RACC Blog

Nine Portland arts organizations receive additional support from RACC to advance equity work

Nine Portland arts organizations receive additional support from RACC to advance equity work

The Regional Arts & Culture Council (RACC) has awarded nine Equity Investment grants to arts organizations in Portland. These grants, totaling $239,550, are made possible through funding from the City of Portland’s Arts Education and Access Fund, or Arts Tax.

“Portland taxpayers voted in 2012 to expand arts education and access in Portland,” said RACC’s executive director, Madison Cario. “We appreciate this important funding source, which helps RACC help organizations that are working to make their programs more equitable and accessible.”

RACC Equity Investments grants, established in 2017, provide additional funding to RACC’s General Operating Support partners for initiatives that are expanding access for Portland residents. Organizations may apply for support to build internal capacity to address issues of equity, to engage new audiences, or develop new programming models.

“Collaboration and learning are key when it comes to equity work, and we are excited to be supporting organizations that are doing rich learning with their staff and board related to diversity, equity, inclusion and access work,” said Ozzie Gonzalez, vice chair of the RACC board and chair of RACC’s Grants Review Committee. “We are also eager to support organizations that are expanding their programming and collaborating with community partners to expand Portlanders’ access to the arts.”

Following a panel review process and approval by the board, RACC will invest in the following organizations and projects:

  • Artists Repertory Theatre, $25,000 to support a two-day equity workshop for staff, resident artists, and staff of resident companies.
  • Independent Publishing Resource Center, $31,050 over three years to support a paid residency program for Black, Indigenous, and People of Color.
  • Oregon Children’s Theatre, $10,000 to continue work with consultants to advance the organization’s work on diversity, equity, inclusion and access.
  • PHAME, $20,000 to support partnership programming with other arts organizations.
  • Portland Center Stage, $52,500 over three years to support PCS’s  commitment that at least half of the partners hired in community engagement programs will be people of color and/or culturally specific organizations.
  • Portland Gay Men’s Chorus, $9,000 to fund an equity assessment with consultants.
  • Portland Institute for Contemporary Art, $40,000 over two years to support SPACE program events in 2019–2021.
  • Portland Playhouse, $40,000 over two years for the creation of a staff position.
  • Portland Youth Philharmonic Association, $12,000 to fund an equity assessment with consultants.

These grants are consistent with RACC’s ongoing commitment to more equitable distribution of resources. Other changes announced by RACC over the last two years include a new structure for project grants with more frequent deadlines; a plan to increase the number of arts organizations that receive general operating support; a capacity building program for organizations that are led by and serving historically underrepresented communities; and a new progressive funding model designed to increase the amount of general operating support provided to small to midsize arts organizations.


RACC will offer a second cycle of Equity Investments in May.  Application materials will be distributed to GOS partners the first week of April and will be due by 5pm on Wednesday, May 8. Funding decisions approved in late June.


Can’t Blame The Youth // THE KIDS HAVE SOMETHING TO SAY

As part of the Art & Power conversation series of 2019, we have asked an artist from each panel to expand on their experience based on the discussion topic they participated in. These “essays” are critical companions to each Art & Power and are meant to move the conversation beyond the spaces that hosted them. They serve as another storytelling platform to further illuminate the ways in which arts and culture intersect with critical social issues through the eyes of these artists.

Art & Power: Restorative Justice was hosted at KSMoCA on February 21st. The panel was moderated by Anna Vo and included local artists Janessa Narciso, Elijah Hasan, and Jesus Torralba. We are pleased to share Janessa’s perspective with the RACC community.

 

By Victoria Janessa Narciso (Ms. J)
Art & restorative justice : the impact, the intersection of it, why there’s a need for it

 

I revisit the page in my journal where I wrote all their names. First and last. Etched them into the pages. Remembrance.

Pages later, next to my sketch of fern leaves and swirls, I write:

“they’re stretching me
molding me. Flowers.”

That was over a year ago. I find myself turning the days over in my hands and sifting through the soil it sure is muddy, sure is rocky – there’s a lotta fertilizing that takes place – but when you witness these buds form that you’ve seen grow from the start … the rainstorms are all worth it.

I fully began my revelation with the word ART at the tender age of 24.

Still unearthing my relationship to it.

See, the thing is, I’m actually not artistically-inclined. At least not practically speaking. You’re talking to a D+ to C average Pictionary player. Everything changed when a world of art showed me that an artist doesn’t have to exclusively work on paper. Scribbled lines, conversations, dance moves… my artform can be as subtle as the pant-sock-combo I sport for the day. Art transformed me. Accessibility to artists and their work kicked my creative spirit into gear.

Once I felt inspired to express my own thoughts and feelings, my whole life started flourishing. I felt connected to my happiness and harnessed an attachment to my own ability to create.

One may consider my line of work a field of landmines and forest fires. Perpetual grays and tears of betrayal. Clouds of confusion and a myriad of misunderstandings. Welcome to The Land of Middle School – Enter If You Dare.

Eleven through thirteen year olds are on this brink of pure genius colliding with their downright absolute need to do whatever they please – that makes for this ironic calamity of a reflection of life right-in-ya face.

Aren’t these the adolescent years in particular where we felt the most confused? These years, in which students rebel against rules the most? Isn’t it a wonderfully gritty, beautiful mess? Challenging power dynamics alongside this uncanny, innate reflex to commit emotional arson.

All this shaken and stirred, right along with the larger oppressive system that is traditional school discipline structures, and we’re in for a spicy, conflicting cocktail.

