Archive for the ‘Community News’ Category

Polk Street Alleys Mural Project Call for Artists

Monday, March 7th, 2011

Download as PDF: CALL TO ARTISTS

CALL TO ARTISTS

POLK STREET ALLEY’S MURAL PROJECT

PROJECT OVERVIEW

THE POLK STREET ALLEY’S MURAL PROGRAM is funded through the Mayor’s Office of Economic and Workforce Development (MOEWD) with a Capital Grant, is organized by the Lower Polk Neighbors and project managed by MOEWD.  These murals will focus on the historical past and present of the Polk Street Corridor and seek to represent the diverse cultural and socioeconomic populations that have lived, worked and made this street their home.

The long-term goal of this project is to engage community in artistic and cultural expression that will help establish a positive street identity, deter graffiti and thus serve as a catalyst to build neighborhood capacity and contribute to the economic vitality / revitalization of the merchant district.  Two murals will be completed during this phase.

Process

  • Artists must be based in San Francisco
  • Selections will be made by the Mural Project Steering Committee
  • The judges and artist will meet with the community (LPN) for their input on chosen design
  • Artists will be notified if and when their designs are selected
  • Finalists may be asked to provide a work portfolio
  • Interviews may be required for all finalists
  • OEWD, Art Commission sign-off may be required

Honoraria

Participating muralists will receive an initial stipend for required materials and a final payment upon completion of their work.  The amount will vary based upon the square footage of the mural, averaging $15-20/per sq ft and limited paint contribution from local merchants.  Non-selected finalists will also receive a $50 honorarium for their sketch and possible interview.

Artist Requirements / Design Guidelines

  • Conduct in depth research into the history of the community theme
  • Artwork must be original
  • Demonstrated experience in public exterior murals
  • Local art community involvement
  • Educational component / use of Larkin Street Youth intern
  • Submitted designs must be your artistic interpretation of the required Lower Polk Street historical theme:  (1) Transportation Hub”.  This vertical mural will be constructed on Hemlock East @ Polk, north wall.  The dimensions are 22’ Length x 18’ Width -396 Sq/ft.  The artist payment is approximately $6732.00 + paint/varnish.

Other Items to Consider

  • Artists are responsible for all materials to complete the mural in their chosen medium
  • Artists will need to supply all equipment and drop cloths
  • Scaffolding if needed, needs to be negotiated
  • Artists are responsible for applying an industry standard mural protection (Such as Precita Eyes Sheer Coat Varnish)
  • Artist will be able to hold a 1 hour  working “artist open house” once a week during the mural process to interact with  the community
  • Mural will be part of Polk Street Art Walk in conjunction with other galleries and the artist should be present at the main opening
  • This is the first installment of an ongoing Polk Street Alley beautification / mural campaign and additional property owners will be encouraged to participate
  • Initial art sketch will not be returned or used for any purpose
  • Judging will be based on design sketch and historically accurate portrayal of the Polk Street Transportation Hub thematic.  Mural will be painted on the Chevalier Bldg (once home to a cable car barn), area also had horse car lines, electric car lines, car barns and stables, gears, electric lines & automobile dealerships
  • Due to the volume of submissions, only the first 50 candidates will be considered for each mural during the application window of March 1-March 31, 2011

Terms of Agreement

  • The work submitted by the artist is original, solely owned by the artist and reproduction will not violate the rights of any third party.  The artist shall not make any additional, exact duplicate reproductions of the final design and dimension, nor shall the artist grant to a third party the right to replicate the artistic designs and dimensions of the artwork, without the permission of LPN and OEWD.
  • The artist grants the rights for final designs to be used in brochures, media, publicity, catalogs or other similar neighborhood marketing publications
  • Artist will make repairs as needed
  • The artwork is the property of the property owner and may be removed and/or destroyed at any time without notification of the artist if the property is sold and the new owner is not willing to maintain the property owner agreement
  • Artist will sign a formal work agreement

