artsawards

Unity through the arts: Arts Alive's welcome speech for the 2024 Ewing Arts Awards

Photo by The Keene Sentinel’s Hannah Schroeder

Welcome to the Ruth and James Ewing Arts Awards, where we come together to recognize and celebrate extraordinary achievements in the arts. 

We have come together, united, to celebrate what is good in our community. To experience stories, performances, and a gallery show of artists and arts presenters, arts educators and advocates who believe that the arts have an important impact on individuals and the social fabric of our community.

All of the eleven artists and organizations selected to receive awards this year are leaders. Tonight, let them inspire you with their generosity, their creativity, and their skill.

This is our tenth Ruth and James Ewing Arts Award celebration. 

The first time I sat down to discuss this idea with folks at the Sentinel, there was some idea that we’d try this out and we’d run out of folks to give awards to after a few years. I said, “I’m not sure that’s possible!”

We have hosted this event for ten years, celebrating 141 artists and organizations. The landscape of the arts has changed even in these ten years. New organizations are popping up, artists are finding their profound voices, folks passionate about the arts are moving to or returning to the area. 

We could certainly host this event for another ten years, fifty years, a hundred years—not only because the arts are flourishing here in the Monadnock region, but because the arts are an essential part of the human experience. I’m sure we could continue this event for thousands of years into the future!

Since human cultures emerged, the arts have given us a pathway to understanding. They help us deeply understand ourselves and our place in the world. When an individual expresses themselves and reflects on their inner world or the big wide world around them, we can see our own values reflected in that work—and our differences.

The arts offer a mirror to human complexities.

There is something about being witness to extraordinary art. Time can stop. The synapses in our brain are firing, writing new pathways of understanding, making new memories of something never experienced before, allowing us to slow down. There is so much to process. A moment, a shape, a color, a word, a note can contain a multitude. 

And why is that important? The arts reveal humanity and the world’s nuanced and multifaceted beauty. The arts embrace ambiguity, and challenge simplistic views of the world rooted in soundbites and headlines. And the arts provide us the tools to question and deconstruct binary narratives that are dangerous to democracies.

The arts generate within us a complex view of the world, ourselves, and each other. That complexity births empathy and understanding. Unity. Unity—which doesn’t mean we are all the same, all aligned in one thought, one morality, or one lived experience—it means we are committed to taking the time to see and feel this multitude of diversity and complexity—acknowledging each others’ motivations, passions, thoughts.

Why are these eleven our winners in 2024? These artists are not just exercising their own voices, but they are uplifting the voices, visibility, and passions of others: Art for turtles; Art for a new narrative of womens’ history; Art for queer community advocacy and placemaking; Art for encouraging the next generation towards their dreams.

With the Ewing Arts Awards, we honor those who have contributed to uplifting a complex dialogue, and those whose work continues to inspire and transform us. We honor those who enrich our lives and our communities with their creativity and vision, bringing us together.

To carry the spirit of these awards forward, I encourage each of you to lift up the local arts community. Attend a performance, visit an open studio, read a book, or participate in a workshop. Learn from the deep wisdom of arts practitioners here in the Monadnock region—they are excellent. And by supporting local artists, fellow artists, you help sustain the vibrant cultural fabric that enriches our lives and fosters deeper connections within our community.

To carry this spirit forward, share your work and process with others. Art is a universal language that speaks to our shared humanity, and by sharing, you contribute to an ongoing dialogue about the human condition.

To carry this spirit forward, discuss and reflect on the art that you encounter. Whether it's a play, a piece of music, a book, or a painting, take the time to talk about its impact with friends, family, or colleagues. These conversations help us appreciate the diverse perspectives that art and arts experiences reveal. These conversations enrich our understanding of the world.

Finally, I urge you to take inspiration from the recipients of the 2024 Ewing Arts Awards. Support increasing access to arts experiences as they do. Seek out and uplift the voices of quiet and underrepresented artists as they do. Encourage creativity in everyone because access to the arts is a human right.

