"By bringing artists to the community development table, this program invites everyone to create new approaches for understanding and caring for ourselves, each other, and the environment."
So says Sarah York Rubin, executive director of Santa Barbara County's Office of Arts and Culture, which is offering $140,000 in grants to local artists to create art-driven campaigns that address public health, climate resilience/emergency preparedness, civic engagement, and social justice, reports the San Luis Obispo Tribune.
The Central Coast Creative Corps Pilot Program, funded by the California Arts Council, is open to nonprofits, tribal governments, and government agencies in the Central Coast region, and applicants are required to commit to working with an artist or culture bearer for a year starting in September 2024, with an additional three-month period for project exploration and design, reports the Los Angeles Times.
"Weall be working directly with grantees about what it means to work with a socially engaged artist, and how that collaboration can be so powerful,"Hannah Rubalcava, workforce development pilot, says in a press release.
The program will provide $100,000 to compensate an artist for work on the initiative, as well as $20,000 for artist-community engagement, including art supplies and materials; another $20,000 will go to the organization for program administration.
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