POLK STREET MURAL PROJECT APPLICATION

Date_________

Artist or Organization Name____________________________________

Mailing Address _______________________________________________

Phone  ________________________________________________________

Website / E-mail________________________________________________

Application Checklist – For Each Mural

  • Completed Application / Artist Signature
  • Copy of Drivers License & Curriculum vitae or bio (Appendix A)
  • At least 1 separate 8 x 10 –or larger, design submission including color scheme and materials list (B)
  • Artist statement of intent, description of concept / approach-(C)
  • Answer the following 3 questions (D)
  1. What is your local art community involvement / commitment?
  2. If needed, what is your experience in mural wall preparation?
  3. How would you integrate an intern from Larkin Street Youth into your creative process?
  • Provide 3 project references (E)

Mail / Drop completed application/appendices by March 31, 2011 to:

Shell Thomas

Project Manager – MOEWD

1 DR. Carlton B. Goodlet Pl, RM. 448

San Francisco, CA 94102

Shell.thomas@sfgov.org

Statement on the shutdown and sale of KUSF-FM

Wednesday, January 19th, 2011

For Immediate Release: Download as a PDF

Date: January 18, 2011
Contact: Christine McClintock, Executive Director, 415-738-4975

The $3.75 million sale of KUSF-FM by the University of San Francisco will have a chilling effect on the culture, community and civic life of San Francisco, the Bay Area, and beyond.

Independent Arts & Media is the 501(c)(3) fiscal sponsor of Friends of KUSF, a volunteer organization that advocates for KUSF-FM’s cultural, civic, community-development and First Amendment services. As such, we propose an alternative plan for the dispensation of the KUSF license and assets, and for the appropriate compensation of the University of San Francisco. (more…)

Off The Grid joins SF Arts Market

Monday, October 4th, 2010

SF Arts Market on UN Plaza invites you to celebrate 24 Days of Central Market Arts with us on October 7th, 12 Noon on UN Plaza. Join us and Off The Grid Roaming Mobile Food Service for lunch and local art.

Off the Grid is a roaming mobile food extravaganza that travels to different locations daily to serve delicious food, with a free side of amazing music, craft and soul. (more…)

SF Arts Market Debuts in UN Plaza

Wednesday, August 18th, 2010

ANNOUNCING ARTS MARKET SF

Aug. 19: Arts Market SF debuts in UN Plaza

Participate: Vendor info, licenses, registration

Learn More: About Arts Market SF

Home Page: http://artsmarketsf.org/

Independent Arts & Media, the Mayor’s Office of Economic and Workforce Development, the San Francisco Arts Commission and Blick Art Materials announce a new, open-air marketplace for local arts and culture in downtown San Francisco.

Arts Market San Francisco debuts on Thursday, August 19, in UN Plaza, and will run every Thursday thereafter from noon to 8:00 p.m. throughout this summer and autumn. An additional run during the December holiday season is also in the works.

Located at 1182 Market Street between Grove and Eighth streets, Arts Market San Francisco at UN Plaza will feature diverse arts, crafts and culture, including painting, photography, mixed media, literature, music, fashion, jewelry, toys, children’s goods, creative home and garden wares, and much more.

GET INVOLVED

Local artists, artisans, fashionistas, musicians, publishers, crafts- and culture-makers, and more are all welcome to apply for a tent space at the San Francisco Arts Market!

All exhibitors must be selling work that has been handmade by local Bay Area artists. The goal of the Arts Market is to help local Bay Area arts and culture entrepreneurs as well as revitalize the arts community and cultural economy around San Francisco’s Civic Center region.
Tents will be provided and set up on the day of each Market. Exhibitors will need to provide their own tables and chairs.
Exhibitors need to hold vendor permits as issued by the Mayor’s Office of Economic and Workforce Development.
Musicians are welcome for the performance area, but must provide their own PA. There is no budget for performances, but performers are welcome to sell merchandise and promote their shows.
FOR MORE INFO: http://artsmarketsf.org/

CONTACT: http://artsmarketsf.org/contact/

Circus Bella opens “Gotcha” season

Wednesday, July 7th, 2010

Congratulations to Indy Arts affiliate Circus Bella who opened their new season “Gotcha” at Yuerba Buena park on July 3!  Now in it’s tenth year, Circus Bella presents free outdoor programs in parks all over the Bay Area. The circus features new and returning artists performing areal acrobatics on a static trapeze, mad cap clowning, balancing feats on slack rope and rola bola, acrobatic antics, and much much more!

