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Hawaii State Foundation On Culture and The Arts JULY 2020 Newsletter
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Hawaii State Foundation On Culture and The Arts JULY 2020 Newsletter
- Hawaiʻi students in national Scholastic Art and Writing Awards exhibit
- NEA Grants
- WESTAF CARES Relief Funds
- SFCA Grantee Spotlight
- 2020 Legislative Grants-in-Aid
- AFTA COVID-19 Arts Impact Survey
- Arts Activities and Resources Page
- Teaching Artists Institute
- Art in Public Places Hawaiʻi
- Public Art Archive
- Arts, Music, and Culture Calendar
- New Exhibit at the Hawaiʻi State Art Museum
- Hawaiʻi State Art Museum Calendar
- Holiday Schedule
- SFCA Board Meeting Schedule
- Job Opportunities
- Volunteer Opportunities
Scholastic Art and Writing Awards
Art. Write. Now. The Best Teen Art and Writing of 2020.
Hawaiʻi students Gabrielle Ah Mook Sang (Iolani School), Clara Wu (Kalani High School), Addysyn Oppegaard (University Laboratory School), Sun Joo Kim, Marielsa Sadio (Farrington High School), Teanna Camara (Kalaheo High School), have artwork in this national exhibit of the Scholastic Student Art and Writing Awards! These works were previously on display in the 2020 Hawaiʻi Regional Scholastic Student Art Awards exhibit at the Hawaiʻi State Art Museum.
Get ready for the 2021 Scholastic Student Art and Writing Awards competition! Read the tips for students and educators, including feedback from judges and preparing for the digital submissions process: Get Ready for the 2021 Awards. Public, private, or home-school students in the U.S., Canada, or American schools in the rest of the world enrolled in grades 7-12 (ages 13 and up) are eligible to participate. Submissions open online September 1, 2020.
State Foundation on Culture and the Arts is the Hawaiʻi regional Affiliate Partner for the Scholastic Student Art and Writing Awards.
Top left: "Panoramic Beauty", drawing by Teanna Camara, grade 11, Kalaheo High School. Educator: Jodie Chock. Top right: "Distortion", photograph by Marielsa Sadio, grade 11, Governor Wallace R Farrington High School. Educator: Aljon Tacata.
Bottom left: "Smile", painting by Clara Wu, grade 12, Kalani High School. Educator: James Mosher. Bottom right: "Grams", painting by Gabrielle Ah Mook Sang, grade 12, Iolani School. Educator: Janis Uehara.
Left: "A Vessel To Hold My Spirit" ceramic sculpture by Addyssyn Oppegaard, grade 12, University Laboratory School. Educator: Douglas Doi. This piece was also nominated for a 2020 American Visions award. Right: "Her", painting by Sun Joo Kim, grade 11. Educator: Janet Sato.
National Endowment for the Arts (NEA) Grants
NEA Grants to Hawaiʻi Organizations
The National Endowment for the Arts (NEA) has announced their second round of fiscal year 2020 funding, including over $1 million to 14 organizations in Hawaiʻi. See the full list online: NEA Spring 2020 Grants Announcement.
NEA CARES Grants to Hawaiʻi Organizations
The NEA has announced the nonprofit arts organizations recommended for direct funding through the Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security (CARES) Act. Five of these organizations are based in Hawaiʻi:
•Hiʻipaka LLC (aka Waimea Valley)
•Hawaii International Film Festival
•Hawaiʻi Opera Theatre
•Honolulu Theatre for Youth
•Maui Arts and Cultural Center
Read the full announcement online: National Endowment for the Arts Approves Arts Organizations for CARES Act Funding.
Our Town Grants
Our Town is the National Endowment for the Arts’ creative placemaking grants program. These grants support projects that integrate arts, culture, and design activities into efforts that strengthen communities by advancing local economic, physical, and/or social outcomes. These projects require a partnership between a nonprofit organization and a local government entity, with one of the partners being a cultural organization. Cost share/matching grants range from $25,000 to $150,000, with a minimum cost share/match equal to the grant amount.
