Upcoming Deadlines | click here to see if you are eligible for any of these opportunities

July 13th: Community Arts Grant - Zellerbach Family Foundation Deadline 2, September 1st: Culture Forward Grant - The Svane Family Foundation Deadline 2, September 14th: New England Dance Fund, October 13th: Community Arts Grant - Zellerbach Family Foundation Deadline 3, December 1st: Culture Forward Grant - The Svane Family Foundation Deadline 3, December 31st: National Dance Project Presentation Grants - New England Foundation for the Arts, December 31st: National Dance Project Travel Fund, December 31st: New England Presenter Travel Fund

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DDP Advocacy

 Nejla Yatkin presented an evening-length work titled The Other Witch at the Ruth Page Center for the Arts
Photo by Enki Andrews

Advocacy in the Media & Allied Organizations

#NotInOurHouse

The Chicago Theatre Standards

Download the Standards here.

Dozens of theatre artists and administrators have contributed to this wholly-free, voluntary, non-legally-binding tool for self-regulation in theatre spaces. The Chicago Theatre Standards seeks to mentor institutions, theatre-makers, teachers, students, parents and anyone who would like to learn more about procedural preventions and potential responses to unsafe practices, with a special focus on harassment, bullying and discrimination.

The Chicago artists and theatre companies who donated their time and experience, and took risks to implement this document over the course of two years, are excited to share this with you so that no one needs to say “I just thought this is how things go,” or “I didn’t know who to talk to” when faced with unsafe practices and abuse.

Thank you for your interest in The Chicago Theatre Standards, and the belief that we can create a safe space for dangerous work!

See more advocacy by #NotInOurHouse here.

Whistle While You Work

Call for Accountability – An Engagement Action

A Whistle parnership | Press: The New York Times

The following is a letter to Jay Wegman at NYU Skirball Center from Engagement Arts in Belgium in response to their November 2018 Jan Fabre Programming.

Dear Mr. Wegman,

As the Senior Director of NYC’s home for cutting-edge performance and discourse, we urge you to initiate a public discussion about the ethics of Jan Fabre’s work practices and Mount Olympus.

Specifically, we feel that presenting Jan Fabre’s work is a form of complicity with his practices. If you do not support sexual harassment, bullying and denigration of performers, and underpaid or unpaid work hours, then we feel that you are responsible for addressing the publicly available testimonies rather than presenting the work without comment.

As a programmer, silence is your privilege, but breaking it is your responsibility. That way, you don’t just program cutting edge work, you do cutting edge work.

Your community needs to know why you have made this programming choice and why you are presenting it in this context. We urge you to take a stance.

Engagement Arts  | New York based Dance Community | Whistle While You Work 

See all of Whistle While You Work’s actions here.