East Somerville Main Streets and the Somerville Arts Council have
been selected to received $50,000 from the National Endowment for the
Arts (NEA), along with Mudflat Pottery School and the City of
Somerville. That funding through the NEA’s Our Town grant program will
support a project designed to celebrate and preserve the community’s
cultural identity and foster community ownership in two projects in East
Somerville: Chuckie Harris Park and the East Broadway Streetscape
Project.
That project, Somerville’s Storytellers as Placemakers Project, will build off of the successes of previous ESMS and Arts Council events, and will consist of two phases; creating a cultural node around the newly reconstructed Chuckie Harris Park on Cross Street East, and converting the East Broadway Business District into a cultural corridor once the streetscape project is completed in 2014.
A series of workshops will be held where local artists and community partners will collaborate to organize hands-on community events with themes of Culinary Culture, Dance, Music, Oral Storytelling/Literature and Visual Arts. Partners will also capture stories of local residents and business owners, host a storytelling tour, and engage residents in a Storytelling Mural with Mudflat Pottery School. All activities will culminate in a large community festival which will celebrate the rich cultural diversity of the neighborhood, and the vibrant business district, as well as the new infrastructure changes.
The NEA announced last month 59 Our Town grants totaling $4.725 million and reaching 34 states in the Our Town program’s third year of funding.Through Our Town, the NEA supports creative placemaking projects that help transform communities into lively, beautiful, and sustainable places with the arts at their core. The grantee projects will encourage creative activity, create community identity and a sense of place, and help revitalize local economies. All Our Town grant awards were made to partnerships that consisted of at least one nonprofit organization and a local government entity.
The
NEA received 254 applications for Our Town this year. Grant amounts
ranged from $25,000 to $200,000 with a median grant amount of $50,000.
For a complete listing of projects recommended for Our Town grant
support, please visit the NEA website at arts.gov.
That project, Somerville’s Storytellers as Placemakers Project, will build off of the successes of previous ESMS and Arts Council events, and will consist of two phases; creating a cultural node around the newly reconstructed Chuckie Harris Park on Cross Street East, and converting the East Broadway Business District into a cultural corridor once the streetscape project is completed in 2014.
A series of workshops will be held where local artists and community partners will collaborate to organize hands-on community events with themes of Culinary Culture, Dance, Music, Oral Storytelling/Literature and Visual Arts. Partners will also capture stories of local residents and business owners, host a storytelling tour, and engage residents in a Storytelling Mural with Mudflat Pottery School. All activities will culminate in a large community festival which will celebrate the rich cultural diversity of the neighborhood, and the vibrant business district, as well as the new infrastructure changes.
The NEA announced last month 59 Our Town grants totaling $4.725 million and reaching 34 states in the Our Town program’s third year of funding.Through Our Town, the NEA supports creative placemaking projects that help transform communities into lively, beautiful, and sustainable places with the arts at their core. The grantee projects will encourage creative activity, create community identity and a sense of place, and help revitalize local economies. All Our Town grant awards were made to partnerships that consisted of at least one nonprofit organization and a local government entity.
“This
is an exciting time to announce the Our Town grants as a national
conversation around creative placemaking advances and deepens,” said NEA
Acting Chairman Joan Shigekawa. “The NEA leads on this topic not only
through our funding but through webinars, publications, and research.
With these resources, we will help to ensure that the field of creative
placemaking continues to mature, enhancing the quality of life for
communities across the country.”
“We’re
proud that Somerville is receiving national recognition through this
grant for our commitment to the arts, cultural and creativity, and that
we can invest even further in the amazing transformation taking place in
East Somerville,” said Mayor Joseph A. Curtatone. “Even as East
Somerville evolves into a more vibrant and thriving neighborhood, this
funding allows us to preserve the rich cultural history of the
neighborhood, its diversity, and its character. Thanks to organizations
like East Somerville Main Streets, the Somerville Arts Council and
Mudflat Pottery School, fostering community ownership is easy in
Somerville. I’m happy we can partner with these great organizations to
receive this funding and make this project happen.”
No comments:
Post a Comment