In addition to previously eligible project types, Our Town FY2021 invites creative placemaking projects and innovative partnerships that respond to evolving and emerging local community needs. These may include efforts to support artists and cultural organizations in addressing impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic, artist unemployment, racial inequity, and other needs that may not be clear at this specific time.
Learn more about how to apply: NEA Our Town.
WESTAF CARES Relief Fund Awardees
The Western States Arts Federation (WESTAF) is pleased to announce the recipients of its Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security (CARES) Relief Fund for Organizations grants. Supported by the National Endowment for the Arts, this competitive grant program was established to provide general operating support to arts and cultural organizations in the West that have been adversely affected by the COVID-19 pandemic. Three Hawaiʻi organizations will receive funding:
•Hawaiian Mission Houses Historic Site and Archives (HMH)
•Society for Konaʻs Education and Art
•University of Hawaiʻi-Hilo Performing Arts Center
Read the full press release online: WESTAF Announces CARES Relief Fund Awardees.
SFCA Grantee Spotlight
SFCA grant recipients have been responding to the challenges of COVID-19 stay-at-home and safer-at-home orders.
•Hawaiʻi Council for the Humanities: Hawaiʻi History Day is a year-long history education program that invigorates the teaching and learning of history in grades 4-12. The program promotes a theme-based, research-centered model for history and civics education. History Day culminates in the presentation and evaluation of these projects at the Hawaiʻi History Day State Fair, which this year was conducted virtually. You can watch a video and do a virtual gallery walk online: 2020 Hawaiʻi History Day Virtual State Fair.
•Honolulu Theatre for Youth: gained national attention for The HI WAY, an eight-episode miniseries geared towards elementary students. The new digital content, delivered online and through a partnership with Hawaiʻi News Now, enabled the organization to continue educational programming to students and their target audience during the COVID-19 pandemic. Projected viewership numbers provided by Hawaiʻi News Now were 30,000. Actual viewership numbers from March through May 2020 were 383,875.
◦National Endowment for the Arts: What I'm Watching, Theater Edition.
◦American Theatre: Theatres Education Programs Now on a Screen Near You.
•West Hawaiʻi Dance Theatre responded to the COVID-19 Stay-at-Home order by adapting programming and offering Zoom dance classes to students of all ages. For students with limited internet capabilities, packets containing worksheets, coloring pages, and theory syllabus were mailed to their homes. The packets enabled students to remain engaged with their dance studies and instructors. Learn more on their website: West Hawaiʻi Dance Theatre Dance From Home.
2020 Legislative Grants in Aid Cancelled
The Hawaiʻi State Legislature has announced that the legislature will not be funding its annual grants-in-aid (GIA) in 2020 due to the State's changing financial circumstances.
In 2019, the Legislature awarded nearly $30 million in grants to nonprofits throughout the state. The Hawaiʻi State Legislature awards grants are funded by the State under Hawaiʻi Revised Statutes, Chapter 42F. These grants are awarded for Capital Improvement Projects (CIPs) to construct and/or repair buildings and other facilities, or for operating funds to support programs.
Help Hawai‘i Get Funding for COVID-19 Relief
The National Endowment for the Arts together with Americans for the Arts, the nation’s leading nonprofit for advancing the arts, have created a survey to assess the economic impact of COVID-19 on nonprofits arts organizations. We urge all Hawai‘i arts and culture organizations, creative workers, cultural practitioners, and educators to participate, so the virus’ effect on our state’s arts infrastructure can be documented.
Your answers are critically important. They create the data-backed case for advocacy to include the arts in emergency relief funding that might be allocated at the federal or state levels.
Take the five-minute survey online at AFTA COVID-19 Arts Impact Survey.
Arts Activities and Resources Page
A curated list, compiled by our SFCA staff, contains various arts experiences accessible online, for all ages and abilities. This list will be updated as more resources become available. Read more on our website: SFCA Arts Activities and Resource Page.
Recent additions to the list include links to:
•Hawaiʻi Women in Filmmaking: their online filmmaking programs for young women will run throughout the summer at no cost for participants. Learn how to produce a short film and make media that matters! Deadline to apply: July 10th, 2020.