Working within the confines of an institution brings me pain and persistence. Stepping into work each day is a day behind enemy lines.

I teach my kids about how vital it is to have critical social-emotional skills. We break down our connectedness to each other through our dilemmas. “Why can’t this be a core class that everyone has to take, like math or science, Ms. J?” they ask. When low-income, underserved schools across the nation are suffering harrowing school cultures, this poses a serious, unanswered question. Inadequate funding and large class sizes decapitate the pressing need for community building amongst students and their authority figures alike. Extensive data proves the unequal disciplinary treatment of marginalized students within our country, including disproportionately high suspension/expulsion rates for students of color.

Students are not only challenged within their educational environment, we have to consider the injustices they and their families face outside the realm of school: generational poverty, discrimination, food scarcity. Gulp down the last sip of this toxic tonic and what we’re really left with is historically severe inaccessibility to resources.

People with money have access to EVERYTHING and ANYTHING. People with money can afford, create, and offer an assortment of opportunities for themselves and their kin. We’d like an order of JUSTICE, served straight up – and hold the White, please.

I wrestle with the term “restorative justice,” because it implies the need to return, or bring us back to something.

I also wrestle with the word “art,” because one’s very existence is the making of a masterpiece itself.

We need, rather, transformative connection. Rethinking our practices and reinvention of the wheel. My mission is this. Connecting with myself, my mistakes, my abundances, my learning – thereby better connecting with my friends and family, my students.

Art is a vehicle for these connections. Expressing ourselves in whatever fashion suits us. Seeing real-life examples of all creative forms of expression. Doing so allows us to open up, discuss, share our (disagreeing) thoughts and ideas. AND THE KIDS HAVE SOMETHIN’ TO SAY. Outlets must be created for our youth to have more non-confrontational opportunities for dialogue – accessibility to art does this.

I know someone who wears a pin that one of their friends made, depicting my belief in all this perfectly.

In bold, black letters it reads, “Can’t Blame The Youth.”  Can’t we – even as adults – still be the very same, “problematic” youth never given the outlet to fully calibrate our pitfalls? What happens when we lack expressive direction?

Our circumstances and opportunities (or lack thereof), directly influence our pathways. As someone who has the capacity (the privilege) to dig up adversaries, weed out discrepancies, and by nature tend to and nurture the souls around me, I find it futile to direct our attention to anywhere but ourselves. WE gotta do the work.

Our fruit will be the future for our children.

 

Janessa Narciso is a dot connector, magic believer, and Mama to an 9 year-old ninja warrior. Currently living and working in N Portland, she is a middle school mentor and teaches a life skills and leadership class after-school. In 2015 she joined an arts and open mic collective, Deep Underground (DUG), formed and led by three other women of color. Their work is dedicated to creating spaces that provide a sense of safety and freedom for the black and brown community in this city. Since their formation, DUG has thrown concerts, film screenings, and large scale events. Together, they have also developed youth programming for student-centered groups: “The Freshest Kids” and “Crucial Bonding.” Janessa firmly believes in the strength of sisters and community; sees the representation of yourself as art; art as activism; and especially stresses the importance of learning outside of school walls. Eventually, she’d like to bring her daydreams to life and turn her journal(s) into a book while having a home base for youth-driven projects.  

 


Black Life Experiential Research Group Pursuing Change Through Art and Radical Geography

by Bruce Poinsette

 

(This is the second of two articles about artist-in-residence projects that RACC manages through the Percent for Public Art Program for the City of Portland.)

Spend a few minutes with Dr. Lisa Bates and Sharita Towne and the two women will have you questioning everything you’ve ever learned about the role of Black creativity in America. For the transdisciplinary artist and urban planner duo, the Black imagination is a tool for tangible change that they’re putting into action through their collaboration as the Black Life Experiential Research Group.

“The Black imagination isn’t about distraction,” says Towne. “We’re not using it to distract us from our reality. Our imagination is an underground railroad of meanings that is actually about derailing oppression. It’s in our imagination that we find a means of escape.”

Officially described as an “interdisciplinary collaborative for inquiry and activism at the intersection of art, urban planning, and radical geography,” BLERG is a think tank that Towne and Bates began developing in the spring of 2017. With the support of the Regional Arts & Culture Council, BLERG is currently participating in an artist-in-residence program focused on the Humboldt neighborhood. Utilizing a variety of different artistic mediums, collaborators, and spaces, the project seeks to both build community and redefine the narrative around Black life in Portland. BLERG-related projects include a DIY newspaper called the “Black Life Sentinel,” collaborative events with local Black artists such as “This is a Black Spatial Imaginary,” ongoing oral history interviews with longtime residents of the Humboldt neighborhood and community, and collaborative learning experiences with students at Jefferson High School.

Towne and Bates are keenly aware that the term “think tank” evokes thoughts of a disconnected, sterilized approach. Bates specifically references the work of geographer Clive Woods when she notes that statistics and metrics like the “achievement gap” and measurements of “blight” have long been used to dehumanize Black communities. Yet, instead of running away from these analytical tools, she and Towne are working to repurpose them to serve Black Portlanders. 

“He (Woods) asked the question, ‘Are we academic coroners? Is this just an autopsy over and over again?’ And then he turns and asks, ‘Isn’t it the same scalpel in the hands of a coroner that’s in the hands of a surgeon?,’” recalls Bates. “So how can we take these tools, instruments, and ways that we study and think and wield them with a different intention?

“How do you talk about struggle and oppression, but also talk about resilience and joy? How do we talk about how Black life continues in those conditions?”