By championing a diversity of artistic expression, we embrace the full spectrum of human experience and ensure that the arts remain a powerful force for unity and understanding.

Delivered by Jessica Gelter, Executive Director of Arts Alive, at the 10th annual Ruth & James Ewing Arts Awards on July 18, 2024.

Ewing Arts Awards to celebrate excellence in the arts July 18th

On Thursday, July 18th at 6:30PM at Keene State College’s Redfern Arts Center, The Keene Sentinel and Arts Alive will present the 10th annual Ruth & James Ewing Arts Awards. Named in honor of the late Ruth and James Ewing, the awards continue these influential figures’ legacies of celebrating artistic excellence. The purpose of the event is to recognize those who contribute to the flourishing local arts and culture scene in the greater Monadnock region. 2024 marks both the 10th anniversary of the awards and the 225th anniversary of The Keene Sentinel.

During the celebration, 11 artists, arts organizations, and arts advocates from southwest New Hampshire and southeast Vermont will be recognized with awards for excellence. This year’s honorees are: Matt Patterson, illustrator; Elisabeth Roos, costume, fashion, and fiber arts designer; Jo Dery, independent filmmaker, visual artist, writer; Paulee Mekdeci (Miss Ginger Soulless), theater and film-trained drag queen and burlesque artist; Christina Wright-Ivanova, pianist, operatic vocal coach, and music educator; the volunteer-run nonprofit Monadnock International Film Festival (MONIFF); Gavin Key, independent filmmaker, musician, and recent Keene State College graduate; Alec Doyle, local arts leader; Richard Whitney, accomplished portrait and landscape artist, author, and educator; MAXT Makerspace Executive Director Roy Schlieben; arts supporters Brewbakers Cafe.

The award ceremony will include winners performing live dance and music, screenings of short films produced by winners, a pop-up onsite gallery with the work of other award recipients, and video interviews featuring the wisdom and stories of each of the honorees. The winners are profiled in a special glossy magazine that is published each summer by the Sentinel, which will be released at the awards event. 

Doors open at 6:30, and the ceremony starts at 7. This year, the event has a masquerade party theme, and attendees are encouraged to wear costumes and masks. Light refreshments and desserts will be served after the presentation. Tickets are $30. For more information, visit www.monadnockartsalive.org/ewing-arts-awards or www.sentinelsource.com. 

Local Artists, Businesses, and Organizations to be recognized with awards for excellence in the arts

The Keene Sentinel and Arts Alive are pleased to announce the recipients of the 2024 Ruth and James Ewing Arts Awards. Several nominations were made this year for artists and organizations from the Monadnock region and southeastern Vermont. A jury of celebrated artists, arts educators, and arts administrators has selected 11 winners to be recognized for excellence and their contributions to the arts community this summer. 

Named in honor of the late Ruth and James Ewing, the awards continue their legacy of celebrating artistic excellence and those who contribute to the flourishing of arts and culture in their local community and beyond. The Ewings made many contributions to the local arts community through their stewardship of The Keene Sentinel and through personal philanthropy. Both were directors at the artist residency program MacDowell in Peterborough. James founded the New Hampshire Humanities Council and established the James D. Ewing World Affairs Lecture at Keene State College. Ruth was active with the Apple Hill Center for Chamber Music and the Grand Monadnock Arts Council. 2024 marks the 10th anniversary of the awards and the 225th anniversary of The Keene Sentinel.

The 2024 honorees are:

Painter and wildlife conservationist Matt Patterson, who will be recognized for excellence in 2D Visual Arts for his skill in hyperrealistic painting, which he uses to bring awareness to conservation and humane causes, especially those that benefit turtles, other reptiles, and amphibians.

Costume, fashion, and fiber arts designer and educator Elisabeth Roos, who will receive an award in the 3D Visual Arts category for her diverse artworks exploring portraiture, costume, and women’s rights.