•Hawai‘i State Public Library System (HSPLS) HSPLS Virtual Programs: library staff are excited to share their favorite stories with you through Online Challenges, Storytime at Home, and how to make crafts, bake, art projects and more through HSPLS Creates.
•Nā Pāka ma ka Hale (Parks at Home): a new series of online classes taught by Honolulu Department of Parks and Recreation staff. Nā Pāka ma ka Hale features videos of DPR’s dedicated recreation staff giving step-by-step information on a wide variety of topics. The classes can be viewed anytime on DPR’s Facebook, DPR’s Instagram, and DPR’s YouTube feeds.
•Pacific Islanders in Communications Teaching Aids and Lesson Plans: Multimedia teaching aids and lesson plans for bringing Pacific Islander culture into the classroom. Organized by grade levels 6 – 8, 9 – 10, and 11 – 12.
•Shangri La Museum of Islamic Art, Culture and Design: videos on YouTube of art and objects from the Shangri La collection, and of past residencies.
Arts Education
Teaching Artist Institute Summer 2020
The 2020 Summer Institute for educators is being held online this year, with the theme of "2020 Vision for Education in Hawaiʻi and Beyond: Culturally Responsive and Sustaining Teaching through the Arts." Registration has closed. For more information: Maui Arts and Cultural Center 2020 Summer Virtual Institute.
Art in Public Places Hawaiʻi
The Hiroki Morinoue: Evolving Language exhibit can be viewed online! The Honolulu Museum of Art (HoMA) has shared a video on YouTube showing this exhibit at First Hawaiian Center in downtown Honolulu, with narration by Hiroki and HoMA curator Katherine Love. Three prints from the SFCA’s Art in Public Places Collection were loaned to the Honolulu Museum of Art for this exhibit: "Moonlit Path", "Examining Picasso's Kimono Design", and "Textile Merchant with Modern Matisse Pattern."
The First Hawaiian Center exhibition program, a partnership between First Hawaiian Bank and the Honolulu Museum of Art, features rotating exhibitions of artists living and working in the islands, or with a connection to Hawaiʻi.
"Moonlit Path" woodblock print by Hiroki Morinoue, 1986. Art in Public Places Collection of the State Foundation on Culture and the Arts.
"Examining Picasso's Kimono Design" wood block/monotype print by Hiroki Morinoue, 1991. Art in Public Places Collection of the State Foundation on Culture and the Arts.
"Textile Merchant with Modern Matisse Pattern" wood block/monotype print by Hiroki Morinoue, 1993. Art in Public Places Collection of the State Foundation on Culture and the Arts.
For over a half a century now, the Art in Public Places Collection of the State Foundation on Culture and the Arts has been recognized as one of the most significant collections of late twentieth and early twenty-first century art in Hawai‘i. The collection enhances the environmental quality of public buildings and spaces throughout the state for the enjoyment and enrichment of the public. View the collection online: Search the Art in Public Places Collection.
Public Art Archive
View permanently installed works of art in the SFCA’s Art in Public Places Collection across the state (and many other public art collections) in the Public Art Archive with the Locate Public Art tool! Try it out: locate.publicartarchive.org or go to www.publicartarchive.org and click the locate button.
This tool is a device-responsive web app. Use it on your desktop, tablet or smartphone. No download is required, and it is available at no cost!
Recent & Upcoming Exhibit Visits
APPROVED EXHIBIT VISITS
The SFCA Board of Commissioners has approved Acquisition Award Selection Committee (AASC) visits to these exhibits:
HAWAI‘I ISLAND - Kipaipai Fellows 2020, Kahilu Theatre Galleries, Kamuela, Hawai‘i Island. Mixed media, curated. August 27 - October 18, 2020.
KAUA‘I - Art Kaua‘i, Kukui Grove Center, Līhu‘e. Mixed media, juried. August 27 - October 18, 2020.
MAUI - Malama Wao Akua, Hui No‘eau Visual Art Center, Makawao, Maui. Mixed media, juried. September 18 - November 6, 2020.
O‘AHU - A Deeper Shade of Soul, Sculpture by Jonathan Swanz, the Honolulu Museum of Art at First Hawaiian Center, Honolulu. Drawings, curated. July 23, 2020 - January 8, 2021.
