CET cohort includes the following participants:

  • Bianca Fitzpatrick, Singer/Songwriter and Fashion Enthusiast
  • Gina Grafos, Visual Artist
  • Tim Hykes, User Experience Designer
  • Lindsay Obermeyer, Artist and Creative Entrepreneur
  • Neko Pilarcik-Tellez, Animator
  • Kevin Street, Dancer and Musician

 ARTrepreneurs: Designing Bridges for Creative Innovation – Public Showcase EventThe 2017-18 Artists at CIC@CET experience will culminate in an interactive showcase event featuring examples of the artists’ work, live entertainment, and a panel discussion with the artists about their work. The event is open to the public and light refreshments will be served.

Event Information:

  • When: 5:00pm on Friday January 12, 2018
  • Where: The Havana Room at CIC St. Louis, 4240 Duncan Ave. St. Louis, MO 63110
  • What: Demos of artists’ work, live entertainment, panel discussion, light refreshments

 About the Regional Arts Commission of St. Louis
The Regional Arts Commission (RAC) is at the forefront of efforts to transform St. Louis into a more vibrant, creative and economically thriving community by elevating the vitality, value and visibility of the arts. It is the largest annual funder of the arts in the region, and since its inception in 1985, RAC has awarded more than 7,000 grants totaling over $100 million to support nonprofit arts, individual artists, cultural organizations, consortiums and programs. Directed by a board of 15 commissioners appointed by the chief executives of St. Louis City and St. Louis County, RAC is a pivotal force in the continuing development and marketing of the arts in the region. Visit www.racstl.org for more information, or follow us on Facebook at Regional Arts Commission or Twitter @RACStLouis.

About CIC St. Louis
CIC is creates globally connected networks of coworking communities to allow entrepreneurs and innovators access to the facilities, services providers and amenities they need to be successful. CIC works to ensure their dedicated workspaces fit ever-changing needs of single person companies, growing startups and innovative arms of larger corporations. CIC’s mission is to change the world through innovation by developing ecosystems that allow exceptional entrepreneurs to innovate better and faster. They do this by actively building innovation communities in the centers of future-focused cities. In St. Louis CIC currently operates communities @4240 Duncan and CIC@CET which provides programing for early stage entrepreneurs. In May 2018, CIC3@4260 Duncan will open as a third location in the St. Louis innovation ecosystem. Today CIC houses communities of hundreds of startups and innovative companies around the world. Our locations include Boston and Cambridge, Massachusetts; St. Louis, Missouri; Miami, Florida; and Rotterdam, Netherlands.  Philadelphia, PA and Providence, RI will open in the coming year. For more information contact Kim Plank, General Manager at:  plank@cic.us.

About the Center for Emerging Technology
Founded in 1998, the Center for Emerging Technologies (CET) is the largest and oldest Innovation Center in Missouri. CET is nationally recognized for providing the infrastructure and resources needed for early-stage, high-growth companies in the fields of information technology, bioscience and manufactured products to innovate and thrive. CET’s signature programs include the Square One (SQ1) Ignite and Boot Camp training programs, workshops and seminars, and other educational programming, often done in partnership with other ecosystem partners. CET is supported by the Missouri Technology Corporation and U.S. Small Business Administration as part of the SBA Regional Innovation Clusters Program. CET is an affiliate of the Cortex Innovation Community since 2012, and is an important program role in the Cortex district and broader St. Louis region. Visit www.cetstl.com for more information or contact Rikki M. Henry Program Manager at rhenry@cortexstl.com.

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 ST. LOUIS (September 14, 2017) – The Regional Arts Commission of St. Louis (RAC) presents Evocation, an interactive exhibition to remember, imagine and inspire a better St. Louis. Featuring a host of local artists, the exhibition is a component of RAC’s cultural planning initiative, EVOKE , which invites the community to engage in dialogue about the value of creativity in their lives and its relevance to issues that make St. Louis a better place to live.

EXHIBIT NAME:                Evocation

FEATURING:       Dr. Amber Johnson, Erin McGrath Rieke, S. Jewell S. McGhee, Select Maps from the St. Louis Map Room

CURATOR:          The Regional Arts Commission of St. Louis

DATES:                Opening Reception: Friday, September 15th, 6:00 – 8:00pm

EVENTS:              Friday, October 6th, 6:00 – 8:00pm
                             Friday, October 13th, 6:00 – 8:00pm
                             Friday, October 20th, 6:00 – 8:00pm
                             Friday, October 27th, 6:00 – 8:00pm
                             Thursday, November 2nd, 6:00 – 8:00pm

 All events are free and open to the public.

