Knight Foundation names South Florida Arts Champions and Arts Challenge grant winners

What do a photo book on abandoned cars in the Everglades, a play about Miami’s immigrant hotel workers, an artificial reef designed by artists, and a world-class guitar festival all have in common?

They are some of the winners of this year’s Arts Challenge grants from the John S. and James L. Knight Foundation.

Now in its 11th year, the arts program will provide grants totaling $1.8 million to 44 artists and arts organization across South Florida to bring their ideas to fruition. All grantees must find funds to match the Knight awards.

The Miami-based foundation will announce the winners Monday night during a ceremony at the Pérez Art Museum Miami. Since 2005, the foundation has given $165 million to South Florida artists and arts and cultural groups.

Knight also recognized 21 community leaders as “champions of the arts.” Each champion designated an artist or cultural group of their choice for a $10,000 Knight gift.

Starting last year, the foundation began alternating the popular arts challenge with Knight New Work, an initiative to help underwrite the creation of original works of art. Inaugurated in 2018, the New Work program will return next year.

The arts challenge is an open-call, “no-rules” competition in which artists submit ideas for mostly modest grants. It’s open to residents from Palm Beach to Monroe counties.

This year, Knight administrators noted, the winning proposals ranged broadly across three themes: environmental preservation and sustainability; the experiences of Miami pioneers, immigrants and women; and representations of the region’s diversity.

GRANTEES

The 2019 Arts Challenge grants go to:

Adrienne Arsht Center for the Performing Arts of Miami-Dade County ($30,000)

“Birds of Paradise:” A collaboration with Miami’s Pioneer Winter Collective to create and present the new dance-theater work, “Birds of Paradise,” which will weave a narrative shaped by all ages, ethnicities, abilities and sexual orientation as it challenges traditional views of dance

Adventure Life Productions ($15,000)

Abandoned Vehicles of the Everglades:” A fine art photography book featuring a beautiful and evocative series of nighttime environmental images by Matt Stock and stories by Charles Kropke of vehicles long-abandoned in the Greater Everglades

Arca Images ($50,000)

Hotel Desiderium:” The commissioning and world premiere production of Pulitzer Prize-winning playwright Nilo Cruz’s new work, “Hotel Desiderium,” which explores the role of immigrants in the hospitality industry, with performances in English and translation in Spanish

Barba-Marcotulli ($18,000)

“Kanay:” Live performances and video installations that draw on Pre-Columbian iconography, myths and legends to explore and re-present a decolonized Latinx identity in times of negative portrayal of Latino immigration

Barbara Fernandez and Javier Riera ($28,600)

“A Growing Transparency:” An artistic collaboration that links Javier Riera’s light projections of geometric patterns onto natural landscapes with live performed sound art curated by Barbara Fernandez

Barron Sherer ($50,000)

“Moving Image Alliance:” A community hub for legacy media art, offering resources to contemporary artists to cultivate their personal voices as moving image makers

Bas Fisher Invitational ($100,000)

“Waterproof:” A series of site-specific, temporary public art installations presented around Miami, in collaboration with Bridge Initiative, that illuminate environmental issues impacting South Florida

BlueLab Preservation Society ($85,000)

“The ReefLine Miami Beach:” An underwater sculpture park, composed of a series of artist-designed artificial reefs swimmable from Miami Beach that will illuminate Miami’s intrinsic connection with the marine environment and art

Bolivar Phil ($60,000)

Bolivar Phil orchestral series for Miami: A concert series featuring Latin American repertoire and classic universal works that celebrates Miami’s cultural heritage

Carla Forte ($20,000)

“Femme:” A dance-video art installation focused on and inspired by Latin American women in South Florida who have felt oppressed by their social circumstances

Charo Oquet ($35,000)

“Ecue-Yamba-O:” A multimedia exhibition created by artist Charo Oquet, students and community members of Allapattah that will take place at Edge Zones and explore concepts of Dominican sacred spaces and spiritual encounters using art, fashion and design

Edison Peñafiel ($6,000)

Land Escape Paintings: A collection of large-scale compositions focused on migrants’ physical and emotional struggles through their journeys

EXILE Books ($50,000)

EXILE Four Zine Fête: A quarterly series of thematic zine fairs with workshops, demonstrations, activations and publications that increase the visibility and engagement of artists’ publications throughout South Florida

Florida International University Foundation, Inc. ($70,000)

“Alegría de la guitarra Latina:” A world-class guitar festival, Miami International GuitART Festival, featuring internationally renowned musicians, that showcases Latin American music through concerts, lectures and workshops

Fringe Projects ($100,000)

“Foresight:” A two-year thematic program and biennial-style exhibition of public art interventions and performances that explore the question, “What might a Caribbean future look like?”