O‘AHU - Downtown Drawing, the Honolulu Museum of Art at First Hawaiian Center, Honolulu. Drawings, curated. July 23, 2020 - January 8, 2021.
O‘AHU - Incipit: Paintings by Tom Walker, the Honolulu Museum of Art at First Hawaiian Center, Honolulu. Paintings, curated. July 23, 2020 - January 8, 2021.
O‘AHU - Why are you painting?, the Honolulu Museum of Art School, Linekona Gallery, Honolulu. Paintings, curated. August 7 - September 4, 2020.
O‘AHU - Resiliance, the Honolulu Museum of Art School, Linekona Gallery, Honolulu. Ceramic, curated. September 18 - October 16, 2020.
Approved AASC visits are also posted on the SFCA's website: Acquisition Award Selection Committees.
An AASC visited the following exhibit in June 2020:
OʻAHU - Hawaiʻi Craftsmen Fiber Hawaiʻi 2020: In, Of, or About Fiber. Hawaiʻi Craftsmen has made the exhibit catalog available online, and Windward Community College has provided a free video walkthrough of the exhibit. View online: Fiber Hawaiʻi 2020.
The role of the Acquisition Award Selection Committee (AASC) is to make recommendations to the SFCA regarding the purchase of works of art, including the review, nomination, evaluation and selection of the recommended artworks for acquisition. The AASC is generally composed of SFCA commissioners, staff members, and visual arts consultants.
For more information on AASCs, including how to invite a committee to an exhibit, or to volunteer as a Visual Art Consultant, please visit our website: Art in Public Places Relocatable Works of Art. For more information about specific exhibits, please contact the exhibit host organizations.
AASC Exhibit Visits made earlier this year and AASC Purchase and Gift Recommendations are posted on our website: SFCA News Blog: Acquisition Award Selection Committees
Arts, Music, and Culture Calendar
July 2020
This month we are sharing information from Hawaiʻi arts and culture institutions that are beginning to re-open. We are also continuing to feature online events and activities by SFCA grantees and Artistic Teaching Partners.
Hawaiʻi Arts and Culture Re-opening
Hawaiʻi’s cultural institutions offer a unique perspective of our island home. As these organizations reopen their doors, it’s a perfect opportunity for residents, both kama‘āina and military, to rediscover and reconnect with the history, arts, culture, and natural environment that makes Hawai‘i special. Museums and other cultural sites cover a wide range of interests, and offer programs and reduced admission rates for local residents. While these venues have adjusted their visitor experience to ensure the health and safety of their guests, they continue to provide valuable insight into our past and inspiration for the future. We encourage residents to visit and support these organizations that are vital part of our economy and community.
Please check with the organization for their hours of operation prior to your visit.
Hawaiʻi National Parks, Trails and Sites
National parks, trails and sites are re-opening in phases. For current information: National Park Service Hawaiʻi.
Bishop Museum
As of June 26, Bishop Museum is open to the general public and is offering a free "Keiki On Us" admission for children until July 5 for Kamaʻāina and military who reserve their tickes online with the code KEIKI at check out. For current information: Bishop Museum E Komo Mai.
Hawaiʻi State Art Museum (HiSAM)
HiSAM will re-open to the public on Monday, July 13 with a new exhibit, "Mai hoʻohuli i ka lima i luna". This exhibition, curated by guest curators Drew Broderick, Kaʻili Chun and Kapulani Landgraf, will spread out across HiSAM over the course of a year. Current hours: Monday - Friday 10:00 a.m. - 4:00 p.m. For more information: Hawaiʻi State Art Museum.
Honolulu Museum of Art (HoMA)
HoMa will re-open to the public on Thursday, July 16 with new hours geared towards Hawaiʻi residents. Days and hours have been adjusted and will include new evening hours and free admission on Friday evenings through September 11. The HoMA Cafe will also be open. For more information: Honolulu Museum of Art Community Update.