Evocation continues through November 2nd.

GALLERY HOURS:             Monday – Friday               10am to 5pm;
                                            Saturday & Sunday          12pm to 5pm.

LOCATION:         The Gallery at the Regional Arts Commission (RAC)
6128 Delmar Blvd. 63112 (across from The Pageant)
Free parking behind The Pageant or metered street parking

EXHIBIT DESCRIPTION:
An interactive exhibition that asks viewers to join us in remembering and imagining a better St. Louis.
This exhibition is a part of Evoke (https://evoke.racstl.org/), a larger cultural planning initiative which invites the region’s residents to engage in dialogue about the value of creativity in their lives and its relevance to issues that make St. Louis a better place to live.

The planning process is guided by a five-member Planning Committee of Commissioners appointed by the Mayor of St Louis and County Executive, and an advisory group of 20+ civic, cultural and community leaders who represent multiple sectors — business, education, arts and culture, philanthropy and other areas of our community.

The goal is to reflect the deep diversity of the St Louis region in a process that will range from large town hall meetings, surveys, roundtable discussions and individual interviews, to quiet chats over coffee, and will invite people to share what keeps St Louis stuck, what makes it dynamic, and how the arts can make our region more creative, cohesive and civically engaged.

This initiative to plan for the cultural future of St. Louis is finally here, it’s happening, and needs everyone’s participation. Be a part of EVOKE St. Louis, and let your voice be heard.

Evocation is open to the public for viewing through Thursday, August 24.

About the Justice Fleet
The Justice Fleet, the work of Dr. Amber Johnson, is a mobile network of experiences that foster community healing through art, play, and dialogue. Housed inside of box trucks, each mobile exhibit ventures into various neighborhoods to engage community members in discussions about implicit and explicit bias, social justice, and empathy. The first exhibit in production engages community members in a dialogue about Radical Forgiveness—the profound notion that we don’t have to live with fear, pain, hostility, or injustice because we have control over the way we perceive, understand, and act. Radical Forgiveness is a fluid and deliberate process that allows us to heal the wounds from injustice. Additional exhibits include Radical ImaginationBlack Girl Magic, and Transfuturism.

About Divinemoira Studios
Divinemoira Studio was founded by Erin McGrath Rieke in 2010, to utilize the unique power of the expressive arts to better communities around the world. As an organization founded on the social business model, Divinemoira Studio curates works of art and design in digital formats, interactive and experiential installations, gallery exhibitions, as well as produces non-profit events and public speaking engagements. Divinemoira Studio represents and cultivates the careers of local, national, and international artists that share the studio’s mission of: “Art. Inspiration. Hope.” The love art. The passion to inspire. The purpose to provide hope. The ever-growing collaborative group of artists come together and share their work with a portion of all proceed benefitting the communities they live within. Divinemoira Studio seeks to inspire others to find their own artistic souls: to “Be Inspired.”

About the St. Louis Map Room
The NYC-based Office for Creative Research, in collaboration with COCA, took over the gymnasium in the now closed Stevens School from March 3–April 9, 2017 to create The St. Louis Map Room: a community space for exploring and creating original, interpretive maps of the city. These maps are currently on display throughout the community.
Free and open to the public, visitors were invited to explore present and historic civic data using maps as instruments. Interactive projections allowed viewers to overlay these community maps with census data, historic city-planning maps, live policing data, and more, to understand how the community has been shaped by acts of mapping.

The St. Louis Map Room was a collaborative project between The Office of Creative Research and COCA in partnership with the St. Louis Public Schools, and with generous support from the Regional Arts Commission, PNC Arts Alive, and the Missouri Humanities Council.

