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The Folk
& Traditional Arts Program was
created in 1983 to: identify and
document the diverse ethnic,
cultural and occupational folk
traditions in Hawai‘i; assist in the
perpetuation of folk and cultural
traditions in Hawai‘i; and promote
public awareness of the beauty and
value of folk and traditional arts
in Hawai‘i and the importance of
preserving Hawai‘i’s folk and
traditional arts heritage.
Folk
& Traditional Arts
Grants
Apprenticeship
Grants are to help
masterful and accomplished teachers
of the traditional arts (teaching
artists) share their knowledge in a
deep and meaningful way with the
experienced individuals who they
feel are best equipped to carry on
the tradition. These grants
are open to practitioners of any
traditional art form or cultural
practice in any culture in Hawai`i.
The teaching artist and apprentice
must apply together as a team.
The
Apprenticeship Grants application is
closed.
The
Culture Learning Grant is
for eligible organizations in the
state. The purpose is to:
- Encourage
leadership
and education in culture and
traditional arts by furthering
learning and understanding of folk
and traditional arts,
- Increase
access
by making funding available
statewide and encouraging neighbor
island participation,
-
Increase
access
by making funding available to
cultural communities with low
participation in other HSFCA
grants programs, and
- Provide
arts education in the folk and
traditional arts for children and
youth and/or families from these
cultural communities.
Organizations
must have at least one year of
experience in programs in which
children and/or families learn
through hands-on experience about
their own culture’s artistic
traditions (e.g. song and music,
dance, storytelling, arts and
crafts).
The Culture
Learning Grants application is closed.
Special Projects &
Community Partnerships
Past project
initiatives undertaken by
the Folk & Traditional Arts
Program include exhibitions (Na
Paniolo o Hawai‘i; Traditions
We Share), touring
presentations (Living
Heritage Series; Slack
Key Outreach),
festivals (Restaging
of the Smithsonian’s Hawai‘i
Folklife Festival; Traditions
We
Share), audio and
video recordings (Musics
of Hawai‘i; Na
Mele Paniolo; Pacific
Visions), and
publications (Musics
of Hawai‘i; Our
Arts, Our Land). To view
the online version of Our
Arts, Our Land,
which features text both in
English and Hawaiian, click here
for Our Arts,
Our Lands.
Current
project initiatives include Hawai‘i
Masterpieces: Ka Hana Kapa
featuring the work of Hawaii’s kapa
makers (with the Edith Kanaka‘ole
Foundation and the Biographical
Research Center) and the
documentation of the Lyon
Arboretum Hale Halawai
construction (with the National
Organization for Traditional Artists
Exchange and the Lyon Arboretum).
Community
Partnerships for Native
Hawaiian special projects have
included: American
Masterpieces-Hawai‘i
presenting and
touring (Hawaiian choral
music with the Hawai‘i Youth Opera
Chorus; the music of Kahauanu Lake
and hula of Maiki Aiu Lake with the
Hawai‘i Arts Ensemble and Halau Hula
Ka No‘eau); the work of Kent
Ghirard with the Hula
Preservation Society; Ka
‘Aha Hula ‘O Halauaola 2009
on O‘ahu; and Kahekili
presenting and touring with the Maui
Arts & Cultural Center.
Contact
For more
information about the Folk &
Traditional Arts Grants, contact
Denise Miyahana, Arts Program
Specialist, via email at denise.miyahana@hawaii.gov
or call (808)
586-0771.
Related Links
American
Folklife Center, Library of
Congress
American
Folklore Society
Hawaii
Council for the Humanities
The
National Network for Folk Arts in
Education
Native
Arts & Culture Foundation
Smithsonian
Center for Folklife and Cultural
Heritage
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