Towne adds, “When Black people get together, be it across discipline or geographies, something shakes loose inside of us. New possibilities are born out of that. With a think tank, we’re not just interested in producing a dry, analytical report. We’re interested in producing an experience that is just as much ours as it is the people who end up collaborating with us to make it or the people who witness it and carry it forward in whatever work they might do that benefits Black life.”

In many ways, Towne and Bates’ vision for BLERG is informed by their past experiences in the areas of art, activism, and urban planning. Towne is transdisciplinary artist and educator who has spent significant time not just in Portland, but also Salem, Tacoma, and Sacramento. She has won a host of awards and produced a number of exhibitions throughout the country. Some of her recent local projects include the film workshop De-Gentrifying Portland and Our City in Stereo exhibition.

Bates, meanwhile, is professional urban planner and activist scholar. Like Towne, Bates has won awards for her work, which has included research stints not just in Portland, but post-Katrina New Orleans and Chicago. She has worked with a multitude of public agencies in Portland to develop equity plans and strategies, including previously serving on the board of directors for the Portland Housing Center.

Considering Bates and Towne’s mutual interest in exploring the roots of gentrification and studying Black space, it was only a matter of time before their paths crossed at the Portland City Club a little over a year prior to the creation of BLERG. After hitting it off, the two quickly developed a vision for a project. Among other things, one of their primary goals was to pivot the larger cultural narrative from Black Lives Matter to “Black Life Matters.” Specifically, they wanted to move away from just discussing the Black experience within the narrow prisms of racial oppression and state-sponsored violence, and instead focus on the entirety of what it means to be Black in Portland. For Bates and Towne, this meant celebrating Black life as an everyday experience and discussing historical Black places as a matter of geography.

Black Life Sentinel Issue One

Black Life Sentinel Issue One

One example of how this ideal manifests in their work is the “Black Life Sentinel.” The DIY newspaper, which is a collaboration with the Portland African American Leadership Forum, Northeast Coalition of Neighborhoods, and the Regional Arts & Culture Council, dedicates each issue to a specific subject of concern for Portland’s Black community. In the latest edition, the paper took on urban renewal. Specifically, the theme of the issue, as well as the title of an editorial by Bates and Towne, was “Is more urban renewal what North/Northeast Portland needs?” In addition to the editorial, the paper contains both current and historic pictures of North/Northeast Portland’s Black community, interviews and testimonials from Black residents, a copy of PAALF’s vision for valuing Black lives, a glossary of urban renewal-related terms, and even a copy of a press release and separate document from the City of Portland making the case for urban renewal.

With the assistance of PAALF, Towne and Bates distribute the papers through word of mouth. Bates says she was genuinely surprised to find out how many people were unaware that the City was considering expanding its urban renewal efforts. For her, it signaled a clear deficit in media coverage.

“Where is this being reported or talked about at?,” says Bates. “Is it not being framed or connected in away that makes sense to people? What happened here? Me, being in urban planning and being attuned to the urban renewal area here, I knew all about that. I just thought everybody knew about it because it’s a big deal and it’s this super historically significant site. And then I started talking to people and handing them papers, and they knew nothing about it.”

While she was surprised by the collective lack of knowledge about current urban renewal plans, Bates understands that the subject in general isn’t particularly accessible for most people. In addition to being considered “boring,” she says it is often depressing. Specifically, the constant research on exclusion, exploitation, displacement, and predatory lending weighs on her.

“It’s just all of these layers upon layers of ways that policy and planning and urban renewal have defined Black people and spaces with Black people in them as defective and unacceptable, then did things to those people to contain, remove, and acculturate them in some harsh way,” says Bates. “But it’s also extremely depressing and in some ways, a weird project for urban planning. Urban planning is inherently future looking. Urban planning is supposed to be about the 25 year plan.

“But what are the tools that would let us imagine a different future? All of the basic tools we have in planning just involve projecting forward from a baseline, assuming the baseline is okay. But if none of this is okay at all because we now understand where we came from, then what would be the thing? So you have to start getting into something that would be way more about the imagination and creative problem solving. It can’t just be learning how to do a population projection. It can’t just be the mainstream tools of real estate site analysis because that’s already got all the bad stuff baked into it.”

BLERG taps into the aforementioned creative problem solving in a variety of ways, including rethinking the very foundation of their approach. Perhaps the best example of this is their collaboration with Jefferson High School, which is part of a larger RACC-sponsored artist-in-residency in the Humboldt Neighborhood.

Black Life Sentinel Issue One

Inside Black Life Sentinel Issue One

For this portion of the project, Towne and Bates work with a Jefferson Senior Inquiry class that explores race and social justice. They visit the class anywhere from twice a month to twice a week. Unlike other courses that seek to engage students with local artists, they make a point of not going into the classroom with a set plan. Instead, they work with the teachers and participate in the activities the students are already doing. They also spend a lot of time simply listening and conversing with students to gauge their perspectives. Four months in, while they don’t have any set projects, a number of students have agreed to work with BLERG on oral history interviews with their family members. Others are currently working with Towne and Bates on gallery presentations set for this spring.

“It can sometimes feel meandering or time consuming for artists or people outside of the school,” says Towne. “At the same time, I think it’s important in a place like Jeff to not arrive with a formula that you want to plug them into as variables. I think Jeff is a high school that is often sensationalized in ways that those youth don’t need to be enduring in their high school experience and in the history of this neighborhood and community. We’re really interested in being there and seeing how we share inquiry and give each other life. That way, we can see what shakes loose out of the soundboarding of our shared stake in Black life in this place.”

