CFGB funds KAC reparative programming
The Community Foundation of Greater Birmingham has awarded $15,000 for the period 7/1/22 to 6/31/23 to conduct cultural assets mapping, have local artists perform, and enhance the October 2022 homecoming. Creative placemaking provides the framework for this activity, which is directed toward reparative programming that facilitates racial reconciliation.
Wideman-Davis Dance Company returns to the Wallace House in 2023-24
Wideman-Davis Dance will return for an 18 week residency in Harpersville between April 2023 to March 2024 with funding from the New Monuments Project of the Mellon Foundation. Migratuse Revisited will expand their model to include more community involvement and audience engagement, placing the Black narrative in antebellum history through dance. Klein Arts & Culture is proud to be their partner.
Pandemic Arts Funding
The Alabama State Council for the Arts has awarded $15,000 (10/1/2021-9/30/2022) to Klein Arts & Culture under the Alabama Arts Recovery Program to address our program losses during the pandemic. This was supplemented by a Sustainability Grant of $6,000 from South Arts to support our operations between 1/1 to 12/31/2022.
ASCA awards two artist program grants to KAC
The Alabama State Council for the Arts has awarded KAC two grants totaling $13,000 effective 1/3 to 9/31/22.
AHA funds panels by Wallace House Interpretation Group
The Alabama Humanities Alliance has awarded $7,500 for the period 12/1/21 to 9/15/22 to Klein Arts & Culture to conduct three public panels: the history of the historic Wallace Plantation, issues in the reparative interpretation of plantation houses, and the design of experiential exhibits based on reparative interpretation, using the Wallace House as an example.
WALLACE HOUSE INTERPRETATION GROUP
A group of distinguished historians and creators has come together to discuss best practices in the interpretation of plantation houses and to understand the history of the Wallace Plantation from a full perspective that brings together black, white and indigenous narratives.
KAC AWARDED $35,000 FROM ALABAMA STATE COUNCIL FOR THE ARTS
On June 2, 2021, the Alabama State Council for the Arts awarded KAC $35,000.00 for our Cultural Facilities project, titled "Klein Arts & Culture Cultural Facilities Design”.
LAND AS PERSONA: COLLABORATION WITH THE ALABAMA WRITERS’ FORUM
Writing our Stories students taught by Daniel DeVaughn in the Vincent Middle School completed the Land as Persona: Many Paths to the Present curriculum in May, 2021. Through the form of the persona poem, students were given the chance to learn and explore the many people and peoples who have called the Harpersville-Vincent area home.
OUR PLANNED VISITOR CENTER
The preliminary design of the visitor center is intended to be modern, evoking what might have been an original outbuilding. The visitor center is an important support facility for the historic Wallace-Klein House. It enables the house to serve as a venue for arts and education. We will begin fundraising for this building in 2021.
ALABAMA WRITERS’ FORUM PARTNERSHIP
The Alabama Writers’ Forum views the Klein-Wallace house, and the land surrounding it, as a means to give students a direct and tangible link to this state's complex past—a literal doorway into history.
UAB BLOOM STUDIOS PARTNERSHIP
Bloom, a student-run design studio at the University of Alabama at Birmingham headed by professor Douglas Barrett, has selected Klein Arts & Culture as its client for Fall 2020.
HARPERSVILLE STARS
On November 3, 2019, Barbara Adkins, Peter Datcher, Nell Gottlieb and Theoangelo Perkins were recognized as Harpersville Stars as part of the Sixth Annual Harpersville Day Celebration. City hall officials introduced each star, providing biographical information and noting how each made the community shine.
OUR FIRST KA&C INTERN
Isabella Newbrun joined Klein Arts & Culture for the summer of 2020 as our first intern.
KLEIN A&C RECEIVES TWO GRANTS IN 2019
Klein Art & Culture was awarded the Peter H. Brink Leadership Fund grant by the National Trust for Historic Preservation in July, 2019. The purpose of the Brink Fund is to build the capacity of existing preservation organizations and to encourage collaboration among them.