Crosshatch Artist Emergency Fund Expands to Charlevoix and Emmet Counties

Many of our region’s artists depend on gatherings for their income, be it concerts, fairs, festivals or galleries. Now, with widespread COVID-19-driven closings and cancellations, those artists are struggling with huge financial losses.

This is made worse by bad timing; winter in Northern Michigan is a slow time for the arts, and many local artists were running on fumes, waiting for spring gigs to refill their coffers. Now those gigs have been cancelled.

Crosshatch Center for Art & Ecology, whose Artist Emergency Fund has supported 40 artists with $20,000 in funding since March 13, is expanding their fund to include artists in Emmet and Charlevoix counties. The funding was originally available to artists in Antrim, Benzie, Grand Traverse, Kalkaska and Leelanau counties, and now, thanks to the Urgent Needs funds at the Charlevoix County Community Foundation and the Petoskey-Harbor Springs Area Community Foundation, the funding footprint has spread. 

“In times of uncertainty, the arts are more important than ever,” said Amanda Kik, co-founder and co-director of Crosshatch. “As we reach for the songs, books, poems, television shows and movies that help us in this difficult time, we can also be sure to support the artists that have created all this great work.” Crosshatch will distribute funding as long as there is a need, and funds to disburse. Individuals can support the fund online at www.crosshatch.org/emergency.

The fund does not just support musicians; any artist impacted by COVID-19 cancellations can apply. The application is short and simple, and available online at www.crosshatch.org/emergency. Artists are eligible if they earn 33% or more of their income from their art, have lost income because of the COVID-19 crisis, and live in one of the seven designated counties. Requests may be made for up to $500 and are disbursed on a first-come, first-served basis.

Crosshatch Artist Emergency Fund Helps Artists in the Age of COVID-19

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Artists working in the gig economy are particularly hard hit when emergencies strike. As the coronavirus pandemic expands, events are being canceled, which often means loss of income for the artists involved.

Crosshatch Center for Art and Ecology is working with funders in Northern Michigan to provide emergency funds for artists in need right now. They have started with a seed fund of $9,000, and are actively raising money to expand the fund.

“Within hours of announcing the emergency fund, we had several artists apply, reporting many thousands of dollars in losses. These are artists that we know and love here in Northern Michigan, and it is heartbreaking to know that their families are struggling” said Amanda Kik, co-founder and co-director of Crosshatch. “Please help support this fund if you are able.”

Artists can apply right now—the application is short and simple. It is available online at www.crosshatch.org/emergency.

Crosshatch awarded $50,000 to build more resilient farms


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Crosshatch was awarded $50,000 through the Extension Risk Management Education Competitive Grants Program, a program of the US Department of Agriculture National Institute of Food and Agriculture.

Crosshatch will utilize the grant to provide programming for small farmers in Northwest Lower Michigan in regenerative agriculture, agroforestry and renewable energy, reducing risk for farmers facing challenges in the current financial climate and helping them to adapt to weather shocks.

Workshops will include silvopasture and alley cropping; forest farming; living fences and hedgerows; on-farm renewable energy; and carbon farming. 

In partnership with the NWMI Small Business and Development Center and Leelanau, Benzie, Grand Traverse and Antrim Conservation Districts, farmers will be provided with individual follow-up sessions to develop and implement business and agroforestry plans.

The popular Twilight Tours series—free farm tours by farmers for farmers— will focus on examples of regenerative agriculture, agroforestry, and renewable energy in practice. 

Thanks for a great conference!

“I love the Northern Michigan Small Farm Conference! It is a gathering of many of my favorite people, many of whom I only see once or twice a year. I can count on new things and making connections that are important to me.” —Conference attendee

Thank you for another great conference! From the feedback, you loved the conference as much as we did. Thanks for showing up, digging deep, and learning with us.

