| | | | The Cultural Alliance of Fairfield County is a nonprofit membership service organization that supports its members through unified marketing, capacity building, professional development, and advocacy services. This newsletter is sent to all who request it, but we ask that, if you are not a member, you explore membership benefits and consider joining. See member benefits here. Join here.. |
| All links in green connect to information on our website See previous issues of Artists Newsletter here. |
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| MAKE IT A PARTY! JOIN US SATURDAY, OCTOBER 3 FOR THE SONO ART CARES LIVE VIRTUAL AUCTION WITH PAT TULLY |
| | Go here to find out more and then to go to the live auction on Saturday:
Go here to bid in the silent auction now through Sat at noon: |
| | | | EDDE LOEBER
Eddie Loeber is a Multimedia artist and illustrator based in Weston. As a child, he says he grew up attuned to shape, to form and to the vibrations of energy around him. He moved around as a kid from Hollywood, to Boston and then the New York where he studied and graduated from several renowned Art Institutes. He worked as a digital graphic artist for Lincoln Center, responsible for creating promotional pieces for all of their shows throughout the Center’s theaters. His freelance work can be seen on cd covers for pop bands, PR firms, such as Mouth : Digital + Public Relations in New York, promotional pieces for Starbucks; and commissioned work for many, including SiriusXM Stars radio host, Deborah Graham. He says that in his work, light, form and space peacefully coexist within the delineation of abstract time - where the journey never ends. Website and Instagram. |
| | SARAH STINSON-HURWITZ
Sarah Owen Stinson-Hurwitz, or SOSH for short, is a Norwalk-based artist, passionate about engaging in the local arts community through participatory projects, festivals and murals. Her subjects range from the human figure to dreamlike landscapes and quiet snapshots of daily life. Key in her painting practice is to allow a relationship with each piece to emerge intuitively, "keeping in mind that painting provides the unique opportunity to pull magic out of the quotidian." Sarah graduated from Carnegie Mellon University in 2018 with an interdisciplinary bachelors in Art and Gender Studies with honors. While at school, she received various grants for her vulnerable portraiture and interactive Dinner Party series. Since then her work has been included in multiple solo and group exhibitions in Connecticut, Pittsburgh, New York, Miami and Charleston. She was recently selected as oe the 10 artists to participate in the Sono Collection's #SoNoArtCares project and her piece "Sundown in July" is in our silent auction and may well make it to the live auction Saturday! See her website and Instagram page. |
| | FRANKIE VINCI
Frankie Leonardo Vinci (just call him Frankie) is drenched in the music, fashion, film and vintage billboards that inspire his Pop Art. The multi-layered backstage passes, concert posters covering the dark alleys and backstage walls in Rock clubs like CBGB’s, all add fire to his creativity. He sees the beauty in subway graffiti, random paint drips, metal rust, torn paper, combined with detailed painting and carefully composed layouts. But Frankie is also a multi-platinum songwriter/recording artist who has shared the stage and worked alongside Aerosmith, Van Halen, Alice Cooper, Meat Loaf, Lynyrd Skynyrd, Tim McGraw, Roberta Flack, Dino Danelli & Gene Cornish (Rascals), Wally Bryson (Raspberries), Ricky Byrd (Joan Jett, Roger Daltrey), Robert Lamm (Chicago), Phil Ramone, and more. He's also had a successful career as a composer/producer for New York NYC advertising companies, composing/producing national jingles for some of the biggest brand names internationally (including composing The Super Bowl Theme for CBS, that has aired on the "NFL Game of the week" for 10 years). See Frankie's website, Facebook and Instagram pages. |
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❦ – Latest List by Town of Organization and Creative Business Members: here❦ – Latest List by Town of Artist Members: here |