About the Regional Arts Commission www.racstl.org
The Regional Arts Commission (RAC) is at the forefront of efforts to transform St. Louis into a more vibrant, creative and economically thriving community by elevating the vitality, value and visibility of the arts. It is the largest annual funder of the arts in the region, and since its inception in 1985, RAC has awarded more than 7,000 grants totaling over $100 million to support nonprofit arts, individual artists, cultural organizations, consortiums and programs. Directed by a board of 15 commissioners appointed by the chief executives of St. Louis City and St. Louis County, RAC is a pivotal force in the continuing development and marketing of the arts in the region. Visit www.racstl.org for more information, or follow us on Facebook at Regional Arts Commission or Twitter @RACStLouis.

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The Regional Arts Commission of St. Louis (RAC) presents The Importance of Texture and Delicacy, an exploration of the concepts of emotional fragility and “Existence as Resistance” in Black Culture.

Through art and culture, we can physicalize the fragility and essence of Blackness. Each artist in this exhibition will use their own craft of sculpture, photography, archival work, or quilting to form a discussion around the body, the style, and the historical trauma/joy of the present and the past.
 
EXHIBIT NAME:     The Importance of Texture and Delicacy

FEATURING:         Katherine Simóne Reynolds, Lola Ogbara, Eugenia Alexander and Jen Everett

CURATOR:            Katherine Simóne Reynolds

DATES:                  Opening Reception: Friday, June 23rd, 6:00 – 8:00pm
                               Panel Discussion: Friday, August 4th, 6:00 – 8:00pm
                               Closing Reception: Thursday, August 24th, 6:00 – 8:00pm
All events are free and open to the public.

The Importance of Texture and Delicacy continues through August 24th.

GALLERY HOURS:              Monday – Friday               10am to 5pm;
                                             Saturday & Sunday          12pm to 5pm.

LOCATION:         The Gallery at the Regional Arts Commission (RAC)
6128 Delmar Blvd. 63112 (across from The Pageant)
Free parking behind The Pageant or metered street parking

The Gallery at RAC Presents
The Importance of Texture and Delicacy

EXHIBIT DESCRIPTION:
Through art and culture, we can physicalize the fragility and essence of Blackness.
The impact of the emotional fragility of Black culture comes with a political statement in tow, whether the statement is meant to be said or not. “Existence as Resistance” comes to mind automatically, but within this delicate political air, there is more depth, layers, and texture that haven’t been fully actualized but derive first from an innate feeling.

Each artist explores the two concepts through their own craft of sculpture, photography, archival work, and quilting to form a discussion around, the body, the style, and the historical trauma/joy of the present and the past.

“The Black Arts and Black Power concept both relate broadly to the Afro-American’s desire for self- determination and nationhood. Both Concepts are nationalistic. One is concerned with the relationship between art and politics; the other with the art of politics.“ –Larry Neal

The Importance of Texture and Delicacy is open to the public for viewing through Thursday, August 24.

About the Curator
Katherine Simóne Reynolds is in her feelings, and will probably remain sitting there. At the moment, she is based out of Saint Louis, MO creating conceptual portrait and architectural photography. From receiving her B.A in Dance from Webster University, movement comes second nature and is thoroughly integrated into her practice. Her recent work is made to be literal, authentic, and emotional.

Katherine has exhibited work within many spaces and institutions around Saint Louis, including the Pulitzer Arts Foundation, Fort Gondo Compound for the Arts, and The Luminary. Internationally she was hired to work for ImPulsTanz, the largest contemporary dance festival in Europe, as the event photographer where she worked on photographic and performance projects within the MUMOK, the Weltmuseum, and many other unique venues around Vienna, Austria.

This year she completed her first residency in Berlin, Germany where she exhibited her work twice at Takt Kunsterprojectum; bringing together her two loves, architectural photography and authentic movement from the subject being photographed. For the future, she will be working on expanding her practice into more sculptural and performance works dealing in social practice.

About the Regional Arts Commission www.racstl.org
The Regional Arts Commission (RAC) is at the forefront of efforts to transform St. Louis into a more vibrant, creative and economically thriving community by elevating the vitality, value and visibility of the arts. It is the largest annual funder of the arts in the region, and since its inception in 1985, RAC has awarded more than 7,000 grants totaling over $100 million to support nonprofit arts, individual artists, cultural organizations, consortiums and programs. Directed by a board of 15 commissioners appointed by the chief executives of St. Louis City and St. Louis County, RAC is a pivotal force in the continuing development and marketing of the arts in the region. Visit www.racstl.org for more information, or follow us on Facebook at Regional Arts Commission or Twitter @RACStLouis.