All performances are free with outdoor open seating.  Audiences are encouraged to bring a blanket to sit on and a picnic lunch for before the show.  Form more information visit Circus Bella online! Read more about Circus Bella.

Saturday, July 10
2:00pm
DeFremery Park’s 100th Anniversary Celebration
Adeline and 18th St.
Oakland
star Sunday, July 11
12:00pm
San Francisco Sunday Streets
Harrison and 21st St., John O’Connell High School Athletic Field
San Francisco
star Friday, July 16
6:00pm
Studio One Art Center Open House
365 45th Street
Oakland
Sunday, July 18
11:45am
Dimond Neighborhood Picnic, Dimond Park
Fruitvale and Lyman Rd.
Oakland

The SF Public Press hits the streets!

Friday, June 25th, 2010

What a thrill to be in the thick of print production!

It was an honor to lend a hand last Monday as the Public Press krewe pushed through those final hours before going to press.

I hardly dipped my toe in the water, did a few page proofs, dispensed a little advice and tried to otherwise stay out of the way — and even that was the journalistic equivalent of cliff diving. Dizzying heights, harrowing free fall, and a tremendous, joyful, encompassing splashdown.

And what a splash! The San Francisco Public Press made its newsprint debut on Tuesday, June 22. Read all about it:

http://sfpublicpress.org/blog/2010-06/sf-public-press-in-print-edition-coming-tuesday-june-22

You can get your own copy at the soiree, from the crew of newsies (count me among them) who are going to line Market Street from Embarcadero to City Hall today, and at any of these fine Bay Area periodical vendors:

http://sfpublicpress.org/where-to-buy-the-newspaper

* * * * *

I should mention that News You Might Have Missed also makes its print debut today as the national and world content for this great new newspaper. We take up half a page in the “Beyond the Bay” section with six short, pithy news items that are a wonderful preview of what a fully fledged NYMHM syndication service will look like.

Once upon a time this was all just a daydream. The only thing real about it was the prospect of ceaseless labor and uncertain returns.

Our dilemma has evolved. Now all we have to do is figure out how to scale it all up. It’s a popular and interesting problem. We could also try to scale Mt. Everest.

Or start an ad-free newspaper. Howbout them apples?

* * * * *

The San Francisco Public Press newsroom on Monday afternoon was tangled with computer cables, piled with papers, reference manuals scattered on desks, backpacks heaped in corners, half-empty takeout boxes teetering on the edges of tabletops.

The clock ticked down the hours and minutes and the two, terrible press deadlines loomed — 6pm for the Treasure Island “ecotopia” spread, 10pm for the rest of the paper.

The open suite of three connected offices was packed with volunteers young and old, kids fresh out of journalism school hunched over proofs and laptops, a handful of once-weary veterans of the trade now grinning, shaking their heads in astonishment, squaring their shoulders and muscling through sheets and sheets of 10-point type with fine red pens.

I did my part. Plowed through a few newsprint proofs. Wrestled some cumbersome headlines into submission. Flagged some contradictions in a fact-checking piece about public power. Gave due encouragement and advice to a young page editor trying to sand down one particularly knotty, burly slab of text. Made some jokes and tried not to get in the way.

I cringed slightly when giving my proofs to ex-SF Chronicle gunslinger Rich Pestorich. He gazed calmly at the pulpy mass of bloody red ink I’d stuck in his paws, then at all the other marked-up pages waiting quietly next to his laptop, and then back at me.

He said nothing.

“You’re the copy chief, right?” I asked.

“No,” he said, expressionless.

He added my “corrected” page to the pile, and ambled out into the corridor to detach a fresh proof from the wall for me to scrutinize.

Later, I strove to get the attention of Jackson Solway, the beleaguered but remarkably cool-headed designer.