| | | | | | A pop-up exhibition 2020: People Politics, Planet showcases area artists’ work that responds to today’s controversial topics. Cultural Alliance artists represented in the gallery: Alicia Cobb, Barbara Ringer, Darcy Hicks, Eric Chiang, Guy Sealey, Holly Hawthorn, Jahmane, Jana Ireijo, Julie Hicks, Kerry Long, Liz Squillace, Louise Cadoux, Margaret Esme Simon, Steven Parton, Susan Fehlinger, Trace Burroughs. These artists are in the online show: Amy Oestreicher, Barbara Ringer, Diane Pollack, Ellen Gordon, Eugenie Diserio, Fruma Markowitz, Gregg Ziebell, Holly Hawthorn, Joanie Landau, Lisa Silberman, Liz Leggett, Liz Squillace, Louise Cadoux, Margaret Esme Simon, Miggs Burroughs, Ruth Kalla Ungerer, Steven Parton, Susan Fehlinger, Suzanne Benton, Toby Michaels, Trace Burroughs |
| | The Stamford Art Association has presented the Faber Birren Color Award Exhibit at its Townhouse Gallery, 39 Franklin Street, Stamford CT since 1980. The exhibit honors Faber Birren, world renowned color theorist and former Stamford, CT resident. He wrote extensively on color and published 40 books and over 250 articles on the subject. Accepted artists for the 40th Annual Faber Birren National Color Award Show include CAFC members: Nancy Breakstone, “Lit Up;” Heidi Lewis Coleman, “Azalea;” Joseph Dermody, “Cirriform Calda;” Heide Follin; “Instar” Mike Harris, “Eyes on the Street;” Melissa Orme, “Rejoice;” and Judy Peknik, “Golden Galaxy." |
| | | | Afsaneh Djabbari-Aslani is exhibiting her work, "Le Jardin #3" (30" x 40") at the Carriage Barn Arts Center Member Show through Oct. 11. She is also exhibiting at the Bring Another Friend Exhibition at Loft Artists Association with Eugenie Diserio, on view virtually through Nov. 1. Her painting, "Never Ends - East" (24" x 30") has been selected for the 2020 Political Discord Exhibit at the Las Laguna Gallery in Laguna Beach, CA , opening Oct. 1. |
| | Abstract artist Alder Crocker is now showing a wide range of his paintings, including his entirely new style, "Symbolic Storytelling Inspired by Chaos Theory," at the Bruxelles Brasserie in Sono, through the end of October and possibly beyond. The exhibit has been staged in the grand dining room. You can also see Alder's work here... |
| | | | Trace Burroughs has won the Conan O'Brien Shows Snicker's animation contest! Two other animations were broadcast on the show as part of Conan's DIY special on TBS Sept. 21. For the DIY (Do It Yourself) show, viewers had to recreate clips from past shows and be creative. This is the link to the winning video. Trace is a professional animator whose clients include Harvey Pekar, Howard Stern, Rita Rudner, Margaret Cho, the Yankees, and had a series developed on HBO. His work has appeared on television and in film. |
| | Nancy Breakstone's photograph “Lit Up” (digital 30” x 20”) received the PMW Gallery Award in memory of Patsy Murphey Whitman and Diane Etienne Faxon at the 40th Annual Faber Birren National Color Award Show at the Stamford Art Association. The exhibit is online from Sept. 22-Oct. 24. She also had her photographs juried into the Hawaii Island Art Alliance's Abstract Only! 10th Anniversary Exhibition at Wailoa Center in Hilo, Oct. 2-Oct. 29 and the Greenwich Art Society’s 103rd Annual Open Juried Bendheim Exhibit, Sept. 30-Oct. 24. Her photograph “Enough!” is also being shown in the Maritime Garage Gallery VOICE Virtual Online Show, Sept. 9-Nov. 3. |
| | Ann Chernow's piece, "Remember," (Aquatint and Etching, 8 x 10”, has been added to the permenent collection at the Museum of Prints and Printmaking located in Schenectady, N.Y. Her print, along with 99 others, is included in the current exhibition, Selections from the Permanent Collection. |
| | Bridgeport is home to an eclectic mix of artists and performers. Take a front-row seat to artistic expression as Ray Hardman of CPTV, tours Bridgeport artists, cultural groups and arts-related businesses, including weaver Ruben Marroquin, body painter and fine artist Alicia Cobb and Grammy Award-winning record producer Peter Katis. Part of CPTV's Where ART Thou new series. See the Bridgeport Episode |
| | Holly Danger's video installation “Let in, Let go”, has gone international and is now being shown at the K Museum of Contemporary Art in Seoul, South Korea. The piece is a three-walled audiovisual projection mapped room installation. A sanctuary space, filled with dreamy mesmerizing video collages, inspired by colors, forms, and patterns, found in nature and reconfigured digitally. It first debuted at Danger Gallery in Stamford, Satellite Art Show in Miami, and ILLUMINUS in Boston in 2019. |
