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$8,050 Awarded to Kalamazoo Institute of Arts for Humanities Project

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE -- June 6, 2008
CONTACT: Scott Hirko, Public Relations Officer, 
shirko [at] mihumanities.org
, 517-372-0029 ext. 25

also in PDF

(KALAMAZOO)----The Michigan Humanities Council today awarded a $8,050 grant to the Kalamazoo Institute of Arts for the project, Perspectives On Place. The grant is part of the Council’s Michigan People, Michigan Places … Our Stories, Our Lives program, which supports community collaboration for public humanities programs. The grant was presented at the Kalamazoo Institute of Arts. The event included comments from the office of U.S. Representative Fred Upton.

“The Perspectives on Place project is designed to help the public gain a better understanding of Michigan history through the lens of artistic expression,”said Jan Fedewa, executive director of the Michigan Humanities Council. “The Council is pleased to support this educational experience through lectures, the spoken word, and music.”

The grant will support a comparison between two exhibits at the Kalamazoo Institute of Arts that will help explore the impact of deindustrialization on Midwest communities.  The two exhibits are Corporate Wasteland: Photographs by David Lewis (May 31 – July 26, 2008) and Perspectives on Place: Artists’ Visions of Michigan’s Land and Lakes (June 6 – September 6, 2008).  Corporate Wasteland brings together images of industrial ruins and the words of displaced industrial workers. It tells the stories of the shutdowns of factories, mills, mines and other industrial facilities throughout the United States and Canada, including the Allied Paper Mill in Kalamazoo. Perspectives on Place is drawn from the KIA permanent collection and private collections of paintings, prints, photographs and drawings which offer visual artists’ perspectives of Michigan.

The project features additional opportunities for the public to better understand deindustrialization through interactive activities using the artwork.  Interpretive programming will be included through lectures exploring artistic interpretation with art history, Michigan history and culture, and oral histories; an overview of an art movement that featured Michigan landscape artists; and, presentations exploring how old photographs can guide the study of Michigan history. Docents will lead tours, there will be a spoken word event examining what it means to be a Michigan resident, and there will be children-focused sing-a-longs and displays.

Perspectives on Place and Corporate Wasteland are free of charge and open during the KIA’s normal gallery hours: Tuesday through Saturday from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m., and Sunday from noon to 5 p.m. (The KIA will be closed on Sundays from July 6 to August 31.)  More information about the exhibits and their public humanities programs is available at www.kiarts.org or by calling the KIA at (269) 349-7775.

The Michigan Humanities Council, founded in 1974, is a private, non-profit organization, funded in part by the National Endowment for the Humanities. For additional information, please visit: www.michiganhumanities.org or call 517-372-7770.

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Jan Fedewa, David Jarl, and Jim Bridenstine with check presentation to Kalamazoo Institute of Arts

(from left): Jan Fedewa, executive director of the Michigan Humanities Council, presents a check for $8,050 to David Jarl, past president of the Kalamazoo Institute of Arts (KIA), and Jim Bridenstine, executive director of the KIA. The check was presented on June 6, 2008, for the project, Perspectives on Place.

 

  Michigan Humanities Council    119 Pere Marquette Drive, Suite 3B, Lansing, MI 48912    p: 517-372-7770 · f: 517-372-0027
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