Sarah Dougher, a local musician and Portland State University professor who helps teach Senior Inquiry at Jefferson, echoes Towne’s sentiments. She says she’s been particularly impressed with how Towne and Bates give students space and encouragement.

“One thing that is really meaningful for our students is when people come in and spend the time to get to know them and to develop relationships with them,” says Dougher. “Most of the time when an artist or writer comes in, students are put in a position to automatically like and trust what that person is doing. One thing that Sharita and Lisa do is understand that is actually not a given. Building relationships with students is part of what makes the learning happen. This means actually spending a lot of time in the classroom with us and doing what we’re doing.”

While the Jefferson collaboration doesn’t yet have a centralized project, one BLERG activity that Dougher says was especially impactful for her students was the “Curation Station” project. As part of this activity, Towne and Bates invited six artists of color representing a variety of different mediums to speak to students. The artists ranged from graphic designers to traditional museum curators. In the weeks following “Curation Station,” Jefferson students even chose one of the presenters to be the keynote speaker for their Black History Month Symposium.

Going forward, Dougher hopes the BLERG collaboration can serve as a model for expanding and developing similar projects at other schools. While she admits that between Jefferson, PSU, and BLERG, it requires an inordinate amount of planning and resources, she believes Towne and Bates’ deliberate, responsive approach is still very much worth the investment. Dougher believes this approach is especially important for introducing students to careers they may not otherwise engage with in a meaningful way.

“It sets up situations for students to interact with different kind of adults, particularly weird adults like artists,” says Dougher. “Most of the adults coming into a school setting are not like that.”

“For me, it’s not ‘Some young people of color saw a role model.’ That’s gross,” adds Bates. “It’s about someone seeing something that made them think about what they’re doing with their work in a different way.”

Black Life Sentinel Issue One

Inside Black Life Sentinel Issue One

In many ways, this undefined approach to working with Jefferson students is reflective of the BLERG project as a whole. By taking on a transdisciplinary approach that encompasses various artistic mediums, as well as community partners and spaces, Towne says it gives the project the advantage of being hard to contain.

“If I’m hitting something as hard and embedded as the white spatial imaginary of Portland and what it has done to generation after generation–if I’m hitting it with all these things in such a massive way, it creates these fissures that can be used in different ways to get to the meat of it and break it apart,” says Towne. “Whereas if it’s one particular angle, I find it’s very easy to get preoccupied with the medium or get preoccupied with the art. But when you use all these different things, it lifts us out of that. Then we can talk about the conceptual underpinning of what we’re dealing with rather than the cool video we saw.”

Going forward, Towne and Bates are working with a local library partner to host more programming that focuses on family and community history in the Humboldt neighborhood. As with all their other programming and activities, the ultimate goal is to create and expand opportunities for different members of Portland’s Black community to engage with each other. Despite the historic apprehension on the part of the City towards most Black organizing, Towne points out that the benefits of this engagement go far beyond the Black community.

“It’s out of that mutuality and solidarity of Black spaces that we see an emergence of the prescription to society’s problems,” says Towne. “As a Black Oregonian seeing and witnessing what that has meant to generation after generation of my family, the values we infuse into space and the way that we take care of people is something that really informs this project.

“When you look at North and Northeast Portland, you see the Black spatial imaginary also included Pacific Islanders. It included Vietnamese refugees. It included all of these people. And that’s what I think I’m interested in. I want people to realize that when we’re centering Blackness, it’s not to exclude anybody, ever. It’s just to acknowledge the way that our values have permeated into the landscape of this place and benefited a lot of people, even in moments of the most devastating segregatory policies of the 20th century.”

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¹The presentations will be held at PCC Paragon Gallery from Apr. 4-25.
²
Derrais (d.a.) Carter, Roshani Thakore, Melanie Stevens, Black Life Experiential Research Group (Sharita Towne and Lisa K. Bates), Kayela J, and Ashley Stull Meyers.
³
The Humboldt Neighborhood Artist-in-Residence project is a partnership between PCC Cascade, the City of Portland and RACC and made possible with funding from PCC Cascade and City Percent for Art funds from neighborhood street improvements. “It’s cool because it does allow for people to really get into the community and not just put up a tombstone that says, ‘They Black community was here,’” says committee member Donovan Smith. “It really allows them to dig in and find out what the community that’s here needs and reflect that back through different artistic avenues. I also like that they’re going through these different cycles so each artist has the chance to build off the work that came from the artist and residence before them.”


 

BRUCE POINSETTE  is a versatile freelance writer, copy/content editor, editorialist, and speaker. Poinsette versatile work ranges from content creation to speechwriting. He has authored over 100 articles in five Portland area publications, including The Skanner, The Oregonian, Street Roots, Flossin’ Media, and We Out Here Magazine;  in the collegiate curricula at Portland State University and University of Oregon. As a speaker, Poinsette has made presentations and participated in panels at various churches, K-12 schools, and universities. Poinsette has also conducted workshops on the journalistic interview. Find out more about Bruce and his work here.

 


March 2019 Night Lights: The Midnight Variety Hour

Our final Night Lights, RACC’s outdoor public art series, is wrapping up its 2018-19 season with The Midnight Variety Hour (MVH) – Night Lights Edition  March 7, at 6pm.  For RACC’s Night Lights Program, MVH will present a video program with live music, sound and vocals.

