The
Jamaica Center for Arts & Learning (JCAL) seeks creative
proposals from visual artists for Jamaica Flux: Workspaces & Windows
2007. This multi-disciplinary and co-curatorial project, which was first
initiated in 2004, encourages artists to engage in a dialogue with the
community, residences, and businesses of Jamaica, NY through their
creative activities. The project focuses on site-specific, experimental
and/or participatory art practices for both indoor and outdoor spaces,
exploring the specific cultural geography of Jamaica, NY within the broad
scope of the relationship between art, economy, and globalization. If you
would like to participate in the project, please send the following items
to JCAL by June 15, 2006 (postmarked deadline):
? A brief
description of your intended work with preferred site and logistic
information ? If available, digital reproductions (drawings, designs,
or segments) of your proposed work ? Digital reproductions of past
works that are related to your proposed work ? A list of the digital
reproductions, which includes the title, year, media, and dimensions for
each work. You may also add a brief description of each work. ? An
Artist?s Statement of 250 words or less ? Your CV ?
SASE
We strongly
recommend that you visit JCAL and Jamaica Avenue (148th Street ? 168th
Street) prior to your proposal conception and propose works that are
appropriate for the theme and our curatorial approach of this project. We
will not entertain works that are not site-inspired. For additional
information about this project, please visit the initial Jamaica Flux 2004
page on JCAL?s website at http://www.jcal.org/detail.asp?item=214&p=1&r=sum
and review the catalogue, Jamaica Flux, which is distributed by the
Distributed Art Publishers and is available at the Jamaica Center for Arts
& Learning, Queens Public Libraries, and online bookstores.
Artists will be selected based on the strength of their artistic
creativity and vision as well as their ability and commitment to the
realization of their proposed work that meets the conceptual framework and
the physical settings of this project. Selected artists will be invited to
further develop and realize their visions during a 14-month period from
August 2006 through September 2007. Each invited artist will receive a
stipend of $500. Depending upon funding, up to $2,000 could be available
to subsidize the costs of production and/or materials. A curatorial
team, currently comprised of Heng-Gil Han, JCAL?s Curator, Koan Jeff
Baysa, independent curator, and Olu Oguibe, artist and art-historian, will
collectively review each proposal. Additional curators and scholars will
join the team as the project develops during the spring of 2006. Selected
artists will be announced by the end of July 2006.
I.
Premises of the Project and its Goals Jamaica Flux: Workspaces
& Windows 2007, organized by the Jamaica Center for Arts &
Learning, is a contemporary public art commission project which includes
the creation, presentation, and interpretation of 25 ephemeral artworks.
As an outgrowth of the previous, very successful Jamaica Flux: Workspaces
& Windows 2004, this project assumes the point of view that an
exhibition is not just a show representing an idea or an entity. An
exhibition, when considered seriously, is a programmatic action with
corporeal effects and consequences. Through this project, JCAL, a
multi-disciplinary and community-based organization, performs its vital
function to serve the NY art world and the community by promoting
contemporary art culture and providing seminal aids to improve social,
political, and economic conditions of urban renewal. Jamaica Flux:
Workspaces & Windows 2007 challenges existing assumptions about
community-based art institutions and exhibition practices, and
simultaneously explores the cultural geography of Jamaica with a hope to
contribute to the elucidation of the relationship between art, commerce,
urban renewal, and community. This collaborative and multidisciplinary
project is designed to stimulate interaction between artists, residents,
and commercial vendors about ways that art can provide cultural and social
understanding, be a catalyst for economic improvement in communities, as
well as strengthen the relationship of JCAL to community residents and the
artistic community.
The goals of
Jamaica Flux: Workspaces & Windows 2007 are to: ? Make contemporary
art practices accessible and an integral part of daily life in the
community. ? Raise the cultural profile of Jamaica, New York and
encourage cultural tourism to this community. ? Provide artists,
curators, and writers with opportunities and material support to realize
their ideas and creative endeavors.
The project also
serves as a catalyst for residents and businesses to celebrate the past
and future arts and culture of Jamaica through exhibitions, performances,
and forums. Hence the title Jamaica Flux, derived from the historical
?Fluxus? movement, represents the transformation of Jamaica Avenue;
Workspace the opportunity to provide artists with stipends and a space for
creative _expression_; and Windows, a transparency between art, community
life, and economy.
