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Subject:
From:
Mark Callahan <[log in to unmask]>
Date:
Mon, 16 Sep 2019 08:02:49 -0400
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ICE Announcements 9.16.19
http://ice.uga.edu

1. CFP: Idea Lab Mini Grants (deadline 10/25)
2. Performance: Killick Hinds and the Daniel Levin / A. Eithne Hamilton Duo (9/17)
3. DIGI Colloquium: Focus on "Henry V" (9/19)
4. Third Thursday (9/19)
5. Opportunity: Grass Roots Art Writing Program (registration open)
6. Info Session: Creative Capital Awards (RSVP 9/26)
7. Integrative Conservation Conference (deadlines 9/16,10/16)
8. CFP: Campus Sustainability Grants (deadline 11/11)
9. CFP: MAP Fund (deadline 11/25)
10. CFP: Capturing Science Contest (deadline 12/2)
11. a2ru 2019 National Conference (registration open)
---

1. Idea Lab Mini Grants
Call for Proposals
Deadline: October 25, 2019

*shape: re-examining our spaces, structures, and systems*

Idea Lab, a UGA student organization dedicated to fostering interdisciplinary creative collaboration, is offering funding of up to $500 for UGA students, faculty, and staff with ideas for interdisciplinary projects within the community, with extra consideration for those which enage with the idea of "shape." Project groups must include at least one UGA student and may include members from outside the UGA community.

Recipients of Idea Lab mini grants will receive mentorship and regular feedback from Idea Lab members and Ideas for Creative Exploration Graduate Research Assistants.

Grant proposals should be sent via email to:
[log in to unmask]

Proposal requirements:

Title and brief description of proposed project
List of participants (include titles and affiliations)
Impact of project
Itemized budget
Proposed timeline of project
No more than 500 words
---

2. Killick Hinds and the Daniel Levin / A. Eithne Hamilton Duo
Tuesday, September 17 from 7-10 PM
ATHICA, 675 Pulaski St.
$10 suggested donation; all are welcome regardless.

Daniel Levin / A. Eithne Hamilton Duo

Cellist Daniel Levin is "one of the instrument's most brilliant contemporary practitioners" (The Wire). Elements of European classical music, American jazz, microtonal and new music, and European free improvisation all figure prominently in his unique sound. 

A. Eithne Hamilton is a performing artist and dance educator whose original choreography and film work has been featured at a variety of venues across the U.S. and in South America. Describing her movement as dance-based and technique-oriented, she says that her work is "situated within the intersections of expressionist dance theater, experimental and improvisational performance art,and postmodern dance." 

Killick Hinds lives in Athens, Georgia. His music is Appalachian Trance Metal made on unusual stringed instruments with an emphasis on unquantifiable rhythms, intuitive intonation, and shamanistic ROYGBIV. 
---

3. DIGI Colloquium: Focus on "Henry V"
Thursday, September 19 at 4 PM
Main Library, DigiLab Room 300)
http://digi.uga.edu

Focus on "Henry V" is a peer-reviewed, digital, multimedia book and an Open Educational Resource authored by students and faculty at the University of Georgia (UGA) and Universite Paul Valery Montpellier 3 (UPVM3). The trans-Atlantic team including undergraduate, Master's, and PhD students will discuss how their collaboration brings high standards of design and readability to the online publication format.
---

4. Third Thursday
Thursday, September 19 from 6 to 9 PM
https://3thurs.org

Seven of Athens' established venues for visual art hold "Third Thursday," an event devoted to art in the evening hours, on the third Thursday of every month. The Georgia Museum of Art, the Lamar Dodd School of Art, Lyndon House Arts Center, Glass Cube & Gallery@Hotel Indigo-Athens, Cine, the Classic Center and ATHICA will be open from 6 until 9 p.m. to showcase their visual-arts programming. 
---

5. Grass Roots Art Writing Program
Deadline:  open until filled
http://athica.org/updates/athica-grass-roots-art-writing-program/

ATHICA is pleased to announce its inaugural Grass Roots Art Writing Program for Fall 2019: a series of four half-day workshops spread over the months of October and November that will cover the basics of critical art writing, editing strategies, and artist statement development. 