MVH deconstructs the world of live television and the essence of the variety hour creating a dream-like memory of tv shows. Through the build up of layers and patterns of imagery and sound, MVH creates a landscape of distorted time and space. Some of the elements used in their live performances have included pre-recorded and live video, foley sounds, tap shoes, microphones, acoustic instruments, drums, synthesizers, and dance. Distinct sections of improvisation emerge through the tension and release of accumulated instrumentation, dance, and video.

All works will take place at the north wall of the Regional Arts & Culture Council office at 411 NW Park Ave, Portland OR (on the corner of NW Glisan St and NW Park Ave).

 

Night Lights is a monthly public art event that celebrates the intersection of digital technology, art, and place. Happening outdoors on the First Thursdays of fall and winter months, this multimedia art series presents local artists’ new works, combining large-scale video projection with other art forms such as movement and sound. Works are projected for several hours starting at dusk on the north wall of Regional Arts and Culture Council’s office at 411 NW Park Ave, Portland, OR.

Midnight Variety Hour (MVH) is a collaborative project consisting of five multi-disciplinary dancers, performers, musicians, and filmmakers (Maura Campbell-Balkits, Sean Christiansen, Kelly Rauer, Fern Wiley, and Leah Wilmoth).  Learn more about them here midnightvarietyhour.

 

 

 

 

RACC announces a more equitable funding plan for arts organizations in Portland

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

>> A major funder of arts and culture responds to existing disparities with a progressive investment model

 

(Portland, Ore.) – The Regional Arts & Culture Council (RACC), one of the city’s largest arts funders, is announcing significant changes to the way it invests in more than 50 arts and culture organizations in Portland.  To address the historic disparity of its existing funding model, and to nurture a more diverse arts ecosystem, RACC will distribute its General Operating Support (GOS) dollars more equitably. These changes, which are in alignment with the City of Portland’s equity goals and national best practices, will result in funding increases for 80% of RACC’s GOS partners next year.

“This is something to celebrate,” said RACC Executive Director Madison Cario.  “Intentional and strategic conversations are taking place locally and nationally about the way we invest in our communities. I am proud that RACC is taking this step and putting the organization’s theories of inclusion, diversity, equity and access into action.”

Every year, RACC provides millions of dollars in unrestricted funds (known as General Operating Support, or GOS) to 54 arts organizations in Portland, made possible with City of Portland general fund investments, Arts Tax dollars, Multnomah County funds, and proceeds from RACC’s workplace giving campaign, the Arts Impact Fund. RACC awarded a total of $4.9 million to these groups in FY18-19.

From 2008 to 2018, 57% of all RACC GOS funds have been awarded to the region’s five largest organizations: Oregon Ballet Theater, Oregon Symphony, Portland Art Museum, Portland Center Stage and Portland Opera. This disparity is common nationally as well; a 2017 study from Helicon Collaborative found that 2% of arts organizations across the country receive 58% of all contributed income. Nationally, those organizations tend to have large budgets, focus on Western European artforms, and attract predominantly white, middle to upper-class audiences.

Going forward, rather than using a formula to grant funds as a percentage of an arts organization’s budget, RACC has adopted a more equitable and progressive distribution funding model. This means that small to midsize arts organizations will receive additional funding and some of Portland’s largest cultural institutions will receive less funding than in past years. In addition to a guaranteed RACC Base Award every year, all groups, regardless of size, will have additional opportunities to receive Investment Awards based on their community impact and other measurable outcomes.  At least $1 million will be distributed as Investment Awards in FY2019-20.

As a result of the changes approved unanimously by the RACC board on February 6, RACC anticipates that more than 80% of RACC GOS partners will receive a larger grant award in 2020. Five to seven of the city’s largest organizations (about 12% of RACC GOS partners, those with budgets of over $2 million) will likely receive less funding starting in 2021—an impact that represents less than 1% of their annual budgets. RACC also supports arts organizations in Clackamas and Washington Counties, and many smaller organizations in Portland, but those groups are not impacted by these changes.

“For organizations like ours who bring the arts where they have generally been overlooked and underfunded, this is a sign that our community is growing in the right direction,” says Seth Truby, Executive Director of Oregon BRAVO Youth Orchestras, an organization that provides tuition-free after-school orchestral music programs.

“As a young organization, BRAVO has relied on RACC support every stage of our development,” Truby continues. “From critical strategic advice and administrative support in our first years to a project grant that helped us expand our programming in our fourth year, RACC support has been a critical part of our path to organizational stability. Last year we started receiving General Operating Support, and we are excited to see RACC’s focus on equitable funding, which has the potential to increase engagement with creators and audiences who traditionally face barriers to participation in arts and culture.”

RACC Board Chair Linda McGeady notes, “These changes, led by our Grants Review Committee, culminate several years of thoughtful work by the RACC staff and board. We understand that this new model creates challenges for some of our city’s largest arts organizations, and for that reason we will continue funding them at their current levels for another year. We are committed to helping our city’s largest cultural institutions reach out to new communities, and we are confident that they will have continued success for generations to come.”

“I’m proud of RACC for responding to longstanding disparities, and excited to see this effort toward greater equity come to fruition.” said the City Arts Commissioner, Chloe Eudaly. “We’re changing the structure of arts funding and redistributing resources in a manner that will directly benefit Portland’s small and midsized arts organizations, increase the diversity of organizations and patrons served, and better reflect our vibrant arts and culture landscape.”

For more information about these changes and RACC’s General Operating Support program, visit racc.org/grants/general-operating-support-grants/.