II.
Project?s Themes, Process and Media Themes: Jamaica Flux:
Workspaces & Windows 2007 seeks prominent artwork with an explicit
awareness of place and time. Due to the demographic profile, economic
status, and geographical factors of the community of Jamaica, the artwork
could deal with a variety of issues relevant to contemporary art and
culture, including issues of constructive identity, cultural heritage, or
immigrants? experiences. In addition, the artwork could explore the issues
of cultural tourism, commodification of art and culture, and urban
development as it relates to issues of displacement, economic
stratification, and class division. Additional possibilities could embrace
subject matters such as the examination of the institutional functions of
JCAL or other organizations within the community, or could identify
specific characteristics of the urban landscapes of Jamaica, NY. Artwork
could be realized as maps, audio tours, directional signs, show-window
designs, and architectural designs that transform commercial spaces into a
space for artistic _expression_ of the personal experience. Other
possibilities include day and night street photography, video
documentations of interviews with community members, images that address
concerns of community members, or performances that involve the
participation of community members. These themes and examples are not
meant to limit, but rather to stimulate artistic creativity. Any ideas
that explore the cultural geography of Jamaica, NY, in relation to the
issues of art and global/local economy, are welcome. The proposed work
should be suitable and exciting for the public spaces, stores, and outdoor
spaces. Collaboration between artists, curators, community members, and
organizations: Works will be newly created for the project, giving
participating artists the flexibility to respond to the opportunities and
limitations of each site while engaging in a truly collaborative process
with business owners and community members. JCAL will work closely with
neighborhood institutions, businesses, and residents to facilitate the
project. Organizations such as Queens Public Library, Cultural
Collaborative Jamaica, Greater Jamaica Development Corp., and King Manor
Park will support the project. Businesses such as The Farmer?s Market,
Kids World, Jimmy Jazz, and Nubian Heritage will be encouraged to
collaborate with artists in the creation of art that will be shown in
windows and stores, which will expand the horizons of the integration of
art into life. Participating artists are also encouraged to interact with
members of the community as well as to identify a specific site that they
would like to incorporate in their work. Though JCAL will be responsible
for securing the proposed sites, the artists? willingness and commitment
to the engagement with the community is vital and highly required to gain
optimal outcomes and a meaningful experience of making site-specific art
that will be presented in a non-art space setting. Once selected, artists
will attend several meetings with curators and participating site hosts.
They will then submit drawings, sketches, and maquettes and work in
collaboration with host site representatives and curators to determine the
scope and details of each project. Proposed projects will be approved by
the end of December 2006, giving artists more than nine months to complete
their work. Media: Jamaica Flux: Workspaces & Windows 2007 seeks a
broad range of visual artists working in any media at any stage of their
careers. 25 artists or artist collectives will be selected and will be
requested to create site-specific ephemeral works. Artists working in any
media, including sculpture, installation, performance, video, film,
drawing, design, and painting will be eligible for selection to create
work that integrates art into life. Artists are encouraged to create
artwork in hybrid forms that fuse art and life in different aspects such
as art and commerce, art and science, art and politics, and art and
technology. Jamaica Flux: Workspaces & Windows 2007 seeks
process-oriented artwork that fosters the involvement of the community and
the audience in the arts.
III.
Project Components and Tentative Schedules 1. October 6, 2007
? November 17, 2007: The centerpiece of Jamaica Flux: Workspaces &
Windows 2007 is a six-week exhibition featuring site-specific visual art
in a variety of locations along Jamaica Avenue from 148th to the 168th
street, including banks, mall lobbies, stores, restaurants, street
corners, phone booths, parks, and other public spaces. 2. October 6,
2007 ? January 12, 2008: A ten-week companion exhibition in JCAL?s main
gallery. In an effort to give historic context to site-specific art
practices as well as to provide visitors with a behind-the-scenes look at
art-making processes, the gallery exhibitions will feature
art-historically paradigmatic works along with participating artists?
sketches, inspirational notes, and experimental renderings generated
during the process of project conception and realization. 3. Public
programs throughout the duration of the project: JCAL will offer
educational and public programs throughout the duration of the project to
enhance the experience of the exhibition and contemporary art. Programs
include neighborhood walking tours to visit the site-specific art
installations, artist talks and discussions, a one-day symposium, and
educational activities for young audiences. 4. Publication, Printed
Materials, and Dissemination of Experience and Knowledge: JCAL will
publish a comprehensive, full-color exhibition catalogue that documents
the project in all aspects and includes artist profiles, reproductions of
artwork, and critical texts on site-specific art practices.