In the News: Long Memory Project in 9&10 News

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GTPulse: Long Memory Project Preserves More Than History

October 3, 2019

Brighid Driscoll

I have fuzzy memories of reading The Giver when I was in middle school. What I can remember is a community elder passing down the communities memories through storytelling and teaching. We have history books and media to recount events, but where do communal memories go? When something significant happens in a community, where do the emotions and the details disappear to as time passes? Crosshatch Center for Art & Ecology in Bellaire, Michigan is working to preserve Northern Michigan’s memories of hope, activism, social justice and so much more through their Long Memory Project.

Read more at 9&10 News.

Hill House Alum Update

As spring slowly rolls into summer, and we do mean slowly, we take a moment to reflect on our Hill House alums and what they have been involved with over the past few months.

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Passepartout Duo:
This past spring, Passepartout Duo, comprised of Christopher Salvito on drums/percussion and Nicoletta Favari on piano/keyboard, released a new piece on Bandcamp entitled, “A Northern Year,” featuring composer, Hafdís Bjarnadóttir. Listen to this inspiring and haunting track HERE.


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Heather Lockie:
Heather Lockie, a performer/composer out of Los Angeles, released a new song as well, “Genius Machine,” from the album Marshweed in the Garden. This particular song even made it to a Spotify playlist.

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Abigail Lapell:
Abigail received the No Depression Singer-Songwriter Award with the Fresh Grass Festival this spring. In addition to this honor, her modern folk album, Hide Nor Hair, won the Canadian Folk Music Award. Hear a couple of her pieces HERE.

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Jenny Johnson:

The National Endowment of the Arts offered a literature fellowship to Hill House alum Jenny Johnson this year. Jenny received recognition for her work in creative writing. See some of her work HERE.

Hill House Alum Update

Winter breeds inspiration—the home-bound weeks, the quiet, the stark, monochrome world. And when this is more debilitating than inventive, we can help. Check out some happenings from a few Hill House alums to warm your soul.

ARTIST NEWS

Charming Disaster

Charming Disaster, the Brooklyn duo known for their macabre, folk-noir tunes, have reached their goal on Kickstarter for album #3, Spells + Rituals. This compilation will feature songs about poison, witches, steampunk, monsters and the end of the world. Ellia Bisker and Jeff Morris have begun work on this album with thoughts of album #4 already a-brewing. Keep up with Charming Disaster and read more about their Kickstarter campaign here.

Passepartout Duo

Passepartout Duo announced that during their residency at De Grote Post in Ostend, they filmed Marta Forsberg's new piece called Gentle Acts. Check this out on YouTube. They will also be returning to the states for residencies and will be conducting concerts in Italy this spring. A new journey begins for the piano/percussion duo in April 2019 for another multi-year journey to commission new works, this time through Asia. The compilation of their similar journey through the Nordic countries can be seen here.

Scott Hocking

Detroit-based artist and Hill House alum Scott Hocking, was nominated to be among 100 influential Detroiters to be photographed and interviewed for Marcus Lyon'sI.Detroit: A Human Atlas of Detroit project. Along with this recognition, Scott has created many site-specific, monstrous installations now gracing southeastern Michigan. From Seventeen Shitty Mountains, created at a decades-vacant Detroit Water & Sewerage building, to The Sleeper (Cowcatcher) created using over 300 railroad ties and artifacts collected from railroad yards of various tracks throughout Detroit and Lansing, to creating a new large-scale site-specific installation for the expansive exhibition Landlord Colors: On Art, Economy, & Materiality, curated by Laura Mott for Cranbrook Art Museum in 2019, Scott has a lot of news. See the entire eblast here.

Latham Zearfoss

Latham Zearfoss was named in Art 50 as one of Chicago’s Artist’s Artist. Their work as an artist spans various genres, all to confront the issue “selfhood and otherness.”  Dismissing boundaries between art media and uniting human beings in collective struggle, political and personal, is at the core of their pieces. Their shorts were screened at New York City’s Union Docs this past spring and last year they co-organized Open Engagement in New York City. Since 2005, Zearfoss has co-organized Chances Dances, a queer collective and monthly dance party.