 

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The Regional Arts & Culture Council is a local arts agency serving 1.8 million residents in the Portland, Oregon metro region including Clackamas, Multnomah and Washington counties. RACC provides grants and technical assistance for artists and nonprofit organizations, with more than 5,000 grants totaling $44 million in the past two decades. RACC also manages a widely-celebrated public art collection of more than 2,200 artworks for the City of Portland and Multnomah County; conducts employee giving campaigns that have raised more than $8.5 million for local arts organizations since 2007; organizes networking events, forums and workshops; and integrates the arts into the broader curriculum for K-8 students through The Right Brain Initiative, serving more than 27,000 students a year. Online at www.racc.org.

 

MEDIA CONTACT: Jeff Hawthorne, Director of Community Engagement, jhawthorne@racc.org, 503.823.5258.


We’re updating our General Operating Support program

Changes to General Operating Support

This post has been updated to reflect the final changes to the GOS program adopted by the RACC Board of Directors on February 6. All current GOS partner organizations have received an email communication from RACC updating them on these changes and indicating Base Award and Investment Award information for FY19-20. If you have questions about how these changes will impact your organization, or if you did not receive an email notification, please contact your Grants Officer. RACC’s Press Release regarding these changes in available here.

Starting in Fiscal Year 19-20, RACC will be adopting a new structure for its General Operating Support (GOS) program. This structure revises the allocation strategy for distribution of GOS funds, and makes us more nimble, inclusive, and strategic. These changes will mean our workplace giving and grants teams work closer together to increase the impact of RACC’s support for GOS organizations. Please see the details below on what is changing, why it is changing, and get your questions answered.

What’s changing?

  • Beginning in FY19-20 RACC will be adopting a new structure for the General Operating Support grant program. Grant awards will be split into two parts – the Base Award and Investment Awards.
  • The Base Award is a stable, predictable allocation for which organizations can budget and plan. Base Awards are set in tiers based on the size of an organization’s budget. As long as organizations continue to meet eligibility requirements and submit annual reports, they can count on receiving a Base Award. In Fy19-20, RACC expects to award approximately $2 million in Base Awards.
  • Investment Awards will be granted through a competitive process in three categories –Community Impact, Operations, and Artistic Work. Each organization will have the opportunity to receive Investment Award funds in addition to their Base Award, depending on how they score in the review process. You can learn more about how the Investment categories will be evaluated here. In FY19-20, RACC expects to award approximately $1 million in Investment Awards.

What’s staying the same?

Eligibility requirements for GOS will not be changing. The membership structure of the program will also continue, but be re-framed as partnership rather than membership.

Why is it changing?

These structure changes make us more flexible, inclusive, representative, and strategic in our funding. Over the last six years, the revenue generated from the Arts Education and Access Fund (commonly known as the Arts Tax) has varied widely. While collections have improved significantly over the years, it remains challenging to predict the amount of funding RACC will receive and when it will arrive. In summer 2017, RACC’s Grants Review Committee began a process to revise the GOS program to be flexible and allow us to more quickly and easily invest this fluctuating revenue in the community.

In addition to addressing the instability of arts tax revenue, the new structure will allow RACC to both provide stability through Base Awards, while also offering additional support for organizations based on their operational health, artistic programming, and community benefit.

Finally, as part of our equity work, RACC is committed to acknowledging the historic disparity of our funding model and the changing demographics of our region. The proposed changes to the GOS program will allow RACC to more clearly and effectively encourage equity work in all our partner organizations, and also pave the way for additional organizations led by historically underserved communities to become GOS partners.

When is it changing?

These changes will take effect starting in FY2019-20, which begins July 1, 2019. Current GOS partners will continue to report annually at one of the three reporting deadlines, and as previously communicated, they will receive the same allocation in FY2018-19 as in the past two years. Reports will continue to be accepted in three cycles with deadlines in November, February, and May.

FAQs

When will my organization receive our Base Award? What about our Investment Award?
GOS Partner Reports will continue to be accepted at three deadlines each year in November, February, and May. Base Awards will be distributed as soon as the review of your report is complete – typically 8-12 weeks after the report is due. Investment Awards will be distributed one-time annually at the end of RACC’s fiscal year in June.

Why was my organization placed in this tier?
RACC has placed organizations in tiers based on your average eligible income over your last three fiscal years. Eligible income is your total unrestricted revenue less: revenue for programs outside RACC’s service region, revenue from programs provided in spaces that are not ADA accessible, non-arts earned income, and in-kind revenue. A table of base award amounts by tier is available here.

How much revenue from RACC should I include in my budget?
We strongly recommend that Partner Organizations budget to receive their Base Award each year. The Base Award is specifically designed to be consistent and reliable, and is a good conservative figure to use when creating your organization’s budget. Investment Awards may vary significantly between years and we don’t recommend that organizations budget around them.

How will Investment Awards be determined?
Investment Awards will be determined based on an organization’s score in our three investment areas. You can read more about how we evaluate these areas in the Investment Award Framework. We currently expect Investment Awards to range in size from $5,000 to $40,000. These award amounts will be set entirely based on score and are not related to the budget size of the organization. We will provide more detail and reporting guidelines to partner organizations when updated Partner Report forms are released in summer 2019. If you have questions about Investment Awards, please contact your RACC grants officer for more information.

How will RACC evaluate equity work in GOS partners?
Rather than having a separate Investment Award or category for equity work, RACC will be evaluating equity work in all three Investment Award categories – Community Impact, Operations, and Artistic Work. For example, the diversity of an organization’s staff and board is one indicator of operational health. The GOS report will continue to include demographic questions.

What happened to Work for Art funding?
Work for Art has evolved to become RACC’s Arts Impact Fund. Funds raised through their campaigns will be awarded as part of each organizations annual Investment Award.