FUNDarte, Inc. ($75,000)

Welcome to El Barrio & to the Main Stage: A program that pairs newly-arrived immigrant artists with established local artists and arts organizations to create new works

IlluminArts, Inc. ($45,000)

“Turn of the Screw: A new, site-specific, multimedia community collaboration:” IlluminArts, in conjunction with Nu Deco Ensemble and the National YoungArts Foundation, will present a new production of Benjamin Britten’s chamber opera, “The Turn of the Screw,” inspired by and performed at Vizcaya Museum and Gardens

The Institute of Queer Ecology ($35,000)

The Institute of Queer Ecology: A New Organism for Miami: Contemporary art exhibitions, publications and performances that prompt intergenerational dialogue around biodiversity and environmental degradation from a queer perspective

IS Projects ($15,000)

Existent Books: A semi-annual residency and publishing initiative that brings South Florida-based artists to public-access printmaking studio IS Projects to experience fine art printmaking and create a limited edition artist book in collaboration with a master printer

Katja Esson ($75,000)

“Liberty City VR – From Roosevelt’s New Deal to the Miami Riots:” An immersive virtual reality experience that takes users through the sights, sounds, triumphs and tragedies of Miami’s legendary Liberty City

Kayla Castellon ($6,000)

Show and Talk: An evening of movement-based works-in-progress showings followed by a facilitated feedback discussion engaging audience, performer and choreographer

Lauren Shapiro ($12,500)

Molding the Future: A visual arts program that offers students a dynamic educational pathway to encourage environmental stewardship through ceramic arts, culminating in a site-specific artwork at Fairchild Tropical Botanic Garden

Mark Hedden ($20,000)

“South of Southernmost:” A photo narrative work that explores and tells the story of Ballast Key, an island 8 miles west of Key West and south of the famous Southernmost Point

Miami Jewish Film Festival (25,000)

“Cinema of Forgotten Dreams: Yiddish Cinema Between Two Worlds:”Commissioning local musicians to create original film scores that will be performed live as part of a film series that celebrates Yiddish silent cinema by bringing forgotten films and the culture they depict to new audiences

Miami Light Project, Inc. ($25,000)

ScreenDance Miami Festival: An annual festival including feature-length films, curated collections of short films, media installations, panels and workshops that supports dancers, choreographers and filmmakers who are forging a bold new art discipline, dance on film

Miami Lyric Opera, Inc. ($45,000)

Young Artist Program: Expansion of an acclaimed Young Artist Program at Miami Lyric Opera that cultivates the talent of bright, young artists in South Florida, through additional artists and performance

Michael Marrero ($15,000)

“Orisha: The Lost Saints:” A photo series exploring the disappearing Santeria religion from the Florida Keys through large format portraits of local practitioners recast as the saints they worship

MUCE Educates ($35,000)

MUCE CAMPUS: A collective of multidisciplinary artists housed under one roof who present cultural offerings, exhibits and festivals at the MUCE campus

Museum of Contemporary Art North Miami ($75,000)

Under the Electric Tree: A restoration of Mark Handforth’s public sculpture, Electric Tree, that will transform North Miami’s Griffing Park into a landmark venue with a major public artwork and all-ages programming

NWD Projects ($28,000)

“Endangered Ecological Timescapes:” A physical exploration of age and youth by multi-generational performers through dance and video taken at climate-affected South Florida locations

Patricia & Phillip Frost Art Museum FIU ($48,250)

Place and Purpose: Art Transformation in Coconut Grove: A comprehensive exhibition that reflects Coconut Grove’s visual arts community from 1963-89 and examines the purpose of place by exploring themes and lessons that resonate with Miami’s visual arts scene today

Patsy West (60,000)

“The Mikasuki People: An Exhibition:” A major exhibition at the HistoryMiami Museum presenting a history of the Mikasuki-speaking people from 1540 to today through art and artifacts

Portia Dunkley ($58,000)

Music of the Unsung America: Celebrating African American Composers in the Shadows of History: A two-day concert-lecture series by a choral and orchestra ensemble of musicians of color that highlights the work of African American composers

Radiator Comics LLC ($20,000)

Radiator Comics Studio: A community art center dedicated to supporting local cartoonists, elevating the profiles of comics in South Florida, and educating new and emerging comics-makers in the region through programming, space and publications

Silvia Ros ($18,000)

Concrete.Miami:” Online guide documenting South Florida’s post-war Brutalist concrete architecture, as well as significant contemporary concrete architecture

South Florida Center for Percussive Arts, Inc. (SFCPA) ($50,000)