Iolani Palace
As of June 19, Iolani Palace is open for tours. Tours must be booked in advance online. The Palace is offering special kamaʻaina and military pricing on self-guided audio tours. Learn more about the Palaces re-opening and what guests can expect: E Komo Mai - Welcome Back to Iolani Palace. The Palace also offers a variety of online experiences and resources, including a 3D Virtual Tour, Palace Grounds Tour, and videos of presentations: Iolani Palace Virtual Experiences and Resources.
Mānoa Heritage Center
Anticipating early July re-opening, limited by day and time slots with pre-registration required. The center plans to offer short docent-led tours of the garden, self-guided exploration, and hands-to-ʻāina service learning opportunities. For more information: Mānoa Heritage Center.
Online Events and Activities
Aloha Performing Arts Company
Aloha Theatre on Facebook: Wednesday Wonders livestream, 1:00 – 2:00 p.m. Story time, sketches, arts and crafts. Family-friendly entertainment and activities.
Ballet Hawaii
Virtual Open Classes: online classes for experienced dancers trying to maintain technique as well as adult and teen enthusiasts interested in continuing their training. Please visit their website for class information, registration, and pricing: Ballet Hawaii Virtual Open Classes.
Beth Marcil
Double Triangle Pop-Up Tutorial from Art From the Inside Out: SFCA Artistic Teaching Partner Beth Marcil's short video shows you how to make a double triangle pop-up with paper, pencil and scissors. Beth led one of the Hawaiʻi State Art Museum's HiSAM From Home kid-focused online art classes in May, demonstrating how to make a 3-D monster pop-up card.
Donkey Mill Art Center
Donkey Mill Art Center on Facebook: DMAC Teen Council’s “The Engagement Project” and the DMAC Virtual Sketchbook Club share weekly prompts and inspiration on Facebook. All ages and experience levels welcome.
Hawai‘i Opera Theatre: Orvis Young Voices Studio
Accepting auditions by high school singers (grades 9 – 12) living in the state of Hawaiʻi for the 2020-2021 season. Open now through June 20. A free program to provide young singers in Hawaiʻi with the unique opportunity to explore the world of solo voice performance. For more information: Orvis Young Voices Studio.
Hawai‘i Symphony Orchestra
•HSO From Home. Digital content created by HSO musicians to help keep music in your lives, shared on Facebook, Instagram, and YouTube.
•HSO Symphony of the Hawaiian Birds. Learn about Hawaiian birds through science, music and art.
Honolulu Theatre for Youth
HTY Drama Education Online: simple, creative activities for parents, children and families. Videos on YouTube. For more information: HTY Drama Education Online.
Jeff Peterson
Online ki ho‘alu (Hawaiian Slack Key Guitar) Workshop: free lessons by SFCA Folk and Traditional Arts alum Jeff Peterson. For more information: Jeff Peterson Guitar.
Laurel Nakanishi
"Writing With Aunty Laurel" is an interactive video series featuring poetry writing lessons, prompts, and art projects for children grades 3 - 5. For more information: Laurel Nakanishi Online Education.
Manoa Valley Theatre (MVT)
•MVT Virtual Night at the Theatre - Shipment Day. Filmed live at MVT, "Shipment Day" is about Olivia Robello Breitha, chronicling her diagnosis with Hansen's Disease at age 18, her two-and-a-half-year confinement at Kalihi Hospital, to the day before her shipment to Kalaupapa, the Hansen’s disease settlement on Molokaʻi. The recording is now available as a video on YouTube.
•MVT Live: Behind the scenes at Manoa Valley Theatre. Watch live on YouTube or Facebook, or watch the recorded version later. For more information: MVT Live.
Statewide Cultural Extension Program (SCEP)
SCEP Live Online will utilize web conferencing to livestream performances and presentations by local artists. For more information, including how to join online performances: SCEP Live Online.
Storybook Theatre of Hawaii
Aunty Janet’s Fun Videos: join Artistic Teaching Partner Janet Carafa as she leads you through a mimed story, and then how to be a mime yourself!
Coming up in 2020 and 2021
Please check with venues and organizations as event information may change.
