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MCLA Receives $20,000 Grant from National Endowment for the Arts

NORTH ADAMS, MASS.—MCLA’s Berkshire Cultural Resource Center (BCRC) has been approved for a $20,000 Grants for Arts Projects award to support the MCLA Institute for the Dismantling of Racism. This project will educate and support staff members of historically White art institutions in creating and implementing an anti-racist agenda within the arts, one person at a time. BCRC’s project is among the more than 1,100 projects across America, totaling nearly $27 million, that were selected during this second round of Grants for Arts Projects fiscal year 2021 funding.

 

“As the country and the arts sector begin to imagine returning to a post-pandemic world, the National Endowment for the Arts (NEA) is proud to announce funding that will help arts organizations such as the Berkshire Cultural Resource Center reengage fully with partners and audiences,” said NEA Acting Chairman Ann Eilers. “Although the arts have sustained many during the pandemic, the chance to gather with one another and share arts experiences is its own necessity and pleasure.”

 

Upon receiving the grant, BCRC Executive Director Erica Wall said, “We are thrilled to have received this NEA grant. It validates and advances our work and our commitment to dismantling racism within and through the arts.”

 

Next summer, four people from the Black, Indigenous, and People of Color (BIPOC) art community will be invited to stay in residence at MCLA to develop and lead sessions on the history of racial inequality and representation within the arts community and how to dismantle it. Each year’s program will be themed around a specific topic that centers how to break down systemic racism within and through the arts. Utilizing work from educators, artists, and DEI professionals, the workshops will be facilitated by the Institute’s resident cohort. A call for applications will go out to historically White art institutions inviting their staff members to participate, learn, and practice how to model and promote anti-racist behavior in their daily and professional lives. The Institute will culminate in an exhibition of work by the selected resident artists at MCLA’s Gallery 51, and a public presentation of the work by the Institute’s cohort and its attendees will be shared with the Berkshire County community, and be archived and made accessible to the community at large.

 

For more information on the projects included in the Arts Endowment grant announcement, visit arts.gov/news.

 

About MCLA:
At MCLA, we’re here for all — and focused on each — of our students. Classes are taught by educators who care deeply about teaching, and about seeing their students thrive on every level of their lives. In nearly every way possible, the experience at MCLA is designed to elevate our students as individuals, as leaders, communicators, fully empowered to make their impressions on the world. In addition to our 125-year commitment to public education we have fortified our commitment to equitable academic excellence. For eight of the last 10 years, MCLA has been named a Top Ten College by U.S. News and World Report. MCLA also appears on the organization’s list of top National Public Liberal Arts Colleges, as well as on the top 50 schools in U.S. News’ Social Mobility Ranking, which measures how well schools graduate students who receive Federal Pell Grants.

 

For more information, go to www.mcla.edu.