Kevin Doyle

New York-based playwright and director Kevin Doyle has been selected as the sixth Saari Invited Artist. This past September he began working at the Saari Residence for artists and researchers, maintained by Kone Foundation in Mynämäki. Doyle is currently exploring ways to make visible the gap between reality and the compressed and consolidated versions of reality created by media. At the Saari Residence, Doyle wrote several plays that he has been developing for nearly two decades.

Warm winter wishes to you all. Email us if you have alumn updates of your own for us to share!

Hill House Alumnx Update

Our alumnx do great things. While their time at the Hill House may have passed, we like to keep abreast of their work. Exhibitions, albums, publications—our alumnx are firing it up this year.

Scott Hocking

Hill House alumnx and Detroit-based artist, Scott Hocking, was featured on Michigan Radio’s Stateside this month. He discussed the new exhibition of his work entitled Old, on view at David Klein Gallery in Detroit until June 23. Scott states his use of found materials for his various installations is an expression of our relation to past, present and future as a society. “...if I’m creating a sculpture that has these kind of archetypal images, shapes inside vacant structures, for example, things people might see as ‘ruins.’ Then I’m interested in how people see a ruin within a ruin. Why one ruin might be considered a monument while another might be considered negative.” Listen to the interview in its entirety here.

Christa Couture

Award winning performing and recording artist, and non-fiction writer, Christa Couture, did a photoshoot at the end of her pregnancy last fall. Christa, who lost her leg in 25 years ago, wanted to bring awareness to the lack of pregnancy photos of those living with a disability. “It took me a long time to believe I could be a disabled parent in part because I found so few examples of other people doing it,” Couture said. “Disabled people are constantly told they can’t do things — either directly or indirectly in the narratives in movies, sitcoms, advertising etc. This is my one tiny way of combating that.” See the full article by Elizabeth Cassidy of the The Mighty here.

Nicole Garneau

Nicole Garneau’s latest work from the UPRISING project, Performing Revolutionary: Art, Action, Activism, was published by Intellect Books. Nicole, a Chicago-based performance artist and writer, wrote this part how-to guide and part memoir to bring awareness to the role of art in activism. The result of five years of experiential research into political public events, Performing Revolutionary, relays the story of Nicole’s participation in a myriad of events throughout America and Europe to initiate change with radically inspired art-based events. Get a copy of the book here.

Wildmaker

Wildmaker released their latest CD this month, Zion. Brooklyn based musicians, Gabriel Birnbaum, Adam Brisbin, Nick Jost, Sean Mullins and Katie Von Schleicher, collaborated to bring us what they refer to as the first chapter in a musical novel. The album chronicles their years trudging through New York City trying to make that coveted break. From the clouds to the quagmire of a burgeoning New York artist’s life, the music takes listeners through the emotions and places of this journey. Hear a track and get the disc here.

Micro Loan Recipients Announced

Crosshatch Center for Art and Ecology and Grain Train Natural Foods Markets Announce Awards for Area Small Farms.

BELLAIRE, MI — Following a successful Micro Loan program in 2016 and 2017, Crosshatch Center for Art & Ecology and Grain Train Natural Foods Markets teamed up again to offer loans for farms and food related businesses in Antrim, Charlevoix, Cheboygan, Emmet, and Otsego counties.

Farmers, agribusinesses, and food business entrepreneurs were invited to apply for the Micro Loan program aimed at enhancing the food and farming network in the Northwestern Lower Peninsula. With $10,000 worth of interest-free loans, the organization’s goals are to help local farmers grow their businesses while building an economy based in community. Out of seven finalists, three young growers were awarded with funds from the Micro Loan allowing doors to open into new farm ventures for two awardees and, for an already established farm, expansion into four-season growing.

This year’s first loan recipient is Natalya Aho of Madcrow Market Garden.  Madcrow Market Garden is a small-scale, intensive market garden newly located at the Martha Wagbo Farm and Education Center in East Jordan. Natalya, a Providence Farm trained grower, plans to use the funds to invest in a cooler, food scale, and perimeter fencing in order to build the infrastructure necessary to become a dedicated market grower.