O‘AHU – Manoa Valley Theatre
•9/03 - 9/20/2020 Desperate Measures
•10/29 - 11/15/2020 Cambodian Rock Band
•12/04 - 12/06/2020 A Christmas Carol: A Live Radio Play
•1/07 - 1/24/2021 The Andrews Brothers
•3/04 - 3/21/2021 Be More Chill
•5/06 - 5/16/2021 Tiny Beautiful Things
•7/01 - 7/18/2021 Lisa Matsumoto’s Once Upon One Time
For more information: Manoa Valley Theatre
O‘AHU – Hawai‘i Book & Music Festival
10/31 – 11/01 University of Hawai‘i-Mānoa
For more information: Hawai‘i Book & Music Festival
Hawaiʻi State Art Museum Re-opens Monday, July 13, with new exhibit
The Hawaiʻi State Art Museum (HiSAM) will re-open to the public on Monday, July 13, with a new exhibit, "Mai hoʻohuli i ka lima i luna". This exhibition, curated by guest curators Drew Broderick, Kaʻili Chun and Kapulani Landgraf, will spread out across HiSAM over the course of a year, occupying different spaces at different times—a wall display case, gift shop, café, and sculpture garden on the first floor, and a sculpture lobby and multiple gallery rooms on the second floor. The curatorial response varies with each space as do the artworks. In certain moments the exhibition is conventional, in others experimental: mapping interpersonal relations within a group of artists, paying attention to materials and techniques, recognizing struggles of the past, dwelling with kaona in the present, and facing indigenous futures already in the making.
For over a half a century now, the Art in Public Places Collection of the State Foundation on Culture and the Arts has been recognized as one of the most significant collections of late twentieth and early twenty-first century art in Hawai‘i. The collection enhances the environmental quality of public buildings and spaces throughout the state for the enjoyment and enrichment of the public.
Hawaiʻi State Art Museum Online
Staff are posting artworks from the SFCA’s Art in Public Places Collection, hosting online activities, and creating a fun, educational space online. Subscribe to the HiSAM email newsletter to get event calendar updates!
HiSAM from Home
Interactive arts classes on Zoom
Every Tuesday from 10:00am-10:30am HST, HiSAM hosts weekly interactive Zoom classes, led by our highly trained Artistic Teaching Partners. Please register in advance: HiSAM From Home Interactive Zoom Classes.
Visual Art Workshops
Every Thursday from 10:00am-11:00am HST, HiSAM hosts visual art workshops online live with local teaching artists. Thursday July 2: DIY Workshop with Welzie Art.
Musical Performances
Musical performances every other Friday at 6:00pm on Instagram Live - a local musician takes over the HiSAM Instagram account (@HawaiiStateArtMuseum) for a one-hour performance. Friday July 3: jazz music with Jabari Prevost.
Pau Hana Talk
Wednesday, July 8, 5:00 - 6:00 p.m. on Zoom: University of Hawaiʻi-Mānoa students Cody Anderson and Zoe Liu. In partnership with the Department of Art and Art History at the University of Hawai‘i at Mānoa. Additional information and link to Zoom session on the HiSAM online event calendar: Pau Hana Artist Talk July 8.
2020 State Government Holiday Schedule
Independence Day - Friday, July 3, 2020
Statehood Day - Friday, August 21, 2020
Labor Day - Monday, September 7, 2020
General Election Day - Tuesday November 3, 2020
Veterans' Day - Wednesday, November 11, 2020
Thanksgiving - Thursday, November 26, 2020
Christmas - Friday, December 25, 2020
The State Foundation on Culture and the Arts and the Hawai‘i State Art Museum operate on the Hawai‘i State Government schedule.
SFCA Board of Commissioners Meetings
2020 SFCA Board of Commissioners Meetings
Wednesday, July 15, 2020
Wednesday, September 16, 2020
Wednesday, November 18, 2020
Committee meetings usually begin at 9:00 a.m., followed by the general meeting at 11:00 a.m.
Unless otherwise specified, the public is invited to attend SFCA Standing Committee and Commission Meetings. Meetings and agendas are posted just prior to the meetings on the State of Hawai‘i Calendar of Events. Select “State Foundation on Culture and the Arts” from the search menu.