“You may want to know about an important typographical situation,” I said.

“DON’T START WITH THE CURLY QUOTES!” Suzanne Yada hollered, though her desk was about three feet away.

“It’s actually that the en and em dashes are all mixed up,” I said.

“F— YOU!” she offered.

A true journalistic renaissance woman, and one of the powerful forces of nature propelling the whole Public Press endeavor, Suzanne in her wisdom is not to be taken lightly.

Another volunteer, one of the young ones, piped up: “I’m fixing those right now.”

Talk about a roomful of beating hearts!

Newsprint, typography, layout, proofreads and copyedits, the quickening pulse as the deadline approaches — print production brings out a fierce sort of joy that can only emerge from something as serious as committing words to print. Like jumping off a cliff, there’s no turning back, and you better be damn sure the water’s deep enough.

* * * * *

I first met Michael Stoll in 2004, at a World Affairs Council conference on press credibility produced by the nonprofit Independent Arts & Media, which I co-founded along with my artist-pal Adam Myers, and ex-MTVi production gal Jen Burke Anderson. We had created this entity because we had serious work to do in media and the arts, but we lacked the business and operational infrastructure to make that work possible.

At any rate, it certainly wasn’t going to happen at our day jobs.

Seems we were not alone in this quandary, and the resource we built turned out to be useful for other folks as well.

After the conference concluded, a thin, serious-looking young gentleman approached me. It was Mr. Stoll himself. I would later discover that his characteristic, soft-toned sobriety was just the calm surface of an oceanic depth of invention, focus, intellect, patience, and dug-in, mule-headed stubbornness. Qualities that have served him well as a “journopreneur” pursuing a decidedly contrarian approach to media production in the dawning digital era.

Michael asked me about Newsdesk.org, the news project I started under Indy Arts’ banner. He spoke about collaboration. He talked about his notion for an ad-free, nonprofit newspaper, one that could translate the public-radio funding model — and the multifacted eruption of online content — into newsprint.

The audacity of it! Delivered with such such an earnest demeanor! It was impossible to resist.

Eventually, when he founded The Public Press, Michael set it up as a fiscally sponsored affiliate of Indy Arts. We helped them get their first grants, and receive donations from hundred of individuals inspired by the Public Press vision, and stay in compliance with IRS tax law. We gave them free tables at our various media and arts expositions, promoted their work through Indy Arts’ newsletters and social media — and otherwise stayed the heck out of the way.

Michael brings such detailed, methodical focus to his work that it borders on inexorable. He recruited his advisers and teammates widely but astutely, held planning sessions at Pauline’s Pizza on Valencia, and soon found, amid the usual bumps and turmoil, that his vision had been taken up by more than a dozen colleagues, of every description and level of experience in the journalism world.

Suddenly The Public Press became a collective, and Michael was hanging on for dear life.

For the nonprofit wonks amongst you: This is the power of a smart, creator-friendly fiscal sponsorship program. It provides a platform for brilliant people to do remarkable things that they can’t do anywhere else. It helps them field-test their vision, launch their project, and then iterate.

Soon, The San Francisco Public Press will receive its own tax-exempt status from the IRS. It’s like they’re graduating! We at Indy Arts want to throw a party for them.

But they’ve taken care of that just fine on their own, thank you very much.

See you tonight at Passion Cafe — or buy a newspaper from me or any of the Public Press volunteers working their beat on Market Street.

* * * * *

Oh yeah! One more thing. The SF Chronicle ran an item about The Public Press today. It’s good.

http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2010/06/21/DDFJ1E1B6M.DTL

Say what you will about the future of newspapers. All I know is I’ve been selling newspapers to interested people on the streets of the city I love.

--Josh Wilson

SF Chronicle to Close? SPJ-NorCal Responds

Friday, February 27th, 2009

[Indy Arts is posting this for informational purposes; please contact the SPJ liaisons below for more details.]

