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Cleveland Arts Prize Call for Nominations 2008Submitted by Susan Miller on Fri, 01/11/2008 - 12:07.
IT’S TIME TO NOMINATE this year’s Cleveland Arts Prize Winners! Perhaps you know someone. You can nominate artists from this region who have made significant creative contributions in the fields of Design, Music & Dance, Visual Arts and Literature. The categories in which to nominate are described on our website. Each nominee is reviewed and voted on by a jury of his or her peers. There are also two special prizes – the Robert P. Bergman and Martha Joseph Prizes –awarded to recognize individuals and organizations that have shown leadership and support for the arts. Making nominations is easy! Nominate on line at any time. Visit our website www.clevelandartsprize.org and click on nominate. Or you can send your nominations to us in the mail at Cleveland Arts Prize, PO Box 21126, Cleveland, OH 44121 Nominations close February 29, 2008. For ideas and to see who has won in the past (and some inspiring reading) visit the archive. For the rules and regs, click here. To find out who is on the juries this year click here. Learn more about the 46 year old organization click here. Come see the medals awarded at our Annual Award Ceremony on June 26, 2008, at the Cleveland Play House. Attached is the Cleveland Arts Prize Winter 08 newsletter.
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Astounding
It some times amazes me how many giants work in Cleveland in relative obscurity. Who am I to nominate the greats? If I had some pull around here these would be my nominees for this year's awards:
Mort Epstein
Douglas Max Utter
Randall Tiedmann
please just nominate them
Laura,
Please do not second guess what sort of pull is required. Just do it. Some artist someday (those mentioned above, for example), will appreciate your setting a side self doubt and just nominating them. If you don't have the time to build a case for support, gather materials (or even just some links) and write a few sentences, ask others to help you by sending letters. This is how it is done. If the public does not become involved and nominate, the jurors have nothing to consider. Please, take the plunge and do this for the three people you mention above.
I like being a part of an organization that celebrates the wealth of artistry here in the region. There is a pool of nominees, and it can take years for someone to be the winner in a certain year, but look at the company they keep! Klaus Roy had a great idea to do this back in 1960. Let's keep it going.
I have to tell you, I didn't start a dance company in order to receive recognition from Northern Ohio Live, but boy was it a surprise when they called my name at that swanky affair decades ago. For a little while the sweat evaporated and the freight train slowed, I appreciated being appreciated by my community and my peers. Whoever that was who nominated me, I thank them.
For a few artists each year, being recognized in this way is sort of the least we can do. It's really just a nod, but we hope it brings a moment to reflect on the fact that this region would not be what it is without its artists. At the opening of the awards ceremony each year, when the past winners process as their names are read aloud, I get all teary just knowing that these are the people standing in line with me at the grocer, riding the train with me, having family picnics in the same parks I visit. The arts are not a miracle; they involve discipline and hard work. Cleveland Arts Prize works all year to celebrate that one evening each year. Be a part of it.
Talk about obscurity... read this one: Marjorie Witt Johnson. She was my mentor. I spoke with the new son-in-law of author and winner, Edith Iglauer Daly last summer, and he said that she cherished her Cleveland Arts Prize. New son-in-law? Yep, she was married at 89 last year to his father who is 92. These memories can mean a lot in future years. Already they do for me. Nominate someone whose work you feel passionate about.
Thanks Susan
If the public does not become involved and nominate, the jurors have nothing to consider and they just go home.
Thanks Susan--merely trying to use a public forum to make a point. The Cleveland Arts Prize is one of the great things going for Cleveland. I would also like to see who other people would like to nominate. It doesn't have to be a secret.