Instructors will include artist and writer Maggie Davis, writer and former ArtsATL Editor Laura Relyea, Piedmont College professor and museum director Rebecca Brantley, and John English, Emeritus Professor of UGA's Grady College of Journalism and Mass Communication.

Registration is open until filled with a maximum of 12 attendees per session. A registration fee of $10 per session goes to cover expenses. All materials will be provided. Any attendee who completes all four sessions will receive a certificate of completion and a $25 honorarium for completion of the program.

Participants will hone critical thinking skills, engage in discussions about the history and current status of critical art writing, participate in peer-editing, and will build a small writing portfolio.  

Session 1: What is critical art writing?
Saturday, October 19, 2019, 10:00 AM - 2:00 PM
Participants will be introduced to the history, theories, and approaches of art criticism. 

Session 2: What makes good art critical writing?
Saturday, October 26, 2019, 10:00 AM - 2:00 PM
*This session is a prerequisite for session three* 
Participants will use different examples of critical art writing styles to workshop diverse markers of successful art writing. 

Session 3: Editing before the editor
Saturday, November 9, 2019, 10:00 AM - 2:00 PM
Participants will use examples of editing to strengthen their drafting skills following by peer-editing activities and a review of final editing tactics. 

Session 4: Finessing an artist statement
Saturday, November 16, 2019, 10:00 AM - 2:00 PM
Participants will discuss the strategies of developing an artist statement. Exercises and in-class readings will be used.

The ATHICA Grass Roots Art Writing Program is sponsored in part by The James E. and Betty J. Huffer Foundation, The Georgia Council for the Arts, and The National Endowment for the Arts.
---

6. Info Session: Creative Capital Awards
Thursday, September 26 at 7 PM
Atlanta Contemporary Art Center
RSVP: https://creative-capital.org/events/creative-capital-2020-award-application-info-session-atlanta/

Learn how artists can apply for the Creative Capital Award valued at $100,000, including $50,000 in project funding, and an additional $50,000 in career development services -- all dedicated to supporting artists complete their innovative project ideas.

The application, opening February 2020, is free and open to artists working in all disciplines across the country. At the info session, staff will present an overview of the organization and answer questions about the application process, the type of work Creative Capital supports, and how to apply. The session is free and open to the public, and artists in all disciplines are encouraged to attend.
---

7. Integrative Conservation Conference
February 6-9, 2020
UGA Special Collections Library
http://cicr.uga.edu/icc-2020/

Call for Participation
Session deadline: September 16
Abstract deadline: October 16

The Integrative Conservation Conference (ICC) invites you to connect across boundaries to create more just and innovative solutions to today's conservation challenges. Connections across academic disciplines, sciences and the arts, and academia and the general public highlight the collaborative nature of conservation initiatives. ICC fosters inclusive spaces that promote cross-cutting conservation work by exploring how different values and knowledge systems impact conservation theory and practice.

The ICC 2020 Program Committee welcomes abstract submissions for presentations that span a variety of formats and stages of research. In addition to more conventional oral and poster presentations, participants are encouraged to present their work through different modes of communication and diverse media. Presentations that reflect any stage of the research process are welcome -- from initial ideas and data collection to completed projects.
---

8. Campus Sustainability Grants
Pre-proposals due October 11, 2019
Applications due November 11, 2019 at 9 AM
https://sustainability.uga.edu/student-programs/sustainability-grants/

Ideas for Creative Exploration and the Office of Sustainability invite you to apply for a UGA Campus Sustainability Grant. Special consideration will be given to projects incorporating sustainability + arts.

Drawn from the Student Green Fee, grants up to $5,000 are available to current UGA students who wish to initiate projects to advance sustainability through education, research, service, and campus operations. Successful projects will address priorities outlined in UGA's 2020 Strategic Plan to actively conserve resources, educate the campus community, influence positive action for people and the environment, and provide useful research data to inform future campus sustainability efforts. Interdisciplinary projects designed to inspire, beautify and uplift -- as well as to inform and conserve -- are encouraged. Special consideration will be given to projects incorporating sustainability + arts. Grants are awarded based on merit, positive impact, implementation feasibility, and available funding.

