Black Lives Matter Artist Grant

WINNERS ANNOUNCED: Black Lives Matter Artist Grant Program

The Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art WSU, in a partnership with the Jordan Schnitzer Family Foundation, announced the grant recipients for the Black Lives Matter Artist Grants on December 3, 2020. Winning artists will each receive $2,500 to fund the creation of art in response to the Black Lives Matter movement and systemic racism. Works from each of the artists are scheduled to be exhibited at the Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art WSU beginning in the fall semester of 2021.

“I want to thank the 70+ artists who submitted their applications to the WSU JSMA Black Lives Matter Artist Grant. To the 20 Washington winners, ‘congratulations’! We look forward to exhibitions of your submissions in the near future!  Now more than ever, our community needs artists to help us understand the issues of racism and white privilege. I am confident that the art created from this grant program will lead to better understanding and change in our community.”
-Jordan D. Schnitzer

2020 | Artist Profiles, Winners Black Lives Matter Artist Grant

To learn more about each of the 20 artists awarded grants, please click the link above.


 

Links

‘Artists have always been chronicles of our time’: WSU’s Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art debuts Black Lives Matter Artist Grant exhibit

Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art announces Black Lives Matter Artist Grant winners

Grants for Washington artists responding to the Black Lives Matter movement made available by Jordan Schnitzer

WSU Museum of Art awards $2,500 to 20 Washington artists

SUBMISSION WINDOW CLOSED: Black Lives Matter Artist Grant Program at the Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art WSU

FAQs

Please take time to read the FAQs. This document has been compiled to help you with any questions you may have about the grant, including contact information. Download the frequently asked questions JSFF – JSMA Black Lives Matter Grant Program – FAQ Sheet – 2020 – v2

Eligibility

Artists 18 years and older, residing throughout the state of Washington are encouraged to submit proposals for new work or projects, or recently created work directly responding to: the current Black Lives Matter movement; marginalized communities; experiences with systemic racism and inequality; and artists whose work thematically connects to these experiences. Visual artists working in the mediums below are invited to apply.

Submission Process

We accept VISUAL ARTWORKS IN THE FOLLOWING MEDIUMS: Ceramics, drawing, painting, sculpture, printmaking, design, crafts, photography, video, and film making. These works may also incorporate aspects of performing arts, conceptual art, and textile arts and design. There is no size limitation, however, the selection committee will evaluate proposed artworks and projects against a range of criteria including gallery space considerations.

To submit: click on the SUBMISSION LINK HERE and create an account with submittable.com, by entering a user name and password for their site. Then, scroll down, and fill in the submission form at the bottom of the page. You will be asked for contact information, your artistic accomplishments, your connection to the BLM movement, high-resolution images of your past artwork (or) concept sketches of your proposed artwork, links to video files, your curriculum vitae or resume as an artist, and any social media accounts highlighting your artwork. Attach the type of artwork that applies to your situation. For example: If you are a visual artist, attach digital images. If you are an animator, attach video links, etc. If you do not have a curriculum vitae, please attach a resume relating to your artistic career. Interested artists should submit no later than October 31, 2020.

Notification

Grantees will be notified by November 30.

Contact

Please contact Caitlin Pihl, Marketing Director, Jordan Schnitzer Family Foundation, with any questions regarding applications or submissions for all universities at caitlinp@jordanschnitzer.org

Jury

The jury reviewing the artist submissions includes: Ryan Hardesty, Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art WSU; Io Palmer, Department of Fine Arts WSU; Lisa Guerrero, School of Languages, Cultures, and Race WSU; Trymaine Gaither, Honors College WSU; and Mikayla Makle, Black Student Union WSU. You can click on this link to learn more about each of our partners.

About the Grant

Washington artists 18 and older will have the opportunity to share their creative visions in response to the Black Lives Matter movement with help from a new grant program established by Jordan Schnitzer in partnership with Washington State University’s Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art. This statewide effort is part of a new $150,000 program funded by The Harold & Arlene Schnitzer CARE Foundation and Jordan Schnitzer, and facilitated through Jordan Schnitzer Museums of Art to promote greater understanding and healing.

The JSMA WSU Black Lives Matter Artist Grant Program will distribute $2,500 grants to 20 artists across the state of Washington who will be asked to use their voices, experiences, and artistic expression to reflect on social justice efforts in response to systemic racism.