In order to comply with the Sunshine Law and social distancing requirements, notice of meetings will be posted on the State of Hawaiʻi Calendar of Events seven days prior to the meeting, submission of written testimony on agendized items will be accepted and minutes of meetings will be available within 40 days after the meeting.
Job Opportunities
Job Listings
There are no SFCA job listings at this time. Job listings are posted in our website news blog and in the monthly email newsletter (subscribe here), as well as on our social media (@hawaiisfca on Facebook, @hawaii_sfca on Instagram, and @hawaii_sfca on Twitter).
Internships
SFCA and HiSAM do not have an active internship program at this time.
Art Acquisitions and Commissions
Artwork acquisitions and commissions are done through the Art in Public Places Program. For more information: Opportunities for Artists.
eProcurement
For doing business with the state as a contractor, the State of Hawaii eProcurement (HiePro) is a system for issuing solicitations, receiving responses, and issuing notices of award. Solicitations and awards are posted and searchable. State Foundation on Culture and the Arts solicitations have included graphic design services, printing services, custom framing, artwork conservation and restoration.To find SFCA solicitations, search under Department: Accounting and General Services (the SFCA is administratively attached to the Department of Accounting and General Services).
Get Involved: Volunteer Opportunities
Help the SFCA Select Artwork
The Art in Public Places Program of the Hawai‘i State Foundation on Culture and the Arts (SFCA) seeks volunteers, particularly on the Neighbor Islands, with expertise and knowledge in the visual arts field to serve as Visual Arts Consultants on Art Advisory Committees and Acquisition Award Selection Committees. The role of the Art Advisory Committee is to make recommendations to the SFCA regarding the development and design of a given commissioned art project, including location, medium, distinguishing features of the artwork, and selection of the artist. The role of the Acquisition Award Selection Committees is to review and make recommendations regarding the purchase of works of art. The SFCA appoints the committee members for each exhibit visit — generally composed of SFCA commissioners, staff members, and Visual Arts Consultants. The application form is available here: Visual Arts Consultants Application.
About the SFCA
The Hawai‘i State Foundation on Culture and the Arts (SFCA) is a government agency, established by the Hawai‘i State Legislature in 1965, to promote, perpetuate, preserve and encourage culture and the arts, history and the humanities as central to the quality of life of the people of Hawai‘i. SFCA funding is provided by the State of Hawai‘i and the National Endowment for the Arts.The SFCA is administratively attached to the Department of Accounting and General Services (Hawai‘i Revised Statutes Chapter 9).
Copyright © 2020 Hawaii State Foundation on Culture and the Arts, All rights reserved.
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Hawaii State Foundation on Culture and the Arts
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The mission of the Hawaii State Foundation on Culture and the Arts is to promote, perpetuate, preserve and encourage culture and the arts, history and the humanities as central to the quality of life of the people of Hawaii. HSFCA funding is provided by the State of Hawaii and the National Endowment for the Arts.
Hawaii State Art Museum
The Hawai'i State Art Museum is dedicated to presenting the largest and finest collection of works by Hawai'i artists that celebrate the diverse artistic and cultural legacy of Hawai'i.
OUR MISSION
To promote, perpetuate, preserve and encourage culture and the arts, history and the humanities as central to the quality of life of the people of Hawai`i. HSFCA funding is provided by the State of Hawai`i and the National Endowment for the Arts. The HSFCA is administratively attached to the Department of Accounting and General Services.
HOURS:
The musuem is open from Tuesday to Saturday from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Closed State and Federal Holdays. Always free admission. For pre-recorded information call 586-0900.
The Hawai'i State Art Museum is open Tuesday to Saturday from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Admission is free. For pre-recorded summary information on the museum, call (808) 586-0900. For current museum program information, call the HSFCA Art in Public Places Program at (808) 586-0305. To arrange an educational tour of the museum, call (808) 586-9958.
For information on the HSFCA; the Hawai'i State Art Museum; HSFCA grants, programs, and services; Hawai'i arts and culture events; and USA and worldwide arts opportunities, visit the HSFCA website, www.hawaii.gov/sfca.
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