| | | | Jennifer Mone Hill's piece "Breath" (Acrylic on Canvas, 40" x 16") is on view at the Greenwich Art Society 103rd Annual Open Juried Show. Sept. 30-Oct. 24. "Breath is a reminder to myself, and all of us, to take a moment and take a deep breath. Let it out. You’ll feel better," notes Jennifer. Close up details can be seen in this video. |
| | JAHMANE's commission, the Space Particle Hoop Court mural, was painted last week on the surface Ryan Park basketball court in South Norwalk. The mural was part of a roughly $1.1 million effort to rehabilitate the park as part of the federal Choice Neighborhood Initiative grant. Jahmane also has a mural at the park, called “Mind Power,” which is a wall constructed out of wood. See CTPost story on Jahmane's mural. |
| | Barbara Loss's 11x14" digital photograph, "Together in the Rain," and part of a series titled In the Year 2020. It is currently exhibited in the Carriage Barn Art Center's Member Show, which can be seen in the online gallery or in the New Canaan Gallery through Oct. 11. The second image is part of the poster series, In the Year 2020, titled "EveryVote Counts." |
| | Nancy Moore is showing three works in the 34rd Annual Juried Show at the Ridgefield Guild of Artists, on view through Oct. 18. Juror: Cybele Maylone, Executive Director of the Aldrich Contemporary Art Museum. Nancy also has large works up in the lobby of the Wilton Library, along with four other invited artists. On view into November. Shown here, “Sisterhood" (Watercolor, 38 x 51”). |
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Amy Oestreicher's is giving her fourth TED Talk Oct. 18 on how we can use creativity to combat climate change. RSVP here. Amy recently participated in the Womens Suffrage Movement Puppetry toy theatre pageant, and did a short form piece on Elizabeth Cady Stanton. Watch here. Her book "My Beautiful Detour: An Unthinkable Journey from Gutless to Grateful," was awarded 2nd place Best Memoir in the CT Press Club Annual Awards and her piece "Running from Surgery" was awarded 2nd place non-fiction essay. In addition, Amy's musical "Webways" was the winner if the inaugural Gail Davis festival and will be livestreamed in the Proteus Festival at Virginia's Zeiders American Dream Theater. Learn more... Her play “Fridas With a Ribbon” was one of three plays produced in “Stories of Color.” The Department of Cultural Arts is promoting this event, and assisted by The Rose Theater Foundation for the Arts. This foundation serves to help provide opportunity to artists of diverse and disadvantaged backgrounds. Friday Oct. 9 at 8pm, Amy will be performing live (virtually) an updated version of Gutless & Grateful at the Marsh International Solo Fest featuring 55 global performers from around the world. |
| | Jill Sarver Rossi is showing her work, "Anonymous (f***ing b*tch), 2020," (Oil on Claybord, 7 x 5") in a virtual exhibition, |
| | New Haven's Gallerylabs welcomes Susan Tabachnick to its Gallerylabs platform as a new artist. She is exhibiting with Argentinian artist Ricardo Ravetllat in the current virtual fair. "I make things out of found objects, both structural and functional. My work is about connections and the partnering of disparate objects. I've always been attracted to the idea that everything has a history. I may not know what it is, but it brings a patina, a fingerprint of its past life to my work table. When the histories of these objects are joined, an unexpected piece of work comes forth," notes Susan. |
| | | | HARD-HIT ARTS SECTOR FACES BRAIN DRAIN AS WORKERS SEEK GREENER PASTURES
Dissatisfied cultural workers are leaving the field in droves—and museums may pay the price. Ed Rodley had prepared to say goodbye—just not this way. After more than three decades of continuous employment in cultural institutions across Massachusetts, the 56-year-old digital-media producer found himself among the dozens of employees laid off from the Peabody Essex Museum in June. The coronavirus pandemic had expedited a restructuring effort already underway there, deepening cuts to longtime workers. Scenes like these have unfolded all summer long as the lasting impacts of the coronavirus pandemic on the arts sector have come into view. And with veterans and newcomers alike abandoning an industry struggling to confront racial and economic inequities, experts worry that the entire field will soon experience catastrophic losses of talent and institutional knowledge. Others claim that the brain drain is already here. Read full article...