IV.
Jamaica Center for Arts & Learning History and Introduction
The Jamaica Center for Arts & Learning is a 34-year-old
multidisciplinary urban arts center serving the residents of Southeast
Queens and New York City. Tens of thousands of people of all ages and
backgrounds participate in our wide array of education, performing arts,
and visual arts programs annually. JCAL?s land-marked, neo-Renaissance
building features a 1,650 square foot visual arts gallery, a 99-seat
proscenium theater, three painting and three dance studios, a ceramics
studio, a computer lab, and a soundproof music studio. JCAL?s programs
include contemporary visual arts exhibitions and an artist-in-residency
program; a multicultural series of music, theater, and dance performances;
free arts and educational programs for youth; in-school artist
residencies; and an extensive series of affordable workshops in fine and
applied arts, drama, dance, creative writing, and music. The Visual
Arts Program has been the cornerstone of JCAL?s programming since the
Center?s inception and JCAL continues to present up to four major gallery
exhibitions each year. JCAL also offers a yearlong artist residency
program and provides individual artists with support through lectures and
discussion events, networking opportunities, and career development
workshops. Over the last three decades, JCAL?s gallery has featured
contemporary artists such as Elizabeth Catlett, Jacob Lawrence, Romare
Bearden, Isamu Noguchi among other mid-career artists in order to support
their continuous creative endeavors and devotion to arts. Through the
Workspace Program, JCAL has featured solo-exhibitions of Lorna Simpson,
Wangechi Mutu, Rajkamal Kahlon, and others at early stages of their
careers. JCAL continues to support the creation and presentation of
thought-provoking new works by emerging and under-represented visual
artists.
Through its
Visual Arts Program, JCAL aims to: ? Encourage the development and
exhibit the work of under-represented artists, especially artists of
color, women, and emerging artists. ? Provide our constituency with
free access to contemporary visual art that reflects the rich cultural
diversity and urban relevance of Southeast Queens. ? Serve as an arts
advocacy organization providing New York artists, particularly those
residing in the outer boroughs, with career resources and
support.
V.
Location and Community Profile Jamaica, NY is one of the
mostly ethnically diverse communities in the country. The neighborhood is
home to primarily African-, Caribbean-, Latin-, and Asian-Americans, as
well as a growing population of recent immigrants from countries including
Trinidad and Tobago, Haiti, Guyana, the Dominican Republic, Nigeria,
India, and the Philippines. Jamaica was a prominent center for commerce
and government in the early part of the century, but, like many
neighborhoods across the United States, saw a significant period of
economic decline in the 1960s. The establishment of the Jamaica Center for
Arts & Learning in 1972 played a pivotal role in the early efforts to
revitalize the community and in the last three decades, Jamaica has seen a
flurry of growth and expansion. The AirTrain, Queens County Family
Courthouse, several major hotel chains, and the renovation of the former
First Reformed Dutch Church are just a few of the large-scale construction
projects that have taken place in our community in the last five years
alone. Today, Jamaica Avenue is once again a thriving commercial
district featuring hip-hop clothing stores, electronics shops, shoe
stores, independent shopping malls, and restaurants ranging from Caribbean
bakeries to fast food restaurants to cafés serving Salvadoran, Columbian,
Guyanese, or Pakistani specialties. Recent growth has brought large retail
chain stores, new banks, and a multiplex movie theater to the
area. Foot traffic in front of JCAL averages approximately 13,000
people per day and Jamaica Avenue attracts busloads of shoppers, from as
far away as Detroit and Baltimore, every weekend. The neighborhood houses
several government buildings and is also a major transportation hub: the
Long Island Railroad, several subway lines, countless busses, and the
AirTrain, which provides a ten minute ride to JFK Airport, all stop within
five blocks of the Center.
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