“I have often said artists are chroniclers of our time. We all feel anguish about the death of George Floyd and many others at the hands of racial oppression,” said Jordan Schnitzer, president of The Harold & Arlene Schnitzer CARE Foundation and the Jordan Schnitzer Family Foundation. “We, more than ever, need artists to help us understand this issue and help us heal.”

The call for grant applications from Washington artists is part of a broader effort funded by Schnitzer that includes similar grant opportunities for Oregon artists as well. The Oregon program is being administered through Jordan Schnitzer Museums of Art at University of Oregon and at Portland State University. A combined total of 60 grants will be issued across both states.

In Washington, the Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art at Washington State University will work in partnership with the Black Student Union; the Department of Fine Arts; the School of Languages, Cultures, and Race; and the Honors College to determine grant recipients.

“We are committed to fostering greater equity, inclusion, and diversity in all our work, recognizing museums must do more as true allies in places of education, learning and community-building,” said Ryan Hardesty, interim executive director at the museum. “Coupled with progressive programming, art and artists act as powerful agents of social change moving people to new understandings of diverse perspectives.”

About the Jordan Schnitzer Family Foundation

The Jordan Schnitzer Family Foundation’s mission is to share the extensive post-war prints and multiples in the collections with qualified museum through exhibitions and loans in order to further the appreciation of and education associated with the printmaking practice of the major artists of the late 20th and 21st century. Jordan D. Schnitzer grew up surrounded by art in his mother’s Portland, Oregon art gallery. What began as an interest in his formative years became a passion in 1988 when he began collecting post-war prints and multiples in earnest. Attracted by the collaborative and egalitarian nature of printmaking, Jordan naturally developed a program to share the work from his personal and Family Foundation collections in 1997. The collection, which has grown to be one of the country’s largest private print collections, exceeds 16,000 works and includes many of today’s most important contemporary artists.

Exhibitions from Jordan D. Schnitzer and the Jordan Schnitzer Family Foundation collections featuring artists of color include: Mirror, Mirror: The Prints of Alison Saar; Emancipating The Past: Kara Walker’s Tales of Slavery and Power; Beyond Mammy, Jezebel & Sapphire: Reclaiming Images of Black Women; Second Look, Twice; Social Space; and Witness: Themes of Social Justice in Contemporary Printmaking and Photography.

He generously lends work from his collection to qualified institutions and has organized over 110 exhibitions and has had art exhibited at over 150 museums. The Foundation publishes scholarly brochures, exhibition catalogs, and catalogue raisonnés in conjunction with exhibitions drawn from the collections. It also funds museum outreach and programming that furthers the mission of promoting education and engaging non-traditional audiences.

About the JSMA WSU

The Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art at Washington State University’s exhibition history includes preeminent national and international artists. Our audiences are connected intimately to the best in life-enriching, forward-thinking art. Since 2018, exhibited artists have included Jeffry Mitchell, Marie Watt, Kate Gilmore, Mark Bradford, Wangechi Mutu, Louise Bourgeois, Kyle Abraham, Chiho Aoshima, and Polly Apfelbaum. In tandem to the museum’s exhibition program is the Collection Study Center. The CSC is a repository of carefully selected artworks and documents, preserved and made accessible; a historical record of visual culture; but most importantly, a tool toward learning and deepened experience.

The museum was established in 1974 and reopened in 2018 as the new Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art at Washington State University. Uniquely positioned to transform arts access across the entire Pacific Northwest and beyond, the museum harnesses the combined power and commitment of the WSU multi-campus system and the Schnitzer Constellation of university art museums and collection centers to fulfill the educational mission of WSU in teaching, research, and service.

VIDEOS

Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art WSU Press Conference, August 4, 2020

KGW-TV Portland, Jordan Schnitzer establishes Black Lives Matter artist grant program at PSU

KOIN-06, Grant program backing BLM now open to artists

NEWS

WSU’s Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art announces Black Lives Matter Grant Program

$50,000 in Grants For Washington Artists Responding to Black Lives Matter Movement Made Available By Jordan Schnitzer

Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art Black Lives Matter Artist Grant Program Harsch

Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art Black Lives Matter Artist Grant Program JSFF

Jordan Schnitzer Will Give Away $150,000 to Artists as Part of a Newly Announced Black Lives Matter Grant Program

Grants offered to Oregon artists responding to Black Lives Matter

Portland Tribune: Schnitzer museums to host social justice artists

University of Oregon Press Conference