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    William Cordova "temporal landscapes" at General Audience Presents. Starting out at the first fair to open, “Untitled” on Monday night: the only local gallery included is the non-profit, artist-run space Dimensions Variable (a Knight Arts grantee). Works from Frances Trombly, Adler Guerrier and Leyden Rodriguez-Casanova are...
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    This Thursday, December 6, is the opening of the third annual Philly Photo Day at the Philadelphia Photo Arts Center. Visit the Crane Arts Building from 6–9 p.m. to catch a glimpse of the many perspectives submitted by photographers from around Philadelphia. The project was funded in part by a...
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    After months of poring through more than 1,100 applications, we’re excited to finally share the 34 winners of the Knight Arts Challenge Miami. This year, we’ve seen some interesting trends. First, the winners will help spread the art deep into South Florida’s communities, whether through Miami Dade College’s new art center in Hialeah, an Opa-locka festival, or a collaborative in Delray Beach. Also, several are bringing art to unexpected places, with theater in shipping containers and music at the airport and more. RELATED LINKS "Making art general: @knightfdn celebrates the local cultural community" on Storify "Knight Foundation announces 34 winners of Knight Arts Challenge" in The Miami Herald "John S. and James L. Knight Foundation Announces $23 Million in South Florida Arics Finding" on NBCMiami.com "Knight Arts Challenge Winners 2012 Winners: Sweat Records to Hip-Hop Symphony" in the Huffington Post "Unexpected Art: Knight Foundation Announces Winners of 34 Grants" on WLRN We’re also excited that close to half are from small organizations or individuals - the kind of grassroots, entrepreneurial projects that are very Miami. (Hip Hop Symphony, anyone?) Together, they’re helping to make art ubiquitous in Miami. Earlier this week, we also announced $23 million in new Knight funding - including to continue the Knight Arts Challenge through 2015 and fund projects at some of the region’s leading institutions. The support is part of our two-pronged approach to fund the organizations that provide artistic excellence everyday and the smaller projects that make our arts scene unique. We decided to increase local support after a study found that challenge funding was fueling the local arts scene.
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    The holiday season is upon us and whether you believe in Santa, hang a stocking or put out your shoes, spin the dreidel, light a Kinara or a Menorah, parade in Posadas, or ring in the New Year, there are festivities for everyone in the Queen City this December. Musical...
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    I spent Black Friday in the imaginary world of Alexey Taran and Carla Forte as they rehearsed for their upcoming performance, "Imaginarium Life," which opens at The Sandbox on December 6th. "Imaginarium Life" is the second phrase (of a four-phase project) that involves a dance-theater-multimedia performance based on the screenplay...
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    By Abdo Sayegh, TU Dance TU Dance opened its ninth season at the O'Shaughnessy, November 16-18, 2013, featuring Feather and Bone, a new work by Artistic Director Uri Sands, who was inspired by the work of Canadian photographer Gregory Colbert. Reflecting particularly on Colbert's Eagle With Dancer, Sands’ new work...
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    We’re excited to share big news for the South Florida arts community: Knight Foundation is committing $23 million in new funding for arts and culture. Part of a two-pronged strategy, the funding will go to some of the region’s leading arts institutions, and to fund more grassroots projects by continuing the Knight Arts Challenge through 2015. Related Link "34 ideas win Knight Arts Challenge Miami" by Dennis Scholl KnightArts.org "Making art general: @knightfdn celebrates the local cultural community" on Storify Everywhere you go in South Florida, we want you to have an encounter with art. As Knight Foundation President Alberto  Ibargüen told the Miami Herald: "The point of all of this, as I never tire of saying, is we want to make art general in Miami. To do that, you want to support arts institutions that day in and day out offer opportunities for people in Miami to see and feel and participate and engage art... and then at the same time engaging anybody in Miami who has an idea.” The institutions receiving funding are: Miami City Ballet ($5 million): to help the ballet increase its outreach and add new works to its repertoire, including new commissions. The Wolfsonian-FIU ($5 million): to engage the community by developing dynamic programming and expanding its digital reach. Cleveland Orchestra ($2 million): to expand its subscription season to four weekends of concerts and significantly increases its educational outreach programs to students. Arts education ($1 million):  To expand the horizons of the next generation of local artists by offering scholarships to DASH and New World students for cultural  field trips to New York City and Europe. Borscht Film Festival ($500,000): to help the festival expand its efforts and create more “only in Miami” stories. Miami International Film Festival ($500,000): to further the expansion of Ibero-American film through awards at this annual event. We began to invest deeply in the arts in 2008, just as the arts scene was beginning to take shape. We’re increasing funding now to help take the cultural community to the next level.
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    "Le petit Parisien." Dina Mitrani Gallery opened up in 2008, with the mission to show photography exclusively. Several other galleries throughout the years dedicated themselves to this art form, but not many. So she has a niche in Miami, and has exhibited both local and national...