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racial or ethnic identity of applicants and the groups they serve. If there is additional information you would like to <br />provide about the race or ethnicity of the groups served by the project, include that information here. <br /> <br />ADVICE FOR APPLICANTS <br />The Public Art Program is scored using four criteria: Artistic Merit & Quality, Demonstrated Need, Outcomes & <br />Evaluation, and Applicant Ability. Each criterion has a series of statements that reviewers are asked to consider when <br />reviewing and scoring an application. When completing a grant application, refer to the criteria statements listed <br />beneath each heading. Strong proposals will address all applicable criteria in the narrative responses. <br /> <br />PROPOSAL NARRATIVE <br /> <br />ARTISTIC MERIT/QUALITY - 9 of 30 points <br />Evaluators use the following criteria when reviewing this section of the application: <br />1. Proposed public art is designed by high quality artists and involves the creation/installation of artwork that demonstrates <br />creativity, mastery of craft, and a distinct artistic voice. <br />2. Public art will contribute artistic value that would not otherwise be available to the communities served, and may also contribute <br />cultural and/or educational value. <br />3. The public art project advances the applicant’s mission or goals related to public art, and builds upon past programming. <br />4. If applicable: ability to create community understanding and awareness of art through community engagement, and/or outreach <br />to underserved communities. <br />5. Proposed public art is shaped or influenced by the identified community and <br />reflects the unique needs and interests of that <br />community. <br />6. Proposed public art will build a deeper understanding and appreciation of the art <br />form. <br /> <br /> <br />1) Mission Statement – Applicants that do not have a mission statement should provide a statement that outlines the <br />goals and values of their group. <br /> <br />2) Describe the public art project – Refer to the criteria statements above <br /> <br />3) Include a rendering or an example of the proposed public art. <br />Examples include designs or schematics for proposed work. Include examples that will help to communicate what <br />the finished art will look like. <br /> Two & Three Dimensional Renderings: 1800 pixels wide in ONE .PDF document and include the title, <br />description and dimension with each sample. <br /> Theater/Dance: Submit samples in .WMV, .SWF, or .MP4 file format and include the Title and Length of <br />excerpt. <br /> Music: Submit samples in .MP3, .WAV, .WMA, or .AIF formats and include the Song Title, Type of Music and <br />Length of Song for each sample. <br /> Literary: Submit samples in ONE .PDF document and include the Title and Length of excerpt. <br /> <br />o Public Art Example upload- Combine multiple pages into ONE PDF document and submit no more than 5 <br />images, 10 pages of literary work or 7 minutes of audio/video. Literary submissions may include up to 7 minutes <br />of audio or video of a reading from submitted pages. <br />o Or Video/Website URL- include this only if you are directing reviewers to specific content on a website. <br /> <br /> <br />4) Example Description – Describe how the example provided relates to your proposal. If necessary, direct reviewers <br />to specific images, pages or a specific 7 minutes of audio/video <br /> <br />5) Temporary works - If the lifespan of the public artwork is 1 year or less, describe how the art will be documented <br />and shared. <br /> <br />Updated 7/18/18 5 <br /> <br /> <br />