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| | 2020 ARTISTS' AWARD RECIPIENTS ANNOUNCED
The Guilford Performing Arts Festival announced the recipients of the 2020 Artists' Awards—three in dance and one each in drama, music and spoken word. Each awardee will get a $2,500 grant to create new work and premiere it at the next festival, currently scheduled for September 2021. "We couldn't be happier to be able to support the creative output of six outstanding Connecticut artists, especially during such a terribly challenging time for performers," says William Boughton, chairman of the festival. Congratulations to CAFC members Ted Thomas and Frances Ortiz of Thomas/Ortiz Dance, New Canaan. Award recipients... |
| | RECOGNIZING THE BENEFITS OF A CREATIVE SOCIETY
The role of the arts in helping to rebuild society has become a significant topic as we gaze out at the elongating time horizon of COVID-19 and experience its devastating effect on our lives and livelihoods. "Social, racial, cultural and economic disparities cannot continue to be systemically reinforced if we are to heal the gaping wounds of our past within our hyper-changing present," notes blogger Kristy Edmunds: Public Care is Our Most Durable Good. "The arts are by no means is unassailable, and yet despite our flaws, we will play a critical role economically and culturally." Read more... |
| | WORLD'S FIRST ENTIRELY VIRTUAL ART MUSEUM OPENS FOR VISITORS
As museums have been forced to close their doors in the midst of COVID-19, many of these cultural institutions have proven just how nimble they can be, temporarily shifting their exhibitions from in-person events to online-only experiences. However, one museum in particular is waging its bets that virtual programming will be the new way of presenting art to a wide audience. Launched just last week, the Virtual Online Museum of Art (VOMA) is the world’s first museum of its kind. More than just an online gallery, VOMA is 100 percent virtual, from the paintings and drawings hanging on the walls to the museum’s computer-generated building itself, giving viewers an entirely new way of experiencing art that transports them to an art space without having to leave their computers. Read full article... |
| | | | BRIDGEPORT ART TRAIL CALLS FOR ARTISTS OCTOBER 5
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| | GRAYSON BOOKS ANTHOLOGY OF POEMS ON THE ENVIRONMENT OCTOBER 10
All poets who live in Connecticut are invited to send poems to be considered for inclusion in an anthology funded by an Academy of American Poets Grant to the State Poet Laureate, Margaret Gibson. The anthology will be published by Grayson Books in Hartford and will be released in time for Earth Day, 2021. The anthology will be comprised of poems that take as their focus the living world that surrounds us in this time of climate crisis and will be judged by a group of readers, and the final selection will be made by Margaret Gibson. Submissions deadline is October 10, 2020. |
| | MULTIPLICITY - PSYCHE, CULTURE, AND CHANGE IN 2020 OCTOBER 14
Artists are invited to enter the Loft Artist Association 7th Tri-State show, with the theme of Multiplicity-Psyche, Culture, and Change in 2020. As we navigate 2020's uncharted waters, we find ourselves in a state of flux coupled with idleness-flowing in and out of self-awareness and introspection that coexists with perplexity. The confluence of the current pandemic, politics, and social justice issues have significantly affected all of us, while also providing the opportunity to reflect, rethink, and refine our current practices. The exhibit runs Nov. 1 - Dec. 1, 2020. Submission deadline: October, 14, 2020. Perspectus here... |
| | THE BEARDSLEY ZOO ISSUES CALL FOR ARTISTS WINTER ART FESTIVAL OCTOBER 15
Connecticut’s Beardsley Zoo invites area artists to submit design proposals for the Zoo’s first Winter Art Festival. The theme of the festival is Snowmen, which includes art that represents a snowman, snowwoman, snowchild, snowpal, snowanimal or any other appropriate rendering. Artists whose designs are selected for exhibition will be provided with a $750 commission from festival sponsors. An online public vote will be held to choose a first, second, and third place winner, with cash prizes of $250, $125, and $75 respectively. At the end of the festival, the pieces will be auctioned, and proceeds will be used to support endangered species at the Zoo. Submissions deadline is October 15, 2020. |
| | THE ART OF GIVING RIDGEFIELD GUILD OF ARTISTS CALL FOR ART OCTOBER 24
We've always said, 'Art makes a great gift!' And this year is no different. Giving the gift of art is a way to express your love with originality and creativity. The holidays always enhance our feelings for family and friends, our love for fine food and spirits, and a real hope for the future. This year the Guild presents this exhibition of works inspired by the gift of art theme, with pieces you feel could make a great gift. Submit up to two works in any medium and format for the Art of Giving in-gallery and online exhibition. Submissions deadline is October 24, 2020. |
| | | | COMPLETE GUIDE TO 2020 ARTIST GRANTS & OPPORTUNITIES
