African Voices to Receive $100,000 Award from the National Endowment for the Arts as a part of the American Rescue Plan
AV Launches Membership Drive to Celebrate 30 Years of Service to NYC Artists & Match NEA’s Historic Support!
February, 2022 (BROOKLYN, NY) — African Voices Communications, Inc.
is pleased to announce that we have been approved to receive an
American Rescue Plan grant from the National Endowment for the Arts
(NEA) to help the arts and cultural sector recover from the pandemic.
African Voices is recommended to receive $100,000 to fund operations and
facilities to fuel New York City’s recovery efforts. African Voices, an
organization devoted to supporting art, literature and film by artists
of color, celebrates our 30th Anniversary in 2022.
The
NEA’s historic investment in our infrastructure marks a milestone in
our legacy as a leading arts institution during a challenging time.
“Our
nation’s arts sector has been among the hardest hit by the COVID-19
pandemic. The National Endowment for the Arts’ American Rescue Plan
funding will help arts organizations, such as African Voices, rebuild
and reopen,” said Dr. Maria Rosario Jackson, chair of the NEA. “The arts
are crucial in helping America’s communities heal, unite, and inspire,
as well as essential to our nation’s economic recovery.”
In
total, the NEA will award grants totaling $57,750,000 to 567 arts
organizations in all 50 states, Puerto Rico, the U.S. Virgin Islands,
and Washington, DC.
“African
Voices is proud that the NEA has included us in the American Rescue
Plan as a representative of New York’s vibrant arts culture. The 2020
lock downs showed the world our artists were essential to keeping our
spirits nourished and communities connected during a time when fear and
anxieties were high,” said Carolyn A. Butts, African Voices Executive
Director and Founder. “We brought families together virtually through
artistic performances, film screenings, literary readings, creative
workshops and community chats. Our arts community is America’s heartbeat
and conscious.”
In
2021, African Voices created a two-year COVID strategic plan with
support from the New York Urban League’s Communities of Color Nonprofit
Stabilization Fund. The NEA award will help us create job opportunities
for artists through our community programs and retain staff while
launching a historic membership campaign to build our resources. African
Voices is revered for publishing one of the nation’s top literary
magazines celebrating writers of African descent. Spelman College, a
historic Black women’s university, acquired African Voices’ arts
collection in 2021.
African
Voices is launching a membership drive during Black History Month to
match the NEA’s $100,000 recovery grant. In honor of the organization’s
30th Anniversary the campaign will run from February 2022 through April
2023 — the organization was founded in 1992 and the first issue of issue
of our literary magazine was published in April 1993.
One can donate and become a member through our ongoing Powered by People Campaign launched on GoFundMe: https://gofund.me/580ea095
The
American Rescue Plan was signed into law in March 2021 when the NEA was
provided $135 million for the arts sector. The funding for
organizations is the third installment providing more than $57.7 million
for arts organizations. For more information on the NEA’s American
Rescue Plan grants, including the full list of arts organizations funded
in this announcement, visit www.arts.gov/COVID-19/the-american-rescue-plan.
African
Voices Communications, Inc. is supported, in part, by the National
Endowment for the Arts, New York Community Trust, West Harlem
Development Corp., New York State Council on the Arts, NYC Dept. of
Cultural Affairs, Cornelia T. Bailey Foundation, CLMP Amazon Literary
Partnership, Humanities New York, Black Arts Future Fund, NAACP Roy
Wilkins Fund, The Tom S. Detwiler Foundation, NYSCA LitTap Program,
Council members Laurie Cumbo (35 C.D.), Farah Louis (45 C.D.) and Bill
Perkins (9 CD, Harlem) and our loyal members.
ABOUT AFRICAN VOICES
Founded in 1992, our mission is carried out through public programs, arts appreciation and the publication of African Voices magazine.
The magazine plays a pivotal role in helping writers and visual artists
establish careers in art and publishing. Our writers have published
work in poetry and fiction anthologies while others have completed
novels and memoirs. The magazine reaches 35,000+ followers via our
websites and social media network. African Voices has earned national respect among the literary community for publishing excellent fiction, poetry and artwork.
African
Voices has a history of providing leadership within the arts
community. Over the past 30 years, African Voices has published the
works of over 4,470 emerging artists of color and presented more than
10,500 community programs to expand access to the arts. Each year,
African Voices provides artistic services to 5,000 artists of color and
young people throughout New York City and the tri-state area.
PROGRAMS:
Reel
Sisters of the Diaspora Film Festival & Lecture Series is devoted
to providing opportunities for women of color filmmakers; AV Readings,
Performance & Workshop Series, a program that offers writing
workshops for emerging artists and presents readings by established
authors and poets; and Get Your Read On! (GYRO!), a literacy program
that uses the arts to strengthen young people’s math, reading, writing
and oral communication skills.
Reel
Sisters is the first Academy Qualifying Film Festival for narrative
shorts devoted to women filmmakers. Reel Sisters is listed number 3 on Film Daily’s top 10 list of women-centered film festivals. Reel Sisters will celebrate its 25th Anniversary in 2022.
Reel Sisters is among the 63 Oscar qualifying accreditation festivals out of the over 7,000 worldwide film festivals.
For information on African Voices call 212-865-2982 or visit www.africanvoices.com and www.reelsisters.org.
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