Independent filmmaker, visual artist, writer, and educator Jo Dery, who will be recognized for excellence in Interdisciplinary Arts for her use of and experimentation with various mediums to craft stories rooted in folklore, memoir, and love for the natural world.

Paulee Mekdeci, theater and film-trained drag queen and burlesque artist who uses their performances as Miss Ginger Soulless to explore topics of gender identity and mental health, will be recognized in the Performing Arts category.

Pianist, operatic vocal coach, and music educator Christina Wright-Ivanova, who will be recognized with a Performing Arts award for her artistic excellence, demonstrated by her numerous regional, national and international performances, collaborations, and projects highlighting underrepresented composers and humanitarian initiatives.

The volunteer-run nonprofit Monadnock International Film Festival (MONIFF), which will receive the Presenter of the Arts award for partnering with numerous local businesses and organizations to present independent films from diverse local and global filmmakers that explore relevant topics such as LGBTQ, BIPOC, and indigenous voices as well as Earth Day and local history.

The following will be recipients in four special award categories:

Independent filmmaker, musician, and recent Keene State College graduate Gavin Key will be recognized with the Student Award for accomplishments of opening a production company, producing locally recognized feature-length and short films, and founding the successful local band Kendall Row and the Jamfest music festival, all before or during college.

Two Lifetime Achievement awards will be presented this year. One goes to Alec Doyle, who served as Executive Director of the Colonial Performing Arts Center for two decades. Under his leadership, the Colonial Theatre Group historic theater conducted a major capital campaign, renovated the historic theater, expanded the arts campus to include the SHOWROOM, and initiated an annual fundraising gala to offer youth programming and to increase access to the arts. 

The second Lifetime Achievement award will be presented to widely celebrated and accomplished portrait and landscape artist, author, and educator Richard Whitney, whose artworks hang in over 800 national and international public and private collections.

MAXT Makerspace Executive Director Roy Schlieben will be recognized with the Arts Advocate award. Under his leadership, the multi-disciplinary community workshop has acquired a new and larger facility, an annual Night Market festival for local artists and artisans, the first volunteer-run repair cafe, and opened the Sharing Arts Ceramics Center, filling in the gap left behind by the closing of the region’s beloved Sharon Arts Center.

Brewbakers Cafe is being recognized for Excellence in Community Engagement. Co-owners Jeff and Eliza Murphy maintain the coffee shop as an arts hub through hosting the open arts studio Wakadoodles, the annual Thing in the Spring music festival, permanent and pop-up arts markets, the nonprofit arts initiative NOVA ARTS, of which they are co-founders, and collaborating with local artists and muralists.

The jury this year consisted of Laura Adams, Executive Director of The Jaffrey Civic Center; Petria Mitchell, co-owner of Mitchell • Giddings Fine Arts and previous Ewing Award winner; Brinda Charry, academic, celebrated novelist, and previous Ewing Award winner; Cailin Marcel Manson, operatic and concert soloist, conductor, master teacher, and previous Ewing Award winner; Julianne Gadoury, artist, arts administrator with a focus in equitable access to the arts and arts education, and interim executive director of the Colonial Performing Arts Center. 

Through the Ewing Arts Awards, The Keene Sentinel and Arts Alive partner to celebrate the diversity, excellence, and community impact of Monadnock region artists, arts organizations, and arts supporters. The mission of this event is to bring hometown recognition to world-class artists and organizations that call this region home. 

Each year that goes by, my appreciation and wonder grows for the rich arts community here in the Monadnock Region. Our culture is one that is steeped in art — traditional styles to boundary-pushing work, from old masters to emerging dreamers. I love that we can bring attention to these artists and organizations and celebrate this part of our region’s identity. - Jessica Gelter, Arts Alive

Winners are profiled in a special glossy magazine that is published each summer by the Sentinel and video interviews about their work are published to YouTube. The evening prior to the publication's release, The Keene Sentinel and Arts Alive co-host a reception for the recipients to showcase their work through galleries, readings, and performances and to receive their awards. Details on the Ewing Arts Awards event, to be held July 18th at the Redfern Arts Center at Keene State College, will soon be available, and tickets are expected to go on sale shortly. For more information on the event, visit monadnockartsalive.org/ewing-arts-awards.