Artwork Archive has compiled a list of the top international open calls, residencies, fellowships, and awards that will benefit artists during the upcoming year. The complete list is broken down into four categories: grants, residencies, calls-for-entry, and opportunity sites. Applying for artist grants is a great way for artists to supplement their income to ease the financial burden that often comes as part of being a working artist. These grants listed help artists pay for materials, studio space, or even their rent, allowing artists the time to make work without the day-to-day pressure of paying bills—giving them the freedom to make work in an unrestricted manner and dedicate their time to being fully creative. Download the Guide Here... |
| | RIDGEFIELD GUILD OF ARTISTS ARTIST-IN-RESIDENCE OPPORTUNITIES OCTOBER 31
The Ridgefield Guild of Artists is pleased to offer a new artist-in-residence program available to three artists during three separate time frames. This is a juried opportunity. It is open to all visual artists – painting, mixed media, sculpture, pastels, photography, digital arts, etc. The dates are: 1.) Sunday, November 15, 2020 – Friday, January 22, 2021. 2.) Sunday, January 24, 2021 – Friday, April 2, 2021 3.) Sunday, April 4, 2021 – Friday, June 11, 2021. The residency for each artist will culminate with a group AIR exhibition in the Guild’s gallery displaying the work they have created during their residencies. The two-week show will be held in late-June/early-July of 2021. This will be an opportunity to showcase your art and give an artist’s talk about your work and share how this AIR has influenced and progressed your artistic career. Deadline to apply: October 31, 2020. Learn more...
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| | RISING VOICES: BENNETT PRIZE FOR WOMEN FIGURATIVE REALIST PAINTERS OCTOBER 16
The Bennett Prize is a stipend/grant-in-aid program established by American art collectors Steven Alan Bennett and Dr. Elaine Melotti Schmidt to support the fine art practice of a woman painter working in figurative realism. The Bennett Prize, administered by The Pittsburgh Foundation, is awarded biennially and provides $25,000 annually over two consecutive years to the winning artist. Ten finalists will be selected to participate in a traveling exhibition organized by the Muskegon Museum of Art (MMA) and the winner will be showcased in a solo exhibition at the close of her grant. Exhibition dates are May 27, 2021 - September 5, 2021. Apply here... |
| | ARTIST RELIEF GRANT DEADLINES EXTENDED THROUGH 2020
Artist Relief has raised nearly $20 million since launching in April and will continue distributing $5,000 emergency relief grants through the end of the year! Artist Relief has received over 130,000 applications since launch, demonstrating the dire need from artists all over the country. So far, Artist Relief has funded 2,700 artists in every U.S. state and territory. Artist Relief Cycle VII ends on Oct. 21. Apply here... |
| | REGIONAL DANCE DEVELOPMENT INITIATIVE RELAUNCHES NOVEMBER 10
Apply to the Regional Dance Development Initiative (RDDI) to join a cohort of 12 New England-based choreographers and dance makers, and experience New England Now. New England Now is a series of connected activities and opportunities across the region designed to elevate your work and strengthen institutional and community-based networks for dance inside of New England. contact Kristin Gregory, Program Manager, at kgregory@nefa.org or 617-951-0010 x521 to discuss your application in advance of submitting. Apply here... |
| | NEW ENGLAND STATES TOURING (NEST) GRANT NOVEMBER 16
The New England Foundation for the Arts is now accepting applications for New England States Touring (NEST) grants for nonprofit organizations based in MA, CT, VT, NH, RI and ME. The program goals include: 1. Expanding direct access to high quality artists and aesthetic diversity for all New England communities by artists from New England, the nation, and across the globe. 2. Stimulate opportunities for collaboration and partnerships among New England cultural organizations and between artists and organizations. 3. Encourage projects that provide meaningful interaction between artists and communities, extending beyond the stage. Due to NEFA’s focus on response to the sector during the COVID-19 crisis, the previously announced NEST deadlines in August and December have shifted to one NEST deadline on November 16, 2020, for projects occurring after February 1, 2021. Learn more... |
| | Recommended Sources for Calls and for OpportunitiesCreative Ground (New England's Director of Creative Enterprises and Artists) |
| | | | BRING YOUR ART TO THE STREETS
With social distancing in place and limited capacities in most enclosed spaces, the pandemic has reinvigorated interest in the outdoors on a country-wide scale. Whether it's a simple walk around the neighborhood, a day in the public park down the street, or a trip to national parks across the country, engaging with the outside world has been key to maintaining connections during the COVID-19 pandemic. On Oct. 16, alumni artists from NYFA's Immigrant Artist Mentoring Program (IAP) will be participating in an online conversation on working in the COVID-19 era. Register here. The event will revolve around how to strategize through this time and move forward with making art. Check out a conversation with Kazuya Morimoto, an artist whose practice consistently brings him out into the streets of New York City. Full conversation...
