Archive of Documentary Arts Collection Awards
Deadline:
Fri May 15, 2015 15:40
Location:
Durham,
North Carolina
United States of America
United States of America
The Archive of Documentary Arts is part of Duke University's David M. Rubenstein Rare Book and Manuscript Library. Its mission is to collect, promote, preserve, and provide access to audio, moving images, photography, and text from around the world related to the documentary endeavor for the purpose of inspiring reflection, research, creative expression, and dialogue in this moment, and for generations to come.
The Archive of Documentary Arts is committed to diversifying its collection in order to better reflect the multitude of viewpoints and communities from which work is being made in the documentary arts today. To this end, the ADA offers the following purchase awards to acquire photography in 2015:
- Award for Documentarians of Color
- Award for Documentarians Working in North Carolina
- Award for Emerging Documentarians
- Award for Innovation in the Documentary Arts
- Award for Women Documentarians
Selected photographers will receive an honorarium of $4500 to print a body of work which will be acquired by the Archive of Documentary Arts. Selected work will be preserved in the non-circulating collections at the David M. Rubenstein Rare Book & Manuscript Library at Duke University, and available for use by students, faculty, and independent researchers. The ADA also promotes collection material through exhibition and a variety of public programs.
Contact: Lisa McCarty, Curator, Archive of Documentary Arts | lisa.mccarty@duke.edu
The Archive of Documentary Arts is committed to diversifying its collection in order to better reflect the multitude of viewpoints and communities from which work is being made in the documentary arts today. To this end, the ADA offers the following purchase awards to acquire photography in 2015:
- Award for Documentarians of Color
- Award for Documentarians Working in North Carolina
- Award for Emerging Documentarians
- Award for Innovation in the Documentary Arts
- Award for Women Documentarians
Selected photographers will receive an honorarium of $4500 to print a body of work which will be acquired by the Archive of Documentary Arts. Selected work will be preserved in the non-circulating collections at the David M. Rubenstein Rare Book & Manuscript Library at Duke University, and available for use by students, faculty, and independent researchers. The ADA also promotes collection material through exhibition and a variety of public programs.
Contact: Lisa McCarty, Curator, Archive of Documentary Arts | lisa.mccarty@duke.edu
Barbaralee Diamonstein-Spielvogel Visiting Artist Program
Deadline:
Fri Jan 16, 2015 18:15
Location:
Durham,
North Carolina
United States of America
United States of America
The David M. Rubenstein Rare Book & Manuscript Library invites applications for the Fall 2015 Barbaralee Diamonstein-Spielvogel Visiting Artist Fellowship. Artists from around the world and representing a range of practices and disciplines are encouraged to apply; including architects, photographers, filmmakers, sound artists, poets, and performance artists to name a few. The Fellowship will provide an artist with the opportunity to develop a new body of work exploring and engaging with archival, manuscript and other special collections housed at the Rubenstein Library. Our diverse and unique collections have the potential to inspire a variety of works, from new documentary films and textile designs to installations and theatrical plays. Fellowships are four weeks in length and include access to research and studio space. Artists will be given the freedom to work with as many (or as few) archival collections as they choose and will have the opportunity to meet with scholars, students and staff from across the academic disciplines while at Duke. In turn, Visiting Artist Fellows are asked to make themselves available a few hours each week as mentors to Duke students from various disciplines. At the end of the residency, the Rubenstein will host a talk with the artist that will focus on the ways in which archival materials and their conversations across campus have inspired new and innovative approaches to art making.
Artists applying for the Fellowship will be asked to write an artist’s statement outlining their interest in the Fellowship and suggesting possible interdisciplinary opportunities. The selection committee will choose artists whose point of view, choice of media, life experiences, and heritage are varied, reflecting the diversity of materials found in the archives. Although artists will be invited to spend time in the archives, investigate its holdings, and create new work for the fellowship, artists will not be required to use materials from the archives in their new work – instead they will be urged to relate to the collections as sources of inspiration.
Documentation or examples of work created for the fellowship must be submitted to the Rubenstein within 12 months of the date of the residency. Documentation and surrogates may be preserved and archived in a digital collection that will be hosted by Duke University.
This grant is made possible through the generous support of Dr. Barbaralee Diamonstein-Spielvogel.
Fellowship Includes
-A private workspace and living quarters on the Duke University campus.
-Access to special collections materials in the Rubenstein Library Reading Room and private consultation with subject specialists.
-A stipend of $4,000 for the artist’s discretionary use.
Apply at:
http://library.duke.edu/rubenstein/research/visiting-artist
Contact:
Lisa McCarty, Curator of the Archive of Documentary Arts, lisa.mccarty@duke.edu
Artists applying for the Fellowship will be asked to write an artist’s statement outlining their interest in the Fellowship and suggesting possible interdisciplinary opportunities. The selection committee will choose artists whose point of view, choice of media, life experiences, and heritage are varied, reflecting the diversity of materials found in the archives. Although artists will be invited to spend time in the archives, investigate its holdings, and create new work for the fellowship, artists will not be required to use materials from the archives in their new work – instead they will be urged to relate to the collections as sources of inspiration.
Documentation or examples of work created for the fellowship must be submitted to the Rubenstein within 12 months of the date of the residency. Documentation and surrogates may be preserved and archived in a digital collection that will be hosted by Duke University.
This grant is made possible through the generous support of Dr. Barbaralee Diamonstein-Spielvogel.
Fellowship Includes
-A private workspace and living quarters on the Duke University campus.
-Access to special collections materials in the Rubenstein Library Reading Room and private consultation with subject specialists.
-A stipend of $4,000 for the artist’s discretionary use.
Apply at:
http://library.duke.edu/rubenstein/research/visiting-artist
Contact:
Lisa McCarty, Curator of the Archive of Documentary Arts, lisa.mccarty@duke.edu