The second loan recipient is Rachel Cross of Spirit of Walloon located in Boyne City near Walloon Lake. Five short, intense years ago, the farm began on just ¼ of an acre. Seven greenhouses, 1.3 acres of production in place, and thousands of pounds of produce later, Rachel had the desire to expand the farm further. The Micro Loan funding will help Rachel create a four-season wash-and-pack-station enabling her to increase on-farm efficiency and provide local fresh food every month of the year.

The third recipient is Nicholas Paxton of Joli Cochon Farm. Nicholas of East Jordan (also a Providence Farm trained grower housed at Wagbo) is on a mission to raise happy, healthy animals and the best tasting pork possible. This new business venture requires shelters, freedom feeders and fencing for his hogs which he is financing through the Micro Loan.He is also experimenting with custom milled feed, and so is purchasing a hammer mill and shopping for grain from other local farms.

“The Micro Loan Program is a great example of what true community can accomplish: coming together to strengthen the livelihoods of those who nurture the people around them with healthy food,” says Jen Harris, Program Coordinator for Crosshatch Center for Art & Ecology who heads the Micro Loan review process along with members of Grain Train. “Our efforts to support the small farm community culture of Northern Michigan is accomplished by bringing capital to a level that is manageable.”

The next Micro Loan application process will kick off once again in January of 2019. Keep your eyes open and your farm projects brewing.

XH News & Hill House Alumni Update

WHAT WE'VE BEEN UP TO:

January was conference month for us here at Crosshatch. We, along with the minds of a stellar committee and the wizards behind the curtain, Events North, put on a farmer’s shebang that is THE event of the winter: the Northern Michigan Small Farm Conference. 

That being said, while we are rebooting, vacationing and planning for the Crosshatch spring and summer event line-up, we’ve realized the Hill House alumni update is long past due. While our artist residency may be on hold for the time being, our alumni are cranking out some fine work.

HILL HOUSE ALUMNI:

Logan Farmer

"I had the opportunity to go to an isolated cabin in the woods and record an album,” Logan writes. “I didn't shave and I packed lots of flannel, all the stuff you would expect from a folk singer in 2017. But despite the isolation and lovely autumnal setting, I knew from the beginning that I wanted to make a city album.” Check out Logan’s album written almost entirely while in residence at the Hill House.

Robinson & Rohe

The anticipated album, Hunger, by Robinson and Rohe, has arrived. Written during their travels between the East Coast and the Upper Midwest. (Hey, that’s us!), Hunger is an album of songs about love and land . Fetch yourself an album and hear more about their updates here. In related news, Jean Rohe recently received full funding for a solo album through PledgeMusic. We cannot wait for this! We will let you know when we know more.

Kay Belardinelli

Kay Belardinelli released Fill Your Lungs with her band, Mar, in 2017. Mar is a two-piece blend of doom metal, noise, and punk with lyrics about trauma and recovery from a feminist perspective. She finished her autobiographical zine, Murmurs, Chants, and Screams, vol II covering dreams, healing, and the subconscious. Kay also developed a solo-music performance with video projection called Mariassunta, based on the life of Saint Maria Goretti. In this performance, she blends harsh guitar noise with simple, organ melodies and combines scenes from the 1949 film based on Goretti's life.

Passepartout Duo

Nicoletta Favari & Christopher Salvito of Passepartout Duo (you may remember the cool video they made at the Hill House) have been busy. They are collaborating on a new album with visual artists from Beijing, Yannis Zhang and Yumo Wu. Their work continues on the Skammdegi/Náttleysi project, a project inspired by light cycles present in the Nordic countries, collaborating recently with composers Marta Forsberg and Hafdís Bjarnadóttir. In addition, they were featured in an article from NYLON magazine about their recent appearance at the Myrkir Músíkdagar festival in Iceland (in English, that means “darkest days”). To see all of their accomplishments and hear their super interesting and diverse work, visit their page here.

Warm winter wishes to you all. Email us if you have alumni updates of your own for us to share! jeannie@crosshatch.org