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| | TURN INSTAGRAM FOLLOWERS INTO COLLECTORS
With its focus on image sharing and visual storytelling, Instagram has grown to become the art world’s favorite social media channel. Learn the fundamentals of social media in Artsy’s Social Media Toolkit, a resource for all organizations, especially galleries looking to start a social media presence and build an online audience of followers. Beginners will learn tips for starting and implementing a best practice social media strategy; Instructions on how to build a following on Instagram; How to get started and maintain a social media presence. The Intermediate Toolkit demonstrates how to figure out the perfect time to post to pre-scheduling your posts and insider tips. The Advance Toolkit is for those with a dedicated following who want to see increased engagement from their audience. Download the Toolkit. |
| | DOCTOR'S HOURS: ONE-ON-ONE CONSULTATIONS WITH ART PROFESSIONALS
The New York Foundation for the Arts (NYFA) will host the next edition of its popular Doctor’s Hours program, which is designed to provide practical and professional advice from industry professionals, online on Monday, Oct. 5. This event will serve Visual and Multidisciplinary artists working in Drawing, Painting, Printmaking, Sculpture, Video, Film, Photography, New Media, Multidisciplinary, Performance Art, Socially-Engaged Practices, Folk, and Traditional Art. Learn more and register... |
| | | | ART HANDLER SAMUEL OWEN GALLERY
The Samuel Owen Gallery is currently looking for a skilled art handler for the Greenwich location. Framing experience appreciated. The ideal candidates will have 2-4 years art handling experience. Among other responsibilities, the handler will be required to move, pack, unpack, install and de-install works of art for display or storage with appropriate hardware, leveling, and security; maintain a weekly / daily schedule provided by Operations Manager; provide inventory and condition reports as requested and track and report art movement in conjunction with Operations Manager. To apply for this job, please E-mail info@samuelowen.com with the subject line: Application for the Art Handler Position. Full informaton here... |
| | ALDRICH CONTEMPORARY ART MUSEUM DIRECTOR OF DEVELOPMENT
The Aldrich Contemporary Art Museum seeks an energetic fundraising professional to join the team as Director of Development. A platform for artists, the Museum was founded in 1964 and today is one of the leading contemporary art museums in the country. The Director of Development is responsible for building and maintaining a growing community of donors, with a specific focus on increasing upper level patrons and identifying new prospects, and overseeing the operations of the small, busy Development Department. S/he will take a lead role in cultivating, soliciting and stewarding individual patrons at all levels; overseeing the annual fund; working closely with the Museum’s board of trustees; overseeing the Museum’s benefit events; and managing institutional grants. Full informaton here... |
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JOBS, FOR SALE, FOR RENT, VOLUNTEERS, AND CALLS FOR ARTISTS - CONSULT AND POST IN OUR CLASSIFIEDS |
| | | | OCTOBER
Gottlieb Foundation: Emergency Grant Program (painters, printmakers, and sculptors) ioby/ArtPlace America: Artists Lead!: creative placemaking crowdfunding plus |
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| | | The Cultural Alliance of Fairfield County is a 501(c)(3) cultural nonprofit membership organization. We are grateful to our members and our donors whose support enables us to do our work. Donations are always very welcome and may be made here. In particular, we are grateful for support from: | | | |