The Office of Sustainability coordinates, communicates, and advances sustainability initiatives at UGA in the areas of teaching, research, service and outreach, student engagement, and campus operations. For more information visit sustainability.uga.edu.
---

9. MAP Fund Grants
Deadline: November 25
https://mapfundblog.org

MAP invests in artistic production as the critical foundation of imagining -- and ultimately co-creating -- a more equitable and vibrant society. MAP awards $1 million annually, to up to 45 projects in the range of $10,000-$45,000 per grant. 

The grant supports original live performance projects that embody a spirit of deep inquiry, particularly works created by artists who question, disrupt, complicate, and challenge inherited notions of social and cultural hierarchy across the United States. 

Funded projects address these concerns through the processes of creating and distributing live performance to the public, and/or through the content and themes of the work itself. MAP is committed to intersectional anti-racism, and does not support cultural appropriation or oppressive project language, structures, or content. 

The program pursues its mission by annually welcoming applications for new live performance projects. Each year, MAP hires a different cohort of peer reviewers who recommend the projects they believe most align with MAP's goals through a rigorous, facilitated review process.
---

10. Capturing Science Contest 
Deadline: December 2 at 5 PM 
http://guides.libs.uga.edu/capturingscience

UGA Libraries is hosting the 2019 Capturing Science Contest to encourage STEM communication in a diversity of formats. Undergraduate and graduate students are eligible for $3,000 in prizes.

Guidelines: Explain a STEM (Science, Technology, Engineering, and Mathematics) concept to a broader audience using any medium of your choice.

Prizes: The top three undergraduate and graduate submissions each receive prizes of $1,000, $350, and $150.

Eligibility: All currently-enrolled UGA undergraduate and graduate students are eligible. Students may submit works used for other class assignments. Multiple entries are acceptable.

Contest Criteria: 
Clarity of expression 
Creativity 
Appeal to a broad audience

Formats: Any and all formats and genres are encouraged! Examples include: essays, board games, virtual reality, videos, music, software, apps, curricula, lesson plans, poems, infographics, fiction, and exhibits. See last years' winners and submissions for more examples. Sponsored by: UGA Libraries & The Office of Research 
---

11. a2ru 2019 National Conference
November 7 - 9
University of Kansas
https://www.a2ru.org/events/2019-national-conference/

*Registration open now with UGA partner rates*

The 2019 theme, knowledges: artistic practice as method is an invitation to explore modes of knowing, especially as arrived through the discovery of artistic practice. This theme is anchored in, but not limited to, the following questions:

- How do artistic practices map onto other methods of knowledge production?

- If contemporary artists are trained from the outset to be critical of their medium(s), how might this critical reflection inform more discrete disciplines, which often treat academic form as neutral vessels for the delivery of content?

- What can researchers across the arts, sciences, and humanities learn from one another's practices and approaches?

The University of Kansas, host of this year's a2ru conference, aims to infuse the arts into its research culture by advancing interdisciplinary projects across the sciences and humanities. This is accomplished through existing structures, such as the Integrated Arts Research Initiative (IARI) funded by the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation at the Spencer Museum of Art, The Commons, and the Research Excellence Initiative through the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences. The exhibition and dialogue among artists and scholars developed through the IARI colloquium (November 6, 2019) will launch the 2019 a2ru national conference.
---

Ideas for Creative Exploration is an interdisciplinary initiative for advanced research in the arts at UGA, supported in part by the Franklin College of Arts and Sciences, the Graduate School, and the Willson Center for Humanities and Arts.

ice.uga.edu
facebook.com/ideasforcreativeexploration

For more events and opportunities visit:

a2ru.org
art.uga.edu
arts.uga.edu
athica.org
calendar.uga.edu
dance.uga.edu
drama.uga.edu
english.uga.edu
flagpole.com
georgiamuseum.org
music.uga.edu
pac.uga.edu
willson.uga.edu

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