Grant to boost visual arts project

10 years ago

    The University of Maine at Presque Isle has been awarded a $50,000 grant from the National Endowment for the Arts to assist in the creation of the region’s very first facility dedicated to the visual arts. The university has been working with the Wintergreen Arts Center, the city of Presque Isle, building owners and several other partners to transform 149 State St. into the Northern Maine Center for the Cultural Arts.
“We couldn’t be more pleased about receiving this kind of support and recognition from the National Endowment for the Arts,” UMPI President Linda Schott said. “Our project is all about working together with local partners to provide arts-focused activities and opportunities in the downtown that will benefit the region in a variety of ways and we’re very excited to have an Our Town grant — only the third awarded in Maine and the first-ever to a Maine college or university — to help us do that.”
The project is one way the university is fulfilling its new strategic plan — which calls for UMPI to stimulate economic development and provide meaningful service to the region and also promote the revitalization of downtown Presque Isle — as well as meeting its new mission, which includes enhancing the region’s quality of life through activities like cultural programming.
UMPI’s grant is one of 66 Our Town grant awards, totaling $5.07 million and reaching 38 states, according to National Endowment for the Arts (NEA) Chairman Jane Chu.
“The University of Maine at Presque Isle demonstrates the best in creative community development and its work will have a valuable impact on its community,” said Chu. “Through Our Town funding, arts organizations continue to spark vitality that support neighborhoods and public spaces, enhancing a sense of place for residents and visitors alike.”
The Northern Maine Center for the Cultural Arts project not only supports the region’s growing arts community and efforts to spur economic development, but also encourages innovation in academic and community education. The building at 149 State St. already houses the Wintergreen Arts Center on its first floor, and will feature UMPI’s Downtown Art Gallery on the second floor (a sister space to UMPI’s Reed Fine Art Gallery) and UMPI’s Art Studio Space on the third floor. Once complete, the space will be used for rotating, high-profile exhibition displays, guest lectures and workshops, private events, small musical performances and private workspace for eight local artists.
Project officials envision the facility as a cultural space that fosters community interaction, a doorway to visual arts that aren’t typically available locally and an incubator for artists. In addition, this project, coupled with efforts like the university’s recent acquisition of art by renowned sculptor Bernard Langlais — which has made Presque Isle one of the places to visit on the Langlais Art Trail — encourages cultural tourism that helps Presque Isle to stand out as a destination for the arts.
Our Town grant funding will help to launch the NMCCA, support high-profile programming for the arts, provide salaries for staffing, and engage community partners in developing a five-year cultural plan for Presque Isle. It will also allow the university to work collaboratively with Wintergreen and the community by bringing to The County an artist who will seek assistance from community members in the creation of a public art installation at the site.
“A facility such as the NMCCA will be an exciting keystone for the arts in The County,” said project director Heather Sincavage, UMPI art professor and director of UMPI’s Reed Fine Art Gallery. “It will provide an excellent opportunity for cross pollination of ideas through collaborative efforts throughout the town, region and state. It will empower students to not just watch a movement for change unfold, but be an active part of that change — through participation in programming, implementation of creative ideas, and collaboration with resident and visiting artists. In essence, it becomes a place where their education is part of the unfolding story of Presque Isle’s transformation as a cultural tourism destination. It all begins in the downtown.”