Folk Arts & Heritage Program

The aim of the Massachusetts Cultural Council’s (MCC) Folk Arts & Heritage Program is to identify craftspeople, performers and cultural specialists, help sustain the practice of tradition where they live, and increase appreciation of their artistry within the community and beyond.

Since 1999, the MCC — with crucial support from the National Endowment for the Arts — has been committed to putting a vital traditional arts program into place. We have established an ongoing regimen of documentary fieldwork; provided direct support to individual artists through Artist Fellowships and Traditional Arts Apprenticeships; and created visibility for traditional artists through print media, radio broadcasts, and bookings at regional folk festivals.

In an effort to bring greater visibility to Massachusetts folk arts traditions we collaborated with the National Heritage Museum in producing the exhbition Keepers of Tradition: Art & Folk Heritage in Massachusetts which ran May 18, 2008 – June 7, 2009 at Lexington’s National Heritage Museum.

Fieldwork and Documentation
Under the leadership of Maggie Holtzberg, Ph.D., the MCC has established a very strong fieldwork collection. Over 800 individuals, groups, and community organizations have been documented. Our archival holdings now include some 5,305 color slides, 1,010 black and white film negatives, 317 color negatives, 1,500 digital images, 172 cassette tapes, and 170 digital audio recordings.

In addition to building our collection and augmenting the state’s folk arts expertise, fieldwork helps us connect traditional artists to resources of which they are often unaware. We consistently fulfill requests for curatorial advice from artistic directors looking for high-quality traditional performing and crafts artists. Fieldwork also continues to play a growing role in the MCC’s arts-in-education efforts, including an ambitious teacher’s institute launched in 2006 in Springfield, ” Explorations in Puerto Rican Culture.”

Direct Support for Traditional Artists
We have two active grant programs for traditional artists at the MCC: Artist Fellowships and Traditional Arts Apprenticeships. These programs offer recognition and economic opportunity to traditional artists; preserve and foster understanding of traditional art forms; and recognize cultural competence and the transmission of cultural values.

Artist Fellowships
In 2001, the MCC introduced the category of traditional artists to its Artist Fellowships Program, offered on a biennial basis. The review criteria for Artist Fellowships in the Traditional Arts include artistic excellence, authenticity, and significance of the artist’s work to the traditional community. In FY10, grants were awarded to Irish stepdancer Kieran Jordan and Frano American fiddler Donna Hebert. A new set of fellowships will be awarded in January 2012. See all the Traditional Arts Fellows and Finalists at Gallery@MCC.

Apprenticeships
The Traditional Arts Apprenticeship Program was introduced in 2002 and is offered on a biennial basis. It provides a financial incentive for master artists to identify promising apprentices to whom they might pass on their traditional skills. Review criteria include artistic excellence, the master’s standing within the traditional community, significance of the art form, quality of budget and work plan, and demonstrated commitment to the traditional art form. In FY10, the Traditional Arts Apprenticeships Program funded five apprenticeships, totaling $15,000. Art forms included South Indian and North Indian Carnatic music, Scottish highland bagpiping, letterpress typesetting and printing, and Cambodian dance. Since the inception of the Apprenticeship Program, more than $65,000 has been awarded to 30 master artists. A new set of apprenticeships will be awarded in FY11.

Since 2000, we have partnered with the Institute for Community Research and the Rhode Island State Council on the Arts in a grant program called Southern New England Folk & Traditional Arts Apprenticeship Program. The program offers traditional artists the possibility of working with masters in neighboring states.

Internships
Folk Arts & Heritage Program interns assist with research, documentation and support of the state’s folk cultural resources. This includes:

1. Working with the Program Manager to identify traditional artists, ethnic and community organizations and agencies working with traditional communities.

2. Assisting with the ongoing development of a folklife database and entering data from folklore fieldwork. (This includes helping to maintain an archive of field collected materials – recorded interviews, slides/digital images/negatives, fieldnotes and log forms – and listening to recorded interviews to create topic indices.)

3. Assisting with the administration of the Traditional Arts Apprenticeship Program and Traditional Artist Fellowships.

Interns should have some familiarity with the field of folklore or the related fields of cultural anthropology, American studies, ethnomusicology and oral history. They must have familiarity with spreadsheets and databases. Basic knowledge of the history and cultural make-up of Massachusetts as well as foreign language experience (Portuguese, Chinese, Spanish preferred) is a plus.

To see if a Folk Arts & Heritage Program internship is currently available, search MCC job listings on hireCulture.org.

Have a Lead?
If you know about a traditional artist or folk tradition who should be documented, please contact Maggie Holtzberg, Folk Arts & Heritage Program Manager.

One thought on “Folk Arts & Heritage Program”

  1. This sounds like a really great place. I recently visited the Georgetown Heritage . I’ll definitely have to keep informed of the Massachusetts Cultural Council’s (MCC) Folk Arts & Heritage Program and see some of the things it has to offer.

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