West Kendall Community Performance Series: The inaugural West Kendall Community Performance Series will engage the public with events by a variety of artists in the comfortable, intimate environment of the SFCPA

Sterling Rook ($15,000)

The Miami Rope Bridges:” A fiber-art installation of a rope bridge made from recycled fabrics in the style of a 500-year-old tradition from indigenous Peruvian rope bridge-builders, created collaboratively through a series of participatory fiber-art workshops and presentations that build community among the creators

Susan Caraballo ($70,000)

#ARTiculatingClimate: Art Actions for Change: A series of art projects, workshops and informational sessions that will enhance Miamians’ understanding of climate change

Sweat Records ($75,000)

Sweat Records: Manifesting Community 15 Years On: An expansion of the record store’s all-ages event programming, an archive of the store’s history, and a block party that engages the community

Tango Out ($20,000)

CONEXION - Miami’s First International Queer Tango Festival: A five-day event, inspired by the International QueerTango Festivals around the globe, featuring social dance, performances and workshops by leading international queer tango artists

Tropic Bound ($50,000)

Tropic Bound: South Florida’s First Fine Art Book Fair: A fine art book fair and symposium celebrating contemporary artists’ books and connecting them to new audiences across South Florida, the Caribbean, Latin America and beyond

University of Miami’s Cuban Heritage Collection ($50,000)

“El efecto Mariel: Before, During, and After (1979-1989):” To commemorate the 40th anniversary of the Mariel Boatlift of 1980, the Cuban Heritage Collection at the University of Miami Libraries is organizing a yearlong series of programs and a major exhibition at the Lowe Art Museum that takes an interdisciplinary approach to re-contextualizing the events that led to that historic moment and its relevance today

Wild Beast Collective ($20,000)

Fågelbo Residency goes International with a Collaboration in Sweden: An international exchange program between South Florida and Halland, Sweden, that links artists from the subtropics and the subarctic

Women Photographers International Archive ($50,000)

Women Photographers International Congress: An inaugural, two-day symposium to convene professionals from around the globe who represent the hidden, modern and contemporary history of women photographers

ARTS CHAMPIONS

Also on Monday, Knight honors the 2019 Knight Arts Champions for their dedication to the local arts scene. The Champions include prominent Miami leaders, as well as emerging voices in the arts. Among them are produce Emilio Estefan; philanthropist Rose Ellen Greene; and Commissioner Co-Founder Dejha Carrington. Each champion was given $10,000 to contribute to a local artist or arts organization of their choice.

The Knight Arts Champions and their grant recipients are:

Aja Monet, poet, educator, organizer: Voices: Poetry for the People

Andrew Martin and Steve Welsh, president and vice president, Miami Stagecraft, Inc.: The GableStage Theatre Company

Arnold Mittelman, president/producing artistic director, National Jewish Theater Foundation: Holocaust Impact Theater

Brook A. Dorsch, founder, Emerson Dorsch: Robert Chambers, artist, and Felecia Chizuko Carlisle, artist

Cathy Leff, acting director, Bakehouse Art Complex: BLCK Family

Dejha Carrington, co-founder, Commissioner; VP of external relations and communications, National YoungArts Foundation: Loni Johnson, visual arts national selection panelist and visual arts co-director, National YoungArts Foundation

Emilio Estefan, producer, director, entrepreneur and author: MISO (Music Autism Project, Miso Children Summer Camp, Miso Children Voices & Ensemble) and South Florida Youth Symphony

Kathryn Mikesell, co-founder and executive director, The Fountainhead Residency and Studios: New World School of the Arts High School Visual Arts Department

María Elena Ortiz, associate curator, Pérez Art Museum Miami (PAMM): The Mujerista

Mario Ernesto Sanchez, producing artistic director, Teatro Avante: Conecta: Miami Arts

Mitchell “Micky” Wolfson, Jr., collector, author, patron, publisher and generator of culture, The Wolfsonian-FIU: Bakehouse Art Complex

New World School of the Arts (Patrice Bailey, dean of theater; Maggy Cuesta, former dean of visual arts; Ron Headrick, music theater faculty; James Samuel Randolph, associate professor in theater division) and Nikisha Williams, chief operations officer, Opa-locka Community Development Corporation (OLCDC): Art Prevails Project

Ray Ellen Yarkin, philanthropist, collector and co-chair, Institute of Contemporary Art Board: Institute of Contemporary Art, Miami

Rose Ellen Greene, philanthropist: New World Symphony College Track Program

Tom Virgin, artist, Extra Virgin Press: Marie Vickles, educator and curator

Tomm El-Saieh, artist: Diego Singh, artist