Processional with Resplendor (Size: 19″ by 7 ft. 2″ by 9 inches) cast bronze with silver crown (installation 2018) photo credit: Peter
Dressler
We are braced for we know not what. The months behind us have been unlike any we have lived through before and those ahead hold new horizons of uncertainty. In this moment, as we wait for the wave to crash, each of us must find our way to tread the dark and thorny path ahead. To be present is, by many accounts, the most important way to live one’s life. And yet perhaps there are times when our best ally is escape. There is little to be done than wait and so escape – whether into the comfort
of art or literature – is indeed a friend in this moment.
Ann McCoy spoke to us from Brooklyn. She was the recipient of a John Simon Guggenheim Fellowship in 2019 and taught at Yale for a decade. Currently she is working on a drawing and a series of projections and says that for the first time she is working on something truly autobiographical. The work is based on a dream
she began having when she was about 5 years old in which her adopted father was a king in an Alice in Wonderland world. He had been killed by the Queen and ground into a powder by the Queen in her recurring dream. As an adult she learned of the dreams of an ancient alchemist who also dreamed of people being ground up. From this she began to discover the meaning behind her own dream. The connection between alchemy and her own father didn’t stop there. To hear more about this and McCoy’s other
work, listen to the complete interview.
Ali LeRoi is a director of film and television. At the moment, the pandemic has put quite a lot of projects on pause though he has recently sold a show to CBS titled Honorable. The show was inspired by the impact of black women in society, including the duty of holding office while simultaneously balancing
a life at home. Aside from this he is in the development process with a handful of other projects/studios. LeRoi’s debut feature film, The Obituary of Tunde Johnson was screened at the Toronto Film Festival and will premier in 2021. LeRoi has five Emmy nominations and one win. He is best known for his work in television on Everybody Hates Chris, Are We There Yet, and Survivor’s Remorse. To hear more from Ali LeRoi on his rich career, the current situation and
how it relates to politics and entertainment, and why black women are an important and chronically overlooked audience, listen to this compelling interview.
|
New Conversations with Fatos Ustek
|
Weekly Grants &
Resources for Artists
Emily Kennerk, installation, 2015
Every week you will find updated resources here to apply for grants, find residencies and more.
|
There is a certain gratitude in knowing that somewhere out there is the opportunity right for you. While you may find your path to this moment scattered with rejection, know that ultimately your efforts will pay off – it is simply a...
|
What better way to celebrate the end of a difficult year than with the gift of opportunity? As the holidays approach, we find ourselves looking at a changed landscape, one where we may not be able to do the things we usually do to mark important...
|
I won’t mince words – it is looking like the winter ahead could be long and dark. As illness continues to spike around the world, we face perhaps another period of much stronger isolation than we have experience in recent months. Do not despair...
|
In today’s opportunity blog, I focus on a single institution with multiple resources. Often museums have outlets for artists to build their knowledge, skills and careers. These can provide more than just enrichment, they are...
|
These are positive and / or negative reviews of galleries, art fairs, consultants, writers, online pay to play offers,
residencies and more – all written by artists so that other artists can beware of situations where institutions treat artists badly, or that end up costing the artist money or are outright scams.
|
|
|