How will these changes impact organizations based in Washington or Clackamas Counties?
Organizations based in Washington and Clackamas counties do not receive funding from Portland’s Arts Education & Access Fund and will not be impacted by most of these changes. These organizations will see changes to the GOS report forms, but will continue to receive county funding as a Base Award. They will not be eligible to receive Investment Awards.

 

Who to contact with more questions:

Ingrid Carlson, Grants Officer | icarlson@racc.org | 503.823.5417

 


“Blightxploitation” Seeks to Change the Landscape of Art and Civic Engagement

by Bruce Poinsette

Art is a powerful tool for communicating complex ideas. When utilized effectively, art doesn’t just help us better understand the world, it also enables us to make real change. Such has been the case with Cleo Davis and Kayin Talton-Davis, two artists in residence with the Portland Archives & Records Center (PARC).

Long frustrated by shallow discussions on gentrification in an overtly anti-Black climate, the husband and wife team were selected by RACC last year to work with PARC staff to illuminate public records and examine historical documents that reveal how seemingly subtle things like forfeiture laws and nuisance ordinances were weaponized against Portland’s Black community. Their research ultimately led to their name for the exhibit and their term for the Black experience in Portland: Blightxploitation.

Cleo Davis says that “gentrification” and other terms he’s heard to describe Portland’s growth and development do not sufficiently represent the experience of Black Portlanders.  “White folks gentrifying white folks and white cultures gentrifying white cultures, it’s a little bit different,” he says. “I’m not saying it doesn’t hurt, it’s not costly, and that it doesn’t displace people. But not on a level it does us, because there’s a type of urban cultural ethnic cleansing that occurs with us that doesn’t occur with other groups.”

Blightxploitation is what happened to us,” Davis says. “You blighted us. You brought in ‘urban renewal’ and ‘economic development’ and all these new terms and then ‘gentrification.’ It was a whole process. Pretty much all the way from slavery–Jim Crow laws were Blightxploitation. The goal of the term is to get us to look deeper into the policies and the social norms that are created to work against us.”

Their installations, which are on display at City Hall and PARC through February, feature a combination of historical documents and artifacts, including a city planning commission map, a newspaper article about Black residents displaced by Emanuel Hospital, pictures of properties marked for blight, and a re-creation of the Black Sambo logo from a restaurant called the Coon Chicken Inn. The City Hall installation also features original artworks, including a print with a sign reads “Blightxploitation: 1859, 1943, 1987, 1991- Now,” and depicts three invading flying saucers labeled “Legacy Emanuel,” “Portland Development Commission,” and “Housing Authority of Portland.”

The artists say their goal is to elevate the discussion around gentrification and to empower others—especially those affected by mass displacement in Portland’s Black community—to fight back using the same zoning codes and institutional tools that were utilized to fracture the community.

 

Illuminating city archives through art

“Not enough of the community know we exist,” says City Archives lead reference archivist Mary Hansen. “Although it can be a lot of bureaucratic papers, bureaucratic papers can be really interesting in a lot of ways. From city council minutes to records about building plans or things like that. There are all kinds of different resources here and a lot of people don’t know they exist or that they have ready access to them.”

To help illuminate these resources, PARC worked with RACC to create a call for artists to work in residence to explore issues of civic engagement, civil rights, housing, and public works projects using the archival collections at PARC. The stated goal of the project was to “help build bridges between archives and new audiences, encouraging a deeper understanding of how archives are integral to the processes of understanding, identifying, empowering, rectifying, and evolving.”

Cleo Davis and Kayin Talton-Davis took note of the opportunity, and have had experience with City Archives before. In 2014, they were working on another RACC-sponsored public art installation, the Black Williams Project, a celebration of the rich cultural heritage and history of the Black families who used to live on Williams Avenue in Northeast Portland. While very much satisfied with the outcome of the project, the artists felt like there was more to talk about. Specifically they wanted to highlight the largely covert efforts taken to end what they saw as Portland’s Black Renaissance.

This desire brought Davis to the City Archives, where he hoped to find photos of his grandmother’s home. The City of Portland had targeted the home with seizure attempts for years during the 1980s and early 90s — ultimately failing in their attempts to condemn the Davis home as a crime property. Among other things, this took a considerably negative toll on Davis’s grandmother’s health.

But when Cleo visited the city archives back then, he found a “sterile” environment with glass doors and a security desk requiring photo ID—he was immediately skeptical. Things only got worse when he asked for information on discrimination and archivists told him he needed to be much more specific by utilizing local government terminology. Likening the environment to Fort Knox, Davis admits the whole experience rubbed him the wrong way and he had no intention of ever going back.

And yet, when he saw the artist residency opportunity, Cleo was intrigued. “I just thought this would be a good way to continue to make art,” he says. “And honestly, I thought I pretty much already had my research done based on my community work on the Williams Avenue project. Now I can see that I was naïve. I came here in 2014 looking for a general overview. That’s not what this place is. I now understand that this is a place of research.”

Davis family at City Hall.

Once they were selected as the PARC artists in residence, Cleo and Kayin started working closely with Hansen and other PARC staff. They quickly learned how to translate terms they were familiar with—such as “red tagging” and “zebra tagging”—into the official language of city records like “urban renewal” and “civil forfeiture,” which ultimately helped them find the public documents they were looking for.

