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     BOSTON
    - Wednesday, December 2, 2020 - Mayor Martin J. Walsh and the Mayor's
    Office of Arts & Culture, in partnership with Massachusetts College of
    Art and Design (MassArt), today announced 16 ALAANA+/BIPOC artists and
    collectives received grants totaling $250,000 in the first year of the Radical Imagination for Racial
    Justice (RIRJ) program. The funds and program support are dedicated to
    artists who identify as ALAANA+ (African, Latinx, Asian, Arab or Native
    American) or BIPOC (Black, Indigenous, People of Color) and who work at the
    intersection of art, community, and justice to radically imagine and build
    toward a racially just society. These grants are made possible by the
    Surdna Foundation's Thriving Cultures program.  
    "As
    we continue to work to dismantle systemic racism in our city, it is
    critically important to learn from those who have been using their creative
    practices to envision a Boston where every single person has the
    opportunities to thrive," said Mayor Walsh. "We are looking
    forward to sharing the work of the grantees, and continuing to support the
    arts and culture sector during these unprecedented times." 
 
  
    UnBound Bodies
    Collective. The Stoop, 2019. Photo by Tyahra Angus/Afrocentered Media.
    Courtesy of the artists. 
    "MassArt
    is proud to partner with the City of Boston to support BIPOC artists who
    are working in our communities to make our city a more racially just place
    to live, work, and create," said MassArt Acting President Kymberly
    Pinder. "As a public institution and a community of makers, equity and
    activism is in our DNA. We're excited to support this first cohort of
    artists and help them actualize their radical visions for racial justice in
    our city."  
 
  
    Fabiola Méndez. Al Otro
    Lado del Charco release concert at Hard Rock Cafe San Juan, June 2019.
    Courtesy of the artist. 
    Artists,
    creatives, or cultural organizers who identify as ALAANA+ or BIPOC, who are
    at least 14 years of age and live or work in Boston were invited to apply.
    For the pilot year, the RIRJ program received over 300 applications and
    made 16 grants to an intergenerational group of artists. The grantees will
    develop a wide variety of projects that work toward racial justice in the
    City of Boston, including: 
    
     - collaborative audiovisual
         storytelling to examine anti-blackness in Latinx communities
 
     - a multimedia project in Chinatown
         to build leadership and design skills of Chinatown youth to grow
         collective capacity for informing and facilitating deeper modes of
         community engagement for urban planners
 
     - a game design studio that
         supports alternative economies for young game designers of color
 
     - altar installations honoring
         Black Trans Femmes and Gender-Non-Binary (GNB) individuals. 
 
     
    The
    complete list of grantees is below:  
    $40,000 Grants 
    
     - UnBound Bodies Collective
 
     - Adobo-Fish-Sauce
 
     - Nia Holley
 
     - Fabiola Méndez
 
     - Husain Rizvi   
 
     - Lily Xie
 
     
    $1,000 Grants 
    
     - Christine Alcindor 
 
     - Mila Fields-Zayas 
 
     - Silvina Ibañez 
 
     - Mariona Lloreta 
 
     - Nate McLean-Nichols 
 
     - Micah x Ireon 
 
     - S
 
     - Leonard Tshitenge 
 
     - Aggrey Twinomugisha
 
     - Irischa Valentin 
 
     
    Learn
    more about the artists and their proposed work at imaginejusticeboston.org. 
    Throughout
    2021 the grantees will further develop and implement their work. Artists will
    gather several times throughout the project year to build fellowship,
    engage in sustained conversations about racial justice in Boston, and share
    how their projects are evolving.  
    "We
    could not have imagined, in this short time, that the world and our daily
    practices would be so thoroughly reshaped by a global pandemic, long
    overdue racial injustice reckonings, abolition initiatives, and numerous
    other acts of resistance to other problematic socio-cultural and economic
    systems and structures," expressed the members of UnBound Bodies
    Collective. "We also could not have imagined that during this time of
    illness and uncertainty, that the City of Boston and MassArt would
    intentionally design a grant that counters many philanthropic
    normativities, addresses racial inequities, supports
    experimental/imaginative world-building, and encourages applicants to
    include care and wellbeing in their creative proposal." 
    The
    unique application process developed for the RIRJ program offers a model of
    equitable, community-driven re-granting practices. For phase one,
    applicants could choose to submit their responses to a series of questions
    in writing or via video. Office hours with RIRJ program organizers were
    offered to support applicants in their process. A group of twelve artists
    applying for the larger grants were invited to complete a second phase of
    the application, and they received additional technical support. All
    applicants were asked to allocate a minimum of 20% of their grant budget
    toward their personal well-being, in recognition of the fact that the
    people bringing creative, collaborative, justice-oriented work to life need
    support, in addition to the projects that are created. The submissions were
    reviewed by two community-based, intergenerational panels comprised of 24
    ALAANA+ / BIPOC individuals. Many grantees have never received grant
    funding prior to the RIRJ program.  
    The
    Radical Imagination for Racial Justice program is a continuation of the
    work that the City of Boston and MassArt have been doing. Mayor Walsh has
    emphasized the importance of equity in Boston by overseeing the creation of
    Resilient
    Boston, the City's first ever strategy for advancing resilience and
    racial equity in Boston, and appointing
    Dr. Karilyn Crockett as the Chief of Equity for the City of Boston. The
    City also launched the Boston
    Racial Equity Fund to advance racial equity and dismantle systemic
    racism in the City of Boston and its enduring effects, particularly on
    Black and Brown communities by increasing their overall safety, wellbeing,
    equity, and prosperity. MassArt's Office
    of Justice, Equity and Transformation (JET) continues to work toward
    achieving systemic equity in all areas of the educational institution
    through transformative learning and teaching efforts, and is simultaneously
    working to advance racial equity framed by the Massachusetts Department of
    Higher Education's Equity agenda. MassArt's mission for equity and
    justice is also brought to life through its Center for Art and Community
    Partnerships and Artward Bound program, which cultivate authentic community
    engagement and access to opportunities for youth, families, and creatives
    throughout Boston and beyond. 
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