Nominations open for the Monadnock Region's 10th annual Ruth and James Ewing Arts Awards

Nominations are now being accepted for the 10th annual Ruth and James Ewing Arts Awards, celebrating the diversity and excellence of artists in the Monadnock Region, and hosted by The Keene Sentinel with Arts Alive.

A jury of arts professionals from diverse fields will select up to 12 nominees to receive awards based on the criteria of excellence and community impact. The jury this year will consist of Laura Adams, Executive Director of the Jaffrey Civic Center; Cailin Marcel Manson, operatic and concert soloist, conductor, and master teacher; Petria Mitchell, celebrated artist and gallerist; Julianne Gadoury, artist and arts administrator with a focus in equitable access to the arts and arts education; and Marisol Zilske, the 2023 Student Award recipient.

Nominations are open to artists, ensembles, nonprofits, and businesses who reside or operate within the area commonly accepted as the Monadnock Region and southeastern Vermont. Individual artists, as well as groups are eligible. Self nominations are welcome. 

Nominations are open from April 29, 2024, and midnight, May 14, 2024. They are being accepted online. Find more information at https://monadnockartsalive.org/ewing-arts-awards

All nominations must include a statement of no more than 500 words about why the artist, group, business, or organization should receive recognition for their excellence. Nominations must also include supporting information, which may include a resume, education, exhibitions, season schedules, honors, awards, reviews, press, or achievements, either in list form or in PDF and examples of work in one of the following forms: PDF, jpeg, video link, link to website/digital portfolio. For literary artists, we welcome a sample of work of no more than 2,000 words.

2023 Ewing Award Winners. Photo by Hannah Schroeder, Keene Sentinel Staff.

Each year four special awards are made - Lifetime Achievement, Excellence in Community Engagement, Arts Advocate, and Student Award. Lifetime Achievement nominations should describe a lengthy career or history in the arts. Recipients have a history of practicing the arts or serving as active institutions for many decades. Excellence in Community Engagement nominations should describe how the nominee has boosted community involvement in the arts in the Monadnock Region. Arts Advocate nominations should describe how the nominee has served as a voice for the arts in a town, state, national, or business environment and has helped make significant change that supports a thriving arts community. Lastly, the Ewing Arts Awards offer recognition to a student creating exemplary works of art in either college or high school with the Student Award.

Through the Ewing Arts Awards, The Keene Sentinel and Arts Alive partner to celebrate the diversity, excellence, and impact of arts in the Monadnock Region. The mission of this event is to bring hometown recognition to world-class artists and organizations that call the Monadnock Region home. Ruth and James Ewing Arts Awardees create and present art of excellence and contribute to the field of arts and culture in the Monadnock Region and beyond.

The awards are named in honor of the late Ruth and James Ewing, who made many contributions to the local arts community through their stewardship of The Keene Sentinel and through personal philanthropy. Both Ewings were directors at the artist residency program MacDowell in Peterborough. James founded the New Hampshire Humanities Council and established the James D. Ewing World Affairs Lecture at Keene State College. Ruth was active with the Apple Hill Center for Chamber Music at and the Grand Monadnock Arts Council.

The awards recognize excellence in the creative community and acknowledge how these artists give back to their communities and their professions through their work. Winners are profiled in a special glossy magazine that is published each summer by the Sentinel and video interviews about their work are published to YouTube.

The evening prior to the publication's release, Arts Alive and The Keene Sentinel co-host a reception for the recipients to showcase their work and receive their awards. Details on the Ewing Arts Awards event, to be held July 18th at the Redfern Arts Center at Keene State College, will soon be available, and tickets are expected to go on sale in June. For more information on the event, contact Brendalee Edwards at brendalee@goshoppingnh.com.