Cleo began visiting the City Archives on an almost daily basis. He and Hansen describe the process as a partnership, one in which they both continued to learn new things about the City’s history of systemically targeting its Black community. He likens the city archives to book out of sequence. “If you just cut the pages out of a book and scrambled them up, it would just be files,” he says. “Here, it’s just a bunch of cut up books. You may think they do not relate to one another, but they relate. There are ways of understanding that they relate. Date, time, location. There are so many names, so many factors. Once I understood that, I was kind of addicted. It was like chess. It was like figuring out the pieces.”

One thing that stood out for the artists was the city’s decades-long campaign against supposed “blight.” From the 1940s through the 1990s, the City seized numerous Black-owned homes and/or targeted them with fines and intimidation, forcing many families to move, all under the guise of “urban renewal.” According to an official document from the Portland Bureau of Buildings from 1962, blight included roof leaks, loose steps, doors that “stick,” uncovered trash, and even seemingly ambiguous charges such as “needs paint” and “needs clean up.” Some homes were even targeted for having items like clawfoot tubs, which are now considered antiques.

“Artists do the same kind of research that everyone does,” Hansen says, “but what they do with that information is very different. It’s not a scholarly paper. It’s not an essay.” Instead, Davis and his wife used the documentation they found on blight to create fake movie posters, including one titled “Attack on Albina” with the aforementioned flying saucers. “It’s just kind of brilliant with the flying saucers coming down,” Hansen says. “With my mind, it’s like I remember scanning those pictures.”

 

Other community impacts

Hansen notes that Davis’s display has drawn some particularly emotional reactions from some passersby. Some people get viscerally upset by it and head straight to the elevator, she says. Beyond sparking people’s emotions, Hansen hopes artist residencies like these increase civic engagement. In fact, Davis’s initial inquiries about his grandmother’s home gave her the opportunity to put that idea into practice.

Specifically, Hansen’s curiosity led her to a Sanborn Insurance map from the early 1900s that detailed the zoning information of Davis’s grandmother’s home and surrounding properties. What she found was that the entire area was designated as a residential zone, even though the property next to the house has long been utilized for commercial purposes.

Following this revelation, Cleo Davis and his wife successfully petitioned the City to change the zoning on his grandmother’s old home so it could also be used as a commercial property. “If it wasn’t for this project, I wouldn’t have had the skills to argue for the housing zoning change,” he says.

Video timelaps by Sarah Smith

In the process, he noticed an abandoned house next door and decided this would be an opportunity to repurpose it as well. He now hopes to transform the historic Mayo House into a project called the “Art-Chive,” which will support and house creative works detailing the Black experience in Portland from the perspective of longtime residents, people simply passing through the city, and everyone in between.

On January 16, Portland City Council waived the fees associated with moving the Mayo House to the Davis’ property and approved the rezoning that the artists advocated for. On the foggy morning of January 27, the house was moved.

Ultimately, RACC and the city hope projects like Blightxploitation will inspire more people to take similar action. “When you have the information, you can do stuff with it,” Hansen says. “There’s a lot of different ways people can engage with the government. It belongs to all of us.”

 


Editor’s Notes:

The Artist in Residence series at PARC is funded through the City ofPortland’s Percent for Art allocation that was set aside when the PARC moved to its new home on the PSU campus at 1800 SW 6th Avenue, suite 550. PARC’s Research Room is open Mondays, Tuesdays and Fridays from 9:00 AM – 1:00 PM, and Wednesdays and Thursdays from 12:00 PM to 4:00 PM.

This is the third of six planned residencies. RACC manages this program along with other Percent for Art projects funded by the City of Portland and Multnomah County. For more information on other PARC residency projects, visit: Sabina Haque and Kaia Sand 

BRUCE POINSETTE  is a versatile freelance writer, copy/content editor, editorialist, and speaker. Poinsette versatile work ranges from content creation to speechwriting. He has authored over 100 articles in five Portland area publications, including The Skanner, The Oregonian, Street Roots, Flossin’ Media, and We Out Here Magazine;  in the collegiate curricula at Portland State University and University of Oregon. As a speaker, Poinsette has made presentations and participated in panels at various churches, K-12 schools, and universities. Poinsette has also conducted workshops on the journalistic interview. Find out more about Bruce and his work here.


February 2019 Night Lights: Untitled

Night Lights, RACC’s outdoor public art series, continues its 2018-19 season with Megan Mckissack’s Untitled work on February 7 at 5:30pm. Mckissack’s Night Lights work was inspired by the current Presidential Administration’s deletion of climate data.

Mapping and generating visualizations of Oregon LIDAR point cloud data from the Oregon Department of Geology and Mineral Industries and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, these visualizations are projected as visual loops accompanied by ambient and atmospheric soundscapes McKissack creates an environment that responds directly to the architecture its projected onto.

Only one more Night Lights event remains after February: Midnight Variety Hour in March.

All works will take place at the north wall of the Regional Arts & Culture Council office at 411 NW Park Ave, Portland OR (on the corner of NW Glisan St and NW Park Ave). The remaining schedule of events for Night Lights is as follows:

February 7, 5:30pm
Megan McKissack
Untitled

March 7, 6pm
Midnight Variety Hour
Night Lights Edition

Night Lights is a monthly public art event that celebrates the intersection of digital technology, art, and place. Happening outdoors on the First Thursdays of fall and winter months, this multimedia art series presents local artists’ new works, combining large-scale video projection with other art forms such as movement and sound. Works are projected for several hours starting at dusk on the north wall of Regional Arts and Culture Council’s office at 411 NW Park Ave, Portland, OR.

Megan Mckissack is a Portland, OR based, new media artist working in the realm of live visuals, video installation, and creative coding. Learn more about her work on her website meganmckissack.com