Society of Professional Journalists Chapter Calls for Public Discussion of Hearst Corp.’s Threat to Shutter the San Francisco Chronicle

Contact: Ricardo Sandoval, 415-786-1258; Tom Murphy, 415-924-3364

Feb. 27, 2008 — The Northern California Chapter of the Society of Professional Journalists today called for a public discussion – at the earliest date possible – of the Hearst Corporation’s threat to make deeper newsroom cutbacks or it will close the paper.

The chapter’s board insists that this discussion include the paper’s broad community of leading-edge thinkers, readers and journalists.

The board fears additional cuts will exacerbate what it perceives to be an already growing vacuum of credible reporting and will further limit scrutiny of our public institutions.

“We hold no faith in claims that if it reduces its staff even further, the Chronicle can maintain adequate – much less high-quality – coverage of the myriad issues affecting the lives of Bay Area residents,” said board president Ricardo Sandoval.

The paper, which today employs an editorial staff of 275, has already lost more than half its newsroom workers since Hearst bought the paper in 2000. Then, as now, Hearst vowed to build the Chronicle into one of the best newspapers in the world. Yet Hearst’s inability to succeed during better times raises troubling questions about its ability or desire to manage the Chronicle through the current recession.

A closure would mean losing the largest source of news for hundreds of thousands of readers in the San Francisco Bay Area, a region that leads the world in innovation. To date, this community of creative thinkers has been excluded from discussions regarding the paper’s downward spiral.

The SPJ chapter’s board is acutely aware of the trying business environment within the news publishing industry, and the board notes that Hearst issued its ultimatum on the eve of negotiations with union officials on another round of staff cuts.

“The board takes no position in labor negotiations or in the operation of any paper, but urges the Hearst Corporation to soften its rhetoric and embrace its responsibility to serve its loyal community of readers,” said Sandoval.

The board asks the Hearst Corporation to participate in a high-profile conversation with its community based on the imperative of reinvention, a conversation conducted with an openness and transparency that no paper has dared anywhere else. Our chapter stands ready to facilitate this dialogue in any way it can.

The 100-year-old Society of Professional Journalists is the nation’s broadest-based journalism organization, dedicated to encouraging the free practice of journalism and stimulating high standards of ethical behavior and diversity in the media. The Northern California SPJ chapter in recent years has actively engaged the creative capital of the Bay Area to identify and promote alternatives to the failing business model used by large media corporations.

In the interest of the public good and open government, the chapter is eager to work with its membership and the rest of the media community to develop new business models that will consistently support meaningful, substantive journalism and which demonstrate that high-quality journalism can remain a profession that attracts the best and brightest.

“We encourage broad community support for these emerging models,” Sandoval said. “We urge journalists, foundations, corporations, the public and public officials to join us in finding solutions to this increasingly urgent civic challenge.”

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KALW-FM ‘Documents the Downturn’ with Your Help

Tuesday, February 10th, 2009

By Holly Kernan, KALW News Director

[Note: KALW-FM was a producing partner with Indy Arts-affiliate Newsdesk.org on 2008's Election Truthiness Report.]

* Help KALW document the downturn!
* The Economic Edge home page

At KALW news, I’m pleased to announce the launch of our new project designed to tap into the power of our community. We’re calling it “The Economic Edge: Documenting the Downturn.”

The goal: to cover how the economic crisis is affecting you and your community.

We need your help to make it happen. We aren’t asking for money, just a little bit of your time. The project will combine the efforts of our reporters with those of people from all over the bay.

That’s where you come in.

When was the last time you went to a neighborhood watch meeting? Or dropped by a merchants association meeting? Are you interested in learning how your neighborhood is coping with the bad economy? Or maybe you just want to have your stories heard and represented in our coverage. It would be difficult for us to spend time in every corner of the Bay Area that we would like to reach.

Now you can lend us a hand, and take an active role in representing and engaging with your community. We’ve made the process simple: you choose a meeting or event in your city, attend, and report back to us via the phone and/or post a blog report.

The second phase of this project will be to ask the question: How can we come together to address some of our community needs?

But first, help us understand the scope of this crisis in our communities. Please pass this